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GREEN COUNTRY GARDENER 7-6-24

Jul 06, 202451 min
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Oh, yeah, here we go. That's a good Manjo pick and that's the Larry Glasses brother. I'm Tom Davis and I'm with the Larry Glass himself and it is time now for the Green Country Gardener Program. And our total free number is one eight hundred and seven four nine, five, nine three six. How's your week? Oh, Tom, has been actually a good week, not quite as hot, not quite as hot, and actually able

to get some stuff done. We did one project that took a fraction of the amount of time if you were to do the thing your week ahead. Wow. But what a difference, you know, the temperature makes out there, especially when you're out in the hot sun and there's no wind and suns just are glaring and kind of baking like something getta killed? Yeah. Really. So somebody asked, we're going to go on vacation here in Oklahoma and they said, you know, well, how hot does it get? I

said, are you familiar with cremation? No? I said, yeah, but we're going to have a cool week ahead of us. Yeah, thank goodness, And we need a break like that. Unfortunately, though, it's associated with a lot of rain, and that's not very conducive to doing a paving and brickwork and Jamie Walls stuff, all that good stuff, your landscaping maintenance. Anyway, in the garden right now in the garden, and it's green. Yeah, anyway, Yeah, it must be a bit of an

off year for the tent caterpillars. I haven't seen him yet. I haven't seen him yet. No tent, what's the deal. Yeah, but maybe that's because the crepe myrtles are late, but they're starting to bloom. They are. The one in the backyard just started popping the other day. Yeah, so we're going to have a pretty good show of craig myrtles, I think this year. We do have a you know, some good weather coming up this week, so I'm kind of a little bit excited about that.

Sure. But anyway, Mike be coming up a bit of a problem on your junipers and things like that, So you want to go ahead and and be a proactive on that, if you will, before he gets out of hand. We'll look very closely at your your juniper plants and your boxwoods too, and if sections of the needles or the leaves in part of one of those trees are characteristically lighter than normal, typically that's the sign of the onset

of spider maights. And usually we have a bit of a problem with spidermights here in the heat in the summertime because they just love that warm weather. They do no Yeah, and I've seen some of some plants through bagworms also, the little bagworms that hang down. Not so many this year, but they seem to be very concentrated in their attack patterns. So being selective, look very very carefully at your plant, very closely after plants, and if

it looks just a little bit off, get a little closer. That's when they're small. That's when they do a lot of their damage. When they get big, they kind of they kind of hang out. Then they turn into them off and wait next year. So uh so watch the watch for your bagworms on your juniper species, your arborvities especially. I've seen some arborvities

that have just riddled with them. And also if you get on a calm day or a calm hot day, you can get down wind a little bit, you can kind of smell the sour juniper smell, and that's that's a sign that you have can't work bag worms on your So anyway, I watch out for those. This time. You're also so on your lawn right now, fertilized your permuda grass only after watering, then water afterwards if it hasn't rained. We got some rain coming, so probably a good opportunity to do

a summer application of fertilizer free permuda grass. I'll probably be doing that to mind tomorrow, just before it rains, because you do want to maintain a you don't want this peaks and valleys and fertility levels. You don't want to try to keep it as constantly as possible, and also on your grass from meto grass and other types of grass, especially PESQ, and so you want

to kind of max out the height of the of your grass too. That does help the plant have a deeper root system so we can tolerate these peaks and valleys of wetness and dryness and so on. So moment as high as you can or as high you can tolerate. I know I've got mindset, Old Max. I think you need to put bigger wheels on my old snapper

higher yet tricycle tire. That's about it's about three inches, so all right now, and I go to these people's yards and their lawns are just maybe a half inch and you know it's fine for you know, March, April and early May. But when it's hot like this, the grass needs that surface area for it to transpire. The transperration is the process by which the plant draws up water from the ground and it evaporates on the surfa to help

keeps it cool. So if it doesn't have that ability to do that, and the sun is beating down on this plant, it overheats and it gets kind of sick and it's sort of thin looking and lethargic. If you will, so uh, mow that grass Bermuda grass and soldier grass, things like that, and especially if aescu grass, mow it rather high at this point. Now later on we can do and I've done this in the past.

