And good morning, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, welcome to the Green Country Gardener Program and once again our number one eight hundreds up in four nine, five nine three six. I'm Tom. I just answer the phones around here. The real brains of the operation is standing right next to me, Larry Glass. Larry, how are we doing today? Pretty good, Tom, been awful busy getting us some landscaping weren't done and
getting caught up. We're selling a lot of plants at the nursery too, and we're kind of selling a lot of hummingbird and oh the mother things. What are they? A lot of things humming bird plants. Yeah, yeah, anyway that they liked to hummingbird plants, so we'll get those. And so that's kind of kind of cool going on around. It's kind of the hot time of the year too, obviously a little bit, and you have to obviously have to be very concerned conservative with water, and as I've say
it in the past, so we'd over again multi multi molts. That helps it. I have my tomatoes under about about nine inches of mults and there's plenty of moisture down there. So they're looking good too. They're looking really good. I think we've had about five tomatoes, but there's more on the horizon. But anyways, there's more and add a lot of mults. And
also my drip system works very well. And that's kind of a system because it addresses the water specifically rather than just slinging out like you know, like hash on them Saturday morning, you know, but just yeah, really no, it the more specific the water you can, the more efficient you're going to be with it. And let's let's clarify things. Larry's using bathwater these days because of the conservation of water. Yeah, I use for my elephant
ears here. Yeah, and they're doing fine, but they are, but they're clean. Who wants the dirty elephant? Your planets, not me? Anyway, that works works for rather what plants don't seem to care about what's going on, and it's wat it's water. It's good. Yeah. A lot of my customers are doing the same thing, but they are. Yeah. Yeah, I got a bather a couple of buckets in the showers also, and it it helps uh to alleviate having to use so much water sure
waste. So that's the one way to do it. Of course, what I what I talked about in the last winter and all in the spring gets a good deep soil prep so that water can get down into that soil. That's a practice we follow when we do landscaping. It's really loosen it up because the soil is acts sort of as a capacitor for water. It's sore as water and does a good job of the two if it If it's opened up enough so that's where the compost comes in. It makes the soil will
pour, so it goes down deep. And also when when it comes to water usage, Uh, I've said a priority at my house, I make sure the foundation has adequate moisture. First. Hadn't water my grass yet this year. You know, it's starting to turn a little round but in places. So what I'm gonna do is dig that up and take the rocks out and put some soiler out there, so so that'll help it later on. Having some soilers can grow in beside rock. So anyway, so just just
kind of ease up on the grass a little bit. It'll survive, okay, you know, once a week it's fine. But I, like I said, I don't water my grass. I'll value the water more than my grass. Yeah, So I don't do that anyway. At the Nurse Creek container in Balden Brees bald burn out trees can be planted about anytime. You got a phone call this morning sixty five kind of plants and trees and things. So trying to beat the heat, weren't they lay Yeah, they're out
there digging holes and I know you're up at four o'clock. How do I plant? They wanted to know how far apart the plant them and how deep and so on, and gave him some quick tips on it, and it's okay, yeah, I will do that anyway. So the cell phone comes in handy, Yeah it does. It just got gotten out of the bath, so filled the bucket and they answered the call. I didn't have the camera on good show here, so the hostess also they're still showing their their
blooms and leaves. I have something my house. Between the shed and the house, there's a building code that's part of how far away from the house she can have the outbuilding and all that, so that there's nine feet and there's a pathway. They're also to get from one part of the yard to another. And they're doing fine in that and that niche if you will big old leaves and flowers on them and all that. I haven't watered them yet
this year. You're doing just fine. So you make these microclimates for them like that, and they do very well. Okay, hostess are showing the blooms real well too. The en Corzelia is show a little flower here and there, and the cone flowers are starting to show some color too. Cone flowers is uh, the e and aca is a native species that the hummingbirds are like too. Oh yeah, they're gimming hummy to the hummingbirds hum like this real well. Yeah, and butterflies and monarchs are like them well too.
So anyway, you're gonna have friends if the wildlife kingdom out there, if we have that is going on. Yeah, they like my sunflowers too, the sunflowers in the backyard too, and the squirrels like the seeds so whatever. Anyway, So anyway, they're starting to exhibit some color. The hard hill biscuits are just about ready to bloom out, and the crepe myrtles
seem a little bit late this year for some odd reason. I think it's because of the rather cool spring wind this year and cool and relatively dry spring, so they're they're a little slow, so they'll be out pretty soon. And the hard hir biscuits too. Got some of my yard that have your blooms that they're six feet another. They're big, big old flowers all that, and they're very drought tolerant also too. So life's going on pretty well
despite our lack of water. And some of the indigenous plants, some of the well established plants are they're they're not affective. You don't see any trees out there they're have any problems, no, because we have pretty good water, pretty good water down deep. But it's just on the surface where the grass and your flowers are where we have some issues there. So and I always say just be conservative with the water and just water that only wind it's
needed, and they do fine. We've we've done some landscapes too in the past that also utilize little water requiring plants, and we're in the process of doing one right now where the plant materials are more drought tolerant than others. And there's some microclimates involved in the site too, where you use different kinds of plants in the shade, in the sun and all that on the same property too, So and you try to use plants that will tolerate the low
water conditions right well in those situations too, so usuagaus right. Anyway, that kind of gets to weeds and things, and round up is is a common, uh insecticidal. It's a little bit of controversy behind it at this point, but my mouth, my thought on that is just just don't get it on you. And I've had this theory about round up if if it wouldn't be much of a problem with the people that they made the stink. Yeah, you know, some of these insecticides or herbicides just smell bad.
