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Volume Twenty, Issue Five September-October 2014 FREE UPSTATE GARDENERS’ JOURNAL - 1140 RIDGE CREST DRIVE - VICTOR, NEW YORK 14564 BUFFALO - ITHACA - ROCHESTER - SYRACUSE Green Visions Stump the Chump The Magic of Garden Follies

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Page 1: Sept oct '14 ugj

Volume Twenty, Issue Five September-October 2014FREE

u p s t a t e g a r d e n e r s ’ j o u r n a l - 1 1 4 0 r i d g e C r e s t d r i v e - v i C t o r , n e w y o r k 1 4 5 6 4

b u f f a l o - i t h a C a - r o C h e s t e r - s y r a C u s e

Green VisionsStump the ChumpThe Magic of Garden Follies

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SAR

A’S

GA

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30+ year Mission!It is our greatest desire to provide our customers with top quality, well-grown plant material at a fair and honest price. We will strive to provide an unmatched selection of old favorites and underused, hard-to-find items, along with the newest varieties on the market. We will eagerly share our horticultural knowledge gained from years of education and experience. Lastly, we offer all this in a spirit of fun and lightheartedness.

Sara’s Garden Center | 389 East Ave. | Brockport 14420 | 585-637-4745

Summer’s Gone…

But the best days for planting are ahead of us! We love the autumn season; brilliant colors, cool mornings, warm evenings & gardens are full. For us, it is also the time of year we choose to thank all of our customers who have been so loyal to us throughout the season by giving back to them. Right now we are offering our best prices on some of our best plant material. Fall is truly the perfect time for planting & establishing all kinds of plant material. We’re planting a new garden bed this fall too! September and October; good weather, good plants, good prices.

Stone Wall Follies 2014Have you seen the amazing stone work in our gardens lately? If you haven’t been out to visit in a while you will be pretty surprised at what 6 weekends of dedicated stone work can accomplish. The 2014 session of our dry-laid stone wall class is set for October 11th and 12th.

A two day event that will give you the knowledge to build your garden dream too! Spaces Available for Students!

You can join our students for an evening of inspiration featuring:

John Shaw-Rimmington, of the CSWA

Norman Haddow, of the DSWA

Saturday October 11th, 7:15 pm—(remember, this event is free and open to the public)

Please check out John’s website & Norman’s blog:CSWA.can and wallswithoutmortar.blogspot.com

We’re asking for a quick call or email to enable us to plan our space requirements, and if you’re ready to take the weekend session here is the contact info, thanks!

[email protected] or (585)637-4745__________________________________________________________

We are currently booking Garden Weddings for the summer of 2015. If you are looking for a unique location for your special event, come visit the gardens at Sara’s.

[email protected] or (585)637-4745

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BUY A TREE, WE PLANT IT FOR FREE

FALL 2014 OCT 1-NOV 15

One

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ALL REMAINING STOCK

AREAS WITHIN A 20 MILE RADIUS OF THE BROCCOLO GARDEN

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BEST LOCATION AND VARIETY FOR YOUR

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We Save Ash Trees

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soul” -Thoreau

58585-424-4476

Page 4: Sept oct '14 ugj

“The True Breath of Life”A 50’ x 50’ area of sod converts enough carbon

dioxide to oxygen to sustain a family of four.

Batavia Turf …Making New York Green.

East/Central NYS… call Katie 585.356.0972

West/Southern Tier… call Chuck 585.261.6370

Page 5: Sept oct '14 ugj

WE HAVE BACK ISSUES! Copies are $2.00 each, which includes 1st class postage.

SUBSCRIBE! Never miss another issue! Get the UGJ delivered to your door six times a year for just $15.00. It’s our area’s guide to everything

gardeners want to know about. To give a gift, simply enclose a note with the gift recipient’s info. We’ll send a notice and

start the subscription.

1140 Ridge Crest Drive Victor, NY 14564

585/538-4980

Name ______________________________________________________________

Address ____________________________________________________________

City___________________________________State______Zip _______________

Subscriptions_______________x $15.00= ________________________________

Back issues ________x$2.00= __________________________________________

Check enclosed for ___________________________________________________

S-O ’14 Thank you

ContentsEar to the ground: Letter from the publisher ..........6

Stump the chump .......................................................9

Almanac: What to do in the garden in September & October ........................................... 10

Goodness grows: Morgan Barry and the Green Visions program ......................................12-14

Calendar ..............................................................16-24

Calendar: The magic of garden follies .................. 17

Recipe: Apple galette ............................................. 26

Cathy the crafty gardener: Autumn votives .......... 29

Rooted: Salad days .................................................. 30

PubliShER/EdiToR: Jane F. Milliman ManaGinG EdiToR: Debbie Eckerson

GRaPhiC dESiGn: Cathy MonradTEChniCal EdiToR: Brian Eshenaur

PRooFREadER: Sarah Koopus

WESTERn nEW YoRk SalES REPRESEnTaTiVE: Maria Walczak: 716/432-8688

ConTRibuToRS: Marion Morse | Michelle Sutton Lyn Chimera | Carol Ann Harlos

Chris LeBeau | Cathy Monrad | Liza Savage-Katz

1140 Ridge Crest Drive, Victor, NY 14564585/733-8979

e-mail: [email protected] upstategardenersjournal.com

The Upstate Gardeners’ Journal is published six times a year. To subscribe, please send $15.00 to the above address.

Magazines will be delivered via U.S. mail and or email (in PDF format). We welcome letters, calls and e-mail from our readers.

Please tell us what you think!

We appreciate your patronage of our advertisers, who enable us to bring you this publication.

All contents copyright 2014, Upstate Gardeners’ Journal.

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ClaSSiFiEdSdaYliliES. Daylilies are outstanding, carefree perennials. We grow and sell over 225 top-rated award-winning varieties in many colors and sizes in our Rochester garden. We are also an official national daylily society display garden. We welcome visitors to see the flowers in bloom from June to September. Call 585/461-3317. PuRE, naTuRal, loCal honEY. Award-winning small scale apiary by Lake Ontario. SeawayTrailHoney.com 585-820-6619 VERMiCoMPoST for sale. $20 per yard or $5 per bag. Maple Ridge Farm, Lancaster, NY. 716-681-4931.GaRdEn buildinG loTS Scottsville Village, Building Lots at #27 & #33 Chili Ave (Rte. 386) 10 min. to RIT, 30 min. to downtown Rochester.

Garden acreage has been subdivided into 2 approved Building Lots: 175’ frontage x 171” (7/8 acre), and 100’ frontage x 171’ (1/2 acre) with electric, sewer, water, gas, cable, garbage pickup, walking distance to high school and village shops. These lots are part of a garden featured in Better Homes & Gardens and Upstate Gardeners’ Journal, and presented at the NYS 7th District Federated Garden Clubs Annual Meeting, the Williamsburg VA Garden Symposium, and on local garden club tours. Both lots feature perimeters of mature evergreens for privacy, and exotic trees, shrubs, and plants artfully designed for beautiful effects. The larg-er lot includes a blacktop drive, historic 12’ x 14’ storage shed, and fruits and vegetable garden.Build your dream home with mature plantings in place. Call Richard LeRoy 585-576-0138 to arrange for a visit.

From the publisher

one of our most popular features of late is "stump the Chump." do you have something unusual in your garden you think might make a good stumper? (not literally—we won't cut it down.) let us know.

Questions? Comments? Concerns? Maybe you have a favorite family recipe for currant jam you'd like to share, or disagree with something you've read in our pages.

have you tried one of Crafty Cathy's projects? upload a snapshot to pinterest and tag us—we'd love to see it. visit our facebook page to keep abreast of late-breaking event announcements and just fun stuff from around the web.

we welcome your suggestions—email me at [email protected] or debbie at [email protected], or call 585-733-8979.

we are always looking for new distribution points, too. drop us a line!

RAISING THE STANDARDIs Your Landscaper a Plant Pro?

Always ask for a Certified Nursery & Landscape Professional

CNLP✓ At Your Garden Center or Nursery

When You Shop

✓ When You're Planning a Landscape Design, Installation or Renovation

✓ For Seasonal Lawn & Garden Maintenance

Visit plantwny.com to ‘Find a CNLP Plant Pro’ Near You!

Page 7: Sept oct '14 ugj

InstallationWalkways/PatiosFlagstoneUnilockBrickPaverstonesKeystoneFoundation PlantingRetaining WallsExcavation & GradingWater GardensWater Features

GardeningMulchingTopsoilRototillingTree PlantingTree RemovalStump GrindingShrub PruningTheme GardensPerennial GardensLawn CareLawn Maintenance

Monroe County’s Oldest Nursery

Large Selection of Hardy Trees & Shrubs

Lawn & Landscaping Services

Over 3 acres of fresh hardy nursery stock from the common to the hard to find.

Annuals Perennials Fertilizer Seed Bulk Mulch Bagged Mulch Stone Large Selection of Fine Pottery

Delivery & Planting Services Available

For an estimate please call (585) 244-1626

CloverNursery.com

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Located near Ellison Park

485 LANDING ROAD NORTH(585) 482-5372

Open 7 Days a Week

C L OV E RNURSERY & GARDEN CENTER

Est. 1927

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Botanical GardensBuffalo and Erie County

www.buffalogardens.com

SucculentsSept 6 - Oct 5

Orchid ShowOct 11-12

MumsOct 18 - Nov 9

PoinsettiasNov 28 - Jan 4

SPECIALIST NURSERY IN BOXWOOD

Extensive selection of deer resistant plants such as Hellebore, Boxwood, Spirea, Pieris, Oregon Grapeholly, & Catmint.

Design Office Hours: M-F, 8am-5pmGarden Center Hours:M-F, 8am-6pm, Sat. 9am-5pmSun. 10am-4pm2712 N. Triphammer Rd. p. 257-3000www.cayugalandscape.com

Ithaca, NY

Cayuga Landscape

Your favorite gardening magazine is online.

We have a shiny new website!Check us out at UpstateGardenersJournal.com.

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U P S T A T E G A R D E N E R S ’ J O U R N A L | 9

Q & A

name this plant!This issue’s specimen is a toughie. it is a non-native and

rare in cultivation here in the states, despite being reliably hardy. a small tree, it only reaches about 20 feet and is generally multi-stemmed. The flowers are fragrant and all above-ground parts are edible.

The first reader to guess correctly will win a 4 foot tall Hamamelis mollis ‘wisley supreme’ (witch hazel) from holmes hollow farm on turk hill in victor.

submit answers to [email protected] (fastest) or by calling 585-733-8979.

Stump the chump

ANSWER FROM LAST ISSUE (JULY_AUGUST 2014): Yellowwood, or Cladrastis kentukea syn. lutea.

lEFT: A mature specimen

ToP RiGhT: Flowers

boTToM RiGhT: Fruit and foliage

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Almanac

What to do in the garden in September and October

GaRdEn MainTEnanCEContinue to remove weeds to prevent the perennials from

having a head start in the spring and the annuals from shedding seeds into the soil. if you don’t have time to weed at least cut off and discard the seed heads.

watering trees and shrubs is as important as watering your perennials, especially anything planted this season.

