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PLEASE NOTE: In the autumn of 1995, we hatched the idea for a free, local gardening publication. The following spring, we published the first issue of Michigan Gardener magazine. Advertisers, readers, and distribution sites embraced our vision. Thus began an exciting journey of helping our local gardening community grow and prosper.
After 27 years, nearly 200 issues published, and millions of copies printed, we have decided it is time to end the publication of our Print Magazine and E-Newsletter.

Archive for the Clippings department

Naturalizing the Home Garden: A Native Garden Design Workshop for Beginners

February 28, 2014   •   Leave a Comment

Friends of the Rouge and the Alliance of Rouge Communities have organized native garden design workshops in metropolitan Detroit to educate residents about the ecological and economic benefits of gardening with native wildflowers and grasses.

The leading source of pollution in the Rouge River is contaminated stormwater. The quantity of rainwater that rushes to the river during every rain event wreaks havoc on the river system and undermines the great work that has been done to improve water quality. When the river rapidly rises, stream banks are stripped of vegetation and sediment enters the water. This clogs the gills of fish and insect larva the fish feed on.

Watershed residents can easily reduce the amount of rainwater that leaves their property by creating attractive native gardens that are strategically placed to absorb rain water.

Workshop dates and locations:

  • Wednesday, March 5, 6:00-7:15 p.m.
    Livonia Civic Center Library, 32777 5 Mile Road, Livonia
  • Monday, March 31, 6:00-7:15 p.m.
    Cranbrook Institute of Science, 39221 Woodward Ave, Bloomfield Hills
  • Tuesday, April 15, 6:00-7:15 p.m.
    Caroline Kennedy Library, 24590 George Ave, Dearborn Heights

Optional expert assistance is available for a limited number of workshop attendees immediately following the workshop. Interested persons are encouraged to register early as space is limited. Registration is required for expert assistance. Information and registration is available online or by calling 313-792-9621.

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: Cranbrook, Dearborn Heights, Livonia, native garden design, Rouge River

NASA working on growing a moon garden

February 24, 2014   •   Leave a Comment

While catching up on some recent stories, this one caught our eye:

Gardens on the moon. It sounds like a particularly whimsical children’s book. But if NASA has its way, it might become more than a fantasy story. The space agency revealed plans this past week to grow a series of plants on the moon: basil, turnips and a little white flowered planet called Arabidopsis.

Read or listen to the full story on NPR.org…

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: garden, moon, NASA

Growing Great Gardens conference

February 18, 2014   •   Leave a Comment

The conference date is Saturday, March 15, 8-4 p.m. at the Wayne County Community College in Taylor.
Attendees can look forward to a low-cost, high-value day of learning, along with fun surprises and shopping. There is something for everyone—from the person who wants to try gardening for the first time, to the gardening professional who wants to learn the latest in garden trends. Returning this year is the Garden Marketplace, with products including fanciful garden art, stepping stones, birdhouses, teas, indoor plants, soaps, baskets, garden tools, and jewelry.

The speakers and topics include:
Dr. Laura Deeter, Associate Professor of Horticulture at The Ohio State University:
• Hortus Mortus: Plants You Gotta Have!
• Getting to “Know” Maintenance: Tips and Tricks to Make Perennials Work for You

Rebecca Titus, Farm Manager of Titus Farms:
• Vegetables of a Different Color.

Jack Barnwell, from Barnwell Landscape & Garden:
• Pedal Power: Creating the Signature Mackinac Island Look.

Registration is $35 until February 21 and $45 after. For more information, please click here.

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: conference, Dr. Laura Deeter, Jack Barnwell, Michigan, Rebecca Titus, taylor

2014 MSU Extension Smart Gardening Conference

February 13, 2014   •   Leave a Comment

The 2014 Michigan State University Extension Smart Gardening Conference will be held in Grand Rapids on Saturday, March 8, 8:15 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The day includes 4 lectures and a vendor marketplace. Participants will learn how their everyday efforts at home can have earth-friendly impacts. The 2014 presenters are:

  • Melinda Myers, nationally-known gardening expert, TV/radio host, and author: “Create a Smart Garden with Year-Round Interest”
  • Dr. George Bird, Michigan State University, Department of Entomology: “Smart Soils and Good Practices: Keys to Building a High Quality, Sustainable Garden”
  • Chuck Martin, Horticulturist at Dow Gardens: “Practicing Phenology is Phun!”
  • Dr. Douglas Tallamy, Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware and author of Bringing Nature Home: “Smart Gardening for Life”

For more information or to register download this PDF.

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: Chuck Martin, Douglas Tallamy, George Bird, Melinda Myers, Michigan State, MSU, Smart Gardening

Proven Winners presents Outdoor Living Extravaganza

February 5, 2014   •   Leave a Comment

Proven Winners is once again bringing this educational gardening seminar to Michigan on Saturday, March 8 in Grand Rapids. Attendees will learn from experts about creative new ways to use color, the easiest ways to grow plant varieties, how to put together exceptional containers, and much more.