Yeah, you know, I don't want that on me. And if it really if they put some stink on in it, you'll get the point across. I don't be any problems with I don't want that. But they sling it around like you know, like sut mouth when when it doesn't smell, they think they they think it's kind of harmlets. So anyway, so be very careful with the use of that, make sure your proportionate proper. I've I've done some spots spraying on like cry brass. Taking care of it took
it a week and a half. Yeah, well you know it's getting it out, but anyway, so round up is a good tool to use in an area where I say, you might have some gravel or something or unwanted vegetation. It's good for that. Yeah, and any any application of that that hits the ground is completely useless. This this mechanism works like through being absorbed through the leaves rather than into the ground, so it doesn't take a
lot for this. I really think people over apply it too, so you have to be very careful with it and apply it asparingly and also use a spread er sticker per se. A lot of these plants have a little haired hairs on them, and that's designed to make rain water and stuff bounce off. And if you if you water it's particularly hard, which it can be in some parts, the same thing happens. It bounces off the leave and it's in his the ground that doesn't really get absword properly. So you want
to add a surfactant to the to the round up. Now. Soap is a pretty good one who works pretty good too, but really a genuine spread it just takes a few drops. A genuine spreader sticker works really well to mix with that. So when you're when you're applying that around the brainier beside, you always want to use a spreader sticker with it. There you go. It makes the water wetter and it stays on the leave, so therefore it gets a chance to do its job exactly. So if that's good.
A roundup works by being absorbed into the into the plant, and it stopped some growth mechanisms in the plant. That's why it takes it a little bit of time for it to work. Now sometimes you get quick kill. Yeah, yeah, well that it comes back. That's die quod, and a die quot is worse than roundup when it comes to harming you and all that. You have to be very careful with it. Yeah, that's a really dangerous stuff. So anyway, it I think we had that once when I
lived in Illinois. It killed everything. Anyway, round up motive or glashosate for the motive action to inhibit an enzyme involved in the synthesis of the amedio acids trio sne, triophan and phinileline, that too stopped all that production going on. If I gotta down there here too. So anyway, it soaks into the foliage and it's trans located in growing tissues and kills it that way. So anyway, that's kind of how round up works, okay, and
I'd be very careful with it too. So it was produced at Montano's campus located in Middleton, Wisconsin. And there are some roundup ready ready crops. I guess they're they're called GMOs yep. The only thing is they have a gene in there that's ops the mechanism of roundup or prevents the mechanism of roundup to work, so they can spray spray it all over the place and kill the weeds out. So that's kind of how that works too. So they
engineer the plants to have an immunity to it. Yeah, I've seen that stuff. You know. It keeps the kids from walking beatings these days, you know. Yeah. One thing about the clapp is it also is it decomposes rather readily, so I don't think it's much of a problem for being in the food itself, so it's no big deal. Okay. So that's kind of the story with a round up. Use it sparingly, use it properly. Anything that hits the ground is a waste, yes, And don't
get it on you ya, don't get it on you. It needs to makes smell. I'll tell you what we're gonna take the quick break. We'll be right back after this two minutes fifteen second time out. Hi have mathematics share from Roman's Outdoor Power. It's hay station and you'll want to get the most value out of your hayfield. Trust the name Camboda. They make bators
just more hey rakes that make a season sweep and simple. Ask about the Silag Special form a sixth mel with netrap, the three nine Combota Discmoer that cuts cleaner and faster, and the Caibota Hate Rakes direct general and play all types of terrain zero down, zero percent financing for up to sixty months now through June thirty, twenty twenty three. Seeus or good a Kibota USA dot com for more information. Roman's Outdoor Power, Your Combota dealer Byway seventy five
in Bartlesville, Independence, Fort Okaycaboda dot com. The employees at United Rentals are local folk who work, play, go to church, and send their kids to school in Bartlesville and the surrounding area. But United Rentals also has corporate buying power, which gives them power and leverage to get you the best deal on equipment. You need to get your job done right and with twenty four hours service, there's always someone from United Printals to help you. United
Rentals on the southeast corner of Highway sixty and seventy five. United Rentals. Who do I call to get my trees trimmed? Keilly Banks Tree Service? Who can grind up these stumps in my yard? Keilly Banks Tree Service. There's a dead tree right by my house and I'm nervous it might fall. Well, you better call Keilly Banks Tree Service. What's that number? It's
nine one eight three three five seven thousand. It's nine one eight d three five seven zero zero zero calling today for your tree trimming, stump grinding and tree removal needs. That's nine one eight three five seven zero zero zero nine one eight three five seven thousand. Hey, Barrelsville, this is Stephen with Revision Properties, Barsville's handyman. Do you have a project around the house you need help with? Let me handle it for you. No project is too