Mulch newly planted perennials, trees and shrubs to prevent heaving in the winter. Make sure the mulch is not touching plant and shrub stems or tree trunks. pile leaves on your macrophylla hydrangeas.

add compost to your beds now.allow annuals such as nicotiana, annual poppies, cleome, and

verbena bonariensis to drop seeds in the garden.prevent mouse and rabbit damage to thin-barked trees and

shrubs by installing 18 inch to 24 inch high hardware cloth. Cut any grass around the base of trees short to discourage nesting by these critters.

PEREnnialSremove and discard all diseased

plant material. do not place in compost pile as some fungal spores can winter over in ground litter and soil and will re-infect plants next season.

disinfect your pruner after working on diseased plants before moving to a new plant. a quick spray with lysol or a dip in a 10% Clorox solution works well.

remove and destroy iris foliage to eliminate the eggs of the iris borer.

Mound soil around your roses when the temperature drops. bring in fresh soil to avoid disturbing roots.

you can leave the seed heads of astilbe, black-eyed-susan, coneflower, daisy etc. intact to provide food for the birds as well as giving winter interest.

don’t cut back grasses and plants such as red osier dogwood. They provide winter interest.

divide any perennials that have become overgrown, diminished bloom or have formed a “doughnut” shape with a bare spot in the center of the clump. it’s best to transplant early in the fall while there is still enough time for their roots to settle in for the winter.

bulbSbegin planting spring bulbs. you will get better results if you

plant when there is a month of 40 degree or above soil temperature (mid sept. - mid oct. in our area). This allows the bulbs to set strong roots and will give you better blooming.

fertilize bulbs when you plant them using compost or 5-10-10. Cover the planting area with 2-3 inches of compost.

to deter moles, voles and squirrels, put a layer of pea gravel or

small gauge chicken wire between the bulbs and soil surface.plant bulbs 2 to 3 times as deep as their height, a little deeper

for naturalizing varieties. laWn

over seed bare spots in the lawn. filling in bare spots helps prevent weeds in those areas next year.

september is the best time to fertilize your lawn and seed a new one. a top dressing of good compost is an ideal natural fertilizer.

remember to water the grass seeds regularly to keep the soil moist and choose high quality seed appropriate for your site.

in early september check your lawn for grubs by lifting up about a square foot of sod. if there are more than 10-12 grubs per square foot you may want to treat for grubs. first identify what type of grub you have so you know the proper treatment. Complete

your grub control program by the middle of september. Contact your Cooperative extension for help in identification and treatment options.

if the leaves aren’t too thick on your lawn leave them there when you mow, it feeds your lawn naturally.

VEGETablES & hERbSany time after the first frost through

late october is a good time to plant garlic.pot up some parsley, chives, oregano, or

mints to use indoors. pick off the tomato blossoms that won’t have time to develop

tomatoes so the nutrients go into the tomatoes already growing on the vine. plant cover crops such as peas or clover as you harvest your vegetables. This will reduce the need for weeding and will add nitrogen to the soil.

another option is to sow a cover crop such as rye or winter wheat in the vegetable garden. turn it over in the spring.

dig mature onions on a dry day. store in well ventilated mesh bags (or even panty hose).

plant radish, kale, spinach, and lettuce seeds in early september as your last crops.

pull up your hot pepper plants and hang them until the peppers are dry. (or thread them on a string to dry.)

if you had any vegetables with fungal problems make sure that area is cleaned of all plant debris and avoid planting the same variety in the same spot next year.

Mulch your asparagus and strawberries.

MiSCEllanEouSfor more miscellaneous tips, visit upstategardenersjournal.com/tag/almanac.

—Carol Ann Harlos & Lyn Chimera, Master Gardeners, Erie County Cornell Cooperative Extension

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Cornell PlantationsFall Lecture Series

2014

September 3William and Jane Torrence Harder Lecture

You’re the Bee’s Kinesis:Poetry and CoevolutionJoanie Mackowski, Poet and Professor of English, Cornell UniversityLecture, 5:30 p.m., Call Auditorium Garden Party to follow at the Botanical Garden

September 17Audrey O’Connor Lecture

The Drunken BotanistAmy Stewart, Author Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Statler Auditorium

October 1Class of 1945 Lecture

Founding GardenersAndrea Wulf, Author Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Statler Auditorium

October 15Elizabeth E. Rowley Lecture

Personal Habitat:Creating a Haven for Wildlife(and Yourself)Julie Zickefoose, Author/illustratorLecture, 7:30 p.m. Statler AuditoriumIn collaboration with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the Cayuga Bird Club

October 2970th Anniversary Lecture

“A Living Sympathywith Everything That Is”Liberty Hyde Bailey’sEcological and Civic VisionScott Peters, Faculty Co-Director, Imagining America: Artists and Scholars in Public Life, Syracuse UniversityLecture, 7:30 p.m. Statler Auditorium

November 12William Hamilton Lecture

An Introduction toClassical Bonsai ArtWilliam N. Valavanis, Bonsai Master Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Statler Auditorium

The Fall Lecture Series is presented in collaboration with the Statler Hotel.

cornellplantations.org

118 South Forest Road (between Main and Wehrle) Williamsville, NY 14221

Fall Patio Pots . MumsOrnamental Peppers . Winter PansiesYour Floral Headquarters for Inside and OutFull-service Florist . Delivery Available

716.632.1290 Toll-free 877.363.1879www.mischlersorist.com

May you�ourish.

May you�ourish.

Fairy Garden Workshop Oct. 17 & 18 - 10 a.m. & 2 p.m. each day

118 S. Forest Rd., Williamsville NY 14221632-1290 for reservations

Spooky

Advance your knowledge at the

PLANT WNY Trade Show & Education Conference 2015

Certified Nursery & Professional Day - Thursday, February 5Trade Show & Education Conference - Friday, February 6

Salvatore’s Italian Gardens, Depew, NY

Join us for two full days of seminars. Friday will feature a keynote speaker and a trade show along with the seminars. Don’t miss this opportunity to network, learn new techniques and gather insights from your peers in the green industry.

CNLP and DEC Credits will be available.

For more information: Visit www.plantwny.com or contact 716-741-8047

www.plantwny.com

Friday, February 6: keynote speaker, Michael A. Dirr, is a legend in the horticultural world and has tremendous energy for teaching about plants, writing about plants, and especially for growing plants.

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Goodness grows

Morgan Barry and the Green Visions Program

By Michelle Sutton (michellejudysutton.com) Photos by Walter Colley (waltercolleyimages.com)

This is a story about young rochesterians learn-ing critical work skills via a horticultural enter-prise called green visions. it’s also about Morgan

barry, who coordinates green visions, which is a pro-gram of greentopia, which is a project of friends of the gardenaerial (see sidebar for more about each.)

Morgan barry is a native rochesterian raised on Maplewood avenue. he attended city schools, including alternative high school at the district’s school without walls (sww), which had a community service empha-sis; barry volunteered at foodlink and as a coach at the neighborhood yMCa.

even though he attended an excel-lent school and maintained a great first job at wegmans, in retrospect barry says he was following the expected col-lege track, without adequate reflection on what he really wanted to do. he went to suny oswego and got his ba in english. he says, “when i graduated in 2003, i said, ‘wait, what’s the plan here?’”

thus began the building of what he affectionately terms his “meandering résumé.” barry worked in construction for several years, and then made a foray into corporate america

in new york City. unsatisfied there, he started emailing the writers whose online work he enjoyed the most—and talked his way into an internship at gawker.

barry says, “i learned the ropes of how a website is run, how social media works, and from that point on i was hus-tling. i was getting work experience in film and commercial

production, sponsored events, and market-ing work. i even had a small photography business with a friend at one point. it was a grind, but i would never take back those experiences.”

as barry approached seven years working in nyC, he felt on the fence about whether to stay. he says, “i was sitting on our back deck in astoria, Queens, watching rain pouring down. when i went back in the apartment, i found that water had leaked through the roof into my room, drowning most everything i owned at the time. i took this as a very obvi-ous sign that it really was time for me to

leave the city.” barry had also been missing rochester and ruminating on a random scene from the tv show parks and recreation, when ron swanson says to leslie knope, “you’ll get a lot of job offers in your life, but you only have one hometown.”

aboVE: Green VIsions' main flower plot on Smith Street in the JOSANA neighborhood.

inSET: Morgan Barry.

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U P S T A T E G A R D E N E R S ’ J O U R N A L | 1 3

ToP lEFT: Program team member

Chandria Smith waters cosmos.

boTToM lEFT: Program team member

Norman Murray hard at work.

RiGhT: Snapdragons are popular and long-

lasting cut flowers.

inSET: Tiani Jennings, site supervison and returning program

grad.

when he moved back to rochester, barry heard a lot from his family and friends about the new gardenaerial project and the fall greentopia festival about to take place for the second year. his mother saw a natural connection, and the gardenaerial cofounders coincidentally lived next door to his brother and his brother’s girlfriend. barry says, “i always tell the green visions youth, ‘the best way to find work, is to work.’” so he volunteered for the full two weeks of the greentopia festival in september of 2012 and after that, gardenaerial cofounders Michael philipson and lewis stess told barry they wanted to hire him.

barry started out doing anything and everything—copywriting, managing their social media and public events, hauling boxes—and still wears many hats. he’s now special projects director and a mem-ber of a small staff (four or five people at any one time) and likes how ideas for the organization are discussed and developed through commu-nal brainstorming and strategy sessions.

when landscape designer Marci Muller, former direc-tor of greentopia, the rochester landscape technicians program and greenworks employment training, pitched

the idea for green visions, barry got to be in on the vision-ing. when Muller left greentopia to be a designer for ted Collins tree and landscape, barry took over green visions because he saw the program as a true chance to make a positive difference in his city and neighborhood.

Muller still advises him on a regular basis, for which he is deeply grateful, because he had no gardening experience before this position. and of course, she brings her years of workforce development knowledge to share as well. of barry, Muller says, “to see how Morgan has grown over the past two years, it shows that he was meant for this type of work. his commitment to the young adults in the program is so strong that it can be overwhelming sometimes. i am so proud to work alongside of him.”

green visions is a 22-week-long work-force development program for 17- to 21-year-olds in the josana (jay-orchard

street area neighborhood association) neighborhood in northwest rochester that has taken over three vacant lots for flower production. bouquets of cut flowers from the gardens are sold at the rochester public Market and throughout the city. the program teaches participants work

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aboVE: Clockwise from top: Xavier Bostic, lasal Cooper and Morgan Barry confer on site.

skills, builds their résumés, and teaches them about small business management and horticulture. there is also a phytoremediation component to the program as envisioned by Muller. (phytoremediation is using plants to extract or neutralize contaminants in the soil.)

