Advertisement

PLANTWISE

Posts tagged with: Gardening Events

Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation
things to do

InFARMation at Roots Brewing

tonight – Wed June 9

Email
Infarmation_in_january

A little beer and a lot of learning! This is from January’s cozy InFARMation event.

Interested in the many facets of urban farming? Tonight, June 9, at 6:30, Naomi Montacre from Naomi’s Organic Farm Supply, moderates a panel titled Urban Farming in Portland at Roots Organic Brewing in Southeast Portland. This event, sponsored by Friends of Family Farmers, is free and open to the public, of course.

Show up at 5:30, mill about, have some delicious beer and talk with fellow farming enthusiasts.

These InFARMation events (full schedule here) are fun, fascinating and generate some great discussion on the featured topics. I’ve attended a few and learned a lot. It’s like a swarming beehive in there, with organic beer flowing and passionate people sharing information about what they love most. If you are a frequenter of farmers’ markets, you will surely see some familiar faces.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Chickens, Farmers Markets

Things To Do

Wine and Roses – Seriously!

Heirloom Old Garden Roses’ Rose Days – this weekend

Email
Swan_rose

Rain-drenched Rosa ‘Swan’ – a rose I found at Heirloom a few years ago and which has been a stalwart in bouquets ever since.

It’s been a couple of years since my last visit out to Heirloom Old Garden Roses. And there’s no better incentive to get me to do something than to mention that there will be wine so I might just head out there this coming weekend Saturday June 5 and Sunday June 6 from 9 am to 5 pm for Heirloom’s annual Rose Days, timed to coincide with the absolute abundance of roses coming into flower right now.

Heirloom Rose Nursery in St Paul, Oregon sells old-fashioned new roses as well as the gorgeous and historic old roses. They are all own root, which means they are not grafted onto a different root stock, but grown directly from cuttings. Own root roses are smaller when you buy them but once established, result in healthier plants that never “revert” to the grafted rootstock. Now that I’ve grown them, I’m a bit of a snob about grafted roses, which are basically only grafted to produce larger, cheaper plants faster, for consumers who don’t know the difference.

The selection at Heirloom Roses is astounding and there are extensive, labeled gardens through which you can wander and see the roses doing their magical thing. Guided tours will be offered both days. The weekend’s events include:

- Wine by Hip Chicks Do Wine
- Chocolate by Honest Chocolates
- BBQ lunch (probably hot dogs and hamburgers)
- Music by Rio Con Brio
- Non-rose perennial plants for sale by N&M Herb Nursery
- Garden art, a demonstration on gardening tool use, etc.

Note that pets are not allowed in the gardens.

Heirloom Roses is about 25 miles from Portland – it takes about 30-45 minutes to get there from downtown. (Directions). And although I can’t say what the weather will be doing, I will say that if you bring your umbrella, gum boots and a good friend or two, you’ll have fun no matter how much it rains.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Flowers, Outdoor Gardening

things to do

Several Great Reasons to Join the HPSO

several great gardeny and planty events in the coming weeks

Email
Silverstar_wildflowers

Silver Star Mountain in July

The Hardy Plant Society of Oregon (HPSO) is a fantastic local horticultural organization that offers free open gardens to members (you get a book with addresses and dates), lectures, classes, and a great horticultural book library, among other things. It’s a great way to meet other gardeners – and the free, casual Open Gardens held almost year-round allow you to get an intimate look into members gardens all over town. The cost is only $35/year per person; $45 for two people in a single household; and $25/year for students.

Here are some upcoming events from the HPSO calendar:

Garden Conservancy Open Gardens Tour – in partnership with HPSO
Five glorious gardens in Northwest Portland
June 5, 2010 from 10 am to 4 pm.
Garden descriptions and driving directions on the HPSO website. Cost: $5 per garden or six gardens for $25. (You don’t need to be a HPSO member for this tour)

Drought Tolerant Plant Nursery Tour
HPSO members only – part of the HPSO Garden School – Saturday June 5 from 11 – 4:30

Learn about gorgeous drought tolerant plants and gardens while touring two of Oregon’s unique nurseries, Dancing Oaks Nursery (Monmouth) and Daryll’s Nursery (Dallas). The tour begins at 11 am at Dancing Oaks with a walking lecture on drought tolerant plants while you admire their display gardens. A boxed lunch, tea, and dessert in the pavilion follow, with time to shop for plants at a 15% discount! At 2:30, arrive at Daryll’s Nursery for a walking lecture focusing on Cistus (over 40 varieties) and ornamental grasses (over 100 varieties). After the lecture there is time for more shopping at a 15% discount! If you’d like to work towards less watering in your garden, this is a great event to learn more about how. Carpooling is encouraged. Cost: $19 for members and their guests.