big or too small for handyman services. Deck in handicap ramp painting, tile and LVP flooring, Privacy, fence, room remodel, and much more for free estimates. Call it text nine one eight nine nine eight to two eight eight. That's nine one eight nine nine eight two two eight eight. That's Revision Properties Parts Wille's handyman, because your home is worth it. Steve part of this and welcome back to the Green Country Gardener Program. It's a twenty
two. Our telephone line is open at one eight hundred and seven forty nine five nine three to six. We want to talk to Larry Glass, our expert today and uh, well we got next on our list there. Well, another thing getting down to insect side server sides. I had some white fly on my tomatoes, which is death nail for your tomatoes. You don't want those, and I said, okay, So I said I'll try this stuff. It's a Captain Jack's dead bug. Well, I like the name.
It's a spinazad which is a synthesis of spinazad A and B and uh it's it's sort of organics, very safe, sort of organicis well, not safe for the bug. It's a bacterial thing that was found in a a run factory because the buggins would jump into that soup whatever it was and they just die. So wow, what's the deal? What is this stuff? And I tried that. I'm like, I said, okay, right,
fly really hard to control. So it comes with a we have it at the nursery and hook on the hosing kind of thing, and it worked. I don't have any white Jack's dead bug. Wieflies are extremely tough to control. Yeah, and this seems to do the job. There's still a few I'm on there, but it's you know, a few of them aren't bad. Yeah, but you know, wipeflies they multiply like crazy, even more than rabbits, and I've always had problems with them in the past and just
seat them up and then plants get weak and they go you know. So they're doing rather well, actually right and healthy. And also I have a nine inch layer of mulch on the tomatoes too. That works. That helps help keep it. If you're if you're soil, it's the moisture level in your soil. It's fairly constant. Then you don't have much of a problem
with cracking and stuff like that. And and the road to me, it's just origented east and west, so they kind of shade each other a little bit too, so that helps kind of fly a little bit of wisdom. You're good. And I didn't grow tomatus or I think or anything last year, but every other year I'll I'll put them on there. Then I'll grow tomatus in the pots in the yard. You know the next year you don't
want to put them in the same place. But really, with with the Seder role Chi, I don't know if the Seder Walsch has anything to do with it, but there's no bacterial lead spot on them this year. Well, if it's working, I'd stick with it. It's doing pretty good so anyway, and Kelly, I worked at soil up all winter. I even put a drip system in which I can't use, but put us there just the case. But anyway, they're doing just fine. So anyway, Tree
the Week this year this week is uh blue spruce. And the blue spruce is actually somewhat drought tolerant and also tolerant of some alkaline soils too nice. It's pretty well barlows except for the clay, but anyway, it will tolerate dry clay if it's well drained. Got to be drained, ye, So narrow upright growth eighty two hundred feet tall, but not here it doesn't have a fight plan. We'll get to forty feet out of them, but yeah, about and about twenty feet wide or so, give this one lots of
room. It cannot grow an anticipated area. I'll be a little bit rather slowly. But the thing about it is you really can't prune them back. You can't know, So you need to pick out a variety that that will fit the space that you want them to be. In the other ways situation, I want a blue spruce at the corner of the house. Well, it may seem a little odd to plant at ten feet away from the house,
but but it'll grow into it. Yeah. In the meantime, you can plant some other things in between it and the house, perhaps to join it up a little better. I'm kind of taking a look at one of our neighborhood home. They kind of started putting their spruces right up in every corner, and it's like, well, that's a that's gonna cause a little problem here in a little bit. But anyway, they weren't. Anyway, this one does not like wet feet, and when we plant them typically we
mounded up a little bit. Yeah, and I try to advise people keep it unless you put an upright growing sprucer. Are some vertical growing variety's totem is one of them. There are some others that it grows narrow and upright, so he can be planting close to the house without too much of a problem. Got it. But I'd like to keep him away from the west side. Uh, primarily because of spider spider mon Ye. Spider mights really like warm surfaces, and they will develop pretty quickly on the west side of
the house. And also these have a tensity to get back words too. Yeah yeah, bag bag, But you remember what I talked about the spins ad. Yeah, it's a very good right after. Yeah, it'll knock out your backworms pretty quickly, so be prepared. And the backwards are kind of sneaking up on us this year. I've seen little tiny ones, even on some oak trees. So but they seemed to stop for a little while. Okay, but just a little while ago before it really stopped raining too
much. I'm seeing them everywhere. The tackle the backwards remember that movie from nine, No, did we have a big problem without a few years ago, like like way out of hand. They ate everything last year, and their recurrence like that is somewhat cyclical, so I think we're on an uphill swing. Next year will probably be a real, real kill a year for
backworms. So see, you wanted to look real closely at your spruce trees because they will defoliate tree rather quickly, and look for the little tiny ones at this point, small backworms, and what I talked about with the spinash very effective control for those. We did have some on a on a tree. We planted some little tiny bagworms. I sprayed it on it. The next day they were just complete. So and it's certain you can take a bath in this stuff. It's pretty safe. I wouldn't want to do it.