I'm not recommend it for everybody, but in late late July, mid August or so, scalp the yard when when the rains return, and it makes for a really nice looking long and going into the fall. Okay, so when the when the weather turns around and it's not so consistently hot, it can be done. It's not I've experimented with it and it's turned out successful

in most cases too. Just to get rid of that thatch because when you mow it up high, you get a lot of dead grass under there, and it kind of looks you know, So if you were to cut it down when when the when the good weather returns, it'll a little snap back pretty quick and look nice again. This it'll be two weeks where you'll have to mow, so that might be a good thing actually. And then as far as fertilization is concerned, keep the fertilizer going and make sure that you

irrigate prior to fertilization fertilizing. Then afterwards it doesn't rain just because you don't burn, your grass absorb a diffuse into the ground. So that's kind of it with your lawn right now. Things to look out for pest wise, not much of bermunographs except maybe some fundas if it rains a lot. But it's pretty resilient. I had somebody come into the nursery yesterday and so we have a picture of the phone of these little dead spots on their bermutographs.

Asking what part of town they live in, it told me and I said, well, that's a lot of shallow rock. He said, yeah, you're right there, and it's just drought stress, it'll come back. So I said, if it's the house I'm moving in, if I were go back, you know twenty years I had rented a big old back home and taken all that rock out fresh dirted, so I can go some roots. I mean that in the middle of my yard and sat on the shadow.

Clang. It just goes nowhere that the blast. So that's something I've tolerated for the last you know, five hundred years. There's a little summer dead spot. It's just nothing new, but it comes back. Actually, the last rain we had has come back really well, so I think if we get some rain now, it'll kind of keep up with it. I don't have a sprinter system. I can't even plant trees in the front yard.

Yeah exactly. So anyway, kind of it with your lot. You know, if you want to turn that print yard into a parking lot, all you have to do is just do a little scrape. And I mean the rocks already, well, you go up to the corner of the house and just grab the sod and you can actually unroll it. Oh that bad, Oh gosh, I know it was that bad in the backyard too. I'm putting my fence in and the jack jackhammer, and the fence posts over there by. The gate has five bags of concrete in it because I had the

jackcamer a whole thing enough just to get the post in there. I'm gonna say, you know, the first time around, you take that big sledge that did come back at you twice as fast as no, no, I had to. I had the romous bootle jackhammer. And you know my daughter just got out of boot camp. Yeah, and she came and helped. She just loved it. Run it out, let me do it, let me pounds. Anyway, that was kind of fun. And the fence is still standing, by the way. That was a good twenty five years ago.

Cool anyway. Uh So trees, Trees make them work in the landscape. Trees provide shade, of course, and some color, some architectural situation. In other words, say they frame the house, if you will, they kind of left and the right of the house or something, just to kind of frame it. And uh and provide a habitat for wildlife. I got a lot of birds and stuff in my yard too, just love it. Oh yeah, you got those humming birds and everything. Oh yeah,

they're all over the place. You know, that's pretty cool. It's a nature right and there a mini tree? Is they grow here? As anyone could possibly consider when choosing a tree. Your primary consideration for funding a tree a is it a specimen tree, a flowering, pretty fall color shade? What do you want this tree to do? Also, you consider the one factor of the tree. Some of them are just done right messy. But yeah, yeah, you don't have one of those. Had a female InKo

tree? Oh I got a litter box in your front. I thank goodness the wind was out of the south, my goodness. Anyway, yeah, that's a consideration. If you have, say a patio or a decoration, I think you might consider, say a male rose of Sharon or even a male Gainkle tree. We do have some at the nursery. By the way. These are clones sending the clones, so you're for sure going to get

the proper gender or that. And with the pistache trees too, they have what male clones and those all, so they're a little a little more expensive than just a who knows what pistache tree. But then again you don't get all the mess associated with the female tree. I happen to find one growing in my backyard, a crack in the cement, little tiny thing, and

I pulled it up and planted it in the in the front yard. Now the trunk is pretty good, yeah, and it shades my old truck in the afternoon when they come home, and it happens to be a male tree. So it worked out pretty dark good for everybody did. Really, it's amazing how big this thing is, how fast it's grown. How big a boy is he? He's pretty good high. Yeah, it's as high as a house and about as big around. But it's when I planted that thing, I had to use a pick and a rock bar to get it in

the ground. And that poor little thing just sat there and wimp eat and cried and all that. I said, you're on your own, buddy, and and it's rich. Just went out and it's it's done, just great. Wow. So I guess the point of that is you really don't want to try to baby it too much. You want them to adapt to the to the area. You want them to dig in and grow strong, build characters and find those resources they need to find all that stuff. And that

that comes back to watering too. It doesn't hurt a plant to wealth a little bit. When when it's hot. It's just the way they respond to the heat. It's a way of preserving themselves. So and then they'll perk back up at night. So but but when you do water, water fairly, deeply and infrequently. It's kind of a rule I followed all along my house and this that try to emphasize some of my customers too. It's to not water something every single day. Don't that. No, it's just this

