KTRH GardenLine | 8-12-23 - podcast episode cover

KTRH GardenLine | 8-12-23

Aug 12, 20232 hr 38 min
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Episode description

Host Skip Richter answers your gardening questions all morning long!

Transcript

Ktr H Garden Line does not necessarily endorse any of the products or services advertised on this program. Welcome to ktr H Garden Line with Skip Rictor. It's smell crazy just watching as woods becomes back kicking. Well, good morning on what is going to be a good Saturday. You're listening to Garden Line.

I'm your host, Skip Rictor, and wow it is. You know, it's like I've been traveling all this week and it just feels like I've started in a new dimension here this morning, with with my brain being on all kinds of other things, and suddenly here we are back in the saddle again, ready to talk about gardening with you guys. In fact, we're gonna not even hesitate. David's been out there hanging on for a little wastle. We're gonna jump on the line and see what's happening with David out in southwest

Houston. How's it going, David, It's going good. Blessed morning, Skip, Thank you. I noticed in my grass that it's either will it's turning yellow or gold and some big spots. Don't know if it's brown patch or what's a bug called chinch bugs? Yes, uh, it's not it's not chinch bugs. You know, if it's kind of doing gold and you don't have any fully brown and stuff like that you're seeing, that's not that and it's not brown patch. I think what you're seeing it could be several

things. First of all, I'm you might just check and grab some of the grass and pull on it just a little bit, you know, like a big handful. So try to like you're picking up a carpet, and see if it does lift up off the ground like that pretty easily, or if it's still firmly pegged down. That's gonna be a long shot, but that would be grubs. I think what you're probably looking at is take all

root rot disease. Now, I can't diagnose a disease based on, hey, my grass is turning yellow, uh, you know, information, but having seen a lot of this stuff, that would be the first thing I would I would be curious about. Are these areas in any particular location like shade or sun or next to a driveway, or you know anything unique about

where you're you're seeing these or are they random? No? Not really, I have no trees and I am water and at nighttime around three o'clock I have a sprinkler system, So I don't think it's because you know, not enough water, too much water. Okay, I did do the can. I did do the can the other day and push you down and put water

in there and didn't see any bucks come up or anything like that. So okay, will there be anything of a fungus or anything that, well, take All is a fungus, and you know, I know water and like at three the only thing about that, And this isn't a you know, it's like a black and white issue, like you absolutely can't do that.

But when you water, let's say, toward midnight end of things, or even late in the evening, your your grass tends to stay wet for longer over the period of the evening, and that moisture for over time can help predispose things to certain disease problems. I don't think that's what the problem is with what you're describing. It could be take All ride and the only way to tell for sure, I mean, you could send me a photo of

it from a distance. I'm not going to be able to diagnose it specifically, but I can tell you, yeah, that really does look like take All instead of me just kind of picture and what you're saying, or the best way is to take a sample and send it up to the state Plant clinic and they will for a for a fee, they do a diagnosis of it. They actually get it in and look at it under a microscope and look for the fungus itself. So we could do this one or two ways.

I mean, you could you could go that root so we know, you know what we're aiming for, or you could just aim toward take all root right treatment, uh, and then hope that works and if it doesn't, well then you're back to Okay, let's look at plan B here. Okay, it sounds less for a life. They would have the stuff that I need to take care of it there. Oh absolutely, yeah they Okay, you're talking about the products and stuff. Yeah, yeah, I know

that was kind of a dumb question. Okay, Well, yeah, Southwest Fertilizer they have everything. Oh I know, I know, I know, I know they're there there. Might go to the outside of call it. So what's the best time I should set my sprinkler system the water to the yard? You know. It ideally would be about like six in the morning or something, because it's the coolest part of the day. Uh, and it you know, you give it a good soaking and then the sun's coming

up and it's kind of drying off the surfaces. To keep it from sitting wet for so long, that would be ideal. But again, this isn't like a huge problem like if you water it three you're gonna kill everything. It just it's just leans a little bit in that direction. That that's all I'm saying. But if you'd like to stay on, I can put your on hold. Josh can give you an email and you can send us a picture or if you want to go to send a sample in also send me

the email in Los Angeles video on how to take a turf sample. But you're going to send it to plant clinic. Uh dot TAMU dot edu. It's really easy. It's plant clinic. One word. Okay, whatche dot dot it's it's at A and M. So it's dot t A m U dot E d U. I have a picture, Okay, I appreciate it. I do have a picture. If you put me on hold, I'll afford that to you. All right, I'm gonna put your on hole right here, and Josh is taking care of some callers and he'll be right with

you. All right, Yeah, you know. The diagnosing plant problems, I mean, we can do it visually. Some of them are easy. You look at them and like the what people still call brown patch. Technically it's now large patch is the name, but uh, you know, the big brown circles and here we are and first of October, get this little coal front front blow through and here comes the circles. That that's easy visually. But there are other diseases you really need to get a get a good

look at in order to diagnose them effectively. And that's one of the advantages of having a plant clinic available, you know. I mean, if you're going to go out shop for a products, spend money on it, come home, take time to apply it, and you had the wrong product, you know, misdiagnosed, Well, nobody's happy with that, right. So that's one reason why for a lot of things, I just say, especially with valuable plants, it's probably better to have a diagnosis so you know for

sure what you're going after. Let's see here. This past week I was at the Texas Nursery and Landscape Association trade Show or Expose, what they call it in San Antonio, and this is a this is like you know, it's like going to some giant thing at George O. Brown Conventions that are I mean, they are booths everywhere. A lot of our sponsors were there. Is good to kind of touch base and catch up with some of those folks. Gosh, I can sit here, start to name up. I'm

sure I'll leave you up. But I saw I talked with the folks at Ego Garden. Nitro FoST fertilizer was there. Let's see. Nelson plant Food and Microlive plant food were both there at the event. I caught up with Dave with r CW. That was kind of nice and rich Eddie while Bird was out there. Just lots of good, kind of a lower reunion to get out there and get to visit with people. But walking through the place, I mean there's a lot of cool stuff. I'll talk about that more

a little bit later. Right now, we're gonna go take a break and do some news or not news, but just get you know, pay the bills. If you'd like to get on the air, our phone number is seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. Good morning on a Saturday morning that is going to turn out really nice. I think being outside yesterday I really enjoyed just early in the day, you know, kind of

getting out was a little cooler and poking around and doing some things. I was done to Santonio yesterday for a conference and it was just a pleasant time to get out and walk around. Well, I'll tell you something, you know, a while back, I was in a let's just say a national chain store and there was an employee there standing in front of the aisle of

all these pesticides, herbicides, fungicides and everything else. I began talking to them, asking a couple of questions that I always like to kind of find out whether people are up to date and know what they're talking about or not. And they absolutely did not. And I ask him, was, so, how long you've been working here? Well, they've been there a week. And what did you do before? Well? I was a hairstylist. Okay. I don't think that prepares you to sell chemicals to people that are

going to go out and try to kill stuff with it. But anyway, that is why I love our mom and pop garden centers, and something like that is not going to happen at a place like Plants for All Seasons. For example, the Flowerty family there has been doing that for all seasons, I think since nineteen seventy three. They know what they're talking about. You bring them in a sample, in a baggie, bring them in a photo.

They can tell you what it is. And that is very valuable because again, as I said earlier, you know, you go, take time to get go somewhere, you buy a product, you come home, you try it, it doesn't work because it was the wrong product for what you have, and then you got to go back and start over again. Waste of time and money. Not at Plants for All Seasons. True lawn and garden experts, from education to selection, to delivery, to planting, even

custom potting. They're the ones. I mean, they know what they're talking about. They're right there on tom Ballparkway FM two forty nine where Luetta comes in, right at that intersection or almost at that intersection, and just go in and it's a beautiful place. Their selection is unbelievable. You can go online Plants for All Seasons dot com, or you can give them a call two eight one three seven six one six four six one cool thing that they

have out there that I had not seen one of these before. But rangoon creeper is a vine that has these big clusters of pink and white. Are pink red and white as they fade, the change our colors, flowers, beautiful, beautiful, and they have a double one. I didn't even know a double one existed. So if you are interested in a plant nobody's got, well, I would say this would be it, or a good example of one, and it's out there at plants for all season. Jet to

go check them out. Today, we're gonna head out to the phones and we're gonna make a long trip out here to Titusville, Florida and talk to DC. Hello, DC, I should get how are you doing well? I'm well, thank you. How can we help? I don't know if you ever heard of this, but we got something here in Florida called alligator reed. When you look at it, if you if you actually let it grow, it actually looks like Saint Augustine, but it's a darker color.

But you literally just put your hands in and just pull it right out without a problem. So it's one of you stop that from spreading, other than going and picking it out by hand. Yeah, is it. Is it in your Sat Augustine lawn? Yes, okay, a broad leaf, a post emergent, we'll do a pretty good job on it. Alligator weed is not one we normally deal with in lawns over here in Texas. Just just difference, a little bit difference in our climates like that. But you can

I don't know. The stuff that would have triclopier in it would work very very well. Triclopier is a brush killer, but you want to be very careful using it. I would not treat it now, and I would be very careful with using it. You may have trouble finding tricolo pier in a lawn labeled home application, so that would be one challenge. Some people will use just a product that kills everything, like a glyphosate product, and just rub it over the top of it, just kind of a wicker Wick type

applicator of it. And that that's another strategy that's excuse me, some people have used for it. Uh, it's just it's it's not a super easy one to kill without hurting your Saint Augustine. And that's the problem. Now, you probably don't have control of this, but if you can make it dryer. Uh, the alligator weed isn't going to do as well as when it has a lot of water, So that that's a way not to control

it, but just to kind of slow it down a little bit. And a lot of the waterways they import a certain kind of insect that basically eats it up. Well, the thing is is that it gets really inside the Saint Augustine, Yes, and it literally just grows from underneath, and and the stoles and all that stuff are just they're just covered with this thing. You're just it's it's like I said, it looks darker green than normals Saint Augustine like fourte yourself. Yeah, I'm familiar with it, and you're right

about that. The thing about it and has is a little white kind of white balls blooms on it. The little small white white blooms. I don't know if you've run across that or not, but yeah, we normally deal with it in an aquatic habitat, and that's why it's kind of a challenge once you once you get it down into a lawn. I'm trying to think of of another product that might might work on it. Pretty much everything I know that's labeled for it is labeled more for waterways, or it's it's too

hard on your lawn. So I think that that's probably I can't think of another lawn herbicide that you might you might try on it other than what I just meantion thing you do. If you go out there, when you see a patcher, when you pull it out, yeah, that's gonna be a that's gonna be a job. And I don't know. Let's see the alligator weed. I believe that one is that that's a perennial. It's gonna come back each year, and so I don't know that that pulling may not be

that great. I think if it remind what I would do is I would get a product that kills, you know, just a general killer like a glyphosate product and a wiper applicator. Because the alligator weed will it'll come up above your lawn if you don't mow right, doesn't it grow up a little higher for you? Yeah? Yeah, So if you can give it some time to get up there, I know that may aesthetically not be acceptable, but then at least you can get the herbicide on it without getting it on

the saint Augustine. That's that's the thing we're trying to avoid. Okay, all right, Like I said, you know, I can also let it grow and it will look a pretty dark green all through the yard. Oh it's pretty grass. Yeah it is, but it is, but it's uh, I don't know. I don't know. You're right, it's dark green and it finds along. But I don't know about aesthetics. That that's up to you. Okay, all right, thank you for the call, thank you for the inform machine. I'll talk to you. I'll let you know

how it goes. All right, thank you very much. I appreciate that. Just be careful with the things I mentioned getting them on your Saint Augustine. All right, that's all? Yeah, well absolutely absolutely sure, you bet. Yeah. You know, find talking about finding products and stuff. When you go aroundtown and you see an ACE hardware store, you know that that is a garden center. It's going to carry the stuff that you want. When I say a garden center, i'm talking about you know, they

have their section where they sell all kinds of things. I mean it's insecticides, the fungicide, herbicides, all of that's there. Fertilizers, if I recommend it on garden Line. You're going to find it there in an ACE Hardware, and there's thirty nine around the Houston area. So how convenient is that ACE Hardware dot Com. Look at their store locator and it will direct

you right to where there is an ACE Hardware near you. And not only do they have the products, but they got people that can help you, They can direct you that know what they're talking about. And of course it's ACE Hardbreast, so they have everything else under the world. I remember the first time in recent times that I went into an ACE I could not believe at how amazing the way the stores are stocked, all the stuff they have.

ACE Hardware is just go ahead and see what I'm talking about. Go in there to get you some garden products, but look around you'll find a lot more that you definitely want. We're gonna head out to Sugarland now and we're gonna talk to Gary. Hello, Gary, good morning. How are you doing well? I'm well, how are you? And I wanted to know what beneficial nematodes will control chinch bugs and fire ens. They they can, but the you know how there's off on a yeah, but there's a

yeah, butt to this one. Number one. You got to buy the right kind of nematode. There's a couple of species out there there don't the names don't matter, but Steiner needed Nema and headerohabditis, or two genera of nematodes that are used in insect control. They call them entomopathic nematodes. So you got to buy one that's labeled for the pests that you're going after. Flease, they'll attack them in the larval stage. Flease lay eggs in the

lawn and the eggs hatch out into larva that become adult fleas. That's the stage where the nematodes have to hit them. Chinch bugs. I don't know that entomopathic nematodes are effective. I would have to look that one up. I've never heard of using them for chinch bugs. They are used for grubs, and so when we get into June, when the grubs have hatched and are young, feeding at the surface. You can use them in a lawn, but they're living organisms, so you know, you put them out in

the garage for a month and they're probably dead. You got to use them. You've got to follow the label. You want to water the lawn well and then use the nematode and then water again to move them down in the soil, because basically you're spraying a bunch of little tiny worms out there that are you want to wash down, and they'll crawl around and find the insects bodies and move in and do what they do. That's very been It would

be good information. I'd like to mention something else. On newly planted trees. I like to spray the foliage in the trunk several times a day with a mist, and I think that helps them upsore more water than they can through the roots. Yet to be careful not to overwater the roots, but misting the trunk and the foliage I think helps them survive well. I have to I have to disagree with you on that one. But just the amount of water that can actually move in through a leaf or trunk compared to a

root system, uh, you know. And plus when you get the leaves wet a lot, if you do it a lot, you can increase some of your leaf diseases. But that is interesting that you've had that that observation or results with it. I think a lot of people recommend doing that and I think works good for me. Well, well, Gary, I appreciate the call on good luck with those chinch bugs that you're dealing with out there. I may look around a little bit if I find anymore, say something

on the air today, if I can find some time to check. But I'm just I would be hesitant as to the nematodes on chinch bugs, But on those other lawn pests, they do work pretty good. Thank you very much. Stay cool, all right, Thank you very much. I appreciate that very much. You know, are you looking for a quality soil? And I hope you are, because everything everything begins in the soil. Airloom Soils is the place you go. I mean, and you don't even have