I do it, but maybe it'll kill all the fleas and pick up. So it's a good. Uh. It's a good insecticide. And it does control the backworms for well, too good. However, if you see them and they're fairly large, and they and they stopped eating your plant, sin is too late, so they've already done their damage. So good. A funny thing is that backworms were different colors, like reds and blues and
yellows. People would want them. I'll tell you what. We didn't take a little bit of a break We're gonna do that, but your telephone calls are walked up as always at one ain't hundred seven four nine five nine three's one eight hundred and seven four nine five nine three to six. We'll be
back with more than Green Country Gardener after these two minute time out. Greenshane Nursery and Greenhouses has their sale of the week, and this week you can save twenty five percent on hydrangees and elephant ear bulbs, save thirty percent on roses, hostas, memorial pots and tropical blooming plants, and take a whopping fifty percent off colladium bulbs. Don't put off adding color to your existing flower
beds, pots, and gardens. Shop now and save at Green Thumb Nursery and Greenhouses on the Water Road, open Monday through Saturday nine to five, Sunday ten two four Full Green Thumb Nursery on Facebook. Everybody loves Bartlesville c d JR. It's cheer and it's getting hot, but the deals are hotter at Partlesville cdjail two thousand dollars bonus cash allowance on Select twenty twenty three Dodge Challenger and Charger model. It's Dodge Season at Partlesville cdjail. You pick it
out, We'll work it out at Bartlesville c DJ hart. Looking for a new career that offers free training, join the team at vs Aviation located by the Independence Airport. We have a media openings in customer service, maintenance and repair and Quality. These full time positions offer competitive pay, comprehensive benefits, and on the job training. To apply, visit vse Aviation dot com forward slash Careers. Vs Aviation is an equal opportunity employer. Egg Birds snow.
When it comes to eggs, there's a whole lot of cluckings that doesn't really mean much of anything. Other farms boast about being cage free. We give our hands some spice, a lot of it our bottle farms. Our hands get one hundred nights square feet per hand, our lights. They're race at an actual pasture in the sunshine. When a restaurant serves vital farm sax,
it makes the hands happy and makes my girls happy. Eggs and egg birds go together, serving Bible farms a breakfast and eggs all day and welcome back to the Green Country Gardener Program. Pone line is open at one eight hundred seven four nine five, nine, three to six. Where are we off too now on the agenda lawns uh crab grass? Yeah, yeah, the post emergent crabgrass control quincl iraq okay is if you can say that that three
times quinn chlora que quick. We have at the nursery and product call weed out with Q and it's a selective Remember MSMA Mount of Sunny massid Myth and Arson eight. Yeah that one. Yeah, that one that was an only bit of goody. That was a popular one to control grassy. We actually annual grasses and targets in pretty well, but there some issues with the arsenic being that's always a bit of a bother staying in the soil and we don't want that in drinking water. So anyway, so they kind of took it
off. They took it off the common market. You can still get it from wrench stores and all that. So anyway, anyway, crab grass is a warm season annual grass grows and best in the heat of the summer. I've seen some lawns that are made completely of crag grass. I have two. It's right next to my house. Oh yeah really yeah. Anyway, it overwinters as seed and the crag grass at this point in time is beginning to go to seed. It is, so we're running out of time with
the control. Once they get to the point where it's a hard stage like that, you you missed the boat. So anyway, it comes up about mid May or lad when it comes up, and it is often killed by a fall frost. Crabgrass is not shay tolerant and grows best in full hot sun. Uh. Several long practices can be used to help control crab grass. A pre emergent urbside in the in the in the fall works rather well. Get it in there in February two. You want to get it on
there, so to control the seeds from coming out. The word is control. You're still gonna have something here and there. But the technical fast majority. Yeah yeah. My neighbor crossed the street doesn't have crab grass, but I do. The winds of change, I know, I got I have one day a week I can work on my yard. Come on, man, yeah, really quit sharing so much. Well you know where it comes from. It blows up the street. My curb, curb in my house
just stops that airflow jumped over the curb. There you go. We got crab grass on the southwest part of the yard. Word anywhere. So yeah, So anyway, a good healthy grass is a good control for that too. And knowing you when to put down a pre emergent and a post emergent urbside at the right time, we'll do a good job of controlling that. So you want to keep your grass getting healthy. And that is a you
