Thursday, July 21, 2011

Photos of July Meeting at the Densing's Garden

Peg Densing & Lynn Kane





Members enjoy a light moment during the meeting




L to R:  Carolyn Savastano, Babette Bishop, & Carolyn Young admire Frank's garden train.


Good friends Barbara Bestafka & Annie Rubbo share the fun.


Choo Choo Duck Stop

July Newsletter

Greetings from the President

Hello Members,

It is already July, and the weather has been everything from unbearable to just plain magnificent. Colors in the gardens are flourishing, and it seems it's already time to begin cutting some species back for the season. How the beauty of the warm season just seems to fly by. Our next monthly meeting will be a treat for anyone who has never been to the home and
garden of our treasurer, Carol Tvelia. The garden is just beautiful, and she has some very large koi to relax with. Please try not to miss it. I have comets and goldfish in my pond, and although I watch them lovingly just the same, they pale in comparison. Keep cool, relax, and enjoy your summer.
See you all soon, Diane

Mark the Date

Tuesday, July 26—Monthly Meeting, 6:00 Our July meeting will be at the home of Carol Tvelia in her garden. 25 Stephani Ave., Patchogue 475-3445

Sunday, September 18—Harvest Dinner, 3:30 p.m. at the Patchogue Beach Club

Get to Know A Fellow Gardener—Carolyn Young

Where were you born?
I was born in Columbus, Ohio and grew up there. I had a younger brother and sister. Each summer our family would spend a couple of weeks in a cottage in Northern Michigan.
Tell us about your family?The family of my husband, Larry, also spent summers in a cottage in Northern Michigan. That’s where I met him. You could say that I ended up marrying the boy next door. I went to graduate school (seven different schools for graduate work) getting a Masters in other types of special education from Eastern Michigan University. I took post graduate work as well. Larry had worked in Yellowstone for the summer and was a special education teacher also, so we had the summers to travel to various National and State Parks with our two daughters. His work
in Yellowstone was where he got his feeling that everyone should see Yellowstone.
Where did you teach?
I graduated with a Bachelors in Elementary and Special Ed from Ohio University. Just after I was married, I taught in Michigan. I then took a job in Euclid Ohio which is northeast of
Cleveland, and taught there for a year and a half. We then moved to Kings Park in 1964 where we raised the girls. It was here that we started our interest in daylilies. Later, I worked with BOCES 3 in the Huntington Babylon area and then taught at Half Hollow Hills until I retired in 1992. After that we moved to Warwick, NY.
What gave you your first interest in gardening?
I think it was learning to identify wildflowers and trees when I was a camper only 8-12 years old. We lived on a ravine within the city of Columbus, Ohio, and I just always loved watching the birds, the trees, etc. Larry and I got into daylilies in about 1981, thinking we’d get something that would survive during the summers when we were traveling around the country. I became a nationalgarden judge, a national exhibition judge, and have maintained a national display garden
from the early ‘90s on. We moved, in pieces, from Warwick in 1997 to our present home. We had to have some of the trees cleared for the lilies, but
kept the woods for a perimeter.
What are some of your other interests?
I like crafts and sewing and decorating the house. But mostly we’ve spent out spare time camping.
A book you’d recommend?
Lasagna Gardening by Patricia Lanza. I have a signed copy of that because I’ve been up to her place. Also A Garden of Wildflowers that tells about wildflowers and how to propagate them.
An accomplishment you are proud of?
My years teaching kids with different disabilities. I knew from sixth grade on that I was going to do that.
An interesting place you’ve traveled to or visited?
When we started camping, we began with just a tent. Then a VW camper with a pop-up top. Finally, we built our own motor home from a used Bond Bread truck. This took a couple of years. I designed the inside, and we both built and repaired it. It was a 90- horse power-18 foot truck. We took it over the Rockies two or three times, traveling to state and national parks. We didn’t hook up to anything. We had extra battery to run our lights and cooked outside the camper.
Your favorite dessert or food?
All the foods I can’t eat any more because of my milk allergy.
Something you keep postponing?
Sorting through old school materials and papers
Future plans?
I’m going back to Warwick, in a 55-and-older community. I’ll be able to walk to the village, shops, and parks. I’ll be close to my daughter, an attorney and hiker. She likes living close to the
Appalachian Trail. Gets a watermelon and cuts it up and leaves it in a cooler on the trail for other hikers to enjoy. I’ll leave my other daughter’s family (with my two grandchildren) in Smithtown.