to go. I mean, they're everywhere. You can go buy airloom soils at a number of our sponsors that we talk about on here, you know, hardware stores, feed stores, garden centers there. They're available out there. You can go online to Airloom Soils of Texas dot com Airloom Soils of Texas dot com find out more. They've got the one yard superstack super sacks. So imagine someone brings one of those little take home grocery sacks that holds

a whole cubic yard and drops it on the driveway. That's what we're talking about. You can call them from seven am to five pm Monday through Saturday. They have a really good deal new lower price ninety five bucks per cubic yard on rose and Rose soil is about the best mix you can get for all kinds of general purpose work. That's Heirloom Soils of Texas. We're gonna take a break here and do the news. Our phone number is seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. Well, good morning. The

dark sky is lightning just slightly outside there. It is a beautiful day in the making. Though. I just enjoy getting out in summertime in the morning early on, getting my gardening work done and just enjoying. I love mornings outside because of the birds. That's really wildlife. It's just, of course it's the most pleasant time of the day in the summertime. But just the songs of the birds are so cool. In fact, I need to talk a little bit more about birds later today. But it's really just it adds

that extra dimension. You know. We have a number of senses. We've got a site we got smell, we've got sound and so on. Well, sound in the garden, the sound of water and the sound of birds are two things that can really enhance and just make gardening even more pleasant thing to do. I was saying, here are some houseplants the other day using of course, the Microlife bio Matrix orange label. That's a seven one three

product seven one three. There's also the Microlife Ocean Harvest Blue label, which is I think it's best to use for the outdoor plants that you have. That's a four two three ratio a product. You can dilute it down, use it as folior feed. Works just great. It being a fish based fertilizer, it's gonna provide a lot of the nutrients that plants need, and they do so so well when you do that, and they're in a little

couart jug. I mixed mine and water and just sprinkle them on, you know, use them as a liquid fertilizer in that way, and it works really good. You get a good fast result with a Biomatrix orange label. By the way, it's also packed with nematodes, beneficial nematodes and those improve the soil root. Oh my gosh, I'm still thinking about the phone call from Gary. Now it's not packed with beneficial nematodes, it's backed with beneficial

microbes. I guess that's closed. But yeah, you know, roots need microbes. Absolutely. Microbes make the world go around. And when you got that biomatrix the orange label, you're getting a lot of microbial activity every time that you use it on the plants. And I can see from my own plants that it does. It does very very well. They respond very well to it. Well, let's head out to League City and we're going to talk to John V. Good morning, John V, Good morning Skips,

and good morning garden Line. Yes, my question is on the excuse me one second. Is that the red Texas star hybiscus, And I'd like to know about I know it. We had a plain red hybiscus before and it grew all the way about to the second story really so needs a lot of space. And there's a species a native plant to Texas. Is that why the name? Uh Texas star? Okay, okay, could you turn the radio off in the background or something? Oh, yeah, the radio's not

on. I apologize, I'm on the international landline. Oh okay, okay, so yes, so Texas, I've never seen Texas started at that tall red Texas star hybiscus. Yeah, okay, well like a two story There's some other types of hibiscus that can get up that large over time. But Texas Star. Interestingly enough, it's native to the Gulf Coast, but not to Texas. It's got Texas in the name, but it is, you know, Southeast Texas is not quite it's native range. But it loves it

here. It absolutely loves it here, and it does really, really well. It'll put up with some very wet conditions. It's it doesn't like dry conditions. I've got some at home in a dry spot that I just I'm always having to run out there and water to keep it happy. So yeah, this is but it does well here. It comes in the red that you're familiar with, but it also has a white and all white form. How beautiful is that? Well, that's wonderful. So it comes in two

seas because it's got five petals. Yes, the star is the name after the star, so that's that's wonderful. That's where it got its name. But just kind of not so well known fact. It's not native here, but Hey, what do they say, I wasn't born in Texas, but I got here as fast as I can. That's the right, that's Texas Star. We'll go ahead and let it keep them in great a grand sayd Texas. Well, thank you y'all have a wonderful Saturday. All right,

you two, thank you very much. John appreciate that. Do you have pest problems? Well, if you have a house, you probably have pest problems. You got some cockroaches running around, you got some silver fish that are chewing up your books, and all the other things that happen around when we've got this little six legged creatures living in the world we live in.

McGrath pest Control is the one you need to talk to. You know, they've been here since what nineteen seventy four, Scott's dad Scott McGrath's dad started it over over forty eight years ago. Still family run. They cover all your pest control needs. And what is pest You know, pests don't have to have six legs. They can have four legs too. In fact, some people would say some pests have two legs. But anyway, things like rodents, raccoons, things like termites in the wall, and some mosquitoes.

With each season, the pests we're mostly dealing with change season to season. You know, September to February, we're about to get into big time rodent season. McGrath can help with control and exclusion. McGrath does not tell you I'm gonna come sometime tomorrow afternoon. They schedule a time and they show up at the time. They said. That's why they're so highly related. On all the review sites, the owner still is involved in day to day operations.

The owner is accessible to all customers. You can go on line to McGrath pest Control dot com or call them two eight one four six nine eighty two forty. With McGrath it's modern technology and techniques with old fashion customer service. McGrath Pest Control. I always enjoy visiting with Scott. Just a wealth of information. I mean, if you want to know anything about pess,

that guy knows it for sure. You're listening to garden Line. Our phone number is seven one three, two one two five eight seven four seven one three two to fifty eight seventy four. Give Josh a call, get you on the boards and talk about some things that you're interested in. Hey, if you're in an active adult age fifty five and better, and you are looking for a new home, a new community, a place to move to just really enjoy a very active life, you know, with lifestyle programs designed

around you. Well, that's a dell Web community, I mean. And there's a new one, by the way going on is going in out there in full sure. It's on FM three fifty nine, less than two miles from downtown, and it has a community garden in it. And this community garden, to me, just makes what was already a perfect community being Dellweb. Beautiful homes, beautiful quality or a good quality, beautiful walk walking paths and all the stuff you enjoy. It makes it even better. Community garden.

Find out from your about dell Web for yourself. The Dellweb difference is really a distinction. You need to see yourself Dellweb dot com, slash Houston. You can get more information there or just give them call to eight one four five nine zero six zero nine. I need to get I need to get back out there effective and talking to some folks about making another trip out that direction, check on how things are going with all of that project.

I was driving down a street in down I say downtown, you know, inside the loop, I guess if you will in Houston, And I just had was noticing that I felt like I was in a jeep going over the rocky mountains. I mean the soul heaving up and down and moving things. And you know it breaks water lines in the summer. Well, that's because our soul moves. And what does that mean. It means when it gets

wet, it swells, When it gets dry, it shrinks. And that plays havoc on house foundations, on driveways, on sidewalks and so on. I mean, you've seen it all over town. Priby experienced at your house or your door sticking is a brick? Is there a brick crack? As you walk around the outside and you see this crack, or maybe inside in the sheet rock you see a cra you need to call Tai Strickland with fix

my slab foundation repair. So just go to fix myslab dot com. Easier to remember fix my slab dot com two eight one, two five five forty nine forty nine. Tell them you're a gardenline listener because they do a free estimate for gardenline listeners and they they're committed to a fair price. They're committed to showing up on time, and they're committed to doing it right. Let's let's fix it once, and let's fix it right. That fix my slab

foundation repair again, fix myslab dot com. I was in San Antonio this week, and you know we're at a conference. I'm gonna tell you a little bit more about that. I want to talk about some of the things I saw there that I think are new and cool when it comes to horticulture. Right now, we're gonna take a break and our phone number seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. We'll be right back. Everybody,

say, hey, you're listening to garden Line. I'm your host, Skip Richter, our phone number seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. Now, when you go to a garden center and shop, what are you what are you looking for? Well, you want place that has selection, right, you want a place that has plants that grow Here for crying out loud, yes, absolutely, you want good customer service. You just want to have fun too, I mean you want a place it's literally

fun to go to. And what am I describing? Well, tell you one thing I'm describing is Enchanted Gardens. Enchanted Gardens out in Richmond. If you're in Richmond, you're head up toward Katie Way there. They're up that direction. They're on FM three fifty nine. You can go online to Enchanted Garden Richmond dot com and you can find them. And man, do they have a selection. Salvia's awesome selection of salvias. And by the way, the hummingbirds are here. They are, They are arriving here to you know,

beef up and get ready to go. They're gonna have to fly all the way across the Gulf of Mexico for their overwintering spot, and so they need food. We need our hummingbird feeders out there. But you also need to plant hummingbird food, you know, and salvias are one of the many kinds of plants that do just that. And boy, do they ever have a good selection. One of my favorite is amistade. The amistade salvia is kind of a purple type salvia. It's really just deep dark purple and really

beautiful. And I mean there's only a million great salvius. They also have a good selection of a hibiscus, the southern hibiscus, the perennial hibiscus. They've got one called Summer Carnival. Another one airbrush effect at midnight Marvel. When you go to in Channa Gardens, and I hope go do that today. Check out. Say I want to see your airbrush effect and your summer Ific, all of those hybistics. They even have a yellow on It's kind

of light buttery yellow called summer Ific French Vanilla. They are beautiful. Go see what I'm talking about. They laugh at our heat. If you say I'm going to be one hundred and five degrees and the humidity is one hundred thousand percent, they just go, okay, I'll take it. I'm here, let's do this. I mean, they are tough, tough plant as long as you give them some water. They are super super tough plants. And it's all out there at Enchanted Gardens out in Richmond again Enchanted Gardens Richmond

dot com. Go and in fact, before you go, grab a friend and let's make this a let's make this a fun trip together, because it's really a place. You don't just go, Okay, I'm gonna pick up a plant and come home. You go and you wander and you wonder the whole time. At enchanted gardens. We're gonna head out now to pair Land and talk to Archie. Hello Archie, Good Morning's skip. I got a couple of problems, actually, but the one is been an ongoing problem off

spring with my grass. And last year I left this time last year for about three weeks to go to Germany and come back, and my whole backyard had turned yellow. And uh, at that time, I wasn't sure what it was. I called Randy. He said, he thought, you know,

it might have been take all patch or something like that. Okay, So I put a bunch of organic composts all over the yard about you know, a half an inch thick, and uh, what I got back was some of the sant Augustine came back, but a lot of bermuda came back. And I understand that, and you know, I'm cutting it and it

was still green. But now I'm starting to get yellowing again in various parts of the yard, especially in that backyard area, and part of the soil kids kind of sunk to where there's like little, you know, fissures in the in the ground. I'm thinking, do I level that off? And I've already put out some microlife brown patch, you know, thinking if it's patch, I'll hit it with that and and I put out some microlife hue mates. Okay, so uh at this point, I don't know what else

to do. I mean, I went out there and I try to tug on it. It doesn't come up. I mean it's it's okay, it's solid to the ground. And did you say sun or shade? I didn't hear it. If you did, uh, it's part you know. I've got it. Not not much shade, not much shade, mostly full sun, all right, okay, and not near masonry or any kind of a

dry since it's in the back well. Yeah, out by the street, it's really bad out there by the asphalt and by the driveway there's a little bit of it, but it's mostly in yrds, away from any of the concrete stuff. So the only thing I've got is rose beds. That but those are those that's that's that's lumber rest, timber well arch. I tell you. The challenge with this is a lot of things can cause a similar symptom, and without actually seeing it, I'm kind of shooting in the dark.

My gut is that if you're pretty sure you're keeping it quickly moist. The soil is adequately moist. I'm watering like crazy. Okay, then I would probably look to take all root rot as being the cause of this. I can again put you on hold, and you can send me a photo of it from a distance and then something up really close and good sharp focus. Uh, let me take a look and see if I see anything that I'm not picturing as we talk on the on the radio here, and I'll

be happy to help you with that. But that that is my gut feeling. It is not a brown patch, but the product you use a good product. In fact, you need to hang on. If you got any extra left, you need to hang on because we're about to be putting that kind of stuff on again when we hit the fall. That that uh winter riser kinds of fertilizers. But yeah, let me let me take a look at a picture. But if I were to, you know, if you're just say, okay, give me your best guests, I think it's I

think it's take all root rot. But I'd rather see the picture before we send you out to buy stuff. Okay, all right, now, the other thing, the other thing I have, I'd bought some hanging kind they're not hanging baskets, but they're kind of the longer baskets that are metal and have the coconut liners and they're only about six inches deep. I've got them an ace and I put them along my fence line, and I got some

this running vinca, the red vinka that runs spreads. But I'm having the water it twice a day in the morning and in the eave and just keep it alive that because it's just not enough soil in there. Yeah, there's no there's no root bank account of moisture. The bigger the more soil you have, the less off in your water a container or hanging basket. So that I guess you know. For now it is what it is. Just

keep watering it. But whenever you go back and do this again, I would put pots like that in a shady area, growing shade loving plants because the demands are less, and then get a bigger one if you want to do that out in the sun. Hey, I've got a run. But I hope that is helpful, and I do appreciate the call. I'm going to put you on hold, Archie, so if you choose to send me a photo Joshua, help you do that. You're talking about yards. We

need to be water in our yards properly. That you need to water a good soaking in frequently. So you're thinking, well, it's hot, I got a water every day. No, that's not good for the grass. It doesn't develop good rooting and you spend a lot of money on water and then the sewer bill goes up to as a result. If you go to water my yard dot org water my yard dot org, you can get an app as well as on an Apple App Store or Google Play, but you

can just go to the website. You sign in. They will send you an email each week as to how much water your grass needs because there's a local weather station near you that they tie into and they get the exact water use and that that's important. It saves money, I may saves resources, but it helps you avoid overwatering, underwatering, or miss watering. So a

good soaking on an infrequent basis, that's how we water. We want to fill the soil volume and then we want to let it begin to dry out and let air come back into the soil roots neat oxygen, so to just constantly keep it saggy wet on top. You are literally depriving roots underground of good oxygen levels where they can thrive. So when you water wet the sail deeply. It takes about an inch to do that, and most soils can't take an inch in at one time. Most of our sprinkler heads put it

out too fast for it to all soak in. So you water for a little while before it starts to runoff. Have the water go off, Wait forty five minutes, water again. Do that cycle and soak until you get an inch in the ground. Can you get the most from your watering dollar. KTRH Garden Line does not necessarily endorse any of the products or services advertised on this program. Welcome to KTRH Garden Line with Skip Ricord. Well,

good morning, the light has arrived. It's you can get outside and see what you're doing right now, get a little early morning gardening, dunk. Got a little nice breeze out there to even make it a bit more pleasant, because this is definitely the time of day when we enjoy being out and about and enjoying ourselves out in the out, in the garden and in the landscape. You know, I talk all the time about how everything starts in