know, fertilizer about once in a month and watered occasionally. But we're having issues with water this year, so next year maybe it'll rate next year, So take your claw hammer and dig it out fall else fails. It's a it's more of a problem in warmer areas, say by curbs and driveways. I noticed that along the curb and along the sidewalk is where it comes out
most. And it will fill in where the permuter grass had died out ahead an area where the grass died for some odd reason dive out last last last summer. And this year the crab grass is taken over. And I zinka was some round up so good. I don't know what to do with it. But anyway, it's take that, thank that. So so you want yeah, anyway, So crab grass, it's tough to control at this point because it's starting to go to seed. Yeah, so you probably missed a
boat on it. A claw hammer works real real well too. You can see we're allcome. Just dig it up and put in a bucket and throw it out in one way to get rid of it too, unless you got a whole lot of it. So then you go and be out there a few days. Yeah, keep them more blade good and sharp. Yeah. So anyway, so crabgrass, you got to be strategic with it, and the timing is really important. A fall application of for diamine works real well,
or spring application will work real well. You keep it under control, and then I say control and then post post emergent applications of a Queen CLARAQ. We'll do a good job to control it. But but you have to there's a time frame when that has to be done and we're getting out of that time frame right now. So okay, that's to deal with cray brass on your fescue lawns, they need to be fairly high right now and real
tall. It does help prevent moisture loss if it has a lot of green on the top and the grass can transpire better and draw it more moisture that way, keep itself cool, so it's healthier. Bermuda grass about an inch and a half two inches tall, same with zoysia. Now Zosia is less
drop tolerant than bermuda grass. So when you do selzio grass, you want to make sure you have some good soiled depth so we can tolerate our periodic weather dryness without much of a problem, without having the water all the time. There you go, So there you go. But anyway, if you
do want to do some ground prep before you plan zisia. We're doing a project now where it's going to involve in selesio grass, but we're kind of kind of putting on a hold until maybe it starts to rain a little bit so we can water it in. Yeah, I'm I'm looking at that big old bright sunshine on that imagined. By the end of the week we might be at stage four really looking at it. The bet man would agree with you. Yeah, so, and then there's no no watering anywhere. No,
so yeah, more more more bathtub. So we need more tub. We need to We need to keep ourselves and you know, ourselves clean and all that before we worry about the grass. But anyway. Um, oh, there's there's not I thought that was a third page. We'll take a break real quick, right back, but more of the Green Country Gardener program. Remember you can always call in and challenge. Challenge Larry Bet. You've got all the answers, believing to trust me. He's like a walking Encyclopedia
one eight hundred zeven four nine five nine three sixes our number. We'll be back after this two minutes a time out. Greens On Nursery and Greenhouses has the sale of the week, and this week you can save twenty five percent on hydrangs and elephant ear bulbs, save thirty percent on roses, hostas, memorial pots and tropical blooming plants, and take a whopping fifty percent off colladium bulbs. Don't put off adding color to your existing flower beds, pots,
and gardens. Shop now and save at Green Thumb Nursery and Greenhouses on No Water Road, open Monday through Saturday nine to five, Sunday ten two four Full Green Thumb Nursery on Facebook. Spring into adventure at Roman Chevrolet. Right now. Roman Chevrolet is offering one point nine percent APR financing for qualified buyers and you can get up to ninety days with no payments on New Blazers, Equinox, Throllblazers and Traverse. That's right, one point nine percent financing and
no payments for ninety days. Roman Chevrolet will also pay more for your vehicle even if you don't buy from us. It's easy and no hasshole. Just come in and let us make an offer and you leave with a jack. Come in or check us out at Independence or at Roman Chevrolet dot com. Who do I call to get my trees trimmed? Kelly Banks Tree Service? Who can grind up these stumps in my yard? Kelly Banks Tree Service. There's a dead tree right by my house and I'm nervous it might fall.
Well, you better call Kelly Banks Tree Service. What's that number? It's nine one eight three three five seven thousand. It's nine one eight D three five seven zero zero zero calling today for your tree trimming, stump grinding and tree removal needs. That's nine one eight D three five seven zero zero zero nine one eight D three five seven thousand. Melissa Wandall was nine months pregnant with her first child when her husband Mark was killed in a car accident.