Hardy Arisaemas & Other Aroids with Norm Kalbfleisch
A geeky plant class for lovers of unusual shade plants (part of the HPSO’s Gen(i)us Program):
Tuesday July 13 @ 7 pm
Multnomah Center, 7688 SW Capitol Hwy, Portland, OR 97219

Two Amazing Hikes With Plant Explorer and Nurserywoman Diana Reeck

1. Grassy Knoll Wildflower Hike & Intro to Using Field Guides
Wednesday, June 30, 8:30 am – 4 pm

2. Silver Star Mountain Wildflower Hike & Intro to Using Field Guides
Saturday, July 10, 8:30 – 4 pm

Two hikes NOT TO BE MISSED. Diana Reeck is a gem: you’ll learn a lot, have a blast, and see devastatingly beautiful wildflowers, all of which she can identify – so no more “shoot, I wish I knew what that was…” – she will know and will help you figure out how to identify plants yourself using a field guide. Diana co-founded Collector’s Nursery and has traveled throughout the Pacific Northwest, as well as more widely, botanizing and collecting plants. Carpooling from a designated meeting point will be organized for each hike.
More information and online registration here or telephone the HPSO office at 503.224.5718

Silverstar_gentian

Gentian on Silver Star Mountain

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events

plant of the week

Bearded Iris

Take a new look at old-fashioned bearded iris (Iris germanica)

Email
Iris_2_edith_wolfort

Iris ‘Edith Wolfort’

The bearded iris is a common plant and for some, that makes it uninteresting. It is seen as a dowdy, old-fashioned plant. And while it’s dramatic in flower, its flowers fade to squishy brown blobs and then it does nothing for a year – until the following spring. All this is worsened by the fact that hybridizers have done some truly bizarre things to bearded iris, creating unlikely, often gaudy color combinations that don’t always play well with other plants.

But don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater!

There are many beautiful hybrids that blend really nicely into gardens, from classic, old-fashioned pastels, subtle bicolors and some frilly-margined little confections to bold, elegant purple, orange, black and even brown flowered selections that look modern and dramatic in single-color drifts. If the flowering stalks are cut down after flowering and any dead leaves pulled off in the fall and spring, the blue-green, blade-like foliage can look rather attractive.

Iris_3_

I can picture a drift of this iris looking fantastic in front of an apple-greenish house.

It’s really just a matter of selecting your color carefully and then clearing out the dead stems and leaves the minute they start to bother you. That, plus dividing the plants every few years, is pretty much all that’s required in terms of maintenance.

As far as their general needs, bearded iris like good drainage, a half day or more of sun, and moisture during the growing season (fall to spring, provided courtesy of Mother Nature around here). Normal, unimproved garden soil doesn’t faze these iris, as long as it drains okay. I’ve never done it but you can sprinkle general purpose organic fertilizer in (best time=when tulips are blooming) and scratch in a little lime to sweeten the soil – or plant them near concrete paving, which leaches lime into the soil. They are truly the easiest of garden plants to grow.

Which is what I told a writer for the Women’s Wear Daily publication, “Beauty Biz,” who interviewed me for a piece she was writing recently about the use of iris in cosmetics and perfumery (she writes a nice monthly column on plants that are used in the beauty industry). Iris grow nearly as well back east as they do here so I could confidently say iris are dirt-easy from coast to coast. (Humid parts of the South are the only areas of the continental US where they don’t thrive.)

Iris_w_alliums

Iris and alliums are a great combination!

You can see acres and acres of bearded iris in glorious flower right now by heading down to Salem to Schreiner’s Iris. Their display gardens are open May 7 – June 6 from 9 to 6 daily. You can wander their 10 acres of well-labeled display gardens and buy iris for your garden – or just take home luxurious bouquets for $6 per dozen stems.