Currently the City of rochester’s policy prohibits grow-ing and selling food from vacant lots, due to the potential presence of lead and other harmful toxins in the soil, but the friends of the gardenaerial’s hypothesis is that phytoremediation could lead to a soil fit for food produc-tion. the soils on the three lots are being tested by Cornell Cooperative extension and paradigm environmental services, as are the tissues of some trial tomato and cucum-ber plants. this fall, green visions will have some data points to share with the community about the phytore-mediation experiment to date. barry says the City is very interested in the research findings and has been a very sup-portive partner to green visions.

in the first year, 2013, the program was geared toward young women only, with spaces for eight participants and one large city lot. in the second year, the program took on twice as many participants, co-ed this time, and two more lots in the same neighborhood, where neighbors are pleased

to see the program expansion. Many of the second-year youth are friends or relatives of the first year’s graduates. one of the first-year women, tiani jennings, returned the following year as barry’s assistant manager. her posi-tion was formed thanks to the dynamic skills of Maranne Mcdade Clay, director of grants. barry calls tiani “a superstar at what she does. i see all the potential in the world in tiani.”

jennings is thrilled to be back in this leadership role, as site coordinator for the gardens. “this experience has been great for me,” she says. “Morgan is awesome; he has taught me so much through the trainings he does for us.” jennings also supervises youth in the City of rochester’s summer of opportunity program. she hopes to study horticulture in

college. tiani and the green visions participants are encour-

aged to run much of the small business on their own, with barry in a coaching capacity. participants give input into the small business plan for the season, grow the plants and sell the bouquets at the public Market, handle the customer service, and run the facebook page and other social media to promote green visions. he says, “i try to be as hands-off as possible. My biggest goal for the program is for the participants to gain work experience—some of them for the first time—and build a résumé that they can use to go out in the world and feel confident applying for other jobs in rochester.”

barry says there’s a lot of momentum building for green visions, and he’s very grateful for the in-kind and monetary donations that have come in. foundation support is never assured from year to year; community support is needed to ensure the program’s continuation. please see their website where you can easily donate via paypal or credit card to friends of the gardenaerial, which adminis-ters green visions. go to the green visions facebook page for photo diaries and videos; you will be inspired!

Michelle Sutton (michellejudysutton.com) is a horticultur-ist, writer, and editor living in New Paltz, NY.

About the GArdenAeriAl From the Friends of the GardenAerial (FoGA) (gardenaerial.org) website: FoGA has worked to preserve

and steward the High Falls Heritage Area and Genesee River gorge through education, promotion, pres-ervation and development of sustainable communities. It is dedicated to green education, advocacy and sustainable development in downtown Rochester, New York.

The GardenAerial project will completely transform the immediate area of the rim of the Genesee Gorge at High Falls, creating an exciting new public greenspace and trail destination at the very birthplace of Rochester. You can see concept drawings at http://gardenaerial.org/fullscreen/gardenaerial-gallery.

About GreentopiA FAll FestivAl This year, Greentopia Fall Festival celebrates four years of educating and entertaining the public in all

things sustainable. Originally conceived as a two-day street festival, Greentopia has grown into a series of events held throughout the year. The 2014 EcoFest and celebration of art, music, and design will take place September 12 from 6 to 9 pm and September 13 from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. around Brown’s Race and the Centers at High Falls. Greentopiafest.com

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Apple HarvestSaturday, September 20th 11:00am – 3:30pm

A family fun day. Call for details.

U Picked Apples Starting early September. Call for varieties

Nursery Open: Monday – Friday 8-5 Saturday & Sunday 9-5

After Oct. 31st, open by chance or appointment

Mail: 1104 Auburn Rd., Groton, NY 13073 (Rte. 34 in N. Lansing bet. Ithaca & Auburn)

Tel: 607-533-4653 email: [email protected] www.bakersacres.net

Largest grower of perennials and herbs in Central New York

20 Display Gardens to View AUTUMN EVENTS

September 21“Thompson Abbey” Day

October 17-19, 24-25Mansion Mysteries

October 26Haunted Garden Stroll

For more information or to register for an event, please call 585.394.4922 or visit

www.sonnenberg.org.

October 11Fall Gardening Symposium

with Keynote Speaker Vincent SimeoneJoin Vincent Simeone to learn how to use trees and shrubs to create visual interest

and appeal all year long in your gardens and landscaping. Vincent’s talks include: Popular

Flowering Trees & Shrubs, Old-Fashioned Trees & Shrubs, & Four Season Gardening with Woody Plants. Lunch & booksigning

included. Pre-registration required.

Blooms & Fall Foliage!Be sure to visit this fall to see our flowers and trees put on a spectacular au-tumn display. Tour the mansion, nine formal gar-dens, and greenhouses. Daily wine tasting. Open daily through October 31st,

9:30 a.m. — 4:30 p.m.

Lockwood’s Greenhouses 4484 Clark St, Hamburg, NY 14075

(716) 649-4684

❀Quality Perennials, Shrubs & Trees for Excellent Fall Color

❀ Winter Pansies~Fall Mums~Flowering Kale~ Fall Marigolds

❀ Unusual Gourds and Exotic Pumpkins from Our Own Fields

❀Fall Garden Fair ❀Saturday, September 6, 9am – 4 pmSunday, September 7, 10am – 3 pm

Vendors, Classes, Food and Plant SpecialsSee www.WeKnowPlants.com for details

Experience Awesome Autumn Color at Lockwood’s

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Calendar

REGulaR Club MEETinGSAfrican Violet and Gesneriad Society of WNY meets

the third Tuesday of each month, September - June, at 7:30 pm, LVAC Building, 40 Embry Place, Lancaster. [email protected]; gesneriadsociety.org/chapters/wny.

Alden Garden Club meets the second Wednesday of the month (except July & August) at 7 pm, Alden Community Center, West Main Street, Alden. New members and guests welcome. Plant sale each May. 716/937-7924.

Amherst Garden Club meets the fourth Wednesday of the month (except December, March, July & August) at 10:00 am, St. John’s Lutheran Church, Main Street, Williamsville. New members and guests welcome. 716/836-5397.

Buffalo Area Daylily Society. East Aurora Senior Center, 101 King Street, East Aurora. 716/ 698-3454; [email protected].

Federated Garden Clubs NYS – District 8. October 9: Luncheon and design program featuring Tony Todesco, Salvatore’s Italian Gardens, Depew. Reservation required. Arlene: 716/837-4014. Maryann Jumper, District Director. 716/435-3412; [email protected]; gardenclubsofwny.com.

Garden Club of the Tonawandas meets the third Thursday of the month at 7 pm, Tonawanda City Hall, Community Room.

Garden Friends of Clarence meets the second Wednesday of the month at 7 pm, September – June, Town Park Clubhouse, 10405 Main Street, Clarence. [email protected].

Hamburg Garden Club meets the second Wednesday of every month at noon, summer garden tours, Hamburg Community Center, 107 Prospect Avenue, Hamburg. 716/648-0275; [email protected].

Ken-Sheriton Garden Club meets the second Tuesday of the month (except January) at 7:30 pm, St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, 576 Delaware Road, Kenmore. Monthly programs, artistic design and horticulture displays. September 9: Table Talk, design demonstra-tion presented by Melissa Marcus, Judges Council Master Gardener. New members and guests wel-come. 716/836-0567.

Niagara Frontier Orchid Society (NFOS) meets the first Tuesday following the first Sunday (dates some-times vary due to holidays, etc.), September – June, Botanical Gardens, 2655 South Park Avenue, Buffalo. niagarafrontierorchids.org.

Orchard Park Garden Club meets the first Thursday of the month at 12 pm, Orchard Park Presbyterian Church, 4369 South Buffalo Street, Orchard Park. October 2: Holiday Flower Design by Cheryl Gicewicz. October 18: OPGC Marketplace, see calen-dar (below). November 6: Gardening and Designing Treasurers Auction. President: Joan Sutton, 716/662-4777.

Silver Creek-Hanover Garden Club meets the second Saturday of the month at 2 pm, First Baptist Church, 32 Main Street, Silver Creek. Sue Duecker, 716/934-7608; [email protected].

South Town Gardeners meets the second Friday of the month (except January) at 10:30 am, Charles E. Burchfield Nature & Art Center, 2001 Union Road, West Seneca. New members welcome.

Western New York Carnivorous Plant Club meets the first Wednesday of the month at 6:30 pm, Menne Nursery, 3100 Niagara Falls Blvd., Amherst. [email protected]; facebook.com/wnycpclub.

Western New York Herb Study Group meets the second Wednesday of the month at 7 pm, Buffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens, 2655 South Park Avenue, Buffalo.

Western New York Honey Producers, Inc. Cornell Cooperative Extension of Erie County, 21 South Grove Street, East Aurora. wnyhpa.org.

Western New York Hosta Society. East Aurora Senior Center, corner of Oakwood & King Streets. A group of hosta lovers who have come together to promote the genus hosta. 716/941-6167; [email protected]; wnyhosta.com.

Western New York Hosta Society Breakfast Meetings, a friendly get-together, first Saturday of the month at 10 am, Gardenview Restaurant, Union Road, West Seneca.

Western New York Iris Society meets the first Sunday of the month in members’ homes and gardens. Information about growing all types of irises and complementary perennials. Shows. Sale. Guests welcome. Pat Kluczynski: 716/633-9503; [email protected].

Western New York Rose Society meets the third Wednesday of each month at 7 pm, St. Stephens-Bethlehem United Church of Christ, 750 Wehrle Drive, Williamsville. September 17: Educational Rose Show, learn how roses are judged. October 15: Winterizing Your Rose Garden by Richard Giese & Steve Styn. wnyrosesociety.net.

Wilson Garden Club generally meets the second Thursday of each month at 7 pm, Community Room, Wilson Free Library, 265 Young Street, Wilson. Meetings open to all, community floral planting, spring plant sale, local garden tours. 716/751-6334; [email protected].

Youngstown Garden Club meets the second Wednesday of every month at 7 pm, First Presbyterian Church, 100 Church Street, Youngstown.

ClaSSES / EVEnTS• Indicates activities especially appropriate for chil-

dren and families.

• Ongoing through October 26: Family Walk at Beaver Meadow, Sundays, 2 pm. Naturalist-led walk through the preserve. Donations. BMAC

September 6: Walk at Knox Farm State Park – Ferns of Knox, 9 am. Donations. BMAC

September 6: Landscape Bus Tour, 9 am – 4:30 pm. Travel by air-conditioned bus for a guided tour of landscapes including plantings, patios and water gardens. At the end of the tour, relax and enjoy refreshments in the garden at the home of hosts Gary and Kathy Sokolowski. Lunch included. $48. Advance registration required. MENNE

• September 6: Homestead Festival, 10 am – 5 pm. Live music, period interpreters, vendors, food. $7 adults; $5 ages 12 & under; free ages 3 & under. BMAC

September 6: Orchids 101: the Basics, 2 pm. Peter Martin will demonstrate potting and pruning while discussing requirements for growing media, light and maintenance. Participants may bring an orchid for consultation and advice after class. Registration required. MENNE

September 6 – 7: Fall Garden Fair, Saturday, 9 am – 4 pm; Sunday, 10 am – 3 pm. Speakers: Tom Szulist, The Garlic Guy; Lyn Chimera, Fall Plants for Birds, Bees and Beauty; David Clark, Spring Flowering Bulbs; Mike Masterson, Honey Bees and Beekeeping; Sally Cunningham, Incredible Gardens of 2014; Mike Frank, Outdoor Living; Donna Connelly & Marge Vogel, Save the Annuals & Houseplants. Vendors. $25 one day; $40 both days; $10 individual lecture. Registration required. Lockwood’s Greenhouses, 4484 Clark Street, Hamburg. 716/649-4684; weknowplants.com.

