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Alexander County Center

Green Thumb Gazette

April 2024 Newsletter
2024 Farmers Market Season!!

The Alexander County Farmers market will be starting back on April 13th in the Alexander County Services building parking lot. We will be open on Saturdays from 8-12pm with goodies from all your favorite vendors! Plan to stop by and support your local vendors! We will be adding another market in the Bethlehem area starting this season!!

If you are interested in being a farmers market vendor at either market in Alexander County, please feel free to join us at our next vendor meeting on April 12th at the Alexander County Services Building (PLEASE CALL TO REGISTER). Or if you cannot attend, give me a call at 828-632-4451. We always look forward to adding new vendors who either hand make, bake, or grow their own products!

Click on the following links to see the Garden Calendars for each month:


BOLOs (Be On The Lookout)....

Month-by-month lists of common plant diseases, pests, and other problems you may encounter in North Carolina yards and gardens. Straight from our PDIC (Plant Disease & Insect Clinic) entomologists and pathologists!


Community Garden & Workdays
If you don’t know already, Alexander County has a community garden! If you are interested in renting a bed, they are $25 per bed for the ENTIRE SEASON! Any additional bed is $10. That is a great deal! Just give us a call at 828-632-4451 to claim a bed.

The Taylorsville Community Garden now has "Community Share Beds" that will be planted for the community to harvest from. Because these beds are for the community, it is our hope that the community will help us maintain those beds (weeding, watering, harvesting, etc.). Our workdays for these beds will be on Mondays and Thursdays from 9-11am. If you are interested in volunteering, please contact Cari Rosenbalm at 828-632-4451 or cari_rosenbalm@ncsu.edu.  We will need all the help we can get!

Ground Nesting Bees and Pollinator Information

Now that spring is finally here you may notice some small soil mounds that look like ant mounds in the bare spots of your lawn or landscape. They are actually the emergence holes for many of our native ground nesting bees! They spend most of their lives in these nests alone as larvae and pupae with some pollen to eat that was left by their mother. When the weather starts to warm up, they will finally emerge to mate and collect pollen for their future offspring. There is no need to be afraid of them though! Most ground nesting bees aren’t aggressive because they are solitary; meaning they do their own thing and aren’t part of a community that they have to help protect, therefore no control is necessary for them because they are only out for a few weeks and will not harm you.

Did you know that we have over 500 native bees in NC alone??
They come in all sorts of sizes and colors, and prefer warm, dry areas with sun exposure, with little organic matter. So like I said, they love the bare patches in your lawn or garden. We also have some very specialized ground nesting bees that pollinate almost all of a crop without the use of honey bees like: for example (squash bees & blueberry bees).


Collectively, bees are our most agriculturally important pollinators and research has shown that native bees improve fruit set twice as much as honey bees! We still need to use honey bees though because they are relatively easy to manage and move from crop to crop. Without bees, we would lose ⅓ of all our food sources! Right now, bee populations are in decline. In the bumble bee family alone, 1 in 4 are at risk of extinction. Reasons for declining bees stem from habitat loss, poor nutrition, pesticides, pests and pathogens.

So as we stride into spring, think about these native bees and pollinators in general. It's okay to have areas that are bare in your lawn, they need those places. Create some bee shelters with your kids or grandkids this summer!  If you have a lot of flowering weeds in your lawn, maybe leave them and say, "Hey, I think I'll feed the bees this year", or if you want to get rid of those weeds, consider mowing their flower heads off before spraying. That way bees won't get into any pesticides or pesticide residue. In areas you are already gardening, think about adding some native plants to attract these bees and other native pollinators. Not only do they need good food sources for pollen and nectar, but they need plants for habitat purposes like grasses and plants with hollow stems. Even the smallest efforts help, like adding a few planters on your porch with some bee balm.

If you don’t know where to start, please give me a call! I have all the resources on plants for pollinators!

Upcoming Events:

  • April 6th : (AVG) Last Spring Freeze Date (+/- 7 days)
  • April 11th @ 5:30p : 4-H Garden Club
  • April 11th @ 3-7p : Spring Fling (Courthouse Park)
  • April 12th @12p : Farmers Market Vendors Meeting
  • April 13th @ 8a - 12p : Alexander Co. Farmers Market Opens (every Saturday through 9/14)
  • April 20th @ 4p : Alexander County Beekeepers Cookout (if you are interested in attending, please contact Cari.
4H Garden Club & Arbor Day

This past month with our 4H Garden Club, we learned all about Arbor Day! Arbor Day can trace its roots back to the mid 1800’s when settlers moving to western prairies found out the hard way that there were not many trees, unlike back home in the east. No wood for fires, shade, wind breaks, or to build their homes. An early settler by the name of J. Sterling Morton recognized this extreme need for trees out west (Nebraska specifically, since he had made his home there). Morton had proposed a new tree planting holiday to Nebraska legislature that was passed. The first Arbor Day celebration in Nebraska was held on April 10th, 1872, with prizes for those who planted the most trees. On that day, an estimated of 1 million trees were planted in the state. Other states soon followed suit with their own Arbor Day holiday on different days. Our NC Arbor Day is always the first Friday following March 15th. We also have a National Arbor day which is celebrated on the last Friday in April.

Give back to your ecosystem this year, and celebrate National Arbor day by planting a tree!! Here is a list of native trees that are great additions to any landscape.

Hackberry
American Fringetree
Serviceberry
Riverbirch
Persimmon
Black Gum
Flowering Dogwood
Sweetbay Magnolia
White Oak


If you want to learn more about Arbor Day, visit the Arbor Day Foundation.
If you want to learn more about native trees and other native plants, visit our Native Plant Portal through NC State Extension.
Are you looking for plants to buy locally??  Here is a great list to start with of local garden centers & greenhouses:

Alexander County:
Country Road Greenhouses
Carmen’s Greenhouse
Rubner's Nursery
NC Case Farms


Surrounding Counties:
Drum Landscaping
Painters Greenhouse
Hefner's Nursery (4135 Springs Rd, Conover: Open 8-5)
Blooms Garden Center
The Mustard Seed


Native Plant Nurseries in NC:
Carolina Native Nursery
Growing Wild Nursery
Mellow Marsh Farm

 
NC State University and N.C. A&T State University work in tandem, along with federal, state and local governments, to form a strategic partnership called N.C. Cooperative Extension.
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