The next couple weeks are peak bearded iris blooming time. If you’re looking to get out of town to see iris – and get far, far away from the urban grind – check out these events:

The Keizer Iris Parade, May 22 at 10:30 am. The parade begins at the corner of Lockhaven and River Road in Keizer, Oregon and proceeds south along River Road to Glynbrook. For more information, go to the Keizer Chamber of Commerce’s iris festival site.

Schreiner’s Iris Gardens Annual Memorial Day Chicken BBQ – May 31, 11:30 am to 4 pm. Features the culinary delights of the Gervais Knights of Columbus, and offering the lively music of the Capital City Jazz Band from 1 to 5 pm. I’ve never been but I hope to go this year – it could be pretty snazzy.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Flowers

weeds

Oregon Invasive Weed Awareness Week 2010

May 16 to May 22, 2010

Email
Buddleia_black_knight

Black Knight – a rich, dark purple Buddleia with a delicious, plummy fragrance – was always my favorite butterfly bush. I pulled mine out about 15 years ago when I first heard about its invasive qualities. This spring, it was finally put on the quarantine list.

This week is Oregon Invasive Weed Awareness Week. What – that doesn’t sound like fun?

The intent of this wild publicity stunt (not really) is to increase public knowledge concerning invasive plant species throughout the state and help people learn how to address the problem of invasive species on their own property and in public spaces.

It may sound peripheral but it’s a huge problem with far-reaching economic and environmental consequences.

There are squidzillions of weedy plant species that are causing trouble for Oregon’s farms, ranches, nurseries, property owners and gardeners. They include plants brought in for ornamental, culinary, and medicinal purposes – even just hitchhikers on people’s shoes or boats – but all share one result: they spread rapidly and out-compete vital forage, farm and nursery crops, and native plants in their natural habitats.

Many of these plants are not ornamentals – they are weeds, pure and simple. Garlic mustard was originally introduced as food; nobody is trying to sell this scruffy little biennial herb anymore. But there are plenty of plants that pose a risk to native flora that have been sold in retail nurseries right up til recently.

On February 4 of this year, the Oregon noxious weed quarantine (OAR 603-52-1200) was amended to regulate three popular ornamental plants: butterfly bush, English ivy, and Scotch broom. A complete copy of the amended quarantine can be found here. Many people are not aware of the new rules – so here’s the scoop on these three newly-regulated invasive plant species:

Butterfly bush (Buddleia davidii and cultivars) is no longer permitted (except to sell back-stock to out-of-state buyers) – meantime, OSU and others are working on seedless cultivars; English ivy (Hedera helix) and the closely related and similarly invasive H. hibernica are prohibited from propagation, transport, purchase, or sale – including for indoor/patio, floral arrangements and topiary uses. Businesses may sell what they have on hand but may not buy new stock. The prohibition will be enforced starting June 1, 2010. And finally, Scotch broom (Cytisus scoparius), all varieties and cultivars, is prohibited.

Homeowners are not legally required to pull it out of their gardens. But if I still had it, I sure would.

To learn more about weeds, click here, on the Oregon Noxious Weed Control Program at the Oregon Department of Agriculture. Here’s Oregon’s Noxious Weed List. And here are profiles of all the weeds, with images and maps. If you’d like to go on a hike through the Nature Conservancy or another organization and help pull weeds while learning, check out this calendar of events is available, as well as Frequently Asked Questions about weeds.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Weeds

upcoming events

Plant Sales, Garden Tours and More

Email
Swallowtail_on_buddleia

A swallowtail enjoying the nectar from an invasive plant, butterfly bush (Buddleia davidii) – learn about both the butterfly and the butterfly bush, this weekend.

This Friday, Saturday and Sunday hold some fantastic garden-related events: you can buy quality native plants, train to identify invasive weeds, tour ten fabulous Naturescaped gardens, and – my favorite – learn about native pollinators at a seminar at the Zoo.

Xerces Society’s Pollinator Workshop
Friday May 14 from 9 – 3:30 Seminar at the Oregon Zoo (directions here)
This seminar will cover pollinators and pollinator conservation including native bee biology and identification and choosing plants and creating habitat to support pollinators around your home, garden or farm. Register on line. The cost – $33 – includes lunch and zoo admission. For more information, contact Melissa Protz: 503-226-1561 x5868.