is not the way it occurs. To love it to death. And typically when we put in plants and trees, we put some in that will adapt to that kind of circumstance as far as watering is concerned, so later on you don't have to worry about it. I did. It's this one landscape here in the neighborhood. The entire thing was zerographic and they don't have to water at all, hardly. In fact, I was over there yesterday day before yesterday talking to him and we're walking talking about his plants, and said,

what you're doing is just fine. You said, well, I haven't watered in three weeks, so well everything's doing great, so just keep it up. Wow. So yeah, if you pick out the plants that will match our climate. Here thing you should do very well, very good. On that note, We're going to take a quick little break and we will be right back after this two minutes time out. It's Hey bailing time. If your old Baylor is not working, it's Hey Baylor's by Kiboda has a

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Martlesville, Independence or online at Okigibota dot com. Summer is here and at Greendum Nursery. In Greenhouses you can shop with your landscape and gardens and save during their's summer specials. Get discounts from thirty to fifty percent off selct items. Plus they have new shipments of drugs that are roading to be planted. Make it to Greendum nursery and greenhouses. I will run a road and see n see what's new. Open Monday through Saturday, ninety five noon to four

Sunday. Happens when a healthcare system truly listens. Healing happens, hope happens, Good health happens. At Ascension. We know because we listen to you to better understand you. Then our network of doctors, nurses and care teams at Saint John deliver a personalized healthcare experience that's right for you and your family. Find the care you need at Stjohnhellthsystem dot Com. Jane Phillips and Bartlesville. Who do I call to get my trees trimmed? Kelly Banks Tree Service?

Who can grind up these stuffs 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 a three five seven zero zero zero. Call it today for your tree trimming, stop gliding and tree removal needs that's nine one eight d three five seven zero

zero zero one eight eight five seven thousand. Welcome back to the Greek Country Gardener Program. If you'd like to be on with the Larry with a question or a comment when it comes to your lawn, your garden, your landscape, give us a call at one eight hundred seven four nine five nine three six Larry. What's next up? We talked a little bit about trees. I will talk about some shrub let's do that. I typically shrubs are associated closer to the house and they kind of screen stuff out now and then,

and they accentuate the architecture. Put them in the corners and so make the entrance to the house like Bill inviting them all that. You must consider the architecture of the house and how the plane materials relate to the house when doing a design. So you just can't just throw out a bunch of rocks and put the plants with them. Pretty for the best. Yeah, you have to plan a little bit and keep in mind what the house is going to look like after. You know, after ten years of these landscapes, you

got a color, Yeah, we did. Good morning. Welcome to the Green Country Gardener Program. Your comment or a question for Larry. Hello, OK, there we go. Welcome to the Green Country Gardener Program. Here you're on the air. Thank you. We have some uh the only plants out here in my front yard, and last year, I believe the freeze got the blooms. This year they come up again, volunteer, but they won't they're not blooming. You know, I don't think they're pros this year.

Blooming plants. Typically they're they're very cold hearty. We had them when I lived in Chicago, right, So they're very cold hearty, and mine went crazy this year. They bloomed, some of them that haven't seen bloom blooms on them in years. They came up. They're just fine. Of course, they bloom very early in the spring, right right, but they didn't bloom again this year for some reason. It's odd. Yeah, it is, okay, Well, most people have very good success with them.

So you're you're an exception to the rule. Possibility of on why it's doing that. You might have a lot of grub worms in the area. If you do have a lot of grub worms are probably dining on the roots of your plants. That's one possibility. Another thing is after three or four years, they need to be dug up and divided. Maybe it's far. They're they're old. They're old plants. Yeah, but they come up part they come up really pretty, you know, real healthy looking and everything. And

last few years there's not no blooms them. Are they real close together and kindly tightly associated? Uh huh, they're probably it's probably time for a division. Okay, well we'll give a shot. That's time to do that. After the first frost, I got you. Yeah, anytime, any time between then and middle of late February. We just okay at the first rup. Appreciate your guys, all right, I calling you, And if you want to be next online, you can do that at one eight hundred seven

three sixs. Larry Peas are good, reliable perennials. Just don't go on vacation while they're blooming, because you miss it. You're gonna miss him. It's like God, not again. Ah we are. They're very easy to grow, reliable plants, but they do need a little bit of work now and then to keep them going. All right, let's see what we got going on. Good morning, you're on the air with a lurry glass and the Green Country Gardener program. What you got for us today? I've got

