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DROP BOX AVAILABLE!!!
At the South entrance of the county building is
a drop-box, labeled payment box. Label
whatever you are putting in it for the
Extension office and you can drop things off
AFTER HOURS!
Find our Website: www.extension.purdue.edu/marshall
Marshall County, The Garden Gate Published by: Marshall County Extension Staff,
~Robert Yoder, Ag & Natural Resources Educator
~Maria Casbon, HHS/ANR Secretary
Purdue Extension Marshall County Ag & Natural Resources
www.facebook.com/marshallanr
Purdue Extension Marshall County Health & Human Sciences
www.facebook.com/marshallhhs
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Getting Your Herb Garden Ready for Winter By: Linda Strain
The cooler days that we have already experienced are letting us know that the first frost is really not far away. As much as we often put it off, the time is upon us to prepare the herb garden for winter.
We need to bring in our last cuttings for drying, gather the herbs in small pots for indoors that we want to use fresh over the winter and tidy up the garden area and prepare it for its upcoming winter dormancy. You do not want to do excessive cuttings at this time because it tends to promote new growth. You do not want the plant to put its energy into new growth when its energy should be directed to prepare for winter.
Any annual herbs that you grew will die at the first frost. They can be pulled up now or kept going if you are still getting viable cuttings for fresh and dried use. Your perennial herbs need your attention too.
If you have not already stopped fertilizing your herbs, you should do so now. If you continue to “feed” your herbs they will actively try to keep growing instead of becoming acclimated for the cold weather ahead. They will winter over in a much healthier state if you allow their growth to stop at this time. You do want to keep watering your herbs in dry times because if they are not getting enough water they will face winter in a more stressed state.
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Calendar of Events October
5, 8, 19, 29— Master Gardener Intern Class at Marshall County Extension Office Rm. 304 from 6-9pm
12—Plant swap & Educational presentation 6pm @ Ponderosa
17—Master Gardener Intern Class at Marshall County Extension Office Rm. 304 26—Master Gardener Intern Class at Marshall County Extension Office Rm. 207 from 6-9pm
November 2, 9, 16, 30—Master Gardener Intern Class at Marshall County Extension Office Rm. 304 from 6-9pm
3—Election Day (office closed)
7— Harvest Dinner
11—Veterans Day (office closed) 23—Master Gardener Intern Class at Marshall County Extension Office Rm. 207 from 6-9pm
26—Thanksgiving Day (office closed)
27—Office Closed
December
3—Master Gardener Intern Class at Marshall County Extension Office Rm. 207 from 6-9pm
5—Breakfast Meeting at Ponderosa 9:00am 10—Master Gardener Intern Class at Marshall County Extension Office Rm. 304 from 6-9pm
24—Christmas Eve (office closed)
25—Christmas Day (office closed)
Our October meeting is our annual plant swap! If you have beds to thin and plants to share, please bring them to our Plant Swap at Ponderosa Parking lot at 6:00 pm on Monday, October 13th. You never know, a new favorite for you may be available to take home. See you on the 13th!
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2015 Master Gardener Officers
President: Donna Napier, 574-586-3621
Vice President: Barbara White, 574-936-2443
Secretary: Norma Goodsell, 574-784-2248
Treasurer: Carol Nelson, 574-546-2458
Board Members
Marion Ellis Jr.
Amy Heinke
Darlene Hlavacek
We would love your help!
If you are interested in contributing in a future newsletter, please let me know by the 15th of each month by emailing
mcasbon@purdue.edu or ryoder@purdue.edu. Thank you!
GARDEN (Flowers, vegetables and small fruits) Cont.
• Remove plant debris from the garden to protect next year's
planting from insect and disease buildup. Compost plant refuse
by alternating layers of soil, plant material, and manure or
commercial fertilizer.
• Have garden soil tested for fertilizer needs every three to five years.