the soil, how important soil is. And I don't think I don't think a lot of gardeners here realize just how fortunate we are in Houston to have sources of soil that are quality. I didn't apply to everyone, for sure, but I tell you who it does apply to, and that's Nature's Way, Nature's Way Resources. They're up there on Interstate forty five. As you're going north toward conro About where fourteen eighty eight comes in. Just turn right,

cross over the railroad tacks. You're there Nature's Way. Now. You can find their products bagged and some of our local source local retailers here, but you can also go out there and you can buy it by bag, you can buy it by bulk. I mean they have it both ways. In fact, they got a lot of good quality fungal compost available. They have a thing called Fungal Friday. Ever Friday ten percent off the bag product, twenty percent off the bulk product. And fungal compost is a very high

quality compost. That is, it'll change things. It'll change things in your yard and garden when you fix the soil like that with a quality product and by the Way, Nature's Way, roast, fungal composts, leave mold composts, on and on and on. Lots of quality products, all of them because they take their time to do it right. By the way, when you're out there, check out their nurse. They have one of the best selections of native plants here in the Greater Houston area Nature's Way. I think

it's cool. They're they're continuing to change up the plan area a little bit to get it just step by step nicer and nicer as we go along, and the selection just continuing to expand and increase out. So while you're out there picking up the soil, why not why not pick up some plants that

will thrive here because they're from here. Makes sense, doesn't it. You're listening to Garden Line and I'm your host, Skip Richter and our phone number seven one three two one two five eight seven four seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. I was talking earlier about being in San Antonio this past week. In fact, that just drove down yesterday evening, finally finished up at the Texas Nursery and Landscape Association show. And that is always

fun. Number One, you get to meet a lot of old friends or see a lot of old friends again, meet a lot of new people. But there's a ton of new products, all the new plant lines that are coming out. You know, there's boothfuls of you know, all the companies that are saying here's our latest greatest, come see it. And that's always a lot of fun, good a lot of new good tools and you know, quality things like that. I got to see the folks at Vego bed

while I was out there. That was kind of nice to visit with them. I think I mentioned earlier. I visited with Dean Nelson, you know, Mike's ran from from Microlife was out there and some of his team. Uh it. Got to visit with Dan Snyder over at Nitrofoss and talk to them about some of the technologies they've got going on and some of the product line that which as very wide as you know, as you would imagine that. That was really nice to get out and kind of get to see all

that kinds of thing. Got rented a lot of other good old friends out there and spend some time out. But it's always refreshing to get out and see what's new. You know, they say that the most important part of cutting cutting down trees is sharpening the saw. And boys that ever true. You may have a sharp saw, but once it gets dull, you were working lay to try to accomplish anything. Well, the way I look at it as a horticulture is is I'm constantly sharpening the saw, and the saw

is me. If I don't stay up to date, if I don't continue to read, to look at research, to talk to people, to visit with the industry, my advice just becomes less and less valuable because it becomes dated. And so it's always good to get out and do that. And I would encourage you if you're interested in gardening at any level, find ways to learn. There's a lot of good information out there. I mean, just as a start, you can go to the Aggy Horticulture website. It's

Aggy Dash Horticulture dot TAMU dot edu. There's a section on vegetables, it's really awesome. There's section on earth kind roses, Texas superstar plants, section on fruit trees. It's outstanding. Just poke around and just learn. You know, the smarter you get, the prettier your plants are. Right, Remember what I say, there's no such thing as a brown thumb. There is an uninformed when you inform your thumb, suddenly it starts to look a lot, a lot greener, a lot greener. Hey, let's go out

to bel Air and we're going talk to Greg. Good morning, Greg, Good morning, Skip. Thank you for taking my call. Yes, I have a couple of questions. One on an improved Myers lemon. It's it's new this year. I put it in a pot and it's I've got it setting next to one that froze back last year, but it came back. And the one that's in the park, the leaves on it are kind of

was getting some yellow spots or yellowing in it, I guess spots. And I watered the plant every day, and I was just curious if you had any thoughts on what might be causing that. You know, I see that sometimes on citrus. And first of all, you shooting your water in it plenty. Are you sure the drainage is good and it's not staying too soggy? Is it? Well, it's it's setting on the ground, so it's not on a like a block work and drain out even better. But but

maybe I can elevate it somewhat. Yeah, you can just take your finger too and dig down or a little hand spade, just go down about four inches and feel the soil and that that'll your answer right there. I doubt you're overwatering. But sometimes when we set our pots on the ground, especially at clay soil, it's just like you took a piece of modeling clay and plug the hole at the bottom of the pot. You know, it didn't

accomplish much. So it could be that, I know, you know, just in the combination of things like that, something's going on in the roots. But certainly the heat, you know, is stressful to plants, but centrist is tough. It can normally take the heat without these any kind of problems that we worry about. On the yellowing spots, you see them more on the old leaves or on the new leaves. I guess it's more of the older or maybe time throughout the plant. But okay, I would say

the older leaves. Perhaps there are okay, there are a few nutrients that are mobile. In other words, when the plant is lacking, it's steals them from the old leaves and it supports the new growth with those nutrients. And so when you see old leaf problems. I think of two things. Number one, I think of the water content, you know, too much, too not enough, that kind of thing. And number two the mobile nutrients. So it could be that that something nutrient wise is lacking. When

was the last time you give them a fertilization? Has it been recently? Or probably about six weeks two months ago? Okay, well you might consider giving them another one gets you a good quality fertilizer force citrus and yeah, and just follow the instructions on how much to put out, you know, depending on the concentration in the product, you put out more or less. Yeah, I have a microlife or so yeah, Okay, well that that's gonna be a good one. Just put it down, follow the label and

water it end really good. Maybe even scratch it into the soul surface if you could, because that's that microbially breaks down. So hey, Greg, I'm gonna have to take break. We're hit another break time. But I hope that helps, and good luck with it, and feel free to call us back if if you continue to see problems and none of that seem to help. Our phone number seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four.

Sweet lit Well, good morning. You're listening to garden Line. I'm your host, Skip Richter, and we're here to answer your gardening question. So give us call seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. Now, if you live, if you live up north and west of the Greater Houston area, up in that direction out, let's say Carlos, Texas. Does that kind of ring a bell for anybody? Well, I always talk about this place like God's country, because it is. We're talking about

Rohnes Prairie. We're talking about beat Eyes, Iola I We're talking about neighborhoods like kings Wood and Kingwood, king Oakes, excuse me, and your Wood. I always get those two confused. King Oaks and your Wood. We're talking about College Station and Brian Navasota, that whole region. Your hometown feed store is Grimes County Feeding Farm, Grimes County keep Feeding Farms on State Highway thirty and it's about two miles west of FM two forty four. Now it's

a family owned and operated. I mean, you know, Chris and his family, They've really put together a nice place and they give you the kind of service. I mean you walk in there and you feel like your family. It's how they treat you, and it trusts me. Go try it out. You'll see what I'm talking about. You know, Chris is he started fifteen years in the Houston Fire Department. Public service always been his passion. And you see that every day when you go out to the feed store.

I mean he puts his personal cell phone on his business card for crying out loud. It's not like here, let me say something to go away. It's like you got any questions, give me a call, because they are there to make sure you have success. Whether it's livestock feed, whether it's lawn and garden products. That's what they're doing now. They in fact, today I believe is the last day of their customer appreciation Week, and

so you should get out there. It's ten percent off on all the tree hugg sprinklers that they have in stock, ten percent off on Nelson plant food, Medina products, nitro FoST products, microlife products, ten percent off on all this. It's a good time to go out and get that because you're gonna need all those. By the way, we're before very long we're going to be doing our fall fertilizations here. Believe it or not, and you need to have those on hand. Now's a good time to purchase some.

Two eight one eight one four twenty four ninety four. Two eight one eight one four twenty four ninety four. That's Grimes County Feeding Farm. We're gonna head out to Clear Lake and I believe we're gonna talk to Jim. Good morning, Jim, good morning. I'm curious about the frequency that I can put down. The medina has to grow for a long and what's some optimal time of day to do that. A time of day doesn't I would put

it down, but then go ahead and water it in really well. You want to kind of get it down there on the soul surface and keep that moist because it's going to be able to put out the nutrients. This is the liquid, right talking, right, comes in the while, it comes in a gallant choke, and then you add it to the spray bottle. Right. But yeah, So what happens though, is when you spray it, it's the grass and it what's the thatch, right, the moisture of

your spray with the medina, and it is doing that. I like to give it a little bit of a watering. I mean, I'm talking about an inch of water, but just just move it down into the soul surface there with a little irrigation. I think it works even better. I mean, it's not the end of the world if you don't. That's just how I would go about that. As far as the frequency of it, it's kind of up to you. I would watch your lawn and see what your lawn says. I you could do it about once a month, and that

would be fine. You know it, You're not putting a ton of it out at any one time, and so you could do that about once a month. I've seen people stretch it out a little further. I've seen people do it a little more often. Just kind of to let your lawn tell you visually. You know, you'll see the difference and it'll kind of guide you in that. So one other quick question that a little off topic, but all of these little brown lizards, are they eating bugs in the lawn

or what are they existing on it? Yeah, they're they're eating insects. They love caterpillars one thing. I mean, yeah, caterpillars, and one of their favorite those, I believe the brown I don't know which one you're talking Abou've got a brown and knowlie that's kind of a slick, slicker skinned, a light brown lizard. And then there's some other ones but lizards or predators and they run around grabbing stuff to eat like the Toronto Source rex would.

I haven't seen a bug in the lawn and the longest time, but I have hundreds of these things running around. Yeah, they're they're not I wouldn't worry about them, but that's what they're doing. Yeah, they're out there running around. Fortunately they don't have teeth like a Toronto source X or we wouldn't be able to go outside. Well, thank you very much, you bet Jim, thank you. I appreciate your call very much. You

know, you're talking about the medina product. I need to get back out and do some planting, and when I do, I want to have some medina has to grow on hand. That's the six twelve six got a pretty good punch of phosphorus in it. And phosphorus is important, you know. It helps with the flowering, it helps with rooting, and it affects other processes in the plant that are absolutely essential for plant life and success. This has to grow six twelve six. It's also got it's really cool blend.

It's you've got Medina still activator to simulate some biological activity. You've got humic acid, which is always beneficial. It's going to help with us a little structure and nutrient uptake. And then of course it's got the seaweed extracts too,

So that's quite a cocktail of cool stuff. And every time I put a plant in the ground, watered in, watered in five days later, again, watered in five to seven days later, again, give it about a succession of I would say about three good soakings with this product to get that plant. You wanted to hit the ground running. That's basically what you're

aiming for. And Medina has to grow will do absolutely just that and make your microbes in the soil happy while probably adding a few microbes a few meanings several million as well. But yeah, it's really good. Just it makes sense to take care of your plants early on. Especially you know, sometimes we wait until we see problems. But you know, if I'm gonna put a plan out there, I know it there's a transition for it to get established. And that is one of the reasons why we like that Medina products

so much. We're gonna head out to a leaf now and talk to Ralph. Hello, Ralph, how are you today? Good morning? My grass? Most of it is turned brown like the color of hay. And so what in the heck do we do? Well? Well, I bet you're not the only lawn and a leaf that's looking a little bit like that this time of the year. So one, one more thing, it might be helpful. There's one house on the corner. It has no trees in the front, like ours don't have any trees in the front. So but there's

this is still green. So that's amazingly. There must be doing something right. Yeah, you may have to go knock on the door find out what they're doing. I tell you, though, Ralph, it's it's it's going to come down to just two or three things. Water Is it getting enough water? Is when you water? Are you wetting the soil deeply or are you just is it just soaking in and maybe getting the top inch or two

wet? That's one, and right now, with the demand so high, you gotta work at keeping the sole moisture up doesn't mean soggy, it just means moist and so that would be number one. There are root diseases, like take a a root rot. There are chinch bugs. That generally is going to be something that starts over by a curb or a driveway and kind of gradually moves out in the yard. So it could be a number of different things. Grubs also, by this time of year, they're chewing enough

roots that that grass is having trouble pumping water. If you don't have roots, you can't pump water, So it could be one of those. I would start with really giving a good look at the lawn moisture content. You can take a long, straight handle screwdriver and push it in the ground, and if your soil is moist it'll push through it just like well it's like soft butter, you know, it just pushes on down when you hit dry soil. I mean, it'll be like you hit concrete without screwdriver, And

that kind of gives you an idea how deep is this soul went? I think I would try try that test as the first step. What does the brown grass turn green or does it just die? And how the grass grow? Is your lawn Saint Augustine or Zosia Bermuda, what do you have? We don't We're not lawn people, so we just have we know something's growing. Okay, Okay, you have green grass, okay. Yeah. So some lawn grasses will turn brown and a heartbeat when it gets dry, and

they'll just sit there and they'll be ready to come back. And that would be something like buffalo, which should not be planted here. Others like Saint Augustine, they live like there's no tomorrow. They just they're all above ground. There's no underground rhizomes, and so when that turns brown, it may be dead. Now there are Saint august There is a stage where it goes pretty brown, but the runners are still green and it can recover. But

there's a stage which it can't recover from. So depending on your grass type, I mean, if you want to send me a picture really up close and good sharp focus, I might be able to identify it for you. But so the answer to your question is, I don't know, because I don't know for sure which grasses we're talking about. Some of them turn brown, come right back, some of them not so much. Oh great, great answer, Well, thank you very much. I thought maybe we'd have

to do braking or things like that course and get everything out. Well, do you feel like it's staying adequately moist. Do you have a feel for that? Oh no, definitely not. Okay, well I would, I would blame that. So if you can't get out there and water, just wait, you're probably over time going to end up with a mixture of grasses and weeds. That's what happens when it gets kind of droughty, the grass gets thin. So but I have a friend of mine over in Mississippi,

and I love this statement. He said, you know, if you want, if you want a weedy lawn to look good, take your glasses off weeds. Your green grass is green. It looks great without your glasses. Thought. I think that's what we'll do. Thank you so much. All right, you take care. Yeah, that's not advice. It's going to be that a lot of people are gonna want to embrace. But you get, you get the idea of what I'm talking about. Speaking of taking care

of your lawn. One of the things we need to do is keep that nutrient content up there. And we want to keep it up there evenly. In other words, we don't want famine. You don't want to dump a bunch of a fertilizer that dissolves and immediately just releases everything you want to have release over time. At Nitrofists Supertarf, that's their silver bag. I like these colored bags because you walk in the store, look for the silverbag.