September 6 – October 5: Succulents, daily, 10 am – 5 pm. Featuring different types of cacti and succulents displayed in unique ways. Included with admission. BECBG

September 8 – 29: Adult Watercolor Classes, four Mondays, 8:45 – 10:45 am. All skill levels. Taught by Joan Saba, professional artist and teacher. $60 series, $17 single class, members; $66 series, $18 single class, non-members. Registration required. BECBG

September 10 – October 1: Adult Drawing Classes, four Wednesdays, 8:45 – 10:45 am. All skill levels. Taught by Joan Saba, professional artist and teacher. $60 series, $17 single class, members; $66 series, $18 single class, non-members. Registration required. BECBG

September 13: Tree Tour, 9 – 10:30 am. Led by Kristy Blakely, Director of Education. Park & meet: South Park Ring Road, look for Tree Tour sign. $5. BECBG

September 13: Bonsai Basic Care & Timely Tips, 2 pm. Bonsai technician Peter Martin will cover prepar-ing for winter as well as basic care including watering and fertilizing. Registration required. MENNE

September 13 – January 17: Horticulture I Certificate, 6 Saturdays, 11 am – 1 pm. Each session will cover a different topic: Botany 101; Plant Propagation; Pest Management & Disease; Shrubs & Trees; Annuals & Perennials; Garden Design. Taught by David Clark. $105 certificate, $20 single class, members; $130 cer-tificate, $25 single class, non-members. Registration required. BECBG

September 16: Awesome “Mossome” Terrarium Workshop, 6:15 pm. Create a miniature moss garden. Materials included. $25 members; $30 non-members. Registration required. BECBG

September 20: Fall Hosta Forum. Damn Right, I’ve Got the Blues. Four speakers on the theme of blue hostas and blue plants. Auction, vendors & lunch. Edinboro, PA. wnyhosta.com.

FREquEnT hoSTS

BECBG: Buffalo & Erie County Botanical Gardens, 2655 South Park Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14218. 716/827-1584; buffalogardens.com.

BMAC: Beaver Meadow Audubon Center, 1610 Welch Road, North Java, NY 14113. 585/457-3228; 800/377-1520; buffaloaudubon.org.

CCE/EC: Cornell Cooperative Extension, Erie County, 21 South Grove Street, East Aurora, NY 14052. 716/652-5400 x177; [email protected]; counties.cce.cornell.edu/erie.

COOP: Chicken Coop Originals, 13245 Clinton Street, Alden. 716/937-7837; chickencooporiginals.com.

MENNE: Menne Nursery, 3100 Niagara Falls Blvd., Amherst, NY 14228. 716/693-4444; mennenursery.com.

buFFalo

Calendar

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U P S T A T E G A R D E N E R S ’ J O U R N A L | 1 7

England and many parts of europe are known for their enchanting and beautifully-designed gardens. a quintessential english garden typically has some

sort stone ruin or a garden “folly” that adds, as a point of interest, an accent of antiquity and creates a bit of magic to the layout and flow of the garden. as an architectural term, folly is a building constructed primarily for decoration, yet suggests through its appearance another purpose. 18th cen-tury english gardens and french garden landscapes often featured roman temples, which symbolized classical virtues and ideals. other 18th century garden follies represented ruined abbeys, Chinese temples, or egyptian pyramids, to represent different continents or historical eras. some fol-lies, particularly during famine, were built as a form of poor relief, to provide employment for peasants and unemployed artisans.

typically follies have no other purpose than as ornamen-tation, to add a sense of majesty and magic. they will often have the appearance of a building constructed for a particu-lar purpose, such as a castle or tower. if they have another purpose, it may be disguised. they are buildings, or parts of buildings, and thereby distinguished from other garden ornaments such as sculpture. follies are deliberately built as ornaments and are commissioned and built for pleasure.

by Liza Savage-Katz ([email protected])photography by Tracy Grier ([email protected])

Upstate New Yorkers have a rare opportunity to learn the art of building garden follies with dry laid stone with two highly skilled and accomplished artisan craftsmen, John Shaw-Rimmington (founder of Dry Stone Walling Across Canada, or DSWAC) and Norman Haddow (Of-ficial dyker of Balmoral Castle, Scotland). The “Walling Weekend” will take place at Sara’s Garden Center in Brockport the weekend of October 11th & 12th. At the workshop, students will build a castle ruin folly. Student space is limited. To register or for more information, contact Kathy at Sara’s Garden Center via email: [email protected] or phone: 585-637-4745.

The Magic of Garden Follies

Calendar

inSET: Norman Haddow and John Shaw-Rimmington

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Calendar

September 20 – January 31: Horticulture II Certificate, 6 Saturdays, 11 am – 1 pm. Each session will cover a different topic: Soil Science; Advanced Plant Propagation; Practical Principals of Pruning; Hydroponics; Water Gardening; Introduction to Landscape Design. Taught by David Clark. $105 cer-tificate, $20 single class, members; $130 certificate, $25 single class, non-members. Registration required. BECBG

September 21: Tropical Terrariums, 2 – 3:30 pm. Participants will learn how to make a terrarium. Bring your own terrarium glass container or purchase one at class. Also bring any trinkets/findings you would like to include in your creation. All other materials provided. $15 your container; $25 purchase container with class. Registration required. BMAC

September 24: Old Woods Autumn Discovery Walk, 1 – 2:30 pm. Explore the old woods at Beaver Meadow with naturalist Mark Carra. Donations. BMAC

September 24: Soil is the Key, 7 – 8:30 pm. Learn how to improve your soil and the role of compost. Bring a soil sample to test the pH. $15; $40 for 3 classes (see also October 1 & October 8). Registration required. CCE/EC

September 26: Western New York Garden & Landscape Symposium, 8 am – 3:30 pm. Keynote speaker Mark Whitmore, forest entomologist at Cornell University: Invasive Landscape Pests: What’s Here, What’s Coming & What Can Be Done. In addi-tion: Tree Management: Back to the Basics with Lori Brockelbank, certified arborist; Working with Natives to Build More Sustainable Landscapes with Ellen Folts, owner, Amanda’s Garden, Native Plant Nursery; Pruning Small Tree Fruits and Berries with Ken Lawton, Turnbull Nursery & Garden Center. $100. Registration required by September 22. Camp Mission Meadows, 5201 East Lake Road, Dewittville. Cornell Cooperative Extension Chautauqua County Master Gardener Program, 3542 Turner Road, Jamestown. 716/664-9502 x204; [email protected]; chautauquacce.shutterfly.com.

September 26: Gala at the Gardens, 6 pm. Cocktails, auctions, dinner, presentation. Proceeds benefit the Gardens. Reservation required. 716/827-1584 x203. BECBG

• September 27 – October 18: Kids’ Art Classes, three Saturdays, 9 – 10:30 am. Ages 5-15. A dif-ferent piece of art will be completed at each class. Taught by Joan Saba. $35 series; $13 single class. Registration required. BECBG

October 1: Good Garden Design, 7 – 8:30 pm. Or, How to Have a Beautiful Garden. Learn about the principles of good garden design to help achieve the garden of your dreams. $15; $40 for 3 classes (see also September 24 & October 8). Registration required. CCE/EC

October 4: Walk at Knox Farm State Park - Autumn Colors, 9 am. Guided walk along the Knox Farm trails to experience the splendor of autumn. Donations. BMAC

• October 4: Autumn Festival, 10 am – 6 pm. Kids’ activities, fresh fall produce, pumpkins, vendors, local cheeses & wines, music. Harrington’s Produce, 5282 Clinton Street Road, Batavia.

October 8: Top Garden Problems of the Season and What to Do About Them, 7 – 8:30 pm. The most common problems of the past season will be dis-cussed as well as how to avoid them in the future. $15; $40 for 3 classes (see also September 24 & October 1). Registration required. CCE/EC

October 8 – 29: Adult Drawing Classes, four Wednesdays, 8:45 – 10:45 am. See description under October 1. $60 series, $17 single class, mem-bers; $66 series, $18 single class, non-members. Registration required. BECBG

October 11: Iroquois Observation Program – Fall Walk, 1:30 – 3 pm. Learn about Native American folklore as it pertains to wild plants, food, medicine and crafts. Meet: Kanyoo Trail, Iroquois National Wildlife Refuge. Free. BMAC

October 11 – 12: Orchid Show, Saturday, 10 am – 5 pm; Sunday 10 am – 3 pm. Hosted by Niagara Frontier Orchid Society. Displays, workshops, ven-dors. BECBG

October 18: OPGC Marketplace, 9 am – 4 pm. Shop a variety of handmade garden-related items: for the birds, hypertufa, containers, notecards, pressed flower nightlights, Christmas items, terrariums, dried and fresh arrangements, gardening aprons and home-made goodies. Presented by Orchard Park Garden Club. Orchard Park Train Depot, Orchard Park.

October 18 – November 9: Mums, daily, 10 am – 5 pm. Included with admission. BECBG

October 20 – November 17: Adult Watercolor Classes, four Mondays, 8:45 – 10:45 am. See descrip-tion under September 8. $60 series, $17 single class, members; $66 series, $18 single class, non-members. Registration required. BECBG

October 21: Succulent Tree, 6:15 pm. Create a living succulent tree arrangement, decorations and orna-ments can be added if desired. $40 members; $45 non-members. Registration required. BECBG

• October 25: Fairy Garden Workshop, 9 am. Ages 4-12. Make a miniature container garden using found and natural materials to create acorn dishes, leaf fences, seed mailboxes and more. $15 members; $20 non-members. Registration required. BECBG

November 1: Walk at Knox Farm State Park – Skeletons of Winter, 9 am. Look for the dead plants that are still standing and learn their value to the creatures that stay active throughout the cold weath-er. Donations. BMAC

• November 1 – 15: Kids’ Art Classes, three Saturdays, 9 – 10:30 am. See description under September 27. $35 series; $13 single class. Registration required. BECBG

November 13 – 17: Christmas Open House. COOP

SaVE ThE daTE…November 20 – 23: Christmas Open House. COOP

November 25: Fresh Thanksgiving Arrangement, 6:15 pm. Make your own fresh floral arrangement. Materials included. $35 members; $40 non-members. Registration required. BECBG

November 28: Christmas Centerpiece Workshop. Make an all-natural pine arrangement with candle and globe that will last through the holiday season. Materials included. $35. Registration required. COOP

November 29: Christmas Centerpiece Workshop. See description under November 28. $35. Registration required. COOP

November 30: Christmas Centerpiece Workshop. See description under November 28. $35. Registration required. COOP

iThaCa

REGulaR Club MEETinGSAdirondack Chapter, North American Rock Garden

Society (ACNARGS). Meets in the Whetzel Room, Room 404, Plant Science Building, Cornell University, Ithaca. Free and open to all. acnargs.blogspot.com; facebook.com/acnargs.

