Powered By Blogger

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

June 2020 Update

Hello fellow gardeners,

Are you seeing lots of birds, critters, bees and butterflies in your gardens? 
Certify your habitat during Pollinator Month,  
Anyone can create a welcoming haven for local wildlife. Turning your yard, balcony container garden, schoolyard, work landscape, or roadside greenspace into a Certified Wildlife Habitat® is fun, easy, and can make a lasting difference for wildlife. Certify this June and save 20% when you purchase any Certified Wildlife Habitat sign.  To see the requirements for garden certification as a National Wildlife refuge, go to this website: nwf.org, click on "Get Involved;" a menu will appear. Scroll down to "Certify a garden."  Your garden needs these 4 elements - food, water, shelter, and a place to raise young.  


Kathy Ramienski, one of our Garden Club members, has this certification. Here are photos of the 4 elements in her garden and some critters who inhabit this inviting space.



 

 


 

Bird visitors to the garden include: cardinals, robins, blue jays, chickadees, woodpeckers, gold finches, hummingbirds.  We had a blue bird brood in the birdhouse in the maple tree before it leafed out.  Now we have a pair of wrens making a nest in another birdhouse on a pole. This is the first time I had blue birds nest. Next year I will put a blue bird house on the pole, which is less obstructed. Hopefully they will stay and have a second brood. As you can imagine, there are countless insects, spiders, and many bees. Lately I've been seeing dragonflies.  I found 2 praying mantis egg sacs as I was cleaning out the flower beds in early spring.  I have seen quite a few toads, and one snake, see picture.  I haven't seen it in over a week, so I guess it moved on... As far as mammals, there are rabbits, deer, and an occasional fox. 
I noticed last year that as the summer blossoming plants waned, the insect pollinators - bees, hummingbird moths, wasps- had little to feed on in the back garden. I only had one aster, and some herbs. This year I added more asters and goldenrods.  Also good for pollinators are herbs that are allowed to flower.  I have a lot of thyme, and let half of it flower; I do the same with oregano.  I do not let basil flower because once it flowers, the entire plant loses its flavor. 
In my front yard, I have phlox and cosmos. My lawn has lots of clover which both the rabbits and deer like.  I also have lavender, which is not only great for pollinators, but also for humans! 



Here are some interesting sources for more information on pollinators and garden habitats:

Gardening for Pollinators  Presented by Howard County Master Gardeners and the Maryland Extension.   Monday, June 22, 2020 at 7 PM – 8:30 PM   OnlineEvent http://host.evanced.info/hclibrary/lib/eventsignup.aspID=145707&ret=http%3A%2F%2Fhost.evanced.info%2Fhclibrary%2Flib%2Feventcalendar.asp%3Fln%3DALL

Save the Pollinators Save the Planet   Ecological Landscaping  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6ejHn_fb18

A Presentation by Doug Tallamy - Nature's Best Hope   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WY4aV5hqkxY

##############################################################################

How does your garden grow?  Peonies made a good show in many gardens, along with roses and irises.  Here are some pictures from Garden Club members:
 







Please feel free to add a comment below or send photos and articles to
Jan Baweja, janbaw2@gmail.com.
Also follow us on Facebook - facebook.com/sandy spring museum garden club
Gardening has NOT been canceled.