That's it. It's nineteen four ten and the nutrients and it it's got some that are available right now and it'll get green right now. But then it continues with the chemistry. I was visiting with Dan Snyder out at the Texas Nursery and Landscape Show and about it, and we're just talking about those technologies that release that nutrient gradually over time, so you get a good even growth

you're mowing is more smooth. The chinch bugs aren't as happy because you didn't cause this flush of top growth at the expense of root growth, and the root system is deeper. Did you know that when you over fertilize with nitrogen, when you overdo it, and you know one application of overdone, you get top growth at the expense of root growth. Well, we need heck

of a root system right now for that grass to do good. Nitrofile super Turf can help you build that kind of root system, and it's available at all of the places we talked about here the home garden centers that we're talking about, the feed stores about he's hardware stores not hard to find. Hey, we're gonna take a break, do a little news network with Niki Nikki News Network. That's how it works. Our phone number seven one three two

one two fifty eight seventy four. Can't you see well, good morning, beautiful Saturday morning out there. Every day is a good day for gardening. I don't care if it's gonna be a hundred degrees. It is a good day for gardening. That's just that's the way it works. I was I follow a lot of our sponsors on their social media and stuff, and I was looking at A and A Plants and Produce up there in Montgomery area, and on their on their Facebook pager's a little meme of a Kermit the frog.

Okay, Kermit the frog. He's drinking water and he's standing out in a desert and it says remember to drink lots of water and to stay indoors between eleven am and November first. If I though it feels like that sometimes. By the way, up at A and A they have a ton of cool stuff. I mean, do you want plants that can survive in the heat. Walk around your landscape. Look at it, I mean, is it a sea of green? That's what happens in the summer here in this

area. We kind of lose some of our color. Well, how about a bougainvillea. How about a plumbago. Oh that gorgeous blue sky plumbago flower, or they have a white form as well. Rose bushes, I mean, yes, roses, they do well. They do their cycling through the summer and they are about to really kick off and fall, So you know, pick up some of those that would be a good time. They're just

a lot of good plants, you know, hibiscus and stuff. And for those of you up in the Montgomery area, when you go to Ana Plants and Produce, you're at your hometown garden center and everything you need is going to be there. They're right there in Montgomery on one oh five if you go like toward Conro from Montgomery on the east side of Montgomery, they're right there, easy to find, and they carry all the products we talk about.

That's the thing I like about this is, you know, I know, when you go there, if you need to pick up some of the fertilizers and soils and things they're gonna happen right there on hand as well, and a lot of other stuff at ana plants and produce out there in Montgomery. So yes, stay indoors between eleven AM and November. First, let's go out to Richmond, and we're gonna talk to Ruth. Hello, Ruth,

good mornings. What's up in Richmond. Well, we have had in the ground for several years a small ten by five twelve by five butterfly garden, and the corners of it we have a copper canyon daisy and until this summer day looked great. One in one corner. We thought it was mealy bugs that were affecting it, okay, and we read to spray I think, I want to say the knem oil, But then we read that nm oil may be harmful to butterflies. And it's sitting in the butterfly garden.

But anyway, so as one deteriorated to death, the other copper canyon daisies are declining, but the lantana in between. Of course, we're watering it and we don't know if it is mealy bugs, how how should we treat it? And we thought that copper canyon daisy would do good in the heat. Okay, So mealy bugs, what makes you think it's mealybugs? What are you seeing? What is the discus? There were some white on the stems of the plant. Okay, Okay, then again, maybe maybe it

was something else. Because they are not next to each other. It could. I won't say it can't be mealy bugs, but generally there if you see the white along the stems, there's an aphid that can do that kind of thing. There's some other insects that can cause the white kind of material. Mealy bugs typically are all clustered together around like where the leaf attaches to

the plant or some other places. And if you grab them and squeeze them, if you're unsqueamish, grab grab some of the white between your thumb and forefinger and just push and slide to the side, you can dismiss it out. If it's mealy bugs, it'll be a pinkish goo on your hand. That's the easiest way to identify me books. I don't think that's what it is. As to why that one is go ahead, no, that's good to know. Yeah. As to why that one is going downhill when the

others aren't, I don't know me. Copper canyon daisy can take blazing hot heat. It can now it doesn't want to be drowned, but it needs adequate soul moisture. But it can take the heat, so it's not a heat problem. Spider mites like marigolds, and copper canyon daisy is a marigold

type relative. You might try putting a piece of paper under some branches that are going from healthy green towards losing that color and thump them real sharply with your fingers, and then look at the paper for little specks that are crawling around. That would be spider mites, And so that's a possibility. I would check that and make sure that that's not what's going on. So soul moisture, no spider mites. Other than that, I don't know. Send

me a picture. I can take a look. But it's really I just have not seen copper canyon daisy have a lot of problems. Wow, and we thought, yes they were. They were quite nice at one time, and the aroma of them when you walked by, yes, yes, but now the other two are in decline. Okay, so I will look for the APIs what are the signs of the APIs no, Oh no, it's your spider mites. You want to put it, Put a white piece of paper under a branch and then real sharply, just pup that, thump it

and then look at the paper for little tiny specks crawling around. That's your sign for spider mites. But you can also send me go ahead, how would we treat How would we treat if it is spider mites this time of

the year. I would get a blast of water. And it's gonna be a messy to do this, but just get one of those spray nozzles on the end of your hose and put it on that hard blast, you know, just a mist, not a shower like your watering plants, but just a blasting mist or a fan spray, and get underneath it and just just drench and blast all the undersides of the pleas leaves around the plant. Do that once, do it to begin a week later, and you pretty much

have them under control. Avoid avoid oils and soaps when it's going to be over ninety degrees outside, which it's gonna be for a long time. All right, Okay, well, thank you very much, and I just send where do I send? The photo again. I'm gonna put you on hold and Josh will get you the email. All right, thanks for that call. Hey, if you are an active adult and you would like to have a neighborhood where you have a beautiful home or a beautiful walk pathways and it's

just a it's just a pleasure to be part of. If you want a place where there's active program active life style programs, because that's who you are. You want to you want to continue in these years to just enjoy life and get out there. That's Dell Web and the new Dell Web community in fulsher Texas on three fifty nine has a community garden. So there we did it. We seal the deal. I mean all of the Dell Web plus

a community garden. That is the place a gardener needs to enjoy. Dellweb dot com slash Houston for more info or two eight one, four, five, nine oh six o nine all day, but I have no bed to go. Well, good morning, beautiful Saturday morning. Hey, we made a little cloud cover out there. That's kind of nice. It kind of slows things down, heating up a little bit. Nice breeze to be outside, and it's a good day. To also to be inside talking on the

phone to garden line, talking on the radio. We are here to answer your gardening questions. That's what this show is all about. We want to have you, help you have success. That's my goal. How can we make you enjoy gardening more? How can we make your place more beautiful? How can we help make your place, your garden more bountiful. That's what it's about. And we can do that because good gardening is all about having the right information. It really is. Your thumb is not browned, your

thumb is uninformed. And that's why we're here. We're gonna head out to Santa Fe now and talk to John. Hello, John, good morning. How are you. I'm well, how are you doing fine? I want to know how I start Brussels spros. Okay, growing him before, but it's been years ago. I want to start from seed. Do I put some seed in some potting soil in the little cups and get them started there? When do I need to get him in the ground? All righty?

Well, you want to plan them today in a cup or in a pot whatever, you know, a little six pack tray, whatever you're gonna grow them in. Go ahead and get a good quality potting soil or a seat even better, a seed starting mix that's a finer ground. It's a very fine textured, so you get good contact between the seed and the potting mix

the growing media, and that helps with germination percentage being better. But go ahead and do it now, because you're gonna want to put those out as we get on into late September. Probably it coin depends on what the weather does. You know, mid to late September. Even you can do it in October two. But russell sprouts take a long time, and so the sooner you get them going, probably the better off you're gonna be. Okay, now, I do have some very good growing okrah right now, And

I have a question. You know, I notice on the ocrapods I see clusters of ants. Yes, they don't seem to hurt the ocropod, but I'm wondering, what what part do they play in this? Okay? Well, it's one of two types of ants, one specifically as fire ants, and they'll go up there to get some of the oils. They'll even chew into the pods to get moisture from the fire ants and whatnot. They're basically

oil slash protein. Interested that's their food stuff, and the other type is just all the other general ants that feet that farm aphids or ranch aphids I guess would be the term ants actually will pick up aphids that will carry them up onto a plant and put them there and take care of them because they can come back later and use their antenna, and they essentially are like dairy cattle. They literally make the aphid produce a drop of honeydew and they feed

on that. So literally it's like ants being dairy farmers on your plant. And those ants are of no damage to you, but if the aphids built up high enough, they could be a problem. I've got a whole big patch of oakre and I have one plant that is just covered with aphids and it's because an ant took them up there or they landed there. But ants will actually protect them too, so they don't you know, like a good

dairy farmer, don't let your cows get killed. Well, I don't see any damage to the yolkra pod itself, but I see the ants on it, and I'm wondering, Yeah, what part do they play? Do I want to keep them away from there? If so, how do I do that. Well, if it's fire ants, you need to get a bait with spinosaid, a fire ant bait with spinosaid, and one of the mut's on the markets called come and get it. Come and get it. Trying to think of who makes it, but anyway, come and get it.

So when when you go, when you find that come and get it, you sprinkle it around and the fire iNTS find the bait and it kills the fire ants other kinds of ants. The only thing would just be blast them off with water. That's all I would do that. That's what I've been doing, is blasting them off with water. Yep, that's probably it. Not much to worry damage the yolkra at all. Well then you know, I wouldn't worry about it a lot. Just a lesser fire ins and you

go pick oak rah and now you're getting bit. I mean that that's a problem. But yeah, all right, well, thank you for your information. Have a good weekend. All right, well you too, thank you for the call. I appreciate that very much. Bye bye bye. You know, it is hot outside and it is dry outside, and our birds have to have water, I mean they do. I just got a new bird bath. In fact, I've got two different kinds of bird best now in the backyard. You know, you got to give those things some to

drink. I mean it. There's not a lot of good water sources around for them. And if you want them to hang out at your yard, well we put feeders and stuff out, put water out that attracts them into. Hummingbirds are arriving now, I mean, we need to be getting our hummingbird feeders out and if you don't have one, you need to go buy wild Birds Unlimited. Ask them about there. It's I think they call it

a high perch hummingbird feeder. It's a little flat thing and it is super effective, and it just it's easy for the hummingbirds to get in there and to do what they do. And you need more than one too. You're gonna want to put them, you know, quite a little bit of a distance apart, let them where they start bossing each other and protecting the feeder. You don't take care of that, so they don't do that. But Wilbirds has that. Wilbirds has everything related to birds, and I just have

to warn you taking care of birds as addictive it really is. I was not a bird person before and now I can't imagine not having the sound of birds. And I sit where where I sit in my living room, I can look out and watch my feeders and see what they're doing, and it's just entertaining. And if you're outside, the sound and just the colors and the antics and everything, it's really cool. By the way, continue to

feed that nesting super blend from wild birds. It's it's our birds are in their molt and they need it. You know, they're getting new plumage, keeping it in top condition. Nesting super blend is important. It's one of the many quality feeds that wallbird has. And do you have to have quality bird feed, Yes, you do. If you buy feed just full of those little red beebies, they don't want that. They don't eat that. And so you think, well, I got a good deal on bird seed.

No, you probably are losing half of your bird seed to stuff birds aren't eating, so you're paying double for what the birds are eating. Go to wildbirds. Just let them teach you about it. There's there's different blends for all kinds of birds. There's a lot of options. And I have a big sack of a wild bird feed that because it is so effective. I don't use as much, and I'm the birds are there at the feed

are all the time. But I'm telling you it makes a difference if you if you are looking, you know, for something that is going to really help you control a pest or control and maybe managing weeds in the garden or diseases in the garden. Southwest Fertilizer is the place you need to go. We were talking about Southwest earlier with another caller and it's just they have everything. They have everything you need. We're getting ready for fall fertilization. Bob

at Southwest has a soil probe that you can check out. Now, you're gonna have to leave a deposit so you don't decide you want to keep the thing right you bring it back, but it's free. Just go buy there, You leave a deposit, you take the soil probe and you can take a quality soil sample that's accurate. Soil tests are accurate in measuring what you send them, but if you don't send them a good representation or your soil, then it's not The results are not representative of what's in your soil.

Does that make sense? Go by, just get talk to Bob. Get that soil probe. Go home, sample your soul properly, and you can send it to soil Testing DOTMU, dot EEDU and they'll give you the results you need and then you can buy your fertilizers accordingly. And Bob has ever kind of fertilizer you can imagine there at Southwest Fertilizer. I mean, I was in the other day just writing some things down. I always check on what's available in garden centers, and he had that and it was just,

you know, the selection was just unbelievable, unbebelievable and outstanding. And so check him out at wild Birds wild Birds still got birds in my brain. A Southwest Fertilizer, and you'll find everything. By the way, if you need to get your lawn mower blade sharp and maybe a small engine or a little bit of small engine repair done, they can do that too. But you'll find your service and the knowledgeable staff they're unparalleled. I mean, they

really know what they're talking about. So when you go home, you spend your money on a product that is going to work. I can guarantee you that. Well, here we go again, another break for the news. Our phone number seven one three two one two five, eight, seven, four, seven, one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. Give Josh a call, get on the board. We'll talk to you when we

come back. I'm enjoined being back in the saddle again visiting it. It's been a it was a wonderful week out at the Texas Nursery and Landscape Association show. Good to see so many of our sponsors out there, visiting with Louise and Heirloom Soils for a little while talking about some of the products they have in line. He did a really good talk too, by the way,

at the number of educational sessions. I was moderating all a lot of the educational sessions, and Lewis did a really really good talk for garden centers on some educational tips and techniques for how to have success. A lot of fun being out there. We'll be right back. KTRH Garden Line does not necessarily endorse any of the products or services advertised on this program. Welcome to KTRH Garden Line with Skip rictor Crazy, just watching as the club. Good

morning, good Saturday morning, beautiful outside there. You're listening to Garden Line. I'm your host, Skip Ricter. Our phone number is seven one three two one two five eight seven four seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four, while I was down in San Antonio at the Texas Nursery and Landscape Association show, got to visit with Dean Nelson down there. And you know, Dean started Nelson plant food back in nineteen eighty three. I mean

they've been doing professional grade horticulture fertilizers for a very very long time. A lot of a lot of professionals are used Dean Nelson's plant foods because they know they work, they know their quality, and when it comes to your lawn, you have that same kind of technological advantage by going with something, for example, like slow and easy. Slow and easy, what is that? Well, I like that name, slow and easy. That's how it applies

fertilizer. You can take it. It's a twenty two two ten. You can take it, put it on your lawn, and you're not just going to get a flush of growth and then here come the chinch bugs and small roots, you know, all the shorter root system, all the things that happen when you overdo nitrogen. Nope, this one is designed to release a little bit early, a little bit later, a little bit later, a little bit later, and it just gradually feed your lawn over time. That's

why they call it slow and easy. How easier can you get? Then you put the lawn fertilizer down and it's going to feed for several months for you. I mean, it's going to give you that gradual release. It works really well. It's part of their whole turf Star line. You know, turf Star. They've got a number of products in there. I probably don't brag about the rest of them enough, but we'll change that. We'll talk about some other shim bit, but basically, slow and Easy is the

one for your summertime feeding of your lawn. You're going to have the beauty you want. And while you're talking about while we're talking about Nelson's Color Star, Neutral Star, our Nature Star, Nature Stars, your organic line of fertilizers. They have a wide variety of options with Nelson plant Food and that slow and Easy is one that is very timely to have a beautiful lawn right now. By the way, when you're taking care of a lawn like that,

you want to also consider the micros that are needed. And that is why we like a product called azamite. Now, don't think of asamite as a fertilizer per se. It's like you need to fertilize your lawn, but you also need to have the nutrient, the small micro trace whatever you want to call them nutrients available as well. It's a mind product. It comes out of Utah. They dig it out of the ground and it is just packed with all kinds of trace elements. You put it on your lawn.