black beetles on my tomato plants that are eating the leaves. Oh that's no good, So so how do I fix it? There are several solutions to that. You want to use something very safe to use on your on your tomato plants, you might consider a BT, which is Besilla thorgenesis or thorocide. It's an effective control. Also, uh spooners AD also known as Captain Jack's Deadbug. I liked it. I like anyway. That does a good

job of controlling them. And the spinners AD is not toxic to us are mammals, So but you do. You don't want to wash your fruit though before you eat it. So but anyway, but amongst the insecticides out there, the spinners ADD would probably be the most effective and at least least toxic to use. Do you have dad at your store spiners AD? Yeah? We do, Yeah, we do, we do have spiners add. Yeah. Okay, right, thanks thanks for calling you, Thank you very much.

It is twenty eight and again our number is one eight hundred seven six and that'll get you on with Larry. And this is the Green Country Gardner product. Spinas add is a spacialis spoor and it's a blend between the spinners and A and spiners and B D and uh. It's it's found that a shuldar factory in Puerto Rico or place like that. Yeah, and and actually I used it on my plums this year. They came out plum delivers bumper crop. Yeah, bumper cross. There you go. So in other words,

they weren't all eating up with boom. And it's very safe to use too, because it works. There's something specific with insects is how it worked. So that's cool. Anyway, we were talking about shrubs and uh. Planting around the house also considered also the eventual size of these plants too, so you don't have to go back and oh we go to troll the step back. So a lot of times under the windows you want to use the plant that's prefaced by the word the name of which is prefaced by the word

dwarf. Yes, because you don't want that shrub to get up about mid window heights. I see, I see that my neighborhood. I'm like, oh, there's something in the sooner part somewhere there's a house behind the hiding. So anyway, and probably back then when those were planets, they didn't have the selection of plants we do right now. So dwarfs yelp on holiday dwarf menandina. Uh. The crimson pygmy barbary is another one and they do

very well, kind of around the crimson barber on those porns. But anyway, the shape to the barbary plants is to just cut them really low. In the spring. My neighbor did that across the street, had these barbary plants really really just kind of like you know, they're all irregularly grown and spaces in them, and he just cut them down and they're beautiful now. But they are solid red hemispheres on the ground and he does nothing to that.

They don't have any bugs or anything. Your neighbors are cool like that, but anyway, they just do nothing to it. It comes up looking really good. How in the world, Well, usually those neighbors ard Sunday and I couldn't get any work done for everybody walking by asking me questions. Then I start the lawnmower up something else going way. What that's so funny? So why does it take you three hours in the front yard? Well, you know, dear of it anyway, there's a lot of friendly folks

around here. So so there are are amount of plants that'll meet that the dwarfia and some of them, even though they say dwarf, it's a relative term. So you want to look at the eventual height of the plant. Also, for instance, the dwarf Jolpon holly. Yeah, it's kind of a workhorse in the landscape. They're just evergreen to come around and very easy to grow. Very few pests. But the dwarf jupon holly gets ten feet tall if you let it. That's a big dwarf, yes, But the

yopon holly itself gets twenty five feet tall if you let it. So every year on my dwarf Yopon Holly's in middle of February, they get they get a Valentine's Day mass. They really get these good and you know they've stayed really low. They're forty years old and they're not even the high so and you only have to do it once a year. So there you go around Easter, it's a good time for that. You don't want to do early,

too early at my urging the growth and you get frozen back. So you want to wait until March, middle of March, middle of March. Ok for them too, for cut them back really low. Okay, got it all right? Tell you what we need to take a quick breakin't thirty two. We're going to be right back after these words in two minutes. Summertime is insects season invading your residential business act now. Call Accent Pest Control for a pre est but also termites are active and swarming. Call Accent Pest

Control for termite treatments to prevent damage. They also treat for bed bugs. Accent Pest Control takes insects seriously called nine one, eight, three, three, six, fifty nine forty two or learn more at Accentpass dot com. Hi, this is Cheryl Chris with Gateway and Bartlesville letting you know it's a great time to take advantage of our CD rates. Right now. You can

get five point one five percent ap y on our seven month CD. That's right, five point one five percent and your percentageyield on a seven month CD. To take advantage, apply online at Gateway First dot com or come see us at our Bartlesville Banking Center downtown at four to two South Dewey Avenue. Some restrictions apply. Five hundred dollars minimum balance required available for new CD deposits

on their gateway first bank number FDIC. The employees at United Rentals or vocal Folk who work right, 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 Rentels 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? Kelly Banks Tree Service? Who can grind up these stuffs 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 through five seven thousand. It's nine one eight three three five seven zero zero

