SAND’n’SEEDS|Sept 2022


Message from the President
By Marilee CrumleyAnother monsoon rain has just graced the area with bountiful rain. I’m sure we’ll start seeing abundant growth from all vegetation in our gardens. TX rangers are covered in their purple robes of blooms, my golden Tecoma flowers are multiplying, and new fragrant flowers are appearing on my kumquat and Meier lemon trees         
It’s been good to meet some of our newer members at two summer luncheons we held recently. It’s great to welcome new members into GVG. We look forward to your getting involved in our many activities. As we look forward to the fall, we hope you find answers to your gardening questions at seminars and workshops all being planned for you.        
Some of the board members took a visit to a hydroponics greenhouse in Tucson to check it out for a future members’ tour. We learned about how they grow greens and herbs for two grocery store chains, some Tucson schools, and for the public. Despite growing in water, their water usage is minimal compared to growing in soil. With water becoming less available to Arizona this is an interesting consideration for future gardening. Hope you have successful August gardening experiences!Happy Gardening!

A New Brand for the Green Valley Gardeners!As part of the work to modernize the website for the Green Valley Gardeners we have developed a new logo brand for our club that is very exciting. It has a palette of colors based on earth tones. The palette will allow us to easily display our logo in many formats and for many uses: web design, paper and digital media as well as for clothing and other paraphanila! Moving forward our brand, in the community we serve, will be distinct and noticeable! Examples are shown below.
Announcements
Green Valley Gardeners is now listed on AmazonSmile. When you shop Amazon, log into AmazonSmile, use your existing personal account login information, select Green Valley Gardeners as your non-profit of choice. The club will receive a small donation for each qualifying purchase you make. Thank you!To shop AmazonSmile go to http://smile.amazon.com/
We need volunteers to lead Green ValleyGardener Tours &Hospitality offerings
Please consider helping us preserve these valued offerings that make our garden club so special!
Hospitality Chair
Do you ever forget to eat breakfast prior to seminars or just enjoy having a treat when you come to seminars? This is a fun and yummy job. Everyone is happy making and eating cookies. Once you start talking to 2 – 3 of your friends to cover the first seminar, it’s super easy to talk to the cookie eaters at seminar to volunteer to bake for future seminars.Tours ChairDo you enjoy going on tours of local gardens and other plant related sites? We need someone to coordinate garden tours or general educational tours. We can assist with ideas and venus to consider._________________Please contactinfo@greenvalleygardeners.com
Charitable Donations

You will be asked for an amount, your contact information and credit card information. Donations go toward operating expenses. If you want your donation to go to a specific project or in honor of an individual, please indicate your intention in the comment area. 
You also can mail in a donation to:Green Valley GardenersPO Box 86Green Valley, AZ 85622-0086Donations to a 501(c)(3) are tax deductible. Please check with your tax accountant for more information on this deduction.

Would you like to help, have fun and meet new people?
Arid GardenFridays at 7:30 a.m. Contact: Mary Kidnocker520-648-7959 orjdkidn@aol.com
Canoa Ranch:  Tuesdays at 7:30 a.m.Contact: Raydine Taberrs_taber@msn.com
Desert Meadows Park: Wednesdays at 7:30 a.m. Contact: Chuck Parsons 520-904-9020 or chuckp.dana@gmail.com

SPRING GARDEN TOUR
The Green Valley Gardeners’ Spring Garden Tour is busy selecting gardens for the 2023 tour to be held in April. We are looking for someone who is willing to photograph the gardens that are selected.  The photographs will be used for posters, tickets etc. We are interested in close up shots and some general landscape photos. Although the tour is not until April, printed materials are submitted to the printer in late February. Early fall is often a good time to catch the gardens in all of their glory. If you are interested in helping the tour by taking some photos of the gardens please contact Cynthia Surprisecjsurprise@verizon.net Stacie Meyerstaciemeyer24@gmail.com
Seminar Committee
Summer is slowly coming to a close. The hottest of summer weather and the monsoons begin to wain. Snowbirds begin to organize for their journey back to their lovely winter home in the Sonoran desert.The first Green Valley Gardeners seminar will be held on October 6th. Last season we had Greg Hugie sharing his experience building solitary bee houses at Desert Meadows Park. The insight he gained while building his bee houses sparked many of our interest in bees. To find out more about the types of bees along with their habitats, we have invited Shakur Nair. Shakur is a Entomologist Professor and Specialist in Environmental Horticulture at the University of Arizona. She is interesting and fun to listen to.The seminar will be held at Desert Hills Center 2980 S. Camino del Sol. The doors open at 8:30am with the presentation beginning at 9:30am. Come as early as 9:00am to socialize with fellow gardeners and to enjoy morning sweets and coffee.We look forward to seeing you there!October 13th- Plant sale preview highlighting plants that can work for small spaces, Stephanie Vickers (Civano)
November 3rd- Cactus Recovery Program/Organization, Steve Watts
November 10th- Labarinths, Lenny Friedman
December 1st- Living with and without Pack Rats, Eric Bell (new owner of Mr. Pack Rat)December 8th- Shrub and Tree pruning, Ursula Schuch “If you are interested in joining the committee, please contact Rhonda Rinn atrinnrr@yahoo.com
FALL SILENT AUCTION DONATIONSWe are now accepting donations for the Fall Silent Auction. Donations can be dropped off at 1010 S. LaHuerta (Chuck Parsons’ screened front porch), or call Sheri Paseka at 406-672-7035 to arrange a time for pick up.Thank you all in advance for your generous donations!
In Your Plot … By Lorna Mitchell
Second summer will arrive this month when monsoons come to an end. Keep watering your plants by maintaining irrigations and timers, weeding that pesky grass, and controlling insect pests. This is also a good time to apply a little extra nitrogen to your actively growing plants since soluble nutrients get washed out with rains and constant irrigation. A simple way to do this is to dissolve a teaspoon (or a little less) of all-purpose Miracle Grow in a gallon of water and pour a little at the base of all your plants in addition to regular watering. 