What I'll do is I'll do a fertilization. I'll turn right around loaded up with the asamite and apply that separately. It's a different sized gran you'll so don't mix them together than your fertilizer. But asamite works well. I was visiting with Mike Hodge at the t n LA show in San Antonio this week. We're looking at some of the new products they got coming along and pretty

cool stuff. But you can go to azamite Texas dot com. You're gonna find azamite and a lot of the places we talk about here on garden Line widely available, easy to find, and azamite as that addition to your fertilizer to make sure the micronutrient levels are what they need to be. Let's head out to Fairfield and we're gonna talk to Marty. Now, Hello Marty,

good morning. Skip question my Libularia chapter seat. Plants that I have on the front porch are have got some kind it almost looks like an aged but the leaves are just like one day I see a little bit of aphid and I was spurring them all and the next day they're like brown and dead the leaves and you're you're seeing apids on lobularia. Well, I don't know if they're ageds or what kind of bugg it is, but they're sucking the juice

out of the leaves and you're not eating them. I can't see like little jagged edges, but they're just sucking the juice. And one day they're alive and one day they're did that's interesting, Well, I don't know I would. I'm not run into that on those plants. They seem to be pretty pest free for me, but hey, ever plant has its pest, I

would say probably a block. I would do get up early in the morning and do it when it's still cool, barely daylight, and I do a spray of inseexcital soap on those plants follow the label carefully, but you want to do it early because you don't want the leaves to be wet with soap when the sun comes out and it gets really hot, or you can burn plants with that. I would try that the go ahead. They're pure shape. Well it's I don't know it. I don't know which pesture you're seeing,

unless you could capture some and send me a picture of them. But I still, you know, whatever the pest is, soap is good against small, soft bodied pests, and pests in their young immature stages, and for adult past it just irritates the heck out of them. We use it to make worms come up, caterpillars come up out of the lawn and chinch bug come up out of the lawn by by drenching them with soapy water. So I would I would try that as the simplest if we knew for sure

what kind of pest? Is it a piercing sucking past you said it didn't seem to be chewing the leaves, so you may be dealing with some sort of a plant bug that's a piercing sucking that's going to take something a little bit stronger. But I always hate to send people out to tell you go buy this product, Marty, because I really don't know what's doing it. And that's kind of what we need to get to the bottom of. You know, there are a number of insecticides out there that will kill insects that

are piercing, sucking types of insects. We call it. The true Bugs is one of the groups, and you can go try one, but you may be wasting time and money if we don't find what it is. If you could, you know, I've talked before about putting a a sheet of paper underneath the plant and swatting the plant and then looking on the paper for a little tiny things crawling around. Just you may try that and see what

you see. If you can capture anything and get a good picture of it, I can look at it and identify it, and then we know exactly what to do. Okay, and then real quick on the acorn they're topping out that they're like when one day there's a bloom in the next day it's like six inches tall, and it's this one variety. It's got that kind of a maroon color with green oh on okra, Yeah, yeah, uh

okay, well yeah, okrew grows fast. Typically we pick okra about three days after the bloom drops, so we can say pick it when it's four inches long or two inches long or whatever, but it's really the time because if it were growing slow for whatever time, it may still be small and be tough. But about three or four days after bloom, so you may kind of get out there. Some varieties are long and slender and fast. One that's like that, Oh gosh, I just went blank on the name

aunt Hetty's. Aunt Hetty's red is a burgundy, and it grows really fast, really long. So you may have a variety like that, and in that case, longer is not a problem. You can you can. They can be a little longer, okay, because like when they pop up, there's like the next day they're huge. Yeah, so I've been pulling them. I thought they were chaffs, so I was pooling them and putting the seeds. Can I still plant the seed? You could once they're dried.

I wouldn't plant them while they're still white. But you can also grab an ochrapod and just bend it and if it snaps loose, that's a good pod to eat it. If it's like got some woody strands that are holding it together. When you try to snap it that throw it away. That's not worth eating. Okay, Hey, I've got to run for a break, but I hope that helps. Thanks, thank you for the call, Marty.

Appreciate that our phone number seven one three two one two five eight seven four In the saddle again, will be time, come back in the saddle again. Oh that makes me happy. Gene Autry one of the singing cowboys. Most of us, even me, not old enough to remember remember the original singing cowboy days. But oh gosh, that's fun, fun stuff. Hey. We are here on garden Line for one purpose, and that is

to answer your gardening questions, to help you have success with gardening. Our phone number seven one three two one two five eight seven four seven one three two and two fifty eight seventy four. Listen, these these hot days are harder on your trees. Your trees pump a lot of water. To think about this, Go set you know anything sitting out in the sun. Go out about two o'clock today and put your hand on it. It's gonna burn

your hand. Think about every leaf on a tree is essentially subjected to that radiation that literally would cook the plant tissues and kill them. Why are the leaves all not brown, It's because they transpire water. What happens if they don't have water? Yeah, you get the idea Affordable tree Care. We're talking about our good friends at Affordable Tree Care. By the way, the number seven one three six nine nine two six six three. They can come

out and do the deep root watering. Now you know there's deep root feeding where you put nutrients in the ground. But Martin will get out there or him and his team get out there and do the deep root watering, and that's important and injects water to fill that soil profile because trees need a huge volume of soil with water in it to be able to survive. For this, I mean they can survive, but not without water. So any tree that's important to you, oaks, pecans, elms, any big tree on

your property, keep them healthy now, because here's what happens. A tree gets drout, stressed and then issues. It wouldn't have been a problem like hypoxlin canker on oaks suddenly are killing the tree now the draft stress just set them up for that. Don't let them do that now, Martin can do all kinds of stuff. I mean they do. They do stump grinding, you know, they do consulting on your trees. They can clear the power

lines because here comes hurricane season. Right, we're already in it seven one three six ninety nine two six six three or just go to aff tree Service dot com. Aff Tree Service dot com. Don't wait until your tree show problems. It's probably too late by the time you get that. Protect them now, take care of them now, hydrate him now to help them get through. Let's head out to sugar Land and we're gonna talk to Mike. Hello, Mike, good morning, Skip good talking to you again. I

was at the Stafford Center Home and Garden show this summer. Oh good, yeah, yeah, I met you there, but you get gave me some of that color Star by Nelson food. Oh man, that's rocket fuel, man it is. I put it on boogabilias. I haven't found anything that I'll make it bloom keep it blooming, but it's worked well so far. Well good, all right, One quick question, then, when can I

start the fall grass feeding and what do you recommend? Well, we're not gonna be feeding our fall grass until we get close to October or sometime in October most cases. I see you're done in Sugarland. Yeah, i'd be about the beginning of October probably we would be looking at putting on a fall feeding. I've got a new schedule that's about to come out. We're just

trying to get some things worked out with the website. But it'll have all that on it and I will talk about it incessantly once we get that up there. But basically, the quick answer to your question is you're gonna put on your fall fertilizers about the beginning of October. That doesn't mean it has to happened in a week or two. There's a range. If you do it eight September, that's fine, If you do it in late October,

that's fine. But you know, we want to get it on there while the grass still is able to take it up and do some good with it. Yeah, So what's the combination that you suggest? Well, you want you want to go ahead? I'm sorry what we're saying. Well, I lost a lot of grass during the winter last year. I don't know what it was, due to the freeze of the drought. I don't want to go through that again. Yeah, no, you sure, you sure don't.

I would say, you know, as far as combination you're talking about, like the numbers and stuff like that, well, you know you were talking about nitrofiles. That's a Nelson product, and Nelson also makes something called carbo load. It's ten ten twenty, so that would be like a one one two. Now, different companies their fall fertilizers are going to have different

ratios slightly. But unlike summer where we want a three one two or four one two ratio, when we get to fall, we want a little bit of nitrogen, but we mainly need to get that third number the potassium in there. That's the winter heartiness and the chemistry of it is that they are taking up taken up together and that that helps you. So you know, if you use the summer fertilizer in the fall, it wouldn't be the end of the world, but the much much better thing would be to go with

the higher potassium and unless nitrogen like turf Star carbo loade. Right, okay, great, well, thank you love your show. Well, thank you, I appreciate that. You take care you bubby. Yeah, and you're gonna you know, I'm talking about these products like turf Star and whatnot. You're gonna find every kind of product like that. I mean, we I talk about a lot of different things on the show and one thing I like about ACE Hardware is if we're gonna talk about it, they're going to carry

it. You can go to ACE hardware dot com, go to their store locator, find one of the thirty nine stores near you, and, by the way, allow yourself a little bit of time because you're gonna find the

fertilizers, you're gonna find the pesticide products and things you want. But you need to walk through that store and see It would take a long time to describe the store fully to you because they have so many different kinds of things, and ACE hardwarees are independently owned, so each can be a little different. I like to go different ones sometimes just to see what's new. What do they have? ACE Hardware is going to have it. I mean that's

simple. They've got what you need. By the way, it's grilling season. Still time to get out there and get that big green egg you can't live without, or a trigger or maybe a webber grill, or maybe some bling. They got lots of cool bling for outdoor cooking as well. Let's head out now to David, and David, you're in kind of the west central area. That's correct, Skip, thank you very much. I live on an alley and there's kind of a gravel bed that runs the length of

my town home. And growing out of that gravel bed is a very robust oleander. It's now recovering from the second breeze, doing good job. But that gravel bed just had a ton of weeds. I had a guy with a weed eater I go through it yesterday, and I'm wondering, how close can I spray the round up to the oliander to just permanently kill those weeds. Okay, the answer is as close as you want, but don't get

it on any green tissue on the oliander. So if you've got it, you want to not pump your sprayer up too high where you get that mist that kind of drifts up. If it gets on green stem or green leaves, it'll damage that oleander significantly. And second the roots. Well, secondly on the roots. When you're using a product like that, all you have

to do is dampen the foliage. If you're spraying and it's just dripping off and you're drenching the soil, then you're gonna you're potentially gonna have a problem with the roots as well, but in general, just barely with the weeds that you can't kill it deader than that will kill it, you know.

In other words, if you go beyond just dampening the leaves, you're wasting the product and potentially having some that secondary damage where you're talking about trying to avoid it so deep that it saturates the soil that will get the rate that will that will not do any additional good and can do additional harm. Great, Thank you very much. I appreciate your show. Thank you, David,

appreciate that call. Appreciate that very much. I keep talking about Texas Nursery and Landscape Association show because I was out there is visiting with David Williamson from it, you know, out in RCW Nurseries and uh, just talking to him about some of the things they've got going on. By the way, you can go to RCW nurseries dot com. That's for those of you who aren't from a with the area. That's the nursery that's on Tomball Parkway,

which is Highway two forty nine. Goes up to Tomball Robbery comes into Beltway eight. You know, it's real easily located northwest northwest Houston, and r CW's got all kinds of good stuff. I mean they always do. You can always go there and know that when you go to RCW you're going to have a good selection of plants. Right now, they got the Mexican plumb in that's their tree of the month. And Mexican plum is a native plum. It's it's a single trunk plum. Some of the plums form thickets

and they just become a mess in your yard. Mexican plumb is a single trunk plum and it does well. It has beautiful spring flowers, it's native, it's tough, and plus you get something for you know, wildlife as well with that fruit that's on the little bit of plums. I guess they're edible. They're not, you know, it's not the if you want fruit, I would plant a fruit type plum. But they're on there and they it's this is one heck of a tough trees. I've seen these things survive

in some pretty pretty brutal conditions. So I've been really impressed with that native plum, but August August time is when they have their sale. Fifteen percent of perennials select trees and shrubs on sale as well. They're open money through Saturday seven to four. That would be today seven to four Sunday Tomorrow nine to four at r CW Nurseries r CW nurseries dot com. Let's go to Kingwood now and we're gonna talk to Bill. Hello, Bill, good morning,