Windsor NY Garden Group meets the second and fourth Tuesdays of the month at 10 am, members’ homes or Windsor Community House, 107 Main Street, Windsor. windsorgardengroup.suerambo.com.

ClaSSES / EVEnTS• Indicates activities especially appropriate for chil-

dren and families.

Ongoing through September 28: Botanical Garden Highlights Tour, Saturdays, 10 am; Sundays, 2 pm. Tour content will vary from week to week, depend-ing on the plants, season, interests of the group and whim of the docent. Free members, volunteers & Cornell students; $5 non-members. CP

September 9: Composting for Healthy Gardens and People, 6 – 7:30 pm. Class will cover home compost-ing with an emphasis on fall composting and prepar-ing for winter. Class will mainly be outside. Free. Registration required. 607/273-9550; [email protected]. Foundation of Light, 391 Turkey Hill Road, Ithaca. CCE/TOM

September 9: Insect Identification and Integrated Pest Management, 6 – 8 pm. Learn to identify insects in the home garden. Class will go through the major orders of insects, look at different types of damage to plants by insects and practice identifica-tion skills on insect samples. There will be information on dealing with major pests with non-toxic methods. $5-$10, sliding scale. Registration required. CCE/TOM

September 13: Faerie Gardens, 10 am – 3 pm. Refresh, rebuild or create a new faerie garden. Low-light plants available. Reenie will be on hand to offer assis-tance and answer questions. BAK

September 15: Seed Saving: Harvesting, Cleaning, Drying and Storing, 6 – 8 pm. Class will harvest and clean seeds from the CCE seed-saving garden includ-ing tomatoes, beans, lettuce and summer squash. Participants can take gathered seeds home for their own gardens. $5-$10, sliding scale. Registration required. CCE/TOM

September 17: Fall Lecture Series, 7:30 – 8:30 pm. Author Amy Stewart, The Drunken Botanist: The Plants That Create the World’s Great Drinks. Statler Hall Auditorium, Cornell University. CP

• September 20: Apple Festival, 11 am – 3:30 pm. BAK

FREquEnT hoSTS

BAK: Bakers’ Acres, 1104 Auburn Road (Route 34), Groton, NY. 607/533-4653; bakersacres.net.

CCE/TOM: Cornell Cooperative Extension, Tompkins County, 615 Willow Ave., Ithaca, NY 14850. 607/272-2292; [email protected]; cce-tompkins.org.

CP: Cornell Plantations, 1 Plantations Road, Ithaca, NY 14850. Inquire ahead for meeting locations. 607/255-2400; cornellplantations.org.

buFFalo cont.

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Page 20: Sept oct '14 ugj

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Calendar

• September 21: Judy’s Day: A Fruit-ful Afternoon, 1 – 5 pm. Explore the world of fruits. Hands-on activities, music, food. Parking & shuttle bus: Cornell University, B-lot, off Route 366, Ithaca. $5 individual; $10 family. CP

September 25: Identifying Plant Diseases, 6 – 8 pm. Blights, wilts and mildews are more prevalent on plants in wet summers like this one. Learn to identify common plant diseases of vegetables and trees and some non-toxic methods to treat or control these diseases. $5-$10, sliding scale. Registration required. CCE/TOM

September 27: Compost with Confidence, 11 am – 12 pm. Focus will be on ways to compost indoors. Free. Compost Demonstration Site, Ithaca Farmers Market. CCE/TOM

• October – December: Seed-to-Table Afterschool Program. Information: ccetompkins.org/seed-to-table; or email Josh Dolan at [email protected]. Registration required. CCE/TOM

October 1: Permaculture Plants and People Tour, 5 – 7 pm. Visit an experimental nut planting and sample nuts from mature wild and planted varieties with John Wertis. Free. BWW Farm, 8144 Searsburg Road. Trumansburg. CCE/TOM

October 1: Fall Lecture Series, 7:30 – 8:30 pm. Author Andrea Wulf, Founding Gardeners. Statler Hall Auditorium, Cornell University. CP

October 8: Permaculture Plants and People Tour, 4 – 7 pm. Visit the area’s largest paw paw orchard for a tasting tour with orchard manager Erick Schatt and a presentation on paw paws by Josh Dolan and Chrys Gardener. Free. Cornell Orchards, Swayze Road, Lansing. CCE/TOM

October 8 – 22: Advanced Composting, three Wednesdays, 6 – 8 pm. Course will cover trouble-shooting techniques including dealing with animal pests plus basic compost chemistry and biology. Intended for residents with some compost experi-ence, educators and gardeners. $40. Registration required. CCE/TOM

October 11: Super Tufa Planter Class, 10 am – 12 pm. Make your own container, 3 shapes to choose from. Materials included. $28; $20 per additional container. Registration required by October 8. BAK

October 15: Fall Lecture Series, 7:30 – 8:30 pm. Julie Zickefoose, author and illustrator, Personal Habitat: Creating a Haven for Wildlife (and Yourself). Statler Hall Auditorium, Cornell University. CP

October 18: Braided Rim Gourd, 9 am – 1 pm. Learn to create a braided rim, choice of brown or black leather, on a prepared gourd bowl. Materials included. $55 members & Cornell students; $60 non-members. Registration required. CP

October 20: Getting Your Landscape Ready for Winter, 6:30 – 8:30 pm. Class will cover what can still be planted, when and what to cut back, mulching, watering, protecting woodies from deer and rodents and other seasonal tasks. Handouts will include a list of deer-resistant plants. $5-10, sliding scale. Registration required. CCE/TOM

October 25: Compost with Confidence, 11 am – 12 pm. Focus will be on ways to successfully com-post outdoors over the winter. Free. Compost Demonstration Site, Ithaca Farmers Market. CCE/TOM

October 29: Fall Lecture Series, 7:30 – 8:30 pm. Scott Peters, faculty, Syracuse University, “A Living Sympathy with Everything That Is” Liberty Hyde Bailey’s Ecological and Civic Vision. Statler Hall Auditorium, Cornell University. CP

• November 1: Worm Composting, 10 am – 12 pm. Hands-on workshop will explain vermicomposting, an easy indoor composting system that produces rich compost for the garden and houseplants. Participants will go home with a working worm bin. $10 per household. Registration required. CCE/TOM

November 12: Fall Lecture Series, 7:30 – 8:30 pm. William N. Valavanis, Bonsai Master, An Introduction to Classical Bonsai Art. Statler Hall Auditorium, Cornell University. CP

November 15: Gourd Basket, 1 – 5 pm. Start with a whole gourd and cut, clean and finish it into a basket. Materials included. $45 members & Cornell students; $50 non-members. Registration required. CP

SaVE ThE daTE…December 5: Evergreen Wreath-Making Workshop,

6:30 – 8:30 pm. Fresh-cut greens, ring, wires and rib-bons supplied. Session oriented towards those who have participated before. $18. Registration required. CCE/TOM

December 6: Evergreen Wreath-Making Workshop, 10 am – 12 pm. See description under December 5. Session oriented for beginners with more instruction. $18. Registration required. CCE/TOM

RoChESTER

REGulaR Club MEETinGS7th District Federated Garden Clubs New York State,

Inc. meets the first Wednesday of the month. 7thdis-trictfgcnys.org.

African Violet and Gesneriad Society of Rochester meets the first Wednesday of each month, September – May, at 7 pm, St. John’s Home, 150 Highland Avenue, Rochester. All are welcome. Bob or Linda Springer: 585/413-0606; [email protected].

Big Springs Garden Club of Caledonia-Mumford meets the second Monday evening of the following months in the Caledonia-Mumford area: September – November, January – May. New members and guests welcome. 585/314-6292; [email protected].

Bonsai Society of Upstate New York meets the fourth Tuesday of the month at the Brighton Town Park Lodge, Buckland Park, 1341 Westfall Road, Rochester. 585/334-2595; bonsaisocietyofupstateny.org.

Fairport Garden Club meets the third Thursday eve-ning of each month (except August and January). Accepting new members. [email protected]; fairportgardenclub.org.

Garden Club of Brockport meets the second Wednesday of every month at 7 pm, Clarkson Schoolhouse, Ridge Road, east of Route 19. Speakers, hands-on sessions. Kathy Dixon: 585/431-0509; [email protected].

Garden Path of Penfield meets the third Wednesday of the month from September through May at 7 pm, Penfield Community Center, 1985 Baird Road, Penfield. Members enjoy all aspects of gardening; new members welcome. gardenpathofpenfield@

gmail.com.

Genesee Region Orchid Society (GROS) meets every month from September through May at the Jewish Community Center, 1200 Edgewood Avenue, Rochester, on the first Monday following the first Sunday of each month (dates sometimes vary due to holidays, etc.). The GROS is an Affiliate of The American Orchid Society (AOS) and of The Orchid Digest Corporation. geneseeorchid.org.

Genesee Valley Hosta Society meets the second Thursday of the month, April – October, at Monroe County’s Cornell Cooperative Extension, 249 Highland Avenue, Rochester. 585/538-2280; [email protected].

Genesee Valley Pond & Koi Club meets the first Friday of the month at 6:30 pm, Cornell Cooperative Extension, 249 Highland Avenue, Rochester, except in summer when it tours local ponds. [email protected].

Gesneriad Society meets the first Wednesday of each month, September – May, at 6:30 pm, St. John’s Home, 150 Highland Avenue, Rochester. All are welcome. Bob or Linda Springer: 585/413-0606; [email protected].

Greater Rochester Iris Society meets Sundays at 2 pm, dates vary, Cornell Cooperative Extension of Monroe County, 249 Highland Avenue, Rochester. September 14: How to Mulch Iris. October 12: The Internet as a Gardening Tool. Public welcome. 585/266-0302; [email protected].

Greater Rochester Perennial Society (GRPS) meets the first Thursday of each month at 7 pm, Monroe County Cornell Cooperative Extension, 249 Highland Avenue, Rochester, except in summer when it tours members’ gardens. 585/467-1678; [email protected]; rochesterperennial.com.

Greater Rochester Rose Society meets the first Tuesday of the month, April through November, at Cornell Cooperative Extension, 249 Highland Avenue, Rochester. July & August meetings in mem-bers’ gardens, December meeting at a member’s home. 585/377-0892; 585/621-1115; [email protected]; rocrose.org.

Henrietta Garden Club meets the third Wednesday of the month (except May-August & December) at 6:45 pm, Riparian Lecture Hall at Rivers Run, 50 Fairwood Drive, Rochester. September 17: Terry Ettinger, Plan Now for Lawn, Landscape & Garden Success in 2015. September 20: Plant Sale, see calendar (below). October 15: Jack Kowiak, The Amazing World of Plants. Open to all. 585/889-1547; [email protected]; henriettagardenclub.org.