His life insurance made a huge difference for Melissa and her daughter Madison. I wasn't going to have to worry about going to work every day, leaving her in the hands of somebody else struggling day by day to get by. A message from the nonprofit Life Foundation, and welcome back to the Green Country Gardener program. It's eight forty one. Our phone lines were open and one eight hundred and seven four nine five nine three six. Larry, what's uh what
do we have here? We can talk a little bit about salvia. I might have talked about this last week, a little bit. It's a little square stem, you got it right. Pay attention, Pay at attention here, Remember that the salvia family goes all the way across. There's a good plant to have around here. And there's a perennial one too, several perennial and it was a wide spectrum of plants too. And another plant I like
is Petrovska. It's the Russian stage. Okay. It has this, uh, this kind of silvery foliage and these blue flowers on it, and it gets to be a pretty good sized plant. There are some small one so,
but it grows anywhere, and it's it's a perennial too. It's a pretty tough plant, so you might well, you might want to consider it if you got an area, what's some pretty good room in the landscape where it's relatively dried and you don't want to water something so much, you might consider the Russian stage or Trumb's easy for you to say, Yeah, anyway, it's it's a quite showy plant, quite large. All right, good, we got a call here. Let's go for it. Hi, good
morning, and welcome to the Green Country Gardener Program. Your question to comment for Larry, Good morning, Larry, good morning. Have you have you had any experience with bind weed? Bind weed? Bind Weed's radio that? Yeah, it comes up out of real fat white flower on the top right now. Yeah, it's a tough one to control around. Yeah, I have it in my yard up. I just pulled it up and just keep after it. But it has a very deep root system on it. Sure
I didn't understand you. I said, I have it in my beds at home and I just keep pulling it up. But it does have a deep root system, so it is difficult to control. Yes, it is, you know around it probably wouldn't kill it, would it. It has a very glossy leaf and because of that, it probably wouldn't soak up very easily. No, So what I do at home, I just pull it.
I'll just keep pulling it. And if a plant can't photosynthesize, it can't survive, So it'll eventually just die out if you just stay after it. Yeah. Well I have some of that in the pasture and I can't find the chemical that will kill it. Yeah, it's very hard to kill. Okay, thank you. It's a tough one, all right, thank you. For anybody has any idea of how to control bindweed, Well, give us a sho yeah, because we'd like to know something that's not really you
know, like deadly. Just no, it just gets Yeah, but it's a it's a tough one to control this very deeply. You pull on it and you get eight inches of stem before it breaks off the route. Wowee. And it is a pain in the neck. Now if you mix a sure factor in with it, with it help you know, to stay on the leave a little bit. Oh, I can experiment with it. Maybe we didn't. We did have you take hold project. But I think what I can do probably is I get a small container like like cut like a
pop bottle. Yeah, sure, and and then dip it in that and see what happens. What happens? Yeah, yeah, with a rubber glob. Remember you don't want it on you. No, no, that'll probably take care of it. But it has a very waxy leaf on it. And because of that, tough. Yeah, what we need is some kind of bug that lead it. Now there you go. Yeah, then it'll probably eat your crape myrtles too. Oh well then then that's not fun. That's not fun at all. Ye see, we solve one problem creative.
It's a tough one to control. And uh, I don't know if the cattle either or not. I'm not familiar with this. Yeah, I don't know about that. A nice sour of the milk a bit uh so much for the Swiss cheese, but won't be very gooda okay, yeah that that that gooded cheese. Yeah, I know, I know. Silent treatment. Wow? Could I heard a pin drop? Who? I kind of practice
that's the best way to say. Nothing. But anyway, salbia as well and average or red soils and fertilized it kind of had as it needed and over long season it flowers as flowers will drop leaving kind of a bit of a ragged spike. But that's just cut it back a little bit and the new growth emerges, you know, kind of refresh too. So this one
it responds very well too. Some cutting back now and then. So if you if you have like five leve minu a row, you might cut back actually two even them, and then let them, you know, just alternate them so they don't all cut back at the same time. But anyway, shabby is a very good plant for for our climate here because they just tolerate the drought real well. Didn't you say that? Like mint? Yeah,
mint, just remember the mint family. Yes. And another plant that does very well in the landscape and the subber time is an annual pailinkle, okay, and it tolerates to eat real well too. Lantana is another good one. And the hummingbirds where they like the lantanas. So so there's a lot of butterflies like them too. There you go. So we get people coming in wants some butterfly plants, and here's some. I have a meeting with
somebody today who is purchasing some for butterflies. So the secret to a butterfly garden is a fairly large. One say, they just kind of go in the wind. And I don't know if they communicate with each other, but I think you do. Say, hey, George, I found a big plot of flowers over here. Come on, bring your friends over. Yeah, let's go to Margees. So they probably don't. They don't communicate too much. It's just kind of wandering around trying to find them, though.
I guess humming birds are the same way. We have a humny repeaters at our house and someone just asking me about those, and I bought ten of them. That's a lot of Well, you don't put them all out at once. They can only stay out for so long you want to. You don't want fungus to build up in there. It's kind of deadly for them.
