Evolve Now!

Lawn Warfare and Dead Bees

Evolve Now!
EILEEN STARK / Saturday, January 26, 2008 05:22 PM

“Say, was you ever bit by a dead bee?”         -- To Have and Have Not, 1944


It’s just a matter of a few months until things start growing like crazy again and lawn care resumes after a wet winter break. Wait – did I say lawn care? I meant lawn combat. According to the Lawn Institute in Pleasant Hill, Tenn., Americans spent over $30 billion a year on lawns in 2004. While some of that tidy sum was likely spent on hiring help to mow the grass, I would venture to say that, judging by the number of chemical products lining the aisles of garden centers, much of it is spent on poisons. More...

TAGS: HOME, compost, gardening, native plants

Fruits of Our Labor: Pruning Tips for Home Orchards

Evolve Now!
EILEEN STARK / Thursday, January 17, 2008 08:35 PM

 

Fruit-bearing trees that are neglected will probably become diseased and produce a meager crop of undersized fruit that is out of reach. I should know. When we bought our house six years ago -- which we chose mainly for its oversized (for close-in Portland) back yard -- we became the proud owners of three fig trees, four peach trees, an apricot, pear and nectarine tree, raspberries, blueberries and red currants. Unfortunately, this heaven only lasted a short while.

The fig trees are thriving, although they are so tall and wide that pruning is difficult and much of the ambrosia-like fruit goes splat on the ground. But they’re healthy, beautiful trees and provide an incredible amount of privacy along the periphery of the yard, so they’re here to stay (plus, the birds and squirrels and neighbors love to eat them). Unfortunately, the peach trees all had to be removed because of advanced disease, poor pruning, placement in mostly shade (not a good thing for fruiting trees), or all of the above. The little apricot tree was found growing almost horizontally and it broke my heart to remove it since it was actually producing a little bit of fruit; I have no idea why the previous owner didn’t stake the poor thing. The white nectarine tree was a gem and produced the sweetest, most flavorful fruit I’ve ever tasted in my life, but last year we had to say goodbye: not only had it been pruned poorly in its early years, it was diseased due to poor placement right next to the house in the wettest spot in the yard. We tried keeping the disease at bay along with winter and summer pruning, but it was rotting from the inside. It was old for a nectarine and wouldn’t have produced many more years, but we still miss it, as I ration out the few remaining pieces of its dried fruit. We also took out the common Bartlett pear because I wanted to plant a Western red cedar and other natives for wildlife, in its place.

With careful cultivation, the berries continue to do well. We've also added a dwarf peach tree on a sunny slope, an espaliered nectarine along a west-facing wall, an Arbequine olive tree, kiwi, strawberries and more blueberries (you can never have too many blueberries). An apple tree that was grafted with five different varieties also graces our garden: a branch each of Gravenstein, Lodi, Golden Delicious, Melrose and Mackintosh. They tend to ripen at different times, so we have fresh apples from July to October.

Sound like a lot of work? It depends on your perspective. To me, nothing compares with gathering the fruits of my labor. I get a little thrill every time I pick those exquisite blueberries or slice into a pie made from apples I’ve grown myself – as cookbook author Alice Toklas put it, “How could anything this beautiful be mine?” Besides being the ultimate payoff in self-sufficiency, it’s an economical way to get nutrient-packed, fresher-than-farmers-market, organic food, ripened to perfection. And, fruit trees in blossom are a sight for winter-weary eyes.



The most important aspect of growing your own fruit, besides proper placement in a sunny, well drained site with adequate nutrients and irrigation, is proper pruning. It can be a bit confusing, especially if you’re new to fruit growing, and since I can’t tell you how to prune every type of fruit tree in one article, I will suggest that you consult a good fruit pruning book or consult the OSU Extension website for specific instructions. However, I can offer a few basics that will help keep your trees healthy and productive, as well as some general advice on rejuvenating an older, neglected fruit tree.

First, some guidelines:

· Bare root trees will need both root and top pruning at planting time. Ask at the nursery how this is done, or if it has already been done.

· Train newly planted trees as soon as possible after planting and follow the instructions consistently. OSU Extension has instructions for how to initially train most fruit bearing trees. Fruit trees are usually trained in one of three forms: central leader, modified leader or open center.

· Young trees will need only minimal pruning during their first few years (mainly to guide them into the desired shape) but as the trees mature and grow more branches, they must be pruned to keep them producing well. Standard (full size) trees will need to be kept shorter than they want to become, if you want to be able to pick most of the fruit. Semi-dwarf varieties can be kept smaller as well, but dwarf trees will not need any pruning to keep down their diminutive size; they may just need occasional thinning.