Good morning. I'm interesting. I have nematodes, and which is like having some kind of dere deadly social disease. As far as I'm concerned. They are in both of my beds, both my garden beds at New Caney and my garden beds in Kingwood. Years ago, I was able to use

some stuff called vapan to kill nematodes and it worked really great. But now people like me with an advanced orgaining chemistry degree are not able to get that stuff because they have restrictions on I think it's called controlled use pesticide or something. Yeah, but what do you recommend? Well, tell me again, what are the kinds of plants that are growing in the nematodes? Mostly vegetable plants for an example, cantaloupes and the tomatoes and pepper. Okay, so

here here's the deal on nematodes. And it's not a fast easy answer. I wish I could say go buy product B and you're done. We don't have one of those, but we do things that reduce their numbers in the summertime, growing a wall to wall marigolds in the bed. I mean, I'm talking about every cubic centimeter or soil has a marigo root in it. That's the goal that you go in there. Pardon fun specific a marigoles. The African types are the big pom poms are better, but that's the other

types will work as well, but that would be that. Then you go to the cool season and you do cereal rye grass, the grain type of rye, which you can get at a good feed store, and the cereal rye grass is the trap crop for the winter time. Anytime you grow mustard, I know people that plant must or not to eat it, but just wall to wall and then they chop it, turn it under, it decomposes and kills nematodes. At planning nematode resistant crops, getting in a rotation where

you plant things that they don't get to kind of starve them down. Those are all some of the options. Solarizing helps a little bit at the surface, but it doesn't go deep enough to control them. And Bill, I'm sorry, but I'm running against a hard break here. But those are a few of the things that you can do that will work pretty well on the nematodes. Just trying to keep your susceptible crops out of that soil. Maybe a different garden bed so that you can rotate a little bit better. Thank

you for the calling. I tell it, hey, Bill, Bill, would you hang on. I'm gonna put you on hold and we'll come right to you after break. I've got I've got to cut looseier. All right. There you have it. You were listening to garden line seven one three, two, one two five eight seven four. We were I was talking about earlier visiting with Dan Snyder out at the TNLA show and talking about some

of the fertilizers and stuff they have. You know, they have the sweet Green and I don't know if you've used this before, if this is an organic fertilizer. It's eleven percent nitrogen, which is one of the higher rates of nitrogen and you can get in a product. Of course, you just apply it accordingly. You know, you get stronger products, you apply less fertilizer products, you apply more fertilizer. But this Sweet Green, it has

a wonderful sweet smell and it is basically a molasses based product. They go through a certain process that where microbes are involved in it and it breaks it down and it gets those numbers up where they need to be. But when you put that on the soil, the microbes go crazy, and microbes are what makes the world go around. In the root system of a plan. You can put that down. You can see a pretty darn fast response in

my opinion, from it, and it works really well. Again, it's easy, it's easy to apply, it works well, it does well. It's got an organic it's basically an organic based product. Sweet Green is available

everywhere nitrofoss is available, which is everywhere. I mean really the ace hardware stores, we talk about a lot of the home and the home, mom and pop nurseries and garden center, even feed stores that we talk about here on garden Line are going to carry the nitrofost products and that would include the one Sweet Green, and that would be a good time to put some of

that down. It would it would continue to feed your lawn, carry you on into the upcoming fall fertilization, which is still a little bit away. But nitrofost sweet green, I think you will be very pleased with it in many many aspects and regards. We're going to head back and talk to Bill back in Kingwood. Bill, I think we were still working on some nematode questions. Right, Yeah, but you know, really have a go to Joe. Gonna tell you that I was considering using plotonium, but I thought

there might have some mild side effects. Yeah, yeah, just mild. It wouldn't it wouldn't do much. But you know what you wouldn't need outdoor landscape lighting make the yard glow. Oh, I got it. You take care, Thanks for the call. Sorry to waste yours all right, bye, Hi, it's fun. It's never a waste of time when we're having fun. Yeah. I need to tell Jason at Pierscapes about that. We just need nuclear reactive materials to do the landscape lighting. Now. Actually Pierscapes

does landscape lighting, but they do it the right way. These high quality LED lighting, you know, saves you some energy, and you just don't want your place glowing like Peerscapes also does irrigation. Maybe maybe your system needs a little work done. You know, things aren't working right. Most irrigation systems are not efficiently designed, and they're definitely not maintained properly, and you

waste water and then you end up with brown spots. You know you're watering and you got this spot over there, stay's brown, and it's because the sprinkler heads are not reaching that area with the same volume of water they are other areas and so on. You know what I'm talking about. But Peerscapes pretty much anything you need done, they're going to do it. Jason and his team. We're talking about experienced people. We're talking about professionally trained employees.

The average tenure for their employees over ten years. I mean, they got folks that have been there twenty six years and more. They've got their certification, they got their license. You want something designed, They've got designers Bob Candice that they know how to do it right. They can turn your place into a show place. Maybe it's a front yard. You want people driving by to see a beautiful home. Maybe it's a backyard where you're enjoying

time with friends. Pierscapes. You can go online to peerscapes dot com or just Callumn two eight one three seven zero five zero six zero. Oh my gosh, Antonium, what do we think of next? Right? I was talking earlier about tree problems and things, and watering our trees is really critical. Watering them right is also critical. The squirt you put on your lawn is typically not going to do them much to help the trees. It's just not going to get down deep enough. And you know, trees and grass

compete, so we need to do additional care. But when a tree is new, you absolutely have to water it regularly. Right now, in the heat of summer, a tree that's been planted in the last few months, you better be watering that thing almost every day. Now. I don't mean

drowning it and creating a swamp. I mean a regular watering of that little root ball you put in the ground or roots cylinder I prefer to call it, because that's where all the roots are, and so the soil may be moist around it, but it pumps dry that little roots cylinder, and gradually, over the months and years, roots get further and further out and it's

not touching go at all. They're very resilient. But early on that's where the tree hugger sprinkler comes in. Because tree hugger you can set that thing. You put it around your trees. It's got a little valve on it, and go back to the faucet and turn it on. You can have it water just a little bit to water that root cylinder, and a little beyond that. You can turn it up more and more. You get a

fifteen inch tree hugger. They come in seven, eleven and fifteen. I believe the fifteen inch we'll put water all the way out, you know, put it out fifteen feet or more in both directions or all directions, all around the tree, so you can really give a good watering underneath that branch

spread of the tree where watering is so critical. So I would say even the first five years of a tree's life at least that I would be looking at a tree hugger sprinkler during these days of absolutely blazing hot weather and not enough rain. Unfortunately. You can go to tree Hugger Sprinkler dot com. You can find out more information there and they are sold in all the good places we talk about here on Garden Line. We're gonna head out now to

Tiki Island, Texas and talk to Jeff. Good morning, Jeff Warrant, Sir, how you do today? I'm well, what's happening in the wild tropical world of Tiki Island, Texas? Oh, not a whole lot where I'm looking at some of the mango plants growing, and you know they're they're not minding the heat too much. But I was gonna rack your brain on a winter garden. I'm already starting to think of transferring over to uh right now, the flower or the garden is full of grass clippings and all my

old cuttings and that stuff. But yeah, I already started seeing something baby tomato plants show up at the stores. And when when do you usually transfer over to your your winter crop? And what do you do to get the tomatoes going? Well, you need to do that asap. It is definitely, uh the later part of tomato planting season. So go ahead and get those transplants in the ground. Choose varieties that that move fast. You know,

brandywine may take almost eighty days. That's too long for fall, uh, you know, so get things are a little faster, uh, and get them in the ground as soon as you can. As far as the tomatoes. The rest of the fall garden, you know, it comes in stages where we're planting cucumb and squashing things. Right now, we're gonna as get to the end of August, we're gonna be putting in potatoes, a little new potatoes. I've been I've been seeing celebrity. I've been seeing some

of the better boys. Those are the ones that I'm seeing right now. Yep, that are out there. I don't know if you've got a preference on that one. Those are usually the two I go to. Yep, I do quite a bit. I would do the celebrity that's a Texas Superstar. By Iggonlife Extension or Econlife Research has something called superstar plants, and that is a superstar plant. It does very very well the benefit of celebrity.

It is also has nemotoad resistance. And you know, you get out near the coast, get some sandy soils, and you need that nematoade resistance. Hey, I'm gonna have to take a break here. If you have a follow up, just hang on and I'll come back to you. If not, Jeff, it's great to talk to you. Sorry, we got gotta go to a break. Our phone number seven one three two one two fifty

eight seventy four. Well, good Saturday morning. We are talking gardening today, which is what we do every Saturday from six am to ten am and every Sunday from six am to ten am here on garden Line our phone number seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. If you are looking for a beautiful home in a beautiful neighborhood, walking trails in even an active

lifestyle. We're talking about you know, folks fifty five and better that are just wanting to enjoy their retirement years or have to be retired, but just an active lifestyle. That's Dell Web. And Dell Web has a new community down in the excuse me, full Share area on FM three fifty nine, a couple of miles out at a full Sure, they have a community garden. In fact, I was just talking talking to someone the other day. I'm about to go down there again because I've been helping them with that garden.

That community garden just makes I mean, Dell Web's enough right there, but you throw a community garden into a Dellweb community. And for those of you listening on garden Line, wow that I don't know how you do better than that. It makes sense, right, Dell webs built, it's designed around you, the lifestyle programs designed around you, and so of course they

would have a community garden. That just makes a lot of sense. Hey, you can go online to dellweb dot com slash Houston for more information, or you can call two eight one four to five nine zero six zero nine two eight one four five nine zero six zero nine, so you can discover that Dell Web difference for yourself. Well, here we are listening to garden Line and we are going to go back here. I believe we're gonna talk to Jeff in Tiki Island. Jeff, I c out there still. I

think we must have more to talk about. Yes, sir, you're previously talking about nemato and I don't know this is just a wise tale, but my dad and other senior gardeners always told me to put the remnant crab shells that I catch down here in the garden after they dried out to help with the nematode population. And I've been doing it for years I don't know if it's truthful or not, but it's it's really helped me out. It is truthful. The kitan in things like you know when you eat crawfish and you

got that pile after you're done of all the body parts. That's basically a high kitan as is you know, crab shells and other things. You get the same thing, and there are there are organisms in the soil that they

feed on that material. Your crab shells you put down, and they are they helped fight nematodes and so you're it's like you're you're increasing their numbers by putting in the high kiten materials, and then the nematodes that are there have a tougher time of it, and it helps reduce It doesn't eradicate, but it does reduce their numbers. Excellent. Next one, I was going to ask you the plumbarias that I've got going everywhere, they're full bloom and gorgeous.

Is it damaging to the plant if I snip off some of the leaves They're getting very very heavy, and I'm adding support underneath of them. But I wanted to kind of cascade the floral a little bit more and it didn't know if that's damage in because I know it, let's add a white secretion afterwards. Yeah, am I hurting them at all? It's it's a percentage game. I mean, every time a plant has a leaf that's green and active, it's doing that plant some good. So as you take them off,

I gonna take them one leave off. Well, that's not a kill a plant, but you know, there's it's a it's a gradual from it's not black and white line, it's gray across there. But at some point you're taking enough leaves off so that you're probably affecting your balloom production and your

overall plant health. You know, it's carbohydrate production and storage. So I don't know that there's a certain amount of leaves you can take off, but just be aware of the fact that the more you take, the more you're probably setting it back a little bit. I'm keeping it at a pretty I'm just kind of just getting it to the floral doesn't have the leaves going into it, okay at all? So not a huge number, all right,

Next, what I have Do you have any recommendations on pineapple plants. I've had several of them over the years, I've gotten one pineapple, but I can't get to it to replicate and shoot out the fruit to get Okay, what you do is, once your plant reaches a good size, it's not just a little young plant trying to grow, but you've got a good sized pineapple. You put an apple in the middle of the top and then get

you one of those. What I would use is a dry cleaner bag, a clear bag put over the whole thing, and basically you're keeping the ethylene gas from the apple in around the base of that crown of the pineapple, and it initiates the bud formation that will become the bloom slash fruit that comes up. I can't remember how long you need to leave the apple there. It's not a super long time. It's just there long enough to cause that initiation. But as an apple sets, it does give off gas that will

do that. But you've got to capture it and hold it in. That's why we have the dry cleaner bag over it. Of course, you wouldn't want it in the sunshine. When you're doing that. You put anything behind a clear cover in the sun and it's gonna cook. So I'm moving it to a shaded area. Apple and I'm covering the entire plant. Yeah, yeah, you're you're keeping it in. And if you go online and you know, do a search for just say pineapple, fruit apple, you're probably

gonna find more information on some of the details of it. I'm gonna have to run to another call. But that is it, you bet, that is it. In a nutshell, Thank you, Jeff, I appreciate that call. Buchanis Plants in the Heights. They have one of the best selection of plants that you're going to find in Houston. And you know, with

hummingbird season arriving now, they've got an excellent selection of hummingbird plants. Firebush, Jamelia, Patton's butterfly weed, esperans a, Turk's cap the autumn sage Zavia, greg Guy, the cardinal flour, they cape, honeysuckle, cypers vine. There's just a lot of really cool plants. Even the even the Pride of Barbados is a good one for that firecracker bush and coral honeysuck. Buchanans has all that, and they have a lot a lot more. By

the way, today you need to write this down. It's right out. In fact, when the show ends, it's starting, so I'll give you permission to quit listening a few minutes before ten Okay, I'm joking. August twelve, that's two day ten am to eleven am. There's a totally tomatoes program put on by Sherry Crews at Buchanans, and she's going to get you set up for the whole fall season of tomatoes. What do you plant, how do you plan it? What kind of products do you use in the

soil to have success? That's all of Buchanans and it's today, so don't delay. I mean you'll miss it. If you wait until after the show to drive over there, you've missed it. So get over there and look at it. And while you're there, say I want to see everything you have that attracts hummingbirds. And by the way, you better have a plenty of time because they have a lot you can plants dot com. Uh. They're on East eleventh Street and the heights, easy to find. Everybody who's

been gardening here for a while knows about Buchanan's plants. It is definitely one of those destination garden centers. Let's head out now to Spring and we're going to talk to Sherry Hello, Sherry. Hey, Skip, it's nice to

hear your voice. Thank you. Hey. My question is years ago, you were the county Extension agent in Montgomery County, and I remember there were volunteer gardens where you could go volunteer and by doing that you would get experiencing garden gardening, and you know it would help you with problems that you're having in your own garden. Okay, I was pretty young then, but now I'm interested in finding something like that. Is there something like that near Spring

Texas? All right, I'm going to give you a quick answer, and that answer is I don't know, but I'm going to find out. That is an excellent question, and I'm going to call all or contact all our garden centers and ask does anybody do this? And I'll announce it on the air if I get a yes. Thank you for that. I'm sorry to have to be in a hurry, but I got to run to another call here and we'll be right back. But yeah, I will announce it on the air, Sherry. If I do find that out, that's a great

question. Thank you, Thank you. I've been talking about fertilizer and importance of fertilizing your lawn importance of having a healthy lawn. If you are looking for a quality organic fertilizer, I'm going to suggest a two product punch, and that would be Microlife's Green Bag and Microlife's Purple Bag. The green bag is six to four. That is just a standard top organic fertilizer in the region. Absolutely in terms of you know, look at how much of sold

the products, the popularity of that product, that's it. And then with purple humates plus add that to it and you've got that combination. Go to Microlife Fertilizer dot com for more information. Kelly, I see that we are about to take a break here. If you will hang on a little longer, I know you have hung on for a long time. Sorry about that. You will absolutely be first up when we come back if you'd like to give us a call. Seven one three two one two five eight seven four

seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. K t r H Garden Line does not necessarily endorse any of the products or services advertised on this program. Welcome to k t r H Garden Line with Skip rictor that just watching as we did Saturday morning. You're listening to garden line. I'm your host, skip rictor, and why are we here. We are here to help you have a more beautiful garden and a more bountiful landscape. Really, that's the bottom line. I mean, how do we help you to have

success? Because let me tell you, there is no better hobby than gardening. And I know folks that listen to the show that are not gardeners. They're just curious. I mean, I don't know. Maybe they wonder what the next crazy song we're going to play is. Who knows why, But I know they're there, that you're out there, and I would encourage you. Why not this fall? Why not become a gardener? Hey, just start with some containers, just a few containers. It is therapeutic, it

really is. I mean, if it's just a house plant, let's get started. Let's give it a try. We will hope you have success. You live if you're listening in the Houston area, you live in the town with the best group of nurseries anywhere in the state. And I know what I'm talking about. I've lived in Austin, I'm in a Santonio area. I've been ben to Dallas many times. Those are all great towns got some awesome garden centers. If you're gonna go on a trip to one of those,

just let me know and I'll tell you where to go. Some cool places, but not like here, not as many and not just the uniqueness and everything. It is great. It's a great, great place to live. And what's an example of that. Well, I'll tell you an example of that. Arbourgate Nursery up in Tomball. It's a destination place. The plants they have are amazing, The service they give is amazing. Beverly and Kennon, all the group out there at Arborgate, they know what they're talking