So we leave them out for a few days and empty mountain and put them in the dishwasher and make sure to put Yeah, so if you want to, if you want to have hummingbirds, and you how many repeaters by double and not you want to get just so you have somehothing that you can keep clean. And if you pull them over there and wash them or and it takes a couple of days to put them back up there. They're going to go somewhere else, so they don't quite understand. And I'll change them
out at night too, so they're not exactly loyal. They're just gonna go to where. Yeah. I really think they come back every year at the same ones too. They try it out, they know where it is. Yeah, So anyway, that's so how many repeaters tiny? I don't know how they do what they do, but oh yeah, it's amazing just to watch that in motion. You just kind of look at that and say, I don't get wings just flapping and they're just there's nothing to them, no,
because wings in the beak. Yeah, And earlier in in the the spring, we had a lot of the how many bird moth? Now that's basically the adult adult stage of the to me to hornworm, is that what that is? Yeah, I didn't know the jette. It's a tornado the tornado hern hornworm. Tomato hornworm is a fairly large about the size of this, a little bigger than this plug in thing over here, almost the size of your little finger. And they have a little spike on the back and
they're green with the kind of an iridescent green color. But this a little bit of banding on it and a spike on the end MT yeah really yeah. I guess that the robins don't like that little spike so they don't eat them. Whatever anyway, and then and they turned into tornado a tornado. They turned into butter humming bird moth and they hover around and they were they were looking at my hanging pots, just just hovering around them. And I
think they've kind of gone for now. They laid their eggs and they we'll have these big giant worms on her tomactus. Good. So okay, Well, I want to talk a little bit about also the yellow leave to Spyria Syria x boom. Well, it's actually somewhat drought tolerant and tolerant, no it is, but where am I oh? Attractive bronzy new growth matures to a yellow green leaf later on as it grows, and some crimson blooms, a small little bloom blom in the summer, and the fall color is copperated
coprate orange. It's great in the foreground. It's a smaller plant, and it's deciduous and there's nothing about nothing to it in the wintertime, which could be a good good thing too, because it's always looks looks good in the summertime. It likes full sun and moderate growth. About three to four feet tall and spreads a little bit whiter. It's great for color accent plant. It's kind of a parallel to they say, the crimson pygmy barberry, which
has these red leaves on them, and people find that attractive. And it's very hearty, very durable response ory world of pruning, and it's easy to grow. A drought tolerant plant even tolerates pour soil, hardy down to thirty below zero. It's a really good plant. Gives you a lot of color on it, but it has thorns. That's this primary drawback. They haven't been able to breathe the thorns out of these things. But when they're getting
they're really not that spiky. It's the old thorns that that that persists on the on the branches. People get a little and probably the best thing you can do on your spiriha. It is such a plant that's so well suited for this area. Oh, I mean not Spatis firia, but the barbary plants. Yeah, it's to cut them back every spring, okay, almost to the ground. Oh for a good good oh, Yeah, they grow and developed so quickly the variegated spireas that they'll be assumed that size rather quickly.
Again, so don't let them get too big. Same thing with the with the spirea plant. People let them get too big and they get ugly. They need to be cut back at least every year or maybe every other year for them to look real good. So spiria or a good thing in the landscape. They're very hearty, they're very easy to grow. There's no insects along with the the the colored leaped spirea, So the spirea and the and the barbara. I kind of use them in tandem. Down them.
