Tuesday, March 27, 2012

In Praise of Volunteers

Master Naturalist intern
Jim Wilson constructs a
pea trellis in the Children's
Funshine Garden.
In mid-March, a group of volunteers and I descended on the Arboretum's Funshine Garden to prepare the beds for spring planting. We were greeted by a few hardy pansies that had overwintered, several husks of Indian corn, and lots and lots of weeds. No problem for our stalwart volunteers: within several hours, the beds were cleared of weeds, enriched with composted horse manure (kindly donated by Jamie Sullivan of Snapdragon Stables), and magically put to rights. Notable events included volunteer Jim Wilson's impromptu creation of a twig and branch pea trellis, as well as Will Cook's heroic battle against a deeply rooted and ill-placed baptisia plant. Thankfully, Jaimie Jacobs was on hand to photograph it all.
Master Naturalist intern
Jaimie Jacobs tends a bed
in the children's garden.

The morning reminded me of the crucial role volunteers play at the Arboretum. When coordinating Arboretum events or preparing for an environmental education program, I sometimes feel that the way forward is as briar-ridden and obstacle-filled as Sleeping Beauty's castle. Yet always (and sometimes at the seeming last minute), volunteers rise to the demands of the occasion: supporting, complementing, toiling, smiling, struggling, and, as in the garden, magically putting things to rights.

by Jenny Houghton
Youth Program Coordinator

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Shedding Light on Shed Antlers

Many years ago, I spent a summer as a nanny on a 340,000-acre ranch in northern Arizona. Long hours of childcare were interspersed with liberating horseback rides through a landscape dotted with juniper, century plants, and...discarded antlers. At the time, I felt great sorrow for the vast number of deer that had seemingly lost their lives to the beautiful but rugged terrain.

Now, with Master Naturalist training under my belt, I've come to better understand deer and their antlers. It turns out that bucks grow new antlers each year from knobby bones on their skulls. Following a fairly predictable calendar, these "buttons" grow to three inches by mid-May and are covered in velvety skin. The antlers reach eight inches in mid-June and begin to branch. By July, the antlers near full growth and are still covered in velvet. The antlers' blood vessels begin to dry up in August. At this time, they become bone-hard, and the velvet shrinks and peels. The antlers themselves are shed in the winter months, when bucks no longer need to fight other bucks for territory and does.

With this knowledge in hand, I no longer have to feel creepy about the antlers that I smuggled back from Arizona in my carry-on luggage and that have languished in my basement for many years. Just what I had originally intended for the antlers remains a mystery. Hat rack? Chandelier? Marshmallow toaster? Perhaps a clue to their eventual fate lay all along in my early days as a nanny: nearly twenty years later, the antlers have come to rest in the eager hands of the children I teach at the Arboretum.

by Jenny Houghton
Youth Program Coordinator



Thursday, March 1, 2012

Dream...plant...nurture your garden

Mark your calendar! The Native Plant Nursery opens for the 2012 season with a members-only shopping day on Friday, April 13 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and public sale days on Saturday and Sunday, April 14 and 15, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fill your garden with hard-to-find ornamental natives, or choose from a special selection of woodland wildflowers, new cultivars, or old favorites.

Members may place presale orders at www.adkinsplants.com through March 25. Join, renew, or upgrade your membership today!

Individual, Household, and Grandparent members receive a 10% discount on plants, and a 20% discount is given to members at the Contributor level and above. Unsure of your membership level? Call Meg Gallagher at 410.634.2847, ext. 23 or Kate Rattie at ext. 33.