zero. Call it today for your tree trimming, stop grinding and tree removal needs. That's nine one eight three three five seven zero zero zero nine one eight three three five seven thousand, Good morning, Welcome back to the Green Country Gardener Programming is eight thirty five seventy bright sunshine today and can't say that

about tomorrow because it looks like we're in the forecast. Full details coming up a little bit later on our to a free number to get on with Lowry Glass on the Green Country Gardener program is one eight hundred seven three six. We were talking about shrubs and shrub that actually can be somewhat of a good indicator as to the amount of water around your house too. You can typically we have peaks and valleys in moisture content and the soil, and you associate

that with a clay soil that can cause some issues with your foundation. So maybe that's why we started this tradition of growing plants up next to the house, just so we know when we need water to try to keep that try to keep that soil moisture content fairly constant, because there are some some houses that are just basically just planted on top of the clay, you know, And then I go to people's houses and you see the bricks and I'll say,

well, your house is falling on the hill. And because when you get this shrinking and swelling of the soil, it also changes the volume of the soil down below the house. So if your footings don't go down below the frost liner down to the stone, which is pretty common, it rocks pretty common around but some parts of town where there's in his tone, if

it doesn't go down to that far will cause some foundation problems. So keeping the moisture level fairly constant around the year is it's very important in some parts of town, especially if you have a lot of clay around the house. So, and that's one roll of the plant is. They're what we call

indicators. They tell you, well, there's plants wilting, maybe they need water, and then you water that your soil moisture constant stays pretty constant, so be very aware of that if you do have some cracks in your house and they might close up in the spring and open up again in the summer. So sure it kind of help us with that too. Also consider on the composition of course, uh, lime, form, color and texture,

all the other thing, architectural sentulation. The conical plants in the corner, don't plant a don't plant a say a foster holly of the corner of the house because they get you know, thirty five feet tall. Do you have it sizable? Yeah, if you want a corner of a plant like that in the house, you might consider it, say a will leaf holly or a needle point holidays only get six to eight feet tall. Yeah, that tall. There is a house down the street here from the radio station.

I just they got order and look at it. Monsters things eating the house. And why people plant yelp on hollis which you get twenty to twenty feet three feet away from the house. I don't understand because they didn't talk to a problem. Yeah, you look at it accomplishing and sometimes you have to do something. You want something good size. You do and they're easy to control. To yepe on holly are very easy to control. You just cut

them once a year and they do fine. But some of them are are not trimmed like we should be, and they get out of handy too big. If we did that unless year, there's nothing to live at the hat rack. This was in the string and she looked at that, looked at me and wrote the check and walked inside the house. Cheap. Oh, and then Pretto much later, it was fine. It's leaked out the house now and then and it's a small one again. And you know, so

some some plants can be cut back like that. Then you'll find Hollis are very resilient as far as that is concerned. They can be cut back really really low. When they'll do just fine, they leap out real nicely. So I like them because of their disease resistance and the insect resistance. And soon they're good plants. They have good so also there you know, there's all kinds of nandinas. You're not. It's not your grandmother's Nandina's anymore.

When I say on the design, I say it obsession Dandina, and people go, I don't want to Dandina. I said, I think you really like this one because the leaves on it say consistently dark purple pretty much throughout the summer. And you got consistency and no bugs, none, no, no. Insects don't like nandinas. They do not like them. Wonderful they have a fairly long life span. You'll probably get twenty five to thirty years out of an obsession. Andina didn't like everything else, get kind of old.

Just throw them out to get you a new one, but give them a good home for a while. Anyway. It's kind of the same thing with the Dwarf Nandina. And I see a lot of people let them get too tall right around Valentine's Day. You need to get that big old thirty two cylinder. We'd like Kevin. That's clipper, like Kevin has. Yeah, and cut those Dwarf Dandina's back, big old diesel thing and you think, oh my god, I cut it back to me. Nothing left.