· Prune in winter when all danger of frost is gone but well before spring bloom (the only pruning that should be done in spring is removing any injured branches). Prune figs in winter only, due to excessive summer bleeding. Sweet cherries and plums can be pruned on a dry summer day to protect from disease. Late summer can also be a good time to prune if you don’t want to stimulate as much regrowth.

· In general, as fruit trees age, remove branches to open up and allow light and air into the tree. Also cut out any crossing branches that touch each other,, “water sprouts” (branches that grow straight vertically, often from old pruning wounds) and dead or damaged ones.

· Never leave a stub and don’t make a cut any bigger than it needs to be.

· When removing large branches, do it in stages, cutting a third of the way through the branch from the underside, a few inches from the trunk. Then make another cut from the top, but a little further out, being careful when the branch falls. You can then saw off the remaining stub cleanly.

· Don’t use “wound dressings” that were once thought to protect cuts. Word is that they could seal in any disease that is on the cut. A healthy tree should heal itself.

· Another way to improve the quality of your fruit is to thin the fruit before it gets too large. Some types of trees will produce so much fruit that not only will the tree’s strength be taxed, the fruit will be of poor quality and size, and branches may even break from the weight of all the fruit. With the exception of cherries that should bear fruit in clusters, pick off fruit when they are small, so that there’s at least six inches of space between each fruit.

· Disease can be carried by pruning tools, so be sure to keep your tools sanitary and sharp.

If you’ve inherited an older or neglected fruit tree such as an apple, first check if there is any rot, large holes or splits. If not, and you like the fruit, it may be a good candidate for rejuvenation. Since it will likely need quite a bit of pruning, winter is not the best time to prune since excessive pruning in winter may stimulate a lot of growth the following spring and summer. For a major pruning job, do all or much of it in late summer or early fall. Start by clearing out all brush and weeds on the ground and remove any suckers from the trunk. Cut out any dead limbs and all broken or split branches back to a live branch or to the trunk, without leaving a stub. You may also need to cut any branches that appear to have insect damage, but don’t compost it on your property. For the first year, this may be all the pruning the tree can handle. Next year remove a few smaller limbs around the top of the tree to let in more light, especially those growing toward the center, but don’t cut out too many in any one year. Later, cut out more older, weak or unproductive branches and gradually shorten the tree if necessary. Thining the fruit when it’s small in size to every 6 inches will result in fewer but larger and more flavorful fruit. You should also apply a good organic fertilizer to the drip line of the tree in the spring.

One last note: if you are truly overwhelmed, consider contacting Growing Gardens. They not only offer fruit tree pruning classes; they can teach you how to preserve your fruit, should you be so inclined. Alternatively, if you don’t want all the fruit your tree(s) produce, you can register with Growing Gardens and they will send volunteers to come and pick your fruit when it's ripe, although you must share the produce with the pickers and local food banks. In addition, Growing Gardens is also looking for scouts to find fruit that is going to waste and get the owners of those trees to register them. What a great idea! More...

TAGS: HOME, compost, gardening, native plants

Now's the Time: Pruning 101

Evolve Now!
EILEEN STARK / Monday, January 7, 2008 06:41 PM

We’re past the solstice and that’s good news to me because short days make me want to hibernate. Don’t get me wrong, there’s something lovely about the sparseness of this season and the rich, earthy color palatte that has nothing to do with showy flowers. We also get a chance to read the outline and form of trees that are otherwise cloaked in leaves the rest of the year. And although there are differing opinions as to the perfect pruning moment, for most trees and shrubs, the months of dormancy – December, January and February – are the best time to prune. Hedges, topiary and some climbers are best done in late spring or summer. More...

TAGS: HOME, compost, gardening, native plants

Falling Leaves: Tips for an Autumn Garden

Evolve Now!
EILEEN STARK / Friday, November 2, 2007 08:18 PM

Fall is a time when many people are outside, “cleaning up” their yard in preparation for anticipated harsh weather ahead. It’s also the perfect time to plant trees, shrubs, perennials, garlic and ornamental bulbs. More...

TAGS: HOME, compost, gardening, native plants

Got Junk Mail? Putting an end to those pesky catalogs.

Evolve Now!
EILEEN STARK / Wednesday, October 31, 2007 07:58 PM

If you’re like me, you groan every time you open your snail mailbox and find another catalog. “They’re cutting down trees for this trash,” I lament. It’s approaching an environmental nightmare, with around 20 billion catalogs reportedly mailed in the U.S. annually that destroy 15 million trees and consume enough energy to power 1.2 million homes a year. And with the holidays fast approaching, there are sure to be many more jammed into mail slots. More...