But the important thing is to cut them back, all right, gotta pay attention to they just they just look ugly when they get too big. Yeah, they kind of like kind of like Nandina's. Actually, actually they are related to Nandina's. They are, yeah, not the spiria, but the barbares. And the common denominator is the yellow wood numb the bart scratch scratch, Oh yeah, that's a barbaris yellow. Yeah, so there's always a
way to tell. So anyway, that's kind of the story with small shrug that give you color and important thing is to cut them back rather sternly in the spring. All right, we're gonna take another break. We'll be back after this one. Let's see two minute, five second time out. Shortly after Charles Lindbergh's transatlantic flight to Europe, the Dole Pineapple Company sponsored a race
from San Francisco to Honolulu in nineteen twenty seven. Lindbergh refused to fly in it, noting he couldn't miss the continent of Europe, but he's sure as heck could miss Hawaii. Frank Phillips saw the race as a great opportunity to advertise his new Phillips Aviation fuel. Frank found his pilot, a Hollywood stunt pilot by the name of Arthur Goebels, and named his plane the Woolerock in honor of the ranch. Eight planes took off from San Francisco on August sixteenth,
nineteen twenty seven, and only two planes finished the race. The flight took over twenty six hours, and the winner was the Woolerock. Charles Lindbergh described it as the greatest event in air history. For the next year, that plane barnstorm the country, advertising Phillip's fuel In he returned to Woolerock. Mister Phillips instructed his staff to build a stone hanger for the airplane, which
they did, and he stored the plane there. As he collected more and more art and artifacts, he stored a lot of it in that hangar until he finally had to enlarge it. Today, you know that airplane hangar is the first room of the museum as you walk out of the dome room. Next time you visit, remember what that room's initial purpose was back in nineteen twenty eight. That same airplane hangs proudly today in the museum at Woolerock,
where magic still happens every day. Welcome home to Woolerock. Build upon a solid foundation of cast iron and steel. The cabot To Standardale Series as part of our tractor lineup rated number one endurability and owner experience. Hi, I'm Mike Maddox, Roman's outdoor Power. They feature powerful cabote To deesell egions and easy operations that's endurable Cabotus Standardale Series. Come see us today and schedule a
demo. Get point nine nine percent for seventy two months for expires June thirty at twenty twenty three see yeahs or go to Kibota USA dot com for full disclaimer. That's Roman's outdoor power. You're comboted dinner in Bartlesfield Independence or online at Okikibota dot com. And welcome back to the Green Country Gardener program. And let's go to the telephones here and good morning. Hi, you're on with Larry. Your question or comment? Good morning. I wasn't sure your
break was over yet. Oh yeah, you timed it perfectly. Great. Hey, y question. I haven't heard you talk about this. But what about flowering quins? Um, My neighbor has one, and I see out my kitchen window. Yes, and it said bookou red blossoms on it this year by hidden. But it's not moving now except there was an occasional red blossom. But I've never seen any fruit in thing. You used to have
one. They grew in far bed outside our church and it actually if you go on the way, I think somebody pointed a shroud in front of it. You know, you research it in the sunlight. Again, So Ry, what have you got to do to get fruit in these things? You need a male plant and a female plant. Yeah, the flowering well for one thing, when they bloom is typically it's very early in the spring and there's not very many pollinators out at that time of the year. So perhaps
a more southern latitude you might have some better fruit on it. But even the northern one let let bloom a little bit later. But typically they're drown primarily for their flowers, and really the food production is nil, if any at all. Okay, it's kind of a kind of a freak if it does have a little bit of fruit on it, but then again, fruits good for nothing but throwing at something. But it's hard as a rock. But I understand they make a pretty good pie. They do. They do
when you when you when you cook them up enough and all that. But yeah, flowering quints blooms. Uh this year, they boomed late. This year they boomed after the leaves emerged because we had such a change of environment. But most of the years it will bloom in the absence of leaves. Were a fairly brief period of time typically and coincident with the uh for Scythia so which which is actually remember the olive family. But anyway, so flowering
quints, yeah, go ahead, and it's a good durable plant. It can take all the drought. I think it'll just grow in concrete. Uh. And it's it's a very durable plant. And it helps also to punt it back a little bit in the right after the blooms when it's done blooming in the spring, and it'll make a prettier shrub I think. But it's just a strong, durable, virtually pets free plant. Okay, great than all right, thanks going, all right, thank you very much. Oh,
there's some Japanese vats of that which are beautiful when they bloom. It's a apple blossom like bloom, pink and white, really really nice kind of growths are regularly also, so they're real they can be real pretty plants. But the bloom is variable on that depending on the weather. It's just they're can' fickle well no, well, not tickle, but responsive to the weather. Okay. Responsive, So if we have a cool spring, they'll be late. If we have a warm spring to bloom real early, okay.
So that you can't really count on the calendar. It knows when it's supposed to do it. Yeah, But it's a good plant. It's very durable. It does tend to also spread through writ divisions as well too. It does so it eventually it will form a bramble. So, if you know what I mean, I do so good. A lot of good plants like that are the goold fashioned plants like that that do real well. And with this weather a bit going on, we might see more of those. I
get the feeling you may be correct. Yeah, exactly. So anyway, come by the nursery and check out our good selection of plants. We've got plenty of heart of hibiscuits out there right now, in varying leaf color too. Some of them have red leaves on them. Red flowers are very attractive. These are really easy to grow. It's it's a native. It's an American native plant, tooky, and it can tolerate some of the conditions we have here without incrouble troubles. I've got some of my house that are growing
without without irrigation and they're doing just fine. Great, And it's a good plant to have. Give it room though, because you get a pretty good sized plant. So you've got to keep that in mind really when doing all your landscaping. How big are these plants are going to get? Yeah, you can't say this looks good right now, you have to wait and see what's going to happen here in a couple of years. Look look at the specs and that's why when we do a landscape plants that kind of firepart with,
they'll grow into it three years later. Yeah think so. Anyway, Kevin, Kevin, Tom, come by the nursery and see what's going on and keep that shovel sharp. We will see you next week. Flowerland, where emotions are expressed in creativity, is delivered flowerland flowers dot com, KWO m