Multnomah County Weed Watchers Free Weed Training
Friday May 14 and Saturday May 15 from 12 – 2
Metro Regional Center
600 NE Grand Ave.
Portland, OR USA 97232
Help protect Oregon’s landscape by preventing the spread of harmful invasive species. You’ll discover tips to identify, locate and report invasive species before they become a problem, with live and preserved invasive specimens to examine. Details here; register here.

Naturescaping for Backyard Habitats Garden Tour
Saturday May 15, 11 – 4
Organized by the Backyard Habitat Certification Program and East Multnomah Soil and Water Conservation District’s Naturescaping program.
Visit 10 Certified Backyard Habitats – tour the gardens, chat with garden hosts, and gather ideas for naturescaping your own yard to create habitat for native creatures including birds and insects. Register on line here. If you’re interested in turning your own garden into a Certified Backyard Habitat, sign up for a home visit here.

Portland Audubon’s 14th Annual Native Plant Sale
Saturday May 15 and Sunday May 16, 10 – 4
Audubon Society of Portland
5151 NW Cornell Road
Portland, OR 97210
For information about this and other Audubon events, go to the Audubon Society’s calendar.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Plant Sale, Native Plants

plant of the week

Blanche Rock Rose

Cistus ‘Blanche’ (properly known as C. ×aguilarii)

Email
Cistus_blanche_w_raindrop

If you love fragrant plants, try Blanche rock rose (Cistus ‘Blanche’) in your garden. Interestingly, it’s not the flowers that are fragrant – it’s the gorgeous, resinous foliage that gives off this sweet, piney-spicy perfume, particularly when the sun hits the leaves. If you’ve ever traveled in the Mediterranean, the scent of this plant’s leaves will transport you to the region faster than a cold glass of fino sherry.

Cistus_blanche_foliage

The long, slender leaves are dark green with crimped, ruffled margins. Plump, rusty rose-tinted buds appear in clusters at the end of the new growth. And the flowers themselves are gigantic – I just measured one at 4 inches across. The petals are pristine, almost translucent white and have a satiny, tissue-paper appearance, with yellow, orange-tipped stamens.

Flowers open in the morning and are cast off the plant and fall to the ground as the day wears on. It’s very romantic, the way the flowers cycle through birth and senescence daily through the month of May, until the last flowers of the season appear in early June.

After flowering, rock roses go into a summer rest, as do many plants from summer-dry regions. These are ideal for drought-tolerant garden schemes: once established, rock roses need little to no water in summer except in the driest spot.

They require good drainage, full sun, and a warm position (reflected heat is fine). Blanche is cold-hardy to around 10-15 F,. Mine sailed through last winter without a sign of damage but was a little frazzled after the previous winter, due to the cold winds.

Blanche rock rose reaches about 6 feet tall and 5 feet wide. It has a nice upright habit, although any rock rose will need a bit of pruning after flowering to keep it tidy unless its grown in very lean, dry soil.

For lots more information about rock roses, click here, where you will find the results of extensive testing by OSU researchers on this diverse group of plants.

Cistus_blanche

Update:

For more information on rock roses, head over to a Hardy Plant Society of Oregon lecture on the subject by one of Oregon’s premier rock roses experts, David Mason of Hedgerows Nursery in McMinnville. David will speak about rock roses (Cistus and Halimium , plus x Halimiocistus and sunroses ( Helianthemum) at 7 pm tonight (Tuesday May 11) at the Multnomah Arts Center, 7688 SW Capitol Hwy, Portland 97219. It’s only $5 and members and non-members alike are welcome. Sign up here.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Flowers, Drought-Tolerant Plants

horticultural ed

Berry Botanic Garden Classes

last call

Email
Rock-garden-showcase-photo

Berry Botanic Garden’s rock garden

The Berry Botanic Garden is closing – but not before it offers a finale of great hikes, tours and classes at reasonable prices, from now to mid-June, when they close their doors. I’ve taken a number of their classes in the past and can recommend them highly.

Here’s the May catalog of classes – and June, here. There are openings in all but one classes and hikes. I’m signing up for some myself. The wildflower hikes are fantastic. Classes include flower ID, mosses and lichens, and botanical illustration. The two remaining garden tours are the Platt Garden and Wallace Huntington’s garden, both profiled in previous issues of Portland Spaces Magazine.

If you want to torture yourself with a list of past classes, here’s a comprehensive class catalog showing what Portland is about to lose forever. To read a history of the garden, click here.