Yeah, for a little whiles it will be. But they come back looking so nice. If they're really If the Dwarf Dandine is to cut back really low in the spring, So and I do that to mind about every second or third year, and and this this next year, they're really gonna get it. You're gonna get it good, go get it hurt right, They're gonna more than that. And they come up some ice and they're small and real bushy and tight. It's kind of like you like. But anyway,

they can't be beat. As far as the fall and winter color, the Dwarf Landina has a very brilliant red like those buttons over there. Yeah, red color on them in the fall in winter, so really nice and no bugs and no diseases, and they're just easy to grow. A landscaper's dream because you don't have to do anything to them. So a dwarf sandinas. Another go went to using the landscape along with the yop on hollidays and so on, and kind of a new A new one in the realm is a

blue star juniper. Okay, it's not new because I planted some of the house thirty years ago, still there, yeah, but anyway, this one gives you some blue color which contrasts actually in the wintertime with the red in a composition. And it's a very low care plant. It's a junifer squamata in a variety of blue stars. This squimata has a very durable plant. And this the blue star universe stays really small. It's about the size of

a half a basketball. It just sits there and stays blue the whole time. Just doesn't think. So the more the more sunshiny gets, the better it is. I use it for little color accidents because you have to think, what has going to look like in January, what's it going to look like in July? All the things you have to factor into this landscape. And that's kind of why I pick out certain plant materials I could do just

so it does have some stability. Now you put in other plants that do stuff, perennials and whatnot, to do stuff on a seasonal basis in with it. But it's gonna look fairly consistent from in July and same thing in January. But you're going to ask some changes of other things around in there too. So keep that in mind when you're when you're thinking about your landscape,

what do I want it to look like in January? I see so many people who do their landscaping perennials, which is fine, they had their place. But in the winter time, what's there? Yeah, there's nothing? So why looks so blending of perennials and annuals and some hardy shrub a year round gives you kind of a year round interest. So a little flock. Yeah, brothers, I'm still hanging around. I guess just take a

little break. We'll be right back with more of the Green Country Gardener program after this two minute time hot summer is here in the green then there's three in greenhouses you can shop for your landscape and gardens and so during there's summer specials get discounts from thirty to fifty percent off sumlight items. Plus they have new shipments of drugs that are road need to be planted. Make it to Green Dum Nursery and Greenhouses on the what A Road and Steeve, NC.

What's new? Open Monday through Saturday, nine to five, new to four Sunday. Hi, this is Ryl Chris with Gateway and Bartlesville letting you know it's a great time to take advantage of our CD rates. Right now you can get five point one five percent apy on our seven month CD. That's right, five point one five percent annual percentage yield on a seven month CD.

To take advantage, apply online at Gateway First dot com or come see us at our Bartlesville Banking Center downtown at four to two South Dewey Avenue. Some restrictions apply five hundred dollars minimum balance required available for new CD deposits only Gateway First Bank Number FDIC. What happens when a healthcare system truly listens. Healing happens, hope happens, Good health happens. At ascension. We know

because we listen to you to better understand you. Then our network of doctors, nurses, and care teams at Saint John deliver a personalized healthcare experience that's right for you and your family. Find the care you need at Stjohnhealthsystem dot com, Jane Phillips and Bartlesville. At a time when misinformation is all too common on social media, we take great pride in bringing you the news that

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welcome back to the Green Country Gardener program. It is eight forty five and if you want to be a part of the program, if you have a question or a comment, you can do that one eight hundred seven nine three six. We love talking to inquisitive folks. Lurie. Let's talk a little bit about the red maple. Let's do that. The red maple is a highly adaptable tree. You can grow just about anywhere you do want to planet in an area where have some fairly deep soil because shallow roots. Than that's

a pretty good tree. I like to avoid planting this on a hill. Why when the soil it roads for not having the flight, you got gotta go to the boom and that looks like a hand on the top of the ground. You want to be sort of careful on a on a hillside situation. You might consaid chime to use this dash or something like that. Yeah, but anyway, the red maple is known for it's fall color. Really wants the fall color. And there's some new varieties out there the red maple

that the feminize variety, which is across between the red and silver. Yeah, it's a little bit of silver maple in it, but it does have the strength of the red maple. And the color on the on the maples is can't be beep. So you might consider that for an area put a maple tree somewhere where you might want some shit, you missed it went over that way. We have a flying beast in here that we're trying to catch.

But the red maple is very easy to grow. I mean, you don't have to do too much to it, because I know because I got two of them in my house. And they just sort of grow on their own. The ones at the north of it, they'll got attacked by boards is terrible and I usually emidic opri on it got rid of the boards. Now it's just really flushing and doing very well. So typically they have a lifespan of thirty years or so in the landscape. Then they kind of get

overgrown and fall apart a little bit. I know one on the south side is starting to starting to kind of do that, you know, let's geting a little old, kind of like what I do when I hit thirty. So but anyways, these days are like I said, the highly adaptable plants. They're indigenous to lowland areas. Typically, in other words, you find them in the ecosystem of things in lowland areas where typically the soil is a little bit anaerobic, and their response to that anaerobic soil is to have a