TAGS: HOME, recycle anything

The Beef with Meat

Evolve Now!
EILEEN STARK / Tuesday, October 9, 2007 02:08 PM

What causes more greenhouse gas emissions: driving a car or eating a hamburger? The car, right? Wrong! Producing one pound of beef is responsible for as many nasty emissions and other pollutants as driving an average car for an hour and a half and wastes enough energy to power a 100-watt bulb for ten days, according to a recent Japanese study by Akifumi Ogino et al. of the National Institute of Livestock and Grassland Science in Tsukuba, Japan. And those calculations don’t even take into account the effect of vast amounts of fertilizing substances released, farm infrastructure management, land degradation and water scarcity, so the total environmental toll is actually much, much higher.

The global meat industry generates 18% of greenhouse gas emissions, according to a United Nations report (below). Most of those emissions come from the nitrous oxide in manure and the methane from the animals' digestive systems (out of the front end, not the rear). I’m told methane has a warming effect that is 23 times that of carbon, while nitrous oxide is 296 times as great.

When we think about the human population and its staggering, exponential growth, we think mainly about numbers of humans. But as we increase in number, we also have to add in everything linked with us, including the animals we raise for “food.” Our humongous footprint on the earth comprises roughly 50 billion animals, including 1.5 billion cattle and domestic buffalo and 1.7 billion sheep and goats which use 30% of the land surface of the planet, according to the study. This land, once wildlife habitat, will be expanded for grazing land due to our insatiable demand for more meat. Not only are more forests and other sensitive ground destroyed forever; an essential carbon dioxide sink is also lost. But all these statistics just scratch the surface of the U.N. report, “Livestock’s Long Shadow.” Read it for yourself.

We live in an eco-conscious city, with aggressive initiatives for green building and carbon dioxide reductions. To live up to Portland’s iconic green ethos, forget buying a new hybrid, which doesn’t cut nearly as much CO2 as skipping the meat and isn’t nearly as tasty.

Living without meat, or even living without less meat needn’t be daunting. But if you’re a heavy meat eater, you may not want to go “cold turkey.” Instead, try replacing a few meals a week with more vegetable dishes and salads, legumes, nuts, wholegrain breads and meat analogs, if you like them. Skip the heavily processed, junky foods and you’ll be fine.

In my particular case, I stopped eating all meat over 25 years ago after reading about the horrors of factory farming, but continued to eat eggs, fish and dairy for quite a few years (because I honestly didn’t know about those atrocities). The meat substitutes that were available back then were bland, mealy grain burgers, so I passed them up and learned to fix easy, delicious and varied meals, mainly with the aid of good cookbooks. (I will now put a plug in for Fields of Greens cookbook by Anne Somerville, executive chef at Greens restaurant in San Francisco – the recipes are all exquisite and use a lot of flavorful herbs; the vegetarian recipes can be made vegan easily).

It was such a good transition that I rarely eat fake meat today. When I later gave up fish and eggs, it was quite easy since I had never been a big fish eater and used eggs mainly in baking, for which there are quite a few alternatives. Giving up milk was a cinch, since milk never appealed much to me as a beverage and I found soymilk to be fine on cereal or for baking. Last was cheese, which I found a bit difficult, being a Wisconsin gal at heart and because so many restaurants smother their food in cheese (I have found the best restaurants don’t and instead let their food speak for itself, so be sure to seek those out). I decided to stop buying cheese at the store and only ate it when eating out and gradually phased that out with the help of vegan-friendly restaurants. But cheese too went the way of meat and today I’m vegan, have more energy than when I was 20 and feel good about my choices.

Be sure to check out Nutshell (3808 N. Williams. Cash only.), the newest vegan restaurant in Portland. The food is innovative, full of flavor and beautifully presented. Many people in the world never eat meat or only in very small portions and Nutshell is doing a great job demonstrating how meat is not only unessential but how veg food can be so varied, healthy and delicious. (My only gripe is that they use small water glasses for wine, which destroys most of the pleasure one gets from sipping good wine; I’m tempted to BYO glasses next time).


And consider venturing out to the second annual Vegan Holiday Festival (I can’t vouch for it as I didn’t go last year, but hope to this year). Saturday, November 3. More...

TAGS: FOOD, local/organic food, vegan

Lovin’ Portland in Anything but a Car

Evolve Now!
EILEEN STARK / Tuesday, October 9, 2007 02:04 PM

It’s official. Paris has become the first world capital to roll out 10,000 bicycles available for rent at modest cost. The latest in Parisian Mayor Bertrand Delanoe’s anti-car war, the program is supposed to double the number of bikes equipped with anti-theft devices by the end of 2007 and predictions are that car traffic will be reduced by 40% within 13 years. So far the result has been fantastic according to the London Times, with 1.2 million rentals in the first three weeks and many commuters hopping on who would otherwise be standing still in gridlock traffic, spewing exhaust fumes. Personally I think biking in Paris could be suicide, but that’s another column. More...

TAGS: GO, bikes, biofuels, green cars
  • Results 1 to 7 of 7