Those who are willing to take a risk can still plant green beans; choose the “55 days to harvest” variety and if the frost is late you may have fresh beans for Thanksgiving.Nights will eventually get chilly so put in seeds of winter crops while the soil is still warm. Prepare soil by digging in composted mushroom or steer manure and granulated fertilizer. As you dig, remove and destroy root nibbling grubs. Nourish your friends the earthworms by adding veggie scrap smoothies that you make in your blender at home.Seeds of these cool season vegetables can be put in anytime this month and next; radishes, carrots, beets, kohlrabi, turnips, rutabagas, collards, parsnips, Swiss chard, kale, fennel, and cilantro. Seeds of spinach and peas will prefer to wait for next month.Transplants of cool season vegetables such as broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, Swiss chard, spinach, and kale can go in near the end of September or early October. Keep a sharp eye for Brassica loving cabbage looper caterpillars which can eat a small plant in a day or two; pick them off and spray the plant with Bt.Snip off the lower browning leaves of tomato plants to reduce disease and pest hiding places. Clean out rotting veggies and ground debris from under beans, peppers, and eggplants. These crops should continue to produce a harvest if the plants are healthy.Grasshoppers are often a serious problem in the late summer months and they will not go away until the weather turns cold; mechanical control is the best option. They eat their way through everything in short order. Consider protecting seed beds with a cover of a white cloth until the seedlings start pushing it up then fine netting (think bridal veil) supported by some posts and held down on all sides by soil will help keep predators off small plants.  Those are my plot thoughts for now,Happy Gardening!!
Activity Updates
Arid Garden …By Mary Kidnocker

Garden volunteers, although still in the process of picking up remaining debris from the July 16 monsoon season storm, are currently busy pulling and gathering many rain-inspired weeds. Besides the usual grass weeds, there have been: already-blooming Fleabane, 3-feet high Nicotianas, wandering Pipevine, fuzzy-leafed Indian Mallow, Senna covesii, and other unnamed intruders.  

At Arid, our volunteers try to be selective of which plants should be pulled out and trashed; which will be watched for future decisions; and which will stay as part of the garden. With careful observation and a bit of research, new plant varieties are sometimes kept. For example, two types of plants now found in several spots in the garden that have “blown in” over the years are Bahia and Dyssodia… officially wildflowers.

We are happy to have two new garden volunteers join our Friday group. Welcome to the team, Janice Duran and Jeff Chew !

Desert Meadows Park …By Chuck Parsons
The July and August monsoon season has provided the park with rain. We finish August with all the vegetation looking spectacular! Most notable, benefiting from natural hydration are the native grasses. Larry Kersdergen diligently hand waters these plants for weeks and they hardly show their appreciation, but after a few nice rainy days they thrive. Had it not been for Larry’s efforts they’d have not survived to enjoy the rain. It’s not only the trees, shrubs, natives and all the other plants that thrive with monsoon rains, it’s the unwanted plants too ~ weeds! Lenny Friedman constructed the labyrinth at the park. The rocks that define the labyrinth maze provide an ideal habitat for seed germination thus requiring tedious weeding. On a recent Wednesday workday, Lenny along with volunteers Mary Smith and Janice Duran spent 3-hours each on that task.

Weeding labyrinthMary Smith and Janice Duran joined Lenny Friedman to clear the labyrinth of weeds. Photo by Lenny Friedman
We have been mowing the Prestige field South of the park to have it available for off street parking during the October plant sale and Art-in-the-Park event. It’s primarily a field of Amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri), a weed by many names ~ careless weed, pigweed, and known as “rain spinach” or Juhukia i:wagi to the Tohono O’odham. Last year we only mowed around the labyrinth area. That was a mistake! We had to hand cut the rest of the field to have it ready for the art event. Several volunteers spent 3 days harvesting and removing Amaranth stock that stood over 5-feet high. That was a lot of work!Amaranthus palmeri germinates in great green swaths wherever rainwater has pooled. It grows faster than one can imagine ~ between 6 and 10-inches a week this last month on the Prestige field. The plant is considered a curse by cotton farmers, it is, on the flip side, a positive boon to traditional harvesters—Native, Hispanic, African or Asian. As climate change digs its teeth into desert environments, our native Amaranth “weed” holds great potential as a rapid-responder “dry-land” crop for the future.The nutrition of Amaranth, our rain spinach, is way up at the top of the chart. Consider that 100g of young shoots provides 42 calories packed with 3-4 grams of protein, 3 mg iron, and 4-11 mg of available calcium. If your Amaranth patch matures faster than your harvesting schedule allows, don’t fret–all is not lost. As long as there are soft, non-fibrous leaves to pick, they are fair game for steaming or stir-frying as greens or quelites. Later, when the arching spike of spiny seed capsules matures and dries, you can harvest seeds (carefully with gloves) and winnow the tiny grains in the breeze. THEY are fabulously nutritious too. Amaranth seed is 15-18% protein—far higher than m