about. They take time. How can they help you, They listen to what you're asking. They put you and the plant need together so that you can have beauty, you can have bounty, you can have success. And while you're out at Arbourgate, then by the way, you can go on line to Arburgate dot com and find out more about them, where they are

and everything there. They are about a mile and a half west of two forty nine on twenty nine twenty in Tomball, So go up two forty nine, turn left on twenty and twenty about a mile and a half on the left. While you're out there, check out the one two three completely easy system. It's a food of four four three organic fertilizer plus calcium and it feeds anything with roots, so that's pretty much anything. They have a soil

for every application. That soil is specially designed knowing the issues we have in our soils here Arburgates. Soil is designed not just you know, like a peat and so on. This product is a quality products. It's got compost in it, a quality compost, it's got large particles sand, and it's got shale, expanded shale. What does that do? That opens up a clay. The more shale you add, the better, I mean, because

you need quite a bit of it to really open up a clay. And when you use their organic Soil Complete over and over over time, you're just going to be building it up better and better and better. Their compost complete, Organic compost complete, two different kinds of compost mixed in there into that product. Tons of microbial diversity, lots of microbial content and diversity, which are both important. And you know they also have expanded shale in that it

promotes that internal drainage of the soil that is so critical. Now. I know it hadn't rained in a while here, but boy, when it rains here, it pours. And if you're soil doesn't have good internal drainage, you're gonna have issues with your plants. Arbogate dot com check them out. If you've got family coming into town, there's that destination. They can go out there. They may even go in the gift houses and just look around at the little shops that they have. And I mean, just trust me

on this one. If you hadn't seen it before, you got to see it. And if you have seen it before, you know what I'm talking about. We're gonna head out now to Base City and talk to Mike. Hello, Mike, Hello, how are you doing today? I'm doing well. Got to listen to a lot of it, so I haven't heard you tell everybody that anyway. Sorry, all right, Hey, you in the past talking about pepper plants and how you can nurse them through the you know,

into the fall and have great bountiful harvest and all of that. My question is, I'm they're coming along great, but they're getting kind of Mike. I lushed you there. Are you still there? Tell you where I think Mike was going and as we try to get Mike back here, we'll hopefully I'll I'll tell you what, Mike, I'm gonna put you on hold just a second and we'll try to get that audio straighten out. You may

have to call back in. We're gonna put you on hold, and I'm gonna go to Kelly and Centerville. First of all, with a lot of apologies. Kelly, I said you'd do first, and then next thing you know, I'm taking a different call. So no worries at all. Is this center fill up up highway? Okay, yes, that's correct. My question, I just bought a small track of coastal hay Hay was just cut off of it, and I did soil samples Monday wedding for the results and

the recommendations. And the previous owner has not fertilized or done any kind of herbicide this year. And my question is in these drought conditions do you recommend a liquid or a granular And the other part is would you add any herbicide at this time? So that that is basically an ad question. And being in horticulture, I've always worked with agriculturists to handle the pastures and things I'm I'm fairly aware of it. So I'm gonna give you my answer. Are

you in Leon County? Yes? Okay. Richard Parrish is your agg agent at the Extension office AIR and Richard is excellent. I would you can listen to what I say, but then call Richard and believe what he says. That's how I do it. He is very good at Yeah. So I don't know that a liquid at this time is going to do you a whole

lot of good. I would you could put a granular down. What the Bermuda grass needs is moisture though, and so uh, you know, if we could get some some rain coming and you put a fertilizer down and kind of get it washed in, it would kick it into high gear. It's a warm season crop and you've got a lot of growth yet, growth yet

to come on bermuda grass pasture up and in the Centerville area. But as far as drought is concerned, uh, you know, at the right rate, you're not going to burn the plants with the fertilizer on the pasture you're putting on if you don't overdo it. But ultimately it's going to be the water that it needs and so I don't know, we all need to be out there doing rain dancers right now. Put an end to this nonsense.

But yeah, that that, But it talked to Richard Parrish. I don't have his phone rub on the top of my head, biteen f I can find it. Yeah, yeah, he's he would be the one who would give you a better answer. As far as the weed control you're gonna wanna, you need to spray something that has actively growing weeds. If your weeds are drought stressed and they're just kind of stunted and sitting there, the products that would normally kill them very effectively will not work very well. Okay,

yeah, so I mean it or not. People will spray round up on a bermuda grass lawn in the winter to kill winter weeds because the round the bermuda grass is so out of it asleep not doing anything that round up doesn't even kill it. Isn't that a weird deal? I mean normally, which is kill bermuter very well. But that's just that whole point about plants being stressed or actively growing. I've heard that. Yeah, okay, information, Hey, hey, are you listening? Are you listening on the radio or

on the computer or what up there. I'm listening on the radio. Okay, I'm actually yeah, I'm actually down in the in the woodlands right now, so I'm more local. But I would just I listened to you on the radio, appuly. I just didn't know if I didn't think the radio signal carried up to Centerville. So yeah, I'll get it. Okay, I don't know why, but okay, well good, I'm good. I'm glad you're listening. Tell your friends and neighbors about it. You take care,

I will. All right, We're gonna take a break ride here our phone number seven one three two one two five eight seven four will be right back. You are listening to garden Line, and we're glad you're listening, because what is this about. Well, this is about you and me talking and figuring out stuff and making your garden more beautiful, making your gardening more

enjoyable. You know a lot of people have banged around out there trying to get something done on a garden and just felt like I got a brown thumb, it doesn't work. Well, that's not true. You don't have a brown thumb. You have an uninformed thumb or a misinformed thumb. Boy, there's a lot of misinformation on gardening out there, but we're here to happy to have success because gardening is way too rewarding, way too much fun for

you to feel disappointed in any way, shape or form. That is absolutely true. If you've got a little piece of property outside of town, maybe a few acres, maybe a lot of acres, you need to consider a Caboda tractor. I mean, though it's the original orange tractor, they are cool and a lot of fun. I like to say, you know that the Caboda is kind of like getting a new car. You know you're out

there enjoying it. And speaking of comparing the Caboda tractor L twenty five zero one, you can get it with a front loader, you can get it with a little mower behind it, and all kinds of stuff to trick your riot out. Really really really cool. And where do you get a Caboda tractor. You get it at LM tractor dot com. LM tractor dot com. There are several LM tractors in this listening area down here. It's not hard to find one. And when you put the combination of Cabota and Lansdowne

Moody together, you've really got a winning deal. And let me prove it this way. They have a deal right now, zero down, zero percent interest for eighty four months at seven years. I mean that hand like they say, hands down, it's lansdown, and that is absolutely true. You're not gonna get a better deal than that. Go buy there. Just sit on one. Just try some of this stuff. Sit on one, check it out, let them tell you about it. I think you will be

as absolutely as impressed as I am. And next thing you know, you're gonna be hauling that mulch with that front end loader around the property and getting a lot of other good fun stuff done. In fact, it might even be working on one hundred degree day. I don't know. Maybe that's stretching a little bit, but I always enjoy being out on a quality tractor. Let's go to Mike in Bay City. Hello, Mike, Hello, Sorry, missed your call while ago. Something happening all right? Well, hey,

I think you have a pepper question, right I do. You talked about nursing your peppers through to the fall and you'll have a great crop. They're more abundance and so forth. Yes, Well, I'm doing great with the pairs, but they're getting pretty tall, not necessarily lanky, but pretty tall. And I'm wondering if I can cut a bunch of little lambs off and that won't that won't deter anything. You'll be helpful, be a little more sturdy plant. What do you think about You could do that. Mine

are getting tall too. You could do that and they'll branch out. But that's gonna delay things, so it's gonna have to you can cut them back. They're gonna pop for a little bit and then they're gonna start setting out new shoots. And those shoots have to mature and hit a point where they're

you know, have looms on them and then set peppers. So what I'm doing on mine is I bought some of these steaks, like survey air type steaks, right and I just hammer one down right beside each plant, right in the middle, and then I use some twine or something and just kind of pull those limbs up and together. Say that it doesn't fall apart, you know, the limbs, because peppers are a little brittle and you don't

want them to break over little. I would not cut them back. I would just do that, and I think overall going to be better off as a result of that, I've been thinking about this every week. I never called in to ask about it because I'm just tempted to cut them. And I'm glad I called you so I didn't want to cut them. Well, I'm glad to hear that and happy to be able to help. And all we ask is that half your pepper crop you drop off at the studio so

I can enjoy it too. Okay, I'll take them all the ones there. That's a small price, the man. I have a good time with your peppers out there. Okay. Take Here's funny. I've talked about trees a number of times today and different things, you know, importance of that tree hugger, sprinkler and things like that. By the way, I saw a tree hugre ride at Verdant Tree Farm a while back. They Verdant Tree Farm. There's two locations. One is on West Houston over at Barker Cypress.

Actually there's three now, West Houston and Barker Cypress. There's one on Broadway Street down in Pearland, and then if you go up to the Heights where Yale comes in to Highway ten, there's one there as well. You can go online to Verdant Treefarm dot Com. And I know it's verdict. I don't know why I say verdant, It's just what comes out of my mouth. But verdict means green and Verdant means green as well. Uh. It's turnkey service. You pick out a tree, you tag it, they

install it for you, truly simple. I mean, if you want a huge tree, if you want instant, they go up to like seven hundred gallons I believe maybe even more than that all sizes of trees. If you need a palm, they are the play that is the place for palms in the Greater Houston area. Do you want a Florida sable? Do you want a mule palm or windmill palmer, a Canary Island palm, or on and

on and on. And they know how to install these trees. So go out there, pick out the one you like, put it, have them put a tag on it, They'll bring it to your house and they'll get it done right. Verdant Tree Farm. You can go to Verdant Tree Farm

Verdant tree Farms dot com and find out more about it. And when you see that, you will be very impressed, as I am, at the quality of trees they grow because they know how to grow them, and then when you have them install it, that's a tree that has the best chance possible of succeeding and doing very very well. Let's head out now and we're gonna talk to Dale Read this morning. Well, Hello Dale, Hello, Kip Harris County Master Gardners. I thought that might be a familiar name.

How are you doing today? Very good? I just called to tell you about the time all community garden. What's happening up there? I used to go out there and I've been there in a long time. Well, my husband told me that somebody, a lady from Spring called it wanted to know where it was. Oh okay, uh, Spring community gard No, well he it was a caller from Spring that you had on your show this morning. Oh was she talking about community guards? I thought she was not garden

centers? Okay, Oh okay, Well my husband taught it was community gardens. You wanted to learn about gardening? Yes, So I just wanted to let people know that it was at sixteen oh three Baker Street in Tomball, sixteen o three Baker. Yeah, it's a cool little community garden out there. You guys are doing a good job. I like I said, I haven't seen it in a while, but that's good. Yeah, community gardens a good place to learn about gardening because you've got a lot of gardeners around.

You know you can will and we are access to teach people and you know, a guide on the long through, especially what's going on right now. I mean, we're doing the best we can, but Tomball is now in mandatory water restrictions. I'm sitting right here at the garden because I came to do a little hand watering. Well, enjoy that, but yeah, I feel you're pain. I'm getting tired of running drinking water out on my

plants, but it's what we gotta do. Well, I wanted we only we work on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and right now we're working summer hours from eight thirty to nine thirty. So I just wanted to let people know that we were here all right Tuesday thirty, eight thirty nine up in the Tomball area, and I know we have a lot of listeners up in that direction. So there's your job. Thank you, good to talk to you, Dyl say hi to all the master gardeners for me. Okay, I will

thank you, skip you bet you bet I was. I was talking to somebody the other day who went to a be class somewhere. It is like over in San Antonio is San Antonio area I think, And it just reminded me. If you want to learn about bees, here we have I think we have the best place in the state, and that is the B Supply, the B Supply. It's out in data and text. A little bit of drive out there, but well worth it a great outing because when you

get out there, you number one. Their shop has I mean, their store is just amazing just learning about all the different things that go into bees if you want to be a beekeeper. They have beginner classes once a month out at there and by the way, the website the B Supply dot com, so you can go out and you can learn about them. And the folks at the B Supply they don't just want to sell you something, take your money, move on, good luck, you learned it, leave us

alone. They want to know when you have problems. They want you to come back in and talk to them and ask questions. And they are willing to take the time because they know when you have success that is going to make you one happy customer and that just makes them happy because they really are

into bees. Now, if you just want to go take a tour, they are free honey tours and they're about one a month out there in Dayton, and any group can go, you know, a group of youth, group of kids or something on four each club or garden clubs of adults. Yeah, adults can do it to church groups, civic organizations. Give them a call out there and check them out. But go to the b Supply dot Com. That's where you get all the information you need about how to

call them, where they are and everything like that. I love the honey tour. You know, you learn about bees, which is fascinating. And then I think they have like six different kinds of honey that you get to taste a honey sampling. That's a lot of fun. While you're out there, you can pick up some honey and all the other bee products that bees make that are good for us and good for our health too. By the way, well, our phone number is seven one three two one two five

eight seven four seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. Give us a call. We'll be glad to talk about whatever you're interested in. For those of you who live down south, we're talking about Rosharon Direction. Okay, seem Ults is your local mults and rock supplier and garden Line recommended products supplier. So if we talk about any fertilizer, fertilizer on garden Line, they've got it down there. So I mean it's a one stop shop.

You head down, you pick up your bags of mults, bags of composts, you pick up your fertilizers. When you're down there, you can order it in book. They'll do delivery for a small charge within twenty miles of the location. And so if you live in Sandy Point, if you live in Riverstone or Fresno, or from Muriti and our first colony, or anywhere out you know Braz'spen State Park, anywhere in that whole region, this is your supplier. CNA Maltz Or open Monday through Friday from seven thirty to

five and today Saturday, seven thirty to two. And if you have not seen their rock selection, it is amazing. First time I went out there, I thought, you know, I wouldn't even think about putting it in a hardscape. When I saw these rocks, it was like, I gotta do this at my house because this is gorgeous stuff. Just go look, you'll see what I'm talking about. CNA Maltz SNA dot com. All right, we're gonna head out to spring. Derek. We got a little over

a minute here. How can we help? Yes, thank you for taking the call. So we just built a house, We've got just dirt in our yards. So we're gearing up to plant grass, trees, plants. I just want to see if the time is right, given the heat, to go ahead and pull the trigger and everything, or if it'd be better to hold off a month or two. Yeah, you know, if if you want to get something planted, you can do it now, and you can keep them alive and it can be done successfully. It's a challenging time

because it's touch and go. You know, you're having to keep that root ball wet with daily regular watering really just to get them going until they get established. The best time overall for planting is in the fall. If you can get into about October, it that is ideal for especially woody ornamentals and other things like that. But if you know what you're doing, you follow the instructs and things, you can still plant now. There's no reason not

to, you know, to plant things now. It's just I would probably focus maybe on some of your color plants so you can have some summer and fall color things like that, perennials and whatnot. There's vegetables that need to be planted now, so that, yeah, hopefully that'll get you off to a good start. But yes, and you're up there in the Spring area. You got a lot of good, good nurseries and garden centers in your

area, you know, from plants for all seasons. A little further up Arbor Gate up there in the Tomball area years and R. C. W is right there, not too far from you, where Beltway eight and two forty nine come together. So those kind of places they can give you the advice and say, hey, here's a plant, and you know here here's the best ones to be planting right now. I'm sorry, I gotta run. We're on a hard break, but thank you so much for that.