If you can swing a visit in the next month, go visit – quick, before it is sold. While perhaps in need of some TLC now, the garden is nevertheless a place of great beauty, with woodland paths, a damp garden, perennial and shrub beds, and an extensive and richly planted rock garden.

The site was purchased and was first gardened by Rae Selling Berry beginning in 1938 so there are beautiful old trees and shrubs that have been there for 70 years. This is a spectacular time to visit, as the rhododendron collection is coming alive. In June, the gorgeous Stewartia tree will be in flower. Berry also collected unusual primula species and alpine plants.

Primula_bed

Berry Botanic Garden’s primrose bed

The garden’s doors close officially on June 30, 2010.

Newsbreak – I’m told my vegetable garden will make a brief appearance on KPTV Channel 12’s Better Portland program today (Monday) between 1 and 2 pm. This is the segment I wrote about last week in which Chef Blake Van Roekel prepares a delicious mâche omelette (recipe here). Tune in!

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Flowers, Trees

upcoming events

A Trio of Garden-Related Events

- enough to keep you in horticultural heaven all weekend

Email
Tumwater

Cute as a button, huh? I needed a picture for this post and this was the sweetest little thing I could find.

Three interesting garden events coming up this weekend:

1.
What: Clackamas County Master Gardeners Spring Garden Fair 2010
When: Saturday May 1 from 9-5; Sunday May 2 from 9-4
Where: Clackamas Event Center and Fairgrounds
Why: over 185 Pacific Northwest nurseries, as well as planting accessories and garden art. Free plant check lets you shop with abandon if you wish. Educational presentations include new plant introductions, Master Gardener educational clinics, soil testing (scroll down this page for details on what to bring if you want soil sampled), a raffle, plant auction and food vendors.

2.
Butterflies, Bees & Bats Class
What: Experts from the Xerces Society and Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife will talk about a decline in pollinators and what we can do to make our yards attractive to them.
When: Saturday May 1, 2010 from 9:30 – 12 noon.
Where: S.W. Community Center/Multipurpose Room, 6820 SW 45th Avenue, Portland
Why: You’ll learn how to create backyard habitat for butterflies, bats and bees, that’s why! You’ll also construct a bee box which will help protect bees during inclement weather.

Registration required. Please register here

3. Let ’er Bloom
What: The Portland Garden Club 2010 Flower Show
When: Saturday May 1 and Sunday May 2 from 10 – 5
Where: Oregon Historical Society
Why: Visitors can view flower arrangements, horticulture displays of miniature gardens, jewelry made from botanical elements and a special exhibit titled “Farm to Table”. This year’s show celebrates the anniversary of Oregon’s own Pendleton Round-Up, coinciding with OHS’s new exhibit, Tall in the Saddle: 100 Years of the Pendleton Round-Up.
$11 admission.

Given the currently fragile financial situation of the OHS (see PM editor Randy Gragg’s Editor’s Note in PM’s May issue), this would be a good opportunity to visit – and support – the OHS.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Plant Sale

Edible Gardening

My Vegetable Garden’s TV Debut

featuring mâche – a fantastic early spring green

Email
Blake___

Chef, cooking instructor, event organizer, owner of Keuken and amazing bundle of energy Blake Van Roekel

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Chef, cooking instructor, event organizer, owner of Keuken and amazing bundle of energy Blake Van Roekel

View Slideshow » Illustration:

I can’t remember if it was reporter Brooke Carlson (here) or photographer Eric Patterson (fiddling with camera) who started joking about the “mache-pit”…

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Brooke watching Blake snipping the greens

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Jeez, the least I could have done is taken down my laundry line for the shoot…

View Slideshow » Illustration:

All done! (And ready to go eat!)

So a little patch of mâche growing in my vegetable garden will be on KPTV Fox 12’s Better Portland on Thursday April 22 at 1:45 pm!

What’s the story, you ask? Well, last month, I was chatting about my favorite early spring green, mâche, with Blake Van Roekel, chef and owner of Keuken. Blake has a monthly cooking segment on KPTV Fox 12’s Better Portland and she’s quite the hot chef. Blake decided it would be fun to harvest the mâche from my garden and try some of her culinary magic on it – on TV! So to my little vegetable patch came super-cool Lifestyle Reporter Brooke Carlson and ultra-suave photographer Eric Patterson – plus lovely Miss Blake, of course – and the photo fiesta began. (Click on that Slideshow for behind-the-scenes photos.)