Holley Garden Club meets the second Thursday of the month at 7 pm, Holley Presbyterian Church. 585/638-6973.

Ikebana International Rochester Chapter 53 meets the third Thursday of each month (except December and February) at 10 am, First Baptist Church, Hubbell Hall, 175 Allens Creek Road, Rochester. 585/872-0678; 585/586-0794.

Kendall Garden Club meets the first Wednesday of the month at 7 pm, Kendall Town Hall. 585/659-8289; [email protected].

Newark Garden Club meets the first Friday of the month at 1 pm, Park Presbyterian Church, Newark. Guests are welcome.

Pittsford Garden Club meets the third Tuesday of the month, 11 am, at the Pittsford Public Library, Fisher Meeting Room, 24 State Street, Pittsford, except

iThaCa cont.

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in July & August when it visits members’ gardens. 585/425-0766; [email protected].

Rochester Dahlia Society meets the second Saturday of most months at 1 pm, Trinity Reformed Church, 909 Landing Road North, Rochester, except in the summer, when it tours members’ gardens. Visitors welcome. 585/249-0624; 585/865-2291; [email protected]; Facebook; rochesterdahlias.org.

Rochester Herb Society meets the first Tuesday of each month (excluding January & February) at 12 pm, Rochester Civic Garden Center, 5 Castle Park, Rochester. June-August garden tours. New members welcome.

Rochester Permaculture Center, meets monthly to discuss topics such as edible landscapes, gardening, farming, renewable energy, green building, rainwater harvesting, composting, local food, forest gardening, herbalism, green living, etc. Meeting location and details: meetup.com/rochesterpermaculture.

Seabreeze Bloomers Garden Club meets the fourth Wednesday of each month, except January, in East Irondequoit. Some meetings feature speakers and some are visits to local gardens or special events. All are welcome. President, Pat Plunkett: 585/342-5477; [email protected].

Valentown Garden Club meets the third Tuesday of each month; time alternates between noon and 7 pm. Victor. Kathleen Houser, president: 585/301-6107.

ClaSSES / EVEnTSSeptember 6: Master Gardener Plant Sale, 8:30 –

11:30 am. Presented by Master Gardeners of Orleans County. Orleans County Fairgrounds, 12690 State Highway 31, Albion. 585/798-4265; cce.cornell.edu/orleans.

September 13: Gathering of Gardeners, 8 am – 4 pm. Featuring David Culp, author and plantsman, & Elizabeth Licata, author and garden designer. Parking lot sale featuring plants and garden-related items. Presented by Master Gardeners of Cornell Cooperative Extension, Monroe County. Eisenhart Auditorium, Rochester Museum & Science Center, 657 East Avenue, Rochester. 585/461-1000 x225; gatheringofgardeners.com.

September 13: Fall Wildflowers, 10 am. Guided walk led by Carol Southby & Carl Herrgesell. Hand lens helpful. Free. TAS

September 13: Fall Garden Gala, 10 am – 1 pm. Plant sale featuring indoor and outdoor plants, mums, floral arrangements, chance auction, soil pH testing and gardening advice by Master Gardeners. Cornell Cooperative Extension of Genesee County, 420 East Main Street, Batavia. 585/343-3040 x101.

September 13: Fall Container Garden, 11 am. Create your own container using fall plants. Includes con-tainer of choice and 3 fall plants. $35. Registration required. BRI

September 13 – 14: National Bonsai Exhibition, Saturday, 9 am – 5 pm; Sunday, 9 am – 4 pm. Demonstrations, exhibits, vendors. $15. Total Sports Experience, 435 West Commercial Street, East Rochester. 585/334-2595; [email protected]; internationalbonsai.com.

September 13 – 14: Dahlia Show & Sale, Saturday, 1 – 6 pm; Sunday, 10 am – 12 pm. Saturday: flower show, arrangements for sale. Sunday: show flowers for sale. Perinton Square Mall, 6720 Pittsford-Palmyra Road. Facebook; rochesterdahlias.org.

September 14: Fungi with Fun Guys, 2 pm. Led by Dave Wolf, Carl Wolf & Don Wolf. Discover and identify mushrooms and other fungi. Free. TAS

September 16 – 17: Hypertufa Garden Troughs, Tuesday, 7 – 9 pm; Wednesday, 7 – 8 pm. Alana Miller will guide participants in the creation of their own hypertufa planter plus discuss curing, wintering over, and various ways to use them in the landscape. Materials included. $65 members; $75 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

September 17: September Blooms Stroll at Michael Hannen’s Nursery, 5:30 – 7 pm. Michael grows over 800 varieties of plants at his urban home-based nurs-ery. Display gardens showcase the rare and unusual plants that he specializes in. Arrive early to shop or preview the gardens. $10 members; $15 non-mem-bers. Registration required. RCGC

September 19 – 21: Northeast Conifer Society Regional Meeting. Program will include tours of local gardens. Holiday Inn Rochester Airport. northeast.conifersociety.org.

September 20: Henrietta Garden Club Fall Plant Sale, 11 am – 3 pm. Wide variety of member-grown plants. Tinker Nature Park, 1525 Calkins Road, Henrietta. 585/889-1547; henriettagardenclub.org.

September 20 – October 27: Introductory Bonsai Course, four sessions, choose either Monday eve-nings or Saturday mornings. Four bonsai will be cre-ated in addition to demonstrations and information on how to create, care and appreciate fine classical bonsai. Taught by Wm. N. Valavanis. $90. Registration required. International Bonsai Arboretum, Rochester. [email protected]; internationalbonsai.com.

• September 21: Thompson Abbey Day, 9:30 am – 4:30 pm. A day of activities inspired by Downton Abbey including picnics, lawn bowling, croquet, period dress and more. Admission includes activities and access to gardens & mansion. $12 adults; $10 seniors & AAA members; $6 military w/ ID, college students w/ ID & youth (13-17); $1 children (4-12); Free children 3 & under. SG

• September 21: Fairy / Mini Gardens Workshop, 2 – 4 pm. All ages. Quick slideshow and treasure hunt for the kids followed by planting session. A variety of plants, containers and décor will be available. Cost varies depending on materials selected. Registration required. Wayside Garden Center, 124 Pittsford-Palmyra Road (Route 31), Macedon. 585/223-1222 x100; [email protected]; Facebook; waysidegardencenter.com.

September 23 – October 9: Basic Professional Floral Design Certificate, Tuesdays & Thursdays, 6:30 – 9 pm. This 15-20 hour comprehensive program will guide students through the basic principles and techniques of floral design. Each intensive class will include a lecture and hands-on workshop. Styles

discussed will include round, triangular, vase, sym-metrical, elongated, corsages and more. Students will create one or two arrangements to take home at each class. Materials included. $395 members; $495 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

September 24: Visit Rochester’s Castle, 6 – 7:30 pm. Enjoy a late-summer soirée at historic Warner Castle, home of the Rochester Civic Garden Center. There will be guided tours of the interior and the grounds, including the Alling DeForest-designed courtyard and sunken gardens. Peruse the Horticultural Library. $12. Preregistration preferred. RCGC

October 2: Continuous Containers, 5:30 – 7 pm. RCGC director and garden designer Christine Froehlich will discuss how to choose plants and materials that will last and demonstrate how to combine living plants with materials already on hand in the yard to make colorful and long-lasting containers for the winter. $22 members; $32 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

October 4: Brush Hour, 10 am. Enjoy autumn’s show of color and add to your knowledge of trees and shrubs. Led by Frank Crombe & Shirley Shaw. Free. TAS

October 4: Fall is a Great Time for Propagating, 10 am – 1 pm. Michael Hannen will discuss which plants to divide now, how to divide them and how to handle them for fall or spring planting in the ground or in pots plus how to plant and store divisions so they will be in good condition for spring sales. He will dem-onstrate how to collect viable seed from plants and winter-sow it for spring seedlings. $18 members; $25 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

October 4: Ikebana Exhibit, 10 am – 5 pm. Hourly demonstrations showing the floral arrangement style of a particular school of Ikebana: Ichiyo, Hijiri Ikenobo, Ohara or Sogetsu. Presented by the Rochester Chapter of Ikebana International. Free. Community Room, Barnes & Noble, Pittsford Plaza, 3349 Monroe Avenue, Rochester. ikebanarochester.org.

• October 5: Terrarium Workshop, 2 – 4 pm. All ages. Presentation and workshop. Cost varies depending on materials selected. Registration required. Wayside Garden Center, 124 Pittsford-Palmyra Road (Route 31), Macedon. 585/223-1222 x100; [email protected]; Facebook; waysidegardencenter.com.

October 8: Botanical Drawing, eight Wednesdays, 6:30 – 8:30 pm. Deb Ver Hulst-Norris, a horticulturist with a B.S. in Fine Arts, will teach participants to draw plants and flowers in accurate detail. Drawing skills will be developed by closely observing the structure and textures of plants and flowers. Class will explore the use of graphite pencils, with colored pencil added to give depth and definition to drawings. No previous experience needed. $99 members; $120 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

October 10: Botanical Drawing, six Fridays, 9 am – 12 pm. See description under October 8. $99 members; $120 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

October 11: Fall Gardening Symposium, 10 am – 5 pm. Vincent Simeone will discuss how to use trees and shrubs to create visual interest and appeal all year long. He will present three lectures: Popular Flowering Trees & Shrubs; Old-Fashioned Trees & Shrubs and Four Season Gardening with Woody Plants. Includes lunch. $75 members; $85 non-mem-bers. Registration required. SG

October 11: Grapevine Tree, 11 am. Wrap a cone-shaped form with grapevines to make a tree to decorate with lights, ornaments and fall accessories. Registration required. BRI

FREquEnT hoSTS

BRI: Bristol’s Garden Center, 7454 Victor Pittsford Road, Victor, NY. 585/924-2274; [email protected]; bristolsgardencen-ter.com & Facebook.

RCGC: Rochester Civic Garden Center, 5 Castle Park, Rochester, NY 14620. 585/473-5130; rcgc.org.

SG: Sonnenberg Gardens & Mansion State Historic Park, 151 Charlotte Street, Canandaigua, NY 14424. 585/394-4922; sonnenberg.org.

TAS: Thousand Acre Swamp Sanctuary, 158l Jackson Road, Penfield. 585/773-8911; facebook.com/thousandacreswamp.

Page 22: Sept oct '14 ugj

• GIFT SHOP •

Located atMILEAGE MASTER

CENTER“The Grillmaster’s Mecca”2488 Browncroft Blvd.

586-1870

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9:00am-5:00pm; Sat. 9:00am-4:00pm

Bee in the Garden

We have a great selection of wood chips & charcoal year ‘round

Genesis EP-330 assorted Models now on DisplayCast Iron Cookware

Need a new grill for the

Thanksgiving Turkey?

Growing the Highest Quality Plants Since 1922.

