New Roses at the Median Gardens

imag1129A few of the dedicated Median Gardens volunteers learned the best way to plant roses from GPIP member Bruce Lester, a master gardener. Bruce also volunteers at Elizabeth Park’s famous rose garden. GPIP is always looking for ways to educate our members about the care of plants and to promote an understanding of the value of biodiversity among flora.

Beware the Beasts in Your Backyard

– Adult Ed. Course a Great Success

In May 2014, GPIP partnered with the Adult & Continuing Education department to offer a course: Beware the Beast in Your Backyard to help our community recognize and control invasive plants such as Oriental Bittersweet, Japanese Knotweed, Garlic Mustard, Burning Bush, Multiflora Rose and more. Information on native plants was also included. It was a 2-night course: a classroom meeting plus an outdoor class at Riverfront Park for a Plant Walk to identify these aggressive plants. 15 people attended.

The course was taught by Michael Corcoran who is affiliated with the University of Connecticut’s College of Agriculture and Natural Resources Coverts Project and the Connecticut Audubon Society.

plant-walk-adult-ed
Class participants learn how bittersweet infests an area killing many trees on the course’s Plant Identification Walk

Mulching around Trees

Your Community Beautification Committee brings you this timely gardening tip.

By Bob Shipman and Della Winans

over_mulched_screenYou must have seen trees mulched in this manner. But do you know that this can be harmful and may cause death to your plants? Although roots require a constant moisture supply, the bark cannot sustain life in a constantly moist situation. This constant source of moisture can cause rot, fungus, and diseases to occur in the bark.

The mulch around this tree is ten inches deep! It should be no deeper than four inches and the mulch should be back at least three inches from the trunk and root flare at the base.

You may not notice any ill effect in the first year or two, but the long-term effect can cause death. You must keep mulch back at least three inches from the trunk. This includes the portion of the trunk that flares out at the base.

The purpose of mulching is to retain moisture, moderate soil temperature, reduce weed competition, protect the plant from mechanical damage from lawn mowers and string trimmers, and add a finished appearance to the planting. But don’t use too much. Two to four inches above the proper soil level is the recommended depth. So if you plan to re-mulch this year, be sure the total depth of mulch does not exceed four inches. The roots near the surface need oxygen. A deep mulch prohibits oxygen from reaching the root system.

Organic mulches breakdown and contribute to the fertility and structure of your soil. Fine textured mulches such as leaf compost or finely ground bark mulch should be applied only two inches deep, while coarse textured mulches such as bark nuggets, may be piled up to four inches deep. The coarse nuggets allow more air penetration whereas fine textured mulch packs down and impedes air penetration.

Mulches whose main component is wood (cellulose) may attract termites and also tie up the nitrogen from your soil as they decompose. Since bark contains little cellulose, composted bark mulch is preferable over other wood mulches. Many of the red color-enhanced mulches are composed of shredded wood and therefore deplete the soil of the nitrogen that your plants need for good growth.

Mulching has many beneficial aspects for your plants. It has the additional benefit of adding a finished appearance to your total landscape. However the mulch should not be the dominant feature of the landscape. The overall design and the plants themselves should be the focal point.