Call our phone number seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. That's upbeat. You're listening to garden line seven one three two one two fifty eight seventy four. That's our number. Give us a call if you're interested in talking about any kind of thing gardening. If you're interested in fertilizing your lawn and having a beautiful place, I'm talking about lawn that is fed gradually over time with quality nutrition. That would be Nitrofists Superturf nineteen four ten.

Good example, silver bag, easy to spot, easy to find. You know when you put it down, you're not going to burn your lawn. People ask me all the time it's summer, if I fertilize them or burn my lawn. No not. If you do it at the right right and then give it a good watering in, it's going to be just fine. In fact, it's a good time to get that done. Nitrofists Superturf nineteen four ten that releases gradually over time. Now is this is the design of

fertilizer. This is the ratio or fertilizer that has been re commended by Texas A and M for a long time for our southern lawn grasses. We know that that's the ratio that plants take up nutrients, and so why not feed them in the way that they eat if you want to think of it that way. Nitrofos Superturf is available everywhere Nitrofoss is sold. And where is that, Well, that's everywhere. All the ace hardwares. We're talking about our mom and pop garden centers, our feed stores. Easy to find it,

silver bag. Just look for that, if you may forget the names and the numbers, silver bag by Nitrofoss. That is the gradual feed that you're going to find. We're gonna head out to Sour Lake and talk to John. Hello, John, Hello, I got to us ten twenty ten. Yes, our raid and murt was good for vining plants like pepcumbers or watermelons and uh, somepins. Okay, do you recommend that or well, I've never heard. I've never heard that. I don't know about that. Just

because it's a vine means it needs ten twenty ten. I don't recommend it a lot because it's got a lot of phosphors in it, and some soils already have enough. Now, if you have a soil test done, it may be that it says you need a higher phosphorus fertilizer. There's nothing wrong with using it if you got it, but in general I would probably shift toward a larger first number and a lower second number in terms of you know

the ratio between them. But when you put it out, if you're putting it in your garden, just mix it into the soil and water it in real well, and you know it's a good fertilizer. I mean, just gonna do some good. Just I wouldn't use it over and over year after year. Yeah, I don't know how I ended up with it, and I don't use very little of it. Okay. I was reading about it as well. I've got some fresh plants starting in the south, okay, and I thought I'd give them a little shot and let them soak in.

That's fine, you can do that. Just just be moderate in your application of it. But in the meantime, be looking to get something else with a higher first number for most of the gardening things, or you know, John Bestia, to just get a soul test about every three years and find out what you have, because you know, I recommend all the time, you know, use this fertilizer, use that fertilizer. And the bottom line

is really what's already in the soil. So you know, like let's just say you in your next door neighbor, you may have super high phosphorus already. They may not have enough phosphorus. And so if I recommended the same fertilizer to both of you, I'd be misleading somebody, right, Yeah, yeah, you think it's too early plant purple peas and sugar snap peas purple holes. It's probably too late. They take a long time. I'd have to look at a chart to see if we still could. No, I

don't think. I don't know, we might squeeze a member. I think it's too late on purple holes, on sugar snaps, the cool season peas, I would wait until about the third or fourth week, accept member and get those planted. Then you want it to cool start just a little bit, cooling off. We're planning them when it's hotter than they want it to be. But it's gonna cool real quick after we plan them. And so I would say about the third or fourth week, let's see where are you.

You're done sour like I'd probably able to do the fourth week of September for the purple hole. I mean, sorry, any kind of a cool season pea. That'd be snow peas, that'd be English peas, that'd be sugar snap peas, all of those snow peas. Yeah, yeah, all right, well, thank you very much. Hey, thanks for listening. I appreciate you calling you take care yep. There. You know, there's a lot of information out there, and sometimes it can be misleading. I

don't know how to say it other than I see social media. I listen to talks people give, listen to radio shows driving around the country, and sometimes I cringe. In fact, let me not be so. In almost all the time, I cringe because a little information can be true in one situation, that can be absolutely untrue in a different situation. Or it can be true in a certain sense, but if you expand that out far enough, it becomes untrue. You know, I'd be like me saying, hey,

if your yard is turning brown, you got chinch bugs. Well, you might have chinch bugs, you might have drought, you might take all root rot, you might have grubs chewing on the leaf. And folks that don't fully understand what they're talking about them and trained in that, you end up then with them giving an answer that is partial, but they don't have that perspective to see the whole thing. And then sometimes there's just people that

I don't know where on earth they got that. I heard one time driving through Houston. It was in the October time of the year, and the host of a radio show was saying, this is was in Houston, This was where? What town was I in? Anyway? Driving through town, the host of radio show was saying, yeah, you want to plant winter squash? Now? Well, yeah, if you want them to die at the first frost and never do anything. But you know it makes sense winter

squash, so they just extrapolated, that's for winter. Why am I talking about all this? Well, good information is important, and I'm not saying I can never make a mistake on gardening. I certainly can and do probably, But you've got to get good research based information to have success, because the whole reason for gardening is to have success, to have fun, to enjoy it, you know. And so let's get you off to a good start. Well as a long droning thing there, but I think you know

what I'm talking about. If you are an active and adult age fifty five and better and you're looking for a place to move, you'd you'd like an active lifestyle. You want to enjoy the rest of your life, all the years of retirement and things, not just you know, sitting a rocking chair I mean, I guess you could sit in a rocket chair if you want. But we're talking about a Dell Web community. They've got those lifestyle programs that are designed around you. The designs, the quality of the home,

the beauty of the community, the walking trails and all that. That's all part of Dellweb. The community down in Full Shirt, two miles from downtown Full Shore on FM three fifty nine. It has a community garden going in and this new community is really beautiful and with a community garden, wow,

it's just a win win win. Dellweb dot Com slash Houston will get you more information, or you can call them at two eight one four five nine zero six zero nine two eight one four five nine zero six zero nine. Someone the other day was asking me about they had moved in up in kind of north northern part of Houston, kind of over toward Magnolia direction, and they were saying, what's a good feed store for here? Well, that's an easy one, because Spring Creek Feed is your hometown feed store if you

live up in that area. We're talking about a FM twenty nine, twenty eight Spring Creek Feed, big, old, beautiful, barn looking. It just makes you want to go in. When you drive up, it looks so cool on the outside. What's cool on the inside too? To carry all the products we talk about. They about lawn supplies, garden supplies, pond supplies, friendly staff to help you, discounts for senior citizens, for military, for for h FA, they'll special order if they don't have it.

To quality food, quality for pets, livestock, but especially for my interest, quality products. The fertilizers are recommend and other supplies for your garden. Minutes away from Graham Parkway and Highway two forty nine on FM twenty nine seventy eight. That's Spring Creek Feed. I'm gonna take a break right now. Our number is seven one three two one two five eight seven four.

Give Josh call, let's get you on the boards. And who knows what you want to talk about, but I bet we find out after the break. Well, good morning, good Saturday morning, on a great day for gardening. Every day is a great day for gardening. I'm sorry if it were outside and it was hailing and snowing and nine hundred degrees and I don't know, let's make up stuff. You could be inside taking care of house plants. You could be inside starting your fall garden. By the way,

now's the time. If you want to have broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, call Robbie, all those transplants. You can start them indoors right now because it's cooler indoors give them good lighting. Best is to buy an artificial light to get them going, but if not, at least get the seeds up and growing and then move them out during the day into a bright, shady area where they get good light but not direct sun initially and get them going.

About six eight weeks later, you're putting those things in the ground and enjoying it. So even today, even today, a hundred degrees daylight today, I don't know how hot it's going to get here, but every day feels like one hundred and five degrees. Sometimes when you're in this part of the summer, you can be gardening indoors of course as well. You know the one of the mini destination garden centers throughout this area, and again I

always brag on them, but I'm telling you it's unique. If you live in the Houston area, you've got a selection of awesome garden centers North southeast, West Central that are just outstanding and worth a visit. Family comes into town that likes gardening, Oh my gosh, you can spend all day Saturday just running around having a good time all over the place. Up in the Northwest area in Kingwood, we're fortunate to have two that would be Kingwood Garden

Center and Warrens Southern Gardens now Kingwood Garden Center. That one's on Stonehallow Driving Kingwood. Warren's Garden Center just a little crosstown there, North Park driving Kingwood. And they have unbelievable supplies of stuff. If I'm talking about fertilizers, you know, like, hey, you gotta go buy this fertilizer, They've got it there. The products I talk about, like mosquito dunks for example, they've got it there. In fact, right now, one of their

products, key products for this month is the tree Hugger sprinkler. And how many times have I bragged on those? They are wonderful. You can get them at Kingwood Garden Center. Warren Southern Gardens, they're out there. They've had hibiscus for a while, just cajun hibiscus. I don't know, you just need to go see one to see what I'm talking about. But they are. They're amazing. They ask when you're out there, ask for the case. I want to see a Cajun hibiscus. Now that's not one kind

of biscus. There's a lot of different bloom forms. It's a series. But oh my gosh, some of them you look at and you go, I didn't know a hibiscus could look like that same thing. You know. They got manda villas out there. They just got in some Cricuma ginger that's the hidden ginger. Really good in a bright shade. It's got these beautiful stalks that come up yell pink and some other related colors right around there. Just really beautiful. It makes a good cut flower too, by the way.

Outstanding cut flower, those Cricuma gingers. And they got the Calandra which is pink powder puff. It's just a little wispy pink bloom. You gotta see it. I'm not going to try to describe it. It's just beautiful. A good tough plant too, by the way, summer tough. While you're thinking about it, grab your calendar and write down August nineteenth from nine to ten am at Warren's Southern Gardens again August nineteenth. That would be from

nine to ten am at Warren's Southern Gardens on North Park Drive. They're going to have their Cultivate a Harvest of Abundance program. Now, this is fall gardening, soil and prep. You're going to talk to their seasoned garden team. They know what they're talking about. They'll take you step by step through the process of getting your soil ready. So so important. I know it's

exciting to get the big hibiscus blooms. Maybe a bag of brown stuff isn't so exciting, but it is the rocket fuel that makes anything you put in it succeed and makes you look good as a gardener. So check this out nine am to ten am. It's Warren's Gardens that are cultivated Harvest of Abundance August nineteen. You need to put that on your calendar because if you want to do one thing, if you want to learn one thing to make you a better gardener, this is it. It all begins in the soil.

Oh and while you're out there, you can take home some soil and you can take home the plants that you're going to put in it. Now that you'll know what to do. That love that. I'm so excited they're putting that kind of a program on. Let's head out to Spring Branch and we're going to talk to Bill. Hello, Bill, Hello, Skip. How you doing today? Well? I think I'm all right. How are you doing? I'm doing well, Thank you, sir. I have a Yoshino

flowering cherry tree. I got it from Tattown Nurseries and Georgia about two years ago, and it'd been doing really, really well. And after the last rain we had about a week and a half ago, I cut back on watering. Now all the leaves about halfway up are turning brown, so I started watering again. I have a two foot diameter ring around it so the long more doesn't hit it. But when I water, I get about a six foot diameter circle of water out on the ground. Am I overwatering?

I don't know what to do? What can I do to help it? Yeah? You know, it's hard for me to say if you're overwatering or not. But the way to tell is to get a little hand trial, dig down about four or five inches and feel the soil. Cherry is a prunus species. It's like plums, it's like peaches and nectarines, and they

do not like soggy soil. But they also, of course don't want to dry out too far, and so you need to be able to provide them that you are stretching the zone on your Chino cherry, that is we are. I would say, in general, I probably would tell someb I don't plant one, but you your tree may prove me wrong, but in general, you know, we're looking zones five to eight little further north on that particular one, and so it's probably really struggling with the summer heat and sun.

So even if your soil is moist, it just may it just may be struggling with that. But we're not too much longer before we're out of this period of time and it can get a little relief. Okay, Well they told me we're zone nine and they said it was good for zone man, so maybe maybe they lied to me. Well, no comment, no

comment, I'm just I'm just telling you. You know, when you look at a plant range and it says zone five to zone eighth, if it would do a wider and I guess, let me say this carefully from a reliable source that is not selling you the plant, uh, look at the range and that sometimes you have to look at two or three. Sometimes I'm stunned. I'll go to two or three places and they'll say a plant will grow in zone nine, and another one says, no, it won't grow

south zone seven. It's like, come on, man's what gives here? So you can't believe everything you see you're here. But I hope it does well, and if it does as it does, I'd like to hear from you, because I'm always open to learning something new. But that that's a stretch on it. But I hope it does well for you. But I think I think it's probably just saying, what in the heck did you do hauling me down here to one hundred degree weather for months, months at a

time. Uh? I wouldn't, now, does it. You know? If generally we do fertilizer in the spring on those, we can do a little bit in the summer when the plant is young. But you just you want a moderate growth rate. You need a decent amount of nutrient for it to do well. So that that's what I would say on that one. Just go easy if you fertilize it. Maybe let's do it this way,

Bill. Let's say that go up to the trunk of the tree. Take your thumb, stick it out there, and for every thumb with across the trunk, give it one cup of a good lawn fertilizer, just a good quality lawn Elijah, one cup per inch of trunk diameter across the trunk, not circumfers, but diameter and watered in really well. I would do that now, do to get in the spring, and I'd do again probably in

June. Okay, you shouldn't be a liquid fertilizer. I know. I just use one pound of dry fertilizer, just a bag of dry lovel and fertilizer and not weed and feed because that'll that'll do damage. Okay, Okay, thank you so much. If you have a good weekend you too, Thank you very much. And I do hope to hear back from you that that thing is actually doing better and better because plants. It proved me wrong more than once I tell you. Something else it's proved me wrong is deer.

I used to work in Travis Kenny in Austin, Texas, and I gosh, there's more deer than people I think around there, and they come in the yard. They're starving to death and they eat everything. So I had a deerproof plant list. One night, some deer broke into the extension office, got into my office, opened to fall drawer, took the list out and ate it, and so I lost my deerproof plantless. Seriously, though there are plants deer would prefer not to eat, but when a deer

is hungry, they will eat cactus and have thorns in their lips. And so I've just learned through the years be careful because there's always exceptions.

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