Fresh From Our Greenhouses

Garden MumsFall Bulbs, Winter PansiesFoliage Plants, Pumpkins

Hay Bales, GourdsAutumn Decor

2722 Clinton StreetWest Seneca, NY 14224

(716) 822-9298

Open HouseSeptember 20th • 10 am – 4 pm

door prizes • 50¢ hot dogs fresh baked treats • sales galore

Browse our 6½ acres

• dwarf conifers

• one of a kind rockery

• specimen trees

• perennials for shade & sun

• artwork for the landscape

• and then there’s our gift gallery...

Landscaping Available

• cleanups & revamps

• patios & walls

• foundation & screen plantings

LLenroc Landscaping, Inc.11753 East Main St.

East Aurora, NY • (716) 652-8969

Mums havebeen wowingus with theirbeauty for centuries. You can’t go wrong with a classic that has that kind of staying power.

In bloom.

23 Pannell Circle • Fairport, NY 14450(585) 223-8951 • Fax (585) 486-1551Hours: Tu & Wed 9-4 • Th 9-6Fri & Sat 9-4 • Closed Sun & Monwww.lucasgh.com

Page 23: Sept oct '14 ugj

Your yard is your sanctuary: Feed the choir.

Higbie Farm Supplies, Inc.www.higbiefarmsupplies.com

3440 South Union Street North Chili, NY 585-594-8300 Open year-round Closed Sundays & Mondays

No Shells! No Fillers!! No Mess!!!

Aspen Song® Just Desserts® Wild Bird Food

LOVED BY BIRDS AND BIRD LOVERS

JEFF KOOPUS Cabinet & Chair Maker

jskoopus.com • 207/687-2108

Cross Point Studio132 Cross Point Road, Edgecomb ME 04556

10820 Transit Road • East Amherst (716) 636-7824

www.baddingbrosfarm.com

pumpkins • gourds • Halloween décor apples • cider • squash • fall crops

tons of fairy gardening items

FREE for our customers with purchase Please call for hours and details

*groups by appointment only*

Scarecrow Village

Badding Bros and garden center Farm Market

Design / Consultation, Installation, and Service

AOLP Certified Outdoor Lighting Designer

AOLP Certified Low Voltage Lighting Technician

Recipient of AOLP Lighting Design Awards in 2007 & 2012

by Niggli Associates, Inc.

Low Voltage Landscape and Architectural Lighting Systems

585-426-5940www.light-scaping.com

Welcome the Night with

Page 24: Sept oct '14 ugj

2 4 | S E P T E M B E R - O C T O B E R 2 0 1 4

October 12: Big Woods Preserve, 10 – 12 pm. Guided walk of old growth woods led by Norma Platt & John Boettcher. Park & meet: 674 Vosburg Road, Webster. Genesee Land Trust, 585/256-2130; [email protected]; geneseelandtrust.org.

October 14: Floral Design Workshop – Fall Landscape-Style Arrangement, 7 – 9 pm. Floral designer Alana Miller will use a zoning technique to organize fall dried and everlasting materials into a landscape-style arrangement which features planned groupings and graduated heights, to create a compo-sition that is larger than a simple floral arrangement. Materials included. $30 members; $40 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

October 15: Landscape Drawing Made Easy – A Step-by-Step Plan for Success, 6 – 9 pm. Garden designer Christine Froehlich will demonstrate the planning method she uses and show how a drawing is useful for choosing shapes, figuring out how many plants are needed and what size and which plants to choose. Bring a variety of photographs of a project you want to work on, printed on 8 ½ x 11” paper. Images can be black & white or color, you will be tracing over them so make sure they are clear. $32 members; $42 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

October 21: Grapevine Tree Workshop, 7 – 9 pm. Charles Lytle will guide participants as they create a 36”-tall stylized tree using a wire form and natural grapevines. He will demonstrate different embellish-ments and discuss various seasonal uses. Trees will last for several years. Materials included. $28 mem-bers; $35 non-members. Registration required by October 16. RCGC

October 23: Putting the Garden to Bed, 1 – 3 pm. In this outdoor class Christine Froehlich will cover what to divide in the fall, what to leave alone, recordkeep-ing, why and how to cut things back, what to leave up for winter interest and wildlife, fall fertilization, cleaning and putting away tools and equipment. $22 members; $32 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

October 25: Potions and Poisons, 10 am. Learn about wild plants and the chemicals in them that are good and bad for people, deer and other critters. Hike led by Carl Herrgesell & Frank Crombe. Free. TAS

October 26 – November 23: Durand Eastman Park Arboretum Tour, Sundays, 2 – 4 pm. Tours conduct-ed by Community Forester Volunteers. Be prepared to traverse moderate hills and wooded trails. Meet: kiosk, Zoo Road, next to park offices lot. Donations. 585/261-1665; [email protected].

• October 26: Haunted Garden Stroll, 6 – 8:30 pm. Hear strange tales about Sonnenberg from the last 126 years and encounter spooky characters during the walk including an apparition of a Civil War gen-eral who died in the mansion, the Lady in Black who continues to walk the grounds and more. $5; under age 5 free. SG

October 27: Terrarium Workshop, 6:30 – 8 pm. Joe Gallea will explain which plants are best for terrari-ums, show how to layer the soil with different plant-ing media, provide tips on landscaping with unusual stones and describe how to maintain them with the proper lighting, watering and fertilizing. Bring a glass container or purchase one from an assortment avail-able. Materials provided include 3 plants, planting medium and decorative stone. $35. Registration required. RCGC

October 28: Make an Everlasting Wreath, 6:30 – 8 pm. Sue Lang and Sheryl Roets will guide participants in creating an everlasting wreath using a base of salal (lemon leaf) and baby’s breath (depending on availability) to embellish with dried, fresh and/or silk floral materials. Materials included. $55. Registration required. RCGC

October 28: Combining Plants for Year-Round Color, 6:30 – 8:30 pm. Garden designer Marcella Klein will present a slideshow of colorful garden groupings and combinations of trees, shrubs, perennials, annuals and bulbs in addition to handouts with ideas to use at home. $22 members; $32 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

October 28 & 30: Intermediate Certificate – Bouquets, 6:30 – 9 pm. Styles covered in this inter-mediate program will include vegetative, landscape, botanical, Biedermeier, and bouquets. Students will take home all arrangements created during class. Prerequisite: Basic Professional Floral Design program or floral shop experience. $150 members; $225 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

October 29: Hallo5ween Pumpkin Arrangement, 7 – 9 pm. Fill a real pumpkin with fresh fall flowers, wheat and a variety of seasonal adornments. Instructor: Alana Miller. Materials included. $30 members; $40 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

November 3: Create a Fairy Garden, 6:30 – 8 pm. Sue Lang and Joe Gallea will guide participants in build-ing a Fairy Garden. Children may attend for free if accompanying a registered adult. Materials supplied: a pot, soil, 2 plants and 1 fairy garden accessory. Additional embellishments will be available for pur-chase. $35. Registration required. RCGC

November 12: Marimo Moss Ball Terrarium Workshop, 7 – 8:30 pm. Marimo moss balls are formed by a unique species of alga (Aegagropila linnaei) that grows in some lakes in the northern hemisphere. The alga has several growth forms, but in certain lakes it takes on the form of a fuzzy green ball. In this workshop with teacher, artist and garden enthusiast Sigriet Ferrer participants will craft an aquatic ecosystem requiring minimal care – marimo moss balls thrive on indirect sunlight and a monthly water change. Materials included. $28 members; $35 non-members. Registration required. RCGC

November 15: Forever Green Auction, 6:30 pm. All proceeds benefit Genesee Land Trust. Jack’s Place at Durand Eastman Park, 1200 Kings Highway North, Rochester. Genesee Land Trust, 585/256-2130; [email protected]; geneseelandtrust.org.

SaVE ThE daTE…November 22: Thanksgiving Centerpiece, 11 am.

Use evergreens and fall accessories to create a Thanksgiving-themed centerpiece. Materials includ-ed. $20. Registration required. BRI

November 29: Grapevine Tree, 11 am. See descrip-tion under October 11. Registration required. BRI

December 6: Holiday Greens Workshop, 8:30 am – 12 pm. $30. Registration opens October 1, early pay-ments will not be accepted. Cornell Cooperative Extension of Wayne County, 1581 Route 88 North, Newark. 315/331-8415.

SYRaCuSE REGulaR Club MEETinGS:African Violet Society of Syracuse meets the second

Thursday of the month, September – May, Pitcher Hill

Community Church, 605 Bailey Road, North Syracuse. 315/492-2562; [email protected]; avsofsyracuse.org.

Central New York Orchid Society meets the first Sunday of the month, September – May, St. Augustine’s Church, 7333 O’Brien Road, Baldwinsville. Dates may vary due to holidays. 315/633-2437; cnyos.org.

Gardeners of Syracuse meets the third Thursday of each month at 7:30 pm, Reformed Church of Syracuse, 1228 Teall Avenue, Syracuse. Enter from Melrose Avenue. 315/464-0051.

Gardeners in Thyme (a women’s herb club) meets the second Thursday of the month at 7 pm, Beaver Lake Nature Center, Baldwinsville. 315/635-6481; [email protected].

Habitat Gardening Club of CNY (HGCNY) meets the last Sunday of most months at 2 pm, Liverpool Public Library. HGCNY is a chapter of Wild Ones: Native Plants, Natural Landscapes; for-wild.org. Meetings are free and open to the public. 315/487-5742; hgcny.org.

Koi and Water Garden Society of Central New York usually meets the third Monday of each month at 7 pm. See web site for meeting locations. 315/458-3199; cnykoi.com.

Syracuse Rose Society meets the second Thursday of every month (except December and February) at 7 pm. Public welcome. Reformed Church of Syracuse, 1228 Teall Avenue, Syracuse. Enter from Melrose Avenue. Club members maintain the E. M. Mills Memorial Rose Garden, Thornden Park, Syracuse. syracuserosesociety.org.

Williamson Garden Club. On-going community proj-ects; free monthly lectures to educate the commu-nity about gardening. Open to all. 315/524-4204. [email protected]; grow-thewilliamsongarden-club.blogspot.com.

ClaSSES / EVEnTS• Indicates activities especially appropriate for chil-

dren and families.

September 6: Seed Saving and Exchange in the Gardens, 10 am – 12 pm. Learn the basic techniques of saving seeds from flowers, vegetables and herbs in this hands-on workshop, using plants from the Parker F. Scripture Botanical Garden. Seed saving experts will be on hand to provide seeds for exchange. Participants may bring some of their own seeds for exchange. Educational displays, plant sale, soil pH testing. $5, includes one soil pH test. Registration required. Cornell Cooperative Extension, Oneida County, 121 Second Street, Oriskany. 315/736-3394 x125; cceoneida.com.

September 28: Make Sure Your Landscape is Well-Grounded, 2 pm. Janet Allen will discuss the ground layer and healthy soil needed to create a healthy landscape. Presented by Habitat Gardening in Central New York. Free. Liverpool Library 310 Tulip Street, Liverpool. hgcny.org; ourhabitatgarden.org.