Daylilies!

Hundreds of registered hybrids are in bloom now in Carolyn Young's garden. She needs to downsize her nationally renowned collection and is selling clumps/divisions for $5.00 each. Some plants are available now; others will be dug as they finish blooming.Call Carolyn at 345-6194
to arrange a day and time to purchase. She’ll give you directions if you need them.

June Meeting in a Flash

• Rolling Rock will clean up the garden prior to the Garden
Tour. They will install the game table and benches.
• The Harvest Dinner will take place on September 18th,
at 3:30 at the Patchogue Beach Club. Bring a covered
dish.
• Jo Miller discussed plans for the new garden workshop
tentatively planned for September 10th. Flyers will be
handed out at the Garden Tour. Carolyn Young offered
free daylilies for the workshop, but she needs help preparing
them for the event.
• There has been a poor response to our Plant and Yard
sale. After much discussion members agreed unanimously
to skip the sale next year.
• Members discussed the possibility of allowing Art
Space artists to sell items in the Garden area. This is a
Village decision.
• Paula asked for volunteers to sit at gardens for the upcoming
tour, and Georgia asked members to make sure
the garden is presentable.

Timely Tips for the Garden in August

Pick herbs for fresh use and for drying. Harvesting will keep them growing longer.
• Order spring bulbs for planting
• Spread a mid-season layer of compost or manure.
• Keep deadheading and harvesting
• Leave some annual seeds to self-sow.
• Start saving seeds and taking cuttings.
• Remove any diseased foliage now, so it doesn’t get lost in the fall leaves.
• Cut back foliage of early bloomers to revitalize the plants
• Prune summer flowering shrubs as the flowers fade.
• Begin dividing perennials. Start with the bearded iris.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Thanks for A Successful Tour

Our 11th annual garden tour sold over 150 tickets--special thanks to our salespeople, the Tiffords of Fantastic Gardens, Mindy of Remember Yesteryears, Sis of Country Junque, and the staff of the Chamber of Commerce, as well as our members. The weather was perfect, and the tour was a great success. None of this would be possible without the efforts of the our volunteers and Tour Committee and all the gardeners and interested people who attended.

2011 Garden Tour Volunteers

Barbara Bestafka
Laura Calarco
Pauline Carleton
Rosalie Coleman
Georgia Dulmovits
John Dulmovits
Karen Ferb
Mark Jeffers
Arlene Lamberti
Marie Magnano
Jo Miller
Ann Rubbo
Carla Steward
Ruth Szuminskyj
Mary Ann Tchinnis
Carol Tvelia

2011 Tour Committee

Paula Murphy, Chair
Barbara Bestafka
Karen Ferb
Arlene Lamberti
Jo Miller
Ann Rubbo
Ruth Szuminskyj
Mary Ann Tchinnis
Susan Toplitz
Judy Zuck

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

PatchoguePatch

ARTS
Patchogue Gardens Displayed in Annual Tour
Garden Club hosts 11th annual Patchogue Garden Tour

12 July 2011 by Krystle DiNicola

The self-guided tour began at the Community Garden on Terry Street in Patchogue Village. Each participant received a fresh sprig of lavender from the garden to enjoy. This year's tour also featured five private homes within the greater Patchogue area in addition to the tour of the Community Gardens.

Northport residents Chris DeAngelo and Fran Rudloff travelled out to Patchogue specifically for the tour after seeing it advertised. "I've been with a friend for other tours. We've done the North Shore more - Smithtown, Saint James, etc," Rudloff said. "I've also done other tours in Sea Cliff and Northport but I've never been to this area before. This is beautiful," DeAngelo said.

DeAngelo liked the McGrath Garden best. "The same thing that appeals to me in the house, appeals to me in the garden. It's artistic - the scale, the color...everything just looks like it was done by an artist. It blends together beautifully," DeAngelo said.

Rudloff preferred the Belzak Garden. "The garden had different structures in it. There were statues as well as antique bistro tables and chairs. It was very whimsical. There were surprise touches everywhere. I also liked that she had vegetables growing nearby," Rudloff said.

See photographs at
http://patchogue.patch.com/articles/photos-patchogue-garden-tour-2011#photo-6943386