The Norman Transcript

Outdoors

July 3, 2009

Demonstration and Teaching Garden a Summer Destination

Do you have questions about how to grow vegetables, or maybe what plants can tolerate the heat with minimal water? Make a visit to the Cleveland County Master Gardener Association Demonstration and Teaching Garden, where these techniques are on display.

The tours are an educational and free service open to the public. The gardens are open 9 a.m.-noon, Wednesday and Saturday mornings. We are also taking reservations for private group or club tours.

The goal of the Cleveland County Master Gardeners is to aid in community awareness of the Cleveland County Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service through horticultural programs and services, and to help residents be successful in their gardens and other horticultural interests. Our expertise ranges from vegetables, trees, fruit, nut, ornamental and lawns. Last year 1,888 visitors toured the gardens and over 1,200 pounds of produce was donated to Food for Friends, a local shelter.

Some of this year's garden themes include: Square Foot, Xeriscape, Oklahoma Proven, Native American, Children's, Handicapped, plus many more. We have also recently added a greenhouse structure.

We are located in the southwest corner of the Cleveland County Fairgrounds, 601 E Robinson St. For more information, please call the Extension office at 321-4774.

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Outdoors
  • Safety is vital when working with chain saws STILLWATER -- As Oklahomans clean up after the recent ice storm that left tree limbs shattered or lying around, care should be taken to ensure protection against unintentionally risking an arm or leg being added to the toll.

    February 11, 2010

  • Dolese Youth Park Pond teeming with trout for young anglers Oklahoma City resident Gaston Gallant goes fishing nearly every day of the two-month trout season at Dolese Youth Park Pond, a northwest Oklahoma City fishing destination currently teeming with nearly 2,600 rainbow trout.

    January 28, 2010

  • De-icing salt can harm landscape plants Each winter, millions of