October 26: Learn to Identify Native Ferns and Fern Allies, 2 pm. Environmental Consultant Joe McMullen will explain how to identify common native ferns and fern allies such as club mosses and horsetails. Presented by Habitat Gardening in Central New York. Free. Liverpool Library 310 Tulip Street, Liverpool. hgcny.org; ourhabitatgarden.org.

πDeadline for Calendar Listings for the next issue (November-December) is Friday,

October 10, 2014. Please send your submissions to [email protected].

CalendarRoChESTER cont.

Page 25: Sept oct '14 ugj

Amanda’s Garden Native Perennial Nursery

Open everyday 9 a.m. until dusk, please call ahead8410 Harpers Ferry Rd., Springwater, NY 14560585-750-6288 • [email protected]

www.amandagarden.com

Fall is the best time to plant early spring blooming perennials

Unusual OrnamentalsTrees, Shrubs, Grasses, Perennials

Holmes Hollow Farm2334 Turk Hill Rd, Victor, NY 14564 • (585) 223-0959 [email protected] • www.holmeshollow.com

Directions: from Turk Hill turn on Whisperwood, go 100 yds, turn R on gravel rd, L past greenhouse and down hill.

H.A.Treichler & Sons

“We Grow Our Own”A Family Tradition Since 1854

We Have Mums!...Mums!...Mums!All sizes to 14” and hanging basket mums

...and many varieties of winter pansies

Open everyday: 9 am – 5 pm

Don’t forget our Senior Discount every Wednesday!

Miracle Gro Scotts

2687 Saunders Settlement Rd. (Rte. 31), Sanbornhatreichlerandsons.com

716/731-9390

Create a beautiful garden space using reclaimed brick pavers.Cobblestones, sidewalk slabs and curbing also available.

Online: www.exbricks.com • Call: 716-691-3061

Page 26: Sept oct '14 ugj

From the garden

Apple Galette

aboVE: Photo courtesy Flickr: Goublegus

Serves 6 – 8 CRuST1 cup all purpose flour

2 Tbsp. granulated sugar

¼ teaspoon kosher salt

¼ pound (1 stick) cold unsalted butter, diced

2 Tbsp. ice cold water

1. place flour, sugar and salt in food processor. pulse a few times to combine. add butter and pulse 12-15 times or until the butter is the size of peas. with processor running, add ice water all at once through the tube. pulse a few times to combine, but stop just before the dough is a solid mass. put the dough onto a

well floured board and form into a disk. wrap in plastic and refrigerate at least 1 hour.

2. preheat the oven to 450 degrees.3. flour the rolling pin and roll pastry into an 11" circle on

lightly floured surface. transfer to baking sheet lined with parchment paper.

FillinG1 ½ lbs. McIntosh, Macoun or Empire apples, 3 large

¼ teaspoon orange zest

¼ cup flour

¼ teaspoon kosher salt

¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon 1⁄8 teaspoon allspice

4 Tbsp. (½ stick) cold unsalted butter, diced

1. peel, core and cut apples into 8 pieces and cut each piece into 3 chunks. toss chunks with orange zest. Cover the dough with the apples, but leave a 1½" border.

2. Combine flour, sugar, salt, cinnamon and allspice in food processor and add butter and pulse until mixture is crumbly. work mixture with your fingers until holds together and then spread over apples.

3. gently fold the dough border over the apples to enclose the dough, pleating it to make a circle. bake for 20-25 minutes or until the crust is golden and the apples are tender. if it is browning too fast, turn oven to 400 degrees. allow to cool. serve warm or at room temperature. May be served with vanilla ice cream.

Recipe courtesy Marion Morse, Allyn’s Creek Garden Club.

Page 27: Sept oct '14 ugj

Eagle Bay GardensEagle Bay GardensVisit

See: 8 acres of gardens~ Over 2000 hosta varieties ~ Rare trees & shrubs ~ Unusual perennialsRestroom & picnic tables * Hundreds of hosta and other

plants for saleRt. 20, Sheridan, NY PLEASE, call for an appointment 716 792-7581 or 969-1688 E-Mail: [email protected]

Leon GinenthalOWNER

190 Seven Mile Drive, Ithaca, NY 14850

607-273-8610www.derrosenmeister.com

DerRosenmeisterHEIRLOOM &

MODERN ROSENURSERY

d e r r o s e n m e i s t e r

Much More Than Just Herbs!

Come Visit Us!We are a perennial nursery that takes pride in growing healthy, beautiful plants.

There is nothing better than taking a little piece of our garden home to your garden!

1147 Main St., Mumford • zantopiaherbgardens.comOne mile north of the Caledonia monument • 585/538-4650

2250 Transit Rd., near Seneca St. West Seneca, NY 14224 • 716/677-0681

Seneca Greenhouse “Something Good for You & Better for Your Garden.”

Invites gardeners and friends to our bountiful harvest of fall decorating needs including colorful mums, pumpkins and corn stalks

Borglum’s Iris Gardens2202 Austin Road, Geneva, NY 14456

585-526-6729

Iris - Peonies - HostaPotted Peonies 100+ varieties

Dig-Your-Own Iris & Daylilies

Opening by May 15, Sunday - FridayClosed Saturdays

[email protected] • www.Borglumsiris.comYour favorite gardening magazine has a new look.

Visit UpstateGardenersJournal.com to sign up for our web version, free.

Page 28: Sept oct '14 ugj

Garden Center• Shrubs• Trees

• Perennials

Landscape Design• Planting

• Walks/Patios• Maintenance

Country Corners Nursery

6611 Rtes. 5 & 20Bloomfield

(585) 657-7165

Coldwater Pond NurseryDwarf Conifers

Flowering Shrubs

Unique Trees

Wholesale and Retail

Hours by appointmentwww.coldwaterpond.com

315-331-8068 • [email protected] S. Marbletown Rd, Phelps, NY 14532

we grow over30 varieties of

organic garlic

ask us about usingtart cherry juice forARTHRITIS, GOUTSLEEP AID andSPORTS RECOVERY

www.singerfarmnaturals.com 716-778-7077

SINGER FARM

Chicken Coop OriginalsA country gift, garden & herb shop featuring  

hand-painted primitives, country artwork, herbal  wreaths & arrangements, oldtiques & collectibles,  

pine trees, herbs & perennials in season

Fall and Christmas Centerpiece Workshops

We are open  Thursday-Saturday, 10-5  

other days by chanceOpen Most Sundays  

in November & December716-937-7837

Christmas Open HouseNov 13-16, 20-23

13245 Clinton St., Rte. 354Alden, NY 14004

www.chickencooporiginals.com

 “As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.”—Joshua 24:15

Apples & Apple CiderAnnuals • Perennials • Herbs

Vegetable Plants • Mulch • Stones11170 Maple Ridge Rd., Medina NY 14103

585-798-4247 • Open Through Dec. 23Mon - Sat 9 - 6, also Sundays Oct. only 10 - 4

www.RobertsFarmMarket.com

Roberts Farm Market

Pudgie’sLawn & Garden Center

3646 West Main St., Batavia, NY 14020 Store: 585/343-8352 Office: 585/948-8100

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U P S T A T E G A R D E N E R S ’ J O U R N A L | 2 9

by Cathy Monrad

Autumn votivesThese votives bring fall colors and textures indoors

and the project is an easy one that kids will love to help create.

MaterialsAssortment of colorful leaves with stems removedWaxed paperCollage and decoupage medium like Mod Podge®

Small bunch of dry twigs (the straighter the better)Hot glue sticksRibbon or twineGlass votivesFall scented candles like apple, pumpkin, or spice

ToolsHeavy booksSmall paintbrushUtility knifeHot glue gun

leaf Votive1. flatten the leaves by laying them between pieces of

waxed paper with heavy books stacked on top for a couple of days. if the leaves are too dry, they will crumble; make sure they still have flexibility before starting the next step.

2. use the paintbrush to coat the vein side of a leaf with Mod podge®.

3. place leaf on the glass, smooth out any wrinkles with your fingers, then add a coat of Mod podge® to the outside.

4. repeat steps 2 and 3, arranging the leaves around the votive.

5. when you are happy with the look, add one more coat of Mod podge® to avoid missed edges.

6. let dry for at least 24 hours before adding and lighting candle. you may also choose to tie a piece of ribbon or twine around your votive.

Stick Votive1. trim the twigs to the height of the votive. i found it

easiest to score the twigs with a utility knife, then break by hand.

2. add a line of hot glue on the twig, then place on votive.

3. repeat step 2, adding twigs around the entire votive. tip: vary the twig size and spacing between each to allow candlelight through.

4. tie a piece of ribbon or twine around the sticks.5. add candle, light, and enjoy!

Cathy Monrad is the graphic designer for the Upstate Gardeners' Journal.

Did you make an autumn inspired votive? Upload an image to Pinterest and tag JaneMilliman and/or CathyMonrad- we’d love to see what our readers are creating!

Cathy's Craft Corner

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3 0 | S E P T E M B E R - O C T O B E R 2 0 1 4

Rooted

Salad days

My daughter was in a stroller the first summer

she visited the farm. six months old, with a

sunhat on her head and sunlight on her toes,

she watched (and snoozed) as my husband and i and our

Csa comrades picked the day’s crops, then washed and

packed them for the trip back to the city for distribution.

the following summer, we brought a little pop-up tent

for her and a friend. but by the next, she was working right

alongside us, eating a cherry tomato for every few she

picked, chomping fistfuls of pea shoots like a cow. this was

before bugs became “gross,” so every wiggler and caterpillar

was a new friend. the memories of those days are etched in

the mommy memory bank. the salad days. literally.

a couple years later, we switched to a Csa without a

work component, and while it’s been easier and we’ve loved

the variety on offer, it’s felt a bit weird to simply show up,

check our name off a list, and start bagging. no work at the

farm. no work at pickup. just pay our money and get our

food.

this isn’t unusual, i understand. it’s how many Csas

these days work, and how most people prefer it. but it

makes me a little sad. i miss the experience of working the

farm and the camaraderie of knowing fellow members as

more than faces in a line. Most of all, i miss exposing my

daughter to all of that and more.

so this season, instead of going back to our old Csa, we

did something radical: we skipped the Csa altogether. we

tried to skip it last year, then changed our minds, lured by

convenience. (and sure, all that good food.) but this year we

held firm.

why? so we could shop the markets, one farm and

farmer at a time, picking just what we wanted and learn-

ing from the choices along the way. times change, so we’ve

found new ways to get our farm fix. we grow a little at

home. we pick a lot at local farms. we’ve continued shop-

ping the markets to supplement our Csa. but this summer

i wanted to slow it down and make each purchase a deliber-

ate act. My daughter is young enough to love shopping by

my side, old enough to be shaped by the experience. the

salad days aren’t over yet.

Christina Le Beau lives in Rochester. She writes about rais-ing food-literate kids at www.spoonfedblog.net. A version of this essay originally appeared on Spoonfed and in New York Organic News.

by Christina Le Beau

aboVE: Photo courtesy Flickr: Wolfgang Lonien

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