fairly shallow root system. So that's kind of drawback to the red maple. But if you have it in an area and you keep it trimmed up so the light can get to the grass down below it, you should have some pretty good luck with it not having some shallow roots. I have two of them in my house, and I don't have any shallow roots on the ground at all because I'll keep it trimmed up. Plenty of light, right, and the soil doesn't eroad when you have plenty of light, because the grass

is real. I actually had bermina grass going in shade at my house. How do you do that? They just know it real tall. Okay, it's not very thick. It's real kind of whispy. It's there. But from the street it looks okay, but you get on top of it, yeah, well you know. Anyway, So it's growing underneath the red maple, and it got to the point where the grass was just so somewhat non

existent under the maple trees. So I made kind of beds underneath it, these big rocks, put them on there, some of the rocks around it the landscape composition, and I put some plants underneath it that will compete suespecially with the red maple. So it looks kind of nice, so cool, so red red maple. If you don't want to have the you have, of course a little seed to spin around, and you do get a little

red maples all over the yard in the spring. But that's I consider that a kind of a small price to pay for a tree that's durable and looks nice even in the heat of the summer. So consider that for a shade tree, keep it, say thirty feet twenty thirty feet away from the house, because you do get pretty big. I've seen a lot of people who plant them too close to the house and it's just not a good thing.

So they should do pretty well. But if you keep them thirty feet away, twenty thirty feet away from the house, And I keep in mind your water line coming into the house and the sewer line going out of the house. Know where those are before you plant it, too, because the rich system can cause some damage. And you can also wrap yourself around the water

pipe and snap it if it's PBC. Yeah, really good. The plumbers are expensive, yeah, almost as expensive as a hard doctor, really, so you want to kind of plant it head on that if you do have If you do want a planet trade that's in that vicinity, you might consider something like a pistache. I would steer clear of oaks around that area too, because they can cause real problems with plumbing. Oh yeah, in the sprinker system too, So so plan to plan ahead on locating a tree and

pick out the right species for the situations. Should do just fine to be trouble free. Okay, Uh, plan your landscape out always a good time to do that, and it's something we do. Have a meeting with a customer here in thirty minutes about his landscape too, so we've been to discuss it. And there's five different cost centers on this landscape. So broke it down so you can look at it and decide what he might want to do. So we do. We do landscape planning. It's a good idea to

have some kind of plan so you know what's coming on. And there's a lot of professional do it. I mean, I mean, folks, you can read all you want, but you've been doing this more than a minute, Larry, Yeah, that's nineteen seventy nine. Here you go. So you've got a little bit of experience behind it, just a little bit, you know, a little bit there too. Yeah, and of course you got a neat can't system that you can show people what it's going to look

like. Yeah. You get an overhead a plan view as well as the perspective you too, so it helps to visualize. Some people have they can't visualize something with a just a plan view. What this does is let you see what it will actually look like. So I've got some designs on the drawing board. I'm a little slow getting done because I'm out putting the stuff in the ground. He's trying to and they out working out working for twenty

five year old. Yeah, oh yard than that. So anyway, so yeah, a landscape a plan is something we offer to but I'm needing a little bit of time just to get it done. So the okay, cool, Let's talk a little about the hearty have biscuits? Do that? Do we have time? Let's take this one break and we will be back in a two minutes thirty seconds. Back in the early nineteen thirties, Frank and

Jane Phillips hosted a wonderful party at their lodge home at Willarock. For this special party, Frank hired the world famous magician Harry Blackstone to provide the entertainment for the large crowd. Throughout the evening, Blackstone amazed the guests with his card tricks and sleight of hand, with the crowd applauding and laughing as the tricks got better and better. Finally, Blackstone asked Jane Phillips to step forward.

He reached into his coat and removed a new deck of cards and dramatically unwrapped them, removed the cards from the deck and shuffle them several times. He then asked Missus Phillips to cut the cards, which she did, pulling the Queen of s page, which she showed to the crowd. She put the card back into the deck and Blackstone carefully shuffled the cards two or three times, then suddenly spun around and threw the entire deck of cards into the

wall of the lodge, just to the left of the front door. Fifty one cards fell to the floor and the Queen of Spades stuck on the wall, where it still remains today, a perfect example of the magic of Willarock.

Come see it for yourself and welcome home to Wallarock. Hi, Mike Mattings here from Romans Outdoor Power. If you measure your lawn by the acre welling with the number one selling Diesel zero turn lower series with comfort with the Cabota zd ACS deck technology for improved cutting performance, responsible and durable chaft driven transmission, hands free hydraulic deck lift. No matter how you measure your lawn.