• Plowing and incorporating organic matter in the fall avoids the
rush of garden activities and waterlogged soil in spring. Fall-
prepared soils also tend to warm faster and allow earlier planting
in spring.
• Carve a Halloween jack-o'-lantern.
• Dig tender, garden flower bulbs for winter storage. Gladiolus
corms should be dug when leaves begin turning yellow.
Caladiums, geraniums and tuberous begonias should be lifted
before killing frost. Dig canna and dahlia roots after a heavy
frost. Allow to air dry, then pack in dry peat moss or vermiculite,
and store in a cool location.
• Complete planting of spring-flowering bulbs.
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Inside this issue… Getting Your Herb Garden Ready For Winter……………..…..…….…..2 Plant Swap & Educational Presentation……………………………………..3 Women In Ag………………………………………………………....………………..…….4 2015 Marshall County Extension Board Annual Meeting...…….…..5 Viceroys Wannabe Monarchs………………………….….……………...…………6 Viceroys Wannabe Monarchs Cont. ...............................….…...………...7 October Garden Calendar ..………………………………………….….…………..8 October Garden Calendar Cont. ………………………………………….…..….9 October Garden Calendar Cont. …………………………………………….….10 Calendar of Events…………………………………………….………………….……….11
PLANT SWAP & EDUCATIONAL
PRESENTATION
The Master Gardeners will be having a plant swap on October 12th at 6:00 p.m. at the
Plymouth Ponderosa. Karen Richey, Health and Human Science Educator, will be hosting an
educational lesson on the do’s and don’ts of food preservation. Hope to see many of you there!!!
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• Strawberry plants need protection from winter's extremes, but
applying winter mulch too early may cause crowns to rot. Apply
winter protection when plants are dormant but before
temperatures drop below 20 degrees F, usually late November or
early December.
• Rake or shred large, fallen tree leaves such as maple, to prevent
them from matting down and smothering grass. Raking smaller
leaves, such as honey locust, is optional.
• Continue mowing lawn as needed.
GARDEN (Flowers, vegetables and small fruits)
• Harvest root crops and store in a cold (32 degrees F), humid
location. Storing produce in perforated, plastic bags is a
convenient, easy way to increase humidity.
• Harvest Brussels sprouts as they develop in the axils of the
leaves from the bottom of the stem. Brussels sprouts will
continue to develop up the stem.
• Harvest pumpkins and winter squash before frost, but when
rind is hard and fully colored. Store in a cool location until ready
to use.
• Harvest gourds when stems begin to brown and dry. Cure at 70
-80 degrees F for two to four weeks.
• Harvest mature, green tomatoes before frost and ripen indoors
in the dark. Warmer temperatures lead to faster ripening.
• Asparagus top growth should not be removed until foliage yel-
lows. Let foliage stand over winter to collect snows for insulation
and moisture.
September and October are good months to apply broadleaf
weed killers to lawns. Be sure to follow all label directions,
and choose a calm day to prevent spray drift.
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By: B. Rosie Lerner, Extension Consumer Horticulturist,
Purdue University
You want to remove any blackened stems of herbs to reduce the
chance of carry-over of any plant disease. You can cut your plants
back to about two-three inches above the ground and then
surround them with a 3-inch layer of organic mulch. You should
wait until after the first freeze before doing this. The mulching will
keep the soil in the herb bed a more consistent temperature.
HOME (Indoor plants and activities)
• Keep poinsettias in complete darkness for 15 hours each day -
for example, between 5 p.m. and 8 a.m. - for eight to 10 weeks
until red bracts begin to show.
• Pot spring-flowering bulbs to force into bloom indoors. Moisten
soil and refrigerate 10 to 13 weeks. Transfer to a cool, sunny loca-
tion, and allow an additional three to four weeks for blooming.
• Houseplants, especially those grown outdoors during the sum-
mer, commonly drop some or many of their leaves in response to
the lower natural light intensity in autumn and reduced light in-
tensity indoors.