In addition, participants will receive a bag of exciting gifts, including a plant. Plus, lunch, beverages, and snacks, as well as plenty of chances to win great prizes. Even non-gardeners will enjoy this relaxed and entertaining look at what’s new in outdoor décor.

For more information and to register, click here.

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: Grand Rapids, Proven Winners, seminar

Light up your life with glow-in-the-dark plants

January 15, 2014   •   Leave a Comment

The plant in regular light, left, and in darkness, right. (Credit: Bioglow)
The plant in regular light, left, and in darkness, right.
(Credit: Bioglow)

CNET:

When it comes to living things that illuminate, a plant is probably your best bet for a low-maintenance conversation piece to have in your home. It’s much easier to deal with than a jellyfish, or even a glow-in-the-dark cat. Bioglow is preparing to offer its bioengineered Starlight Avatar autoluminescent ornamental houseplants to the public.

Competing companies have popped up, but Bioglow has been leading the movement ever since molecular biologist Alexander Krichevsky created what the company calls the first light-producing plants and published his findings in 2010.

Read the full story here…

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: autoluminescent, bioglow, glow, glowing, plants, Starlight Avatar

Chicago Botanic Garden hosts orchid show

January 7, 2014   •   Leave a Comment

Paradise Jewel 'Flame' (Photo: By Dougie WII via Wikimedia Commons)
Paradise Jewel ‘Flame’ (Photo: By Dougie WII via Wikimedia Commons)

The Chicago Botanic Garden Orchid Show will provide an infusion of warmth and color to guests visiting the Chicago Botanic Garden this winter. The event will run daily from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, February 15, through Sunday, March 16, 2014.

Visitors will enter the exhibition through an orchid-and-palm allée, then view a large orchid tree surrounded by other displays. The greenhouses will be filled with orchids on trees, in the ground, and suspended on hanging structures. The effect will give visitors the feeling of being surrounded by colorful, fragrant blooms. Guests can also wind their way through orchid columns as they read about conservation efforts.

This showcase of unusual and stunning orchids will give visitors the opportunity to learn about one of the largest, most diverse and revered flowering plant families.

The Illinois Orchid Society will have experts on hand to answer questions, provide re-potting services, and offer a marketplace every weekend.

For more information, click here.

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: chicago, orchids, show

Stunning macro photography of bees

January 3, 2014   •   Leave a Comment

Megachile fortis (Photo: Sam Droege via Flickr)
Megachile fortis (Photo: Sam Droege via Flickr)

We discovered these fascinating macro photographs of bees and other insects by Sam Droege, a biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Bee Monitoring Lab. Friend or foe, all are interesting to look at. Check out his gallery on Flickr.

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: bees, photography, USGS

Rock Garden Expert to Speak at Fernwood

December 25, 2013   •   Leave a Comment

panayoti
Panayoti Kelaidis

Fernwood Botanical Garden in Niles, Michigan welcomes Denver Botanic Gardens’ rock garden expert, Panayoti Kelaidis, on Saturday, January 4, from 2:00 to 3:30 pm. He will present “The Gardener’s Year: Journey of a Rock Garden Plantsman.”

Kelaidis, Senior Curator and Director of Outreach at Denver Botanic Gardens, was the designer of its Rock Alpine Garden, one of the best collections of alpine plants in North America. Past president of the Rocky Mountain Chapter of the American Rock Garden Society, he received the Award of Excellence from National Garden Clubs, the most prestigious award given by the organization. He also received the 2000 Arthur Hoyt Scott Medal from Swarthmore College, one of the highest honors in American horticulture.

Kelaidis will present a lively lecture chronicling his love of rock garden plants and how the journey of gardeners is personal, but often can lead to much more. He speaks about his own interest in plants at a young age, which led to a career in gardening, world travel, and plant exploration.

This special program is $25, and Fernwood members are admitted free. Please register by Friday, January 3. For more information, please visit www.fernwoodbotanical.org.

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: expert, Fernwood, Panayoti Kelaidis, Rock Garden

Genetic sequence unlocks the origin of flowers

December 20, 2013   •   Leave a Comment

The plant Amborella is found natively only in New Caledonian island of Grande Terre in the South Pacific. (Photo: Sangtee Kim)
The plant Amborella is found natively only in New Caledonian island of Grande Terre in the South Pacific. (Photo: Sangtee Kim)

Nature:

A shrub with cream-coloured flowers that is the closest living descendant of Earth’s first flowering plants has had its genome decoded. The sequence of Amborella trichopoda hints at the genetic adaptations that helped flowers to emerge and conquer the world some 160 million years ago — an evolutionary explosion described by Charles Darwin as an “abominable mystery”.

Read the full story here…

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: Amborella trichopoda, flowers, genetic, genome, oldest

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