The Cabota ZD delivers Visit your Localkbota dealer today. Go to Caboda USA dot com, pfol describer, Romans, outdoor Power, your Cabota Dealer, Highway seventy five and Bartlesville Independence Ordo Kikbota dot com. You're the entertainment you love and information that shoots your day. We are your lifeline, we are your companion. We are broadcasters. Text radio so five to eight eighty six, and that Congress know you depend on your local radio stations. This message

furnished by the National Association of Broadcasters. Welcome back to the Green Coutry Gardener program. It is eight fifty four to seventy one degrees and you can call us one eight hundred seven three six with questions. Comment. Didn't mean to catch you off mid sentence there, Larry. That's where where we are. Heart Hibiscus, they're blooming right now. I have some in the backyard that are blooming, and unlike any of the flowers, say that's in the garden

if you will. The heart of hibiscus offers us flowers that are both rather large and also rather delicate, just as if they were made from crape paper the great big flowers. The flowers arrange in size from three to four and is to up to eight to twelve inches in diameter, and it's highly reliant on the amount of resources available. So the center of each flower is you'll find a bit of a dark trickle like this right here here you go, and it's reminiscent of a say, of a rose of Sharon, which is

actually related rosa Sharon is a Hibiscus syriacus. These are Hibiscus mochetto's here, yes, so they're kind of related to that. And we all know the durability and strength of the rows of Sharon being a very sturdy plant, a very reliable one actually in blooming and quite show you in the landscape too, so if this one also offers that, but it has a red of large

flower on it and lots of different colors available. This one also kind of fools people in the spring because it takes it a while to come up out of the ground. It's not the first one to show up in the landscape.

It typically it doesn't really start to grow until it gets the soil gets really warm, and a lot of people take them for a loss and they dig them up and oh no, oh no no. So if you do have a hard have biscuits, hopefully it's in an area that's fairly well drained and in the open sun, and it should do really, really quite well. This is a native American species, the heart of hibiscuits, and it typically grows in the swampy areas but obviously very hearty or very highly adaptable.

That's the name hardy, hardy hibiscuits. And it comes up every year. Uh so it is very easy to grow. It has a few pats on it too now and then you'll get some little caterpillars knowing on it, but don't seem to bother that much. And if it's really really hot and humid and rainy when they set their ballooms, chances are they won't bloom as heavily as they would if it were a little drier. So they're in bloom right now, thank goodness. And we've got some rain coming for the next few

days. So these uh they got to chance chants some in the backyard. Did are. They're about five feet tall in the and they have red red blooms on them. Actually dug them up out of a customer's yard you want to have invited said, take some of them with you. Okay, cool, it's throw in the ground. See you're on your own, buddy. And right now they're they're in full bloom, and they're towards the back of the landscape composition because they get rather tall, so and they're putting on a

lot of red flowers right now. So they're really kind of attractive plants too. They don't bloom all summer long. They don't bloom as long, says The Roads of Sharing. But when they do bloom, it's on quite a good show, very good. So hard to have. Biscus might be the one you want to consider in the landscape, in the back of the landscape somewhere. It's going to be a year or two before it really really puts on a big shell. But if you plant it in good soil, not

in clay, but in good soil, it should do quite well. So add a lot of accomplish to the soil and do it a preparation about as wild as you can reach around say three feet wide or so, depending on your reat. But you want to do a pretty good size ground prep for that so its roots can exploit the area and you have bigger, better ballooms if you have a bigger, better prep on your soil. All about the prep. You gotta work a very few pests on this also maybe a little

caterpillar now and then, but very few pests on too. Vegetables still time to plant beans, cowpees, almost time for turnips and multiose tomatoes really well, water only when needed. Try to keep the water level constant on your tomatoes just then, don't crack and should do just fine. A customer brought in tomato with a rotted bottom on it, and it's a blossoming rot and typically that's indicate eating a chascium deficiency in the soil. So we have some

liquid calcium she's going to put on the plant. And also I told her to get in February. I use some gypsum and some magnesium sulfate or epsom salts in your soil. Blend that into the soil. You shouldn't have much of a problem with blossom inrot. Then tomato is like a slightly lower pH two, so the epsom salts will help that also. Anyway, come buy the nursery and check us out. We've got all kinds of things on the

sale. Right now, got tons of composts, tons of dirt, got some dirt a good still, a great selection of shrubs and hollies and whatnot over at the nursery, and some cool things to have around the house too. So anyway, we're on No Water Road, halfway between Madison and Washington, on the south side of the road, and tom ally has been quite a show. Keep your shovel sharp. We will see you next week.

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