• Water indoor plants less frequently, and discontinue fertilizer as
plants slow down or stop growing for the winter season.
YARD (Lawns, woody ornamentals and fruits)
• Keep plants, especially newly planted stock, well watered until
ground freezes.
• Have soil ready to mound roses for winter protection. Do not
mound or cover roses until after leaves drop and soil is near
freezing, usually late November or early December.
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Viceroys Wannabe Monarchs
Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, or so English cleric Charles Colton wrote in 1820. It was one of the bits of wisdom that he included in his book Lacon; or Many Things in a Few Words: Addressed to Those Who Think. Now almost 200 years later, this bit of wisdom might still be true.
Apparently marketing executives think so. They spend millions of dollars on advertising campaigns where well-known celebrities hawk products and services. That is because many of us want to imitate those celebrities and are willing to part with cold, hard cash to do so. Think Michael Jordan and Air Jordan basketball shoes or Elizabeth Taylor and White Diamonds perfume. Then there is Eric Baldwin for Priceline.com and the Capital One Venture card that has also been promoted by the likes of Samuel L. Jackson and Jennifer Garner.
Imitation isn’t something that we humans invented. You might just say that we merely imitated what was a general practice in nature. Imitation has been around for millions of years in the animal and plant world. While some people imitate other people as an ego boast, imitation in the rest of the living world is a matter of survival.
In general terms, imitation in the animal world boils down to one of two types: “I want to be seen” or “I don’t want to be seen.” Either way, the benefit is to avoid becoming a meal for something. It is an eat-or-be-eaten world out there. Alfred Lord Tennyson summed it up in Canto 56 of In Memoriam by writing “Tho’ nature, red in tooth and claw.”
Animals employ a number of tools including flying, jumping or running to escape ending up in the gut of some hungry predator. Some animals are able to defend themselves by biting or stinging. Other animals just hide from danger. A few resort to trickery through resemblance to something they are not. This is the use of protective coloration. Biologically, such protective coloration is called mimicry.
Monarch Butterfly
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In the world of insects, one of the best-known examples of mimicry is between the monarch and viceroy butterflies. The monarch is one of the most widely recognized butterflies in North America. This distinctive brown butterfly with the black stripes migrates northward from its wintering site in the mountains of Mexico each spring, and individuals two or three generations later return each fall. In between these two trips, some of which cover 2,000 miles, adult female monarchs oviposit eggs on milkweed plants that serve as food for their caterpillars.
Milkweeds aren’t the most hospitable of host plants because they produce an antifeeding chemical called cardiac glycoside. A few species of insects, including the monarchs, can tolerate this bitter substance when eating the milkweed. Not only do the monarch caterpillars tolerate the chemical, they store it in their tissues so they become bitter-tasting to potential predators. The cardiac glycoside is passed on to the butterfly when the caterpillar pupates. As a result, monarch butterflies are bitter-tasting to a bird that tries to eat one. That bitter taste lingers in the mind of the bird as does the color pattern of the butterfly, and, as a result, it will not try to eat another one. That is protective coloration for the monarch.
Another butterfly that resembles the monarch in color and marking is the viceroy. The viceroy is a bit smaller and has a black line across the hind wing that is lacking in the monarch. However a bird that had a bad experience with a monarch as food will also avoid the viceroy. This historically had been called Batesian mimicry that is defined as a good-tasting insect mimicking a bad-tasting insect. For the system to work, the monarch model must be more numerous than the viceroy mimic. That is so predators learn quickly that the food item is bad-tasting without devouring the good-tasting mimics before the lesson is learned.
Some scientists argue today that the viceroy also has a bad taste, and that means the system is really what is named Mullerian mimicry – where two species that taste bad benefit each other. Either way, it is clear that the two species are mimics of each other. I suspect it is not just because the viceroy is trying to flatter the monarch by wearing the same outfit!
By Tom Turpin, Professor / Insect Outreach / Instruction Development Specialist
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