After harvesting the mâche, Blake and the team toodled off to her kitchen where she prepared a delicious yet simple meal, with easy instructions on how to make it at home. I won’t spoil the story by telling you what she made – you’ll just have to follow the Better Portland link to see if they put up a video of it on line after it airs. The program runs from 1-2 pm – Blake’s segment (with me and my mâche in it) starts at 1:45 pm.

For more information on growing mâche, read this.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Vegetables, Edible Gardening

Plant Sales

Things to Do – Plants to Buy

plant sales going on every day for the next week

Email

Take your pick – or maybe go wild and pick both.

There are two great plant sales coming up – one running Monday through Friday this week and the other running Saturday and Sunday.

COMMUNITY TRANSITION CENTER’S SPRING PLANT SALE

When: Monday April 12th to Friday April 16th from 8:30 am to 3:00 pm daily. Where: 6801 SE 60th & Duke St. in Greenhouse #1

This plant sale features an array of perennial, annual and vegetable starts grown using organic methods, at fantastic prices (cash or check only) – for example:

- Canna lilies, chrystanthemum, gal. pot – $3
- Foxglove, oxalis, licorice fern – $1-3
- Daylilies, assorted colors – $2
- Flowers including sweet William, California poppy and phlox plus vege starts including broccoli, kale, lettuce, collards, chard, sorrel,
spinach – 6-pack tray $2

The Community Transition Center is a Portland Public Schools program for young adults focusing on vocational experience and life skills. Students in the program are responsible for starting, caring for, and maintaining the plant stock in the greenhouse. Purchases support the greenhouse program.

For more information, call 503-916-5817 or email sgoforth@pps.k12.or.us

HARDY PLANT SOCIETY OF OREGON SPRING PLANT SALE & GARDEN FESTIVAL
The other plant sale coming up takes place this weekend – it’s the Hardy Plant Society of Oregon’s wondrous and amazing Spring Plant Sale. Held at the Expo Center (readily accessible by light rail), this Queen of Oregon’s Spring Plant Sales runs from 10 am to 3 pm Saturday April 17 and Sunday April 18. It is the premier gathering of local specialty nurseries from all over Oregon and Western Washington. It’s also a marketplace for locally made garden art. And, this year, there’s a gardening book shop where you can find relevant, regionally-appropriate gardening books – some written by local authors.

If you take light rail, bring some of those fabric grocery bags. You’ll be amazed by how many plants you can fit into those things.

Details of Spring Plant Sale & Garden Festival:
When: April 17 & 18, 2010 from 10 am to 3 pm both days
Where: Portland EXPO Center – Hall C. The Interstate MAX Yellow Line goes right to EXPO. See TriMet web site

No wagons, strollers or carts in the sale – the aisles can be tight. There is a hold area, though, so you don’t have to stagger around loaded down with plants unless you have a particular need to wave your brilliant scores in front of other possibly covetous shoppers.

You can go to the website for a list of vendors at the sale (many, many!) and for a map of the site.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Flowers, Garden Stuff, Plant Sale

garden events

Native Plant Sale & Green Gardening Fair

Email
Trillium

Long-lasting Western wake-robin (Trillium ovatum) flowers nestled in tough, evergreen western sword fern (Polystichum munitum) – a fantastic combination for a native woodland garden.

TUALATIN HILLS PARK & RECREATION DISTRICT is sponsoring the Green Gardening Fair and Native Plant Sale.

When: Saturday, April 10, 10 am – 2 pm
Where: Tualatin Hills Nature Park Interpretive Center

This is a day of gardening workshops and demos focusing on sustainable techniques for composting, water conservation, minimizing pesticide use, growing native plants, insect pollinators, pruning, tool sharpening, and more. A schedule of events can be found on the event website.

A native plant sale will offer over 100 species of native trees, shrubs and perennials. A free bag of potting soil comes with every $35 purchase.

Exhibitors include landscape designers, mason bee suppliers, garden art, sustainable stores and services, and some governmental agencies.

Hosted by Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District
http://www.thprd.org/facilities/naturepark/nativeplantsales.cfm

Salmonberry

Salmonberry (Rubus spectabilis) – its hot pink flowers serve as important hummingbird fodder

Add a Comment »

Tags: Gardening Events, Places to Go, Plant Sale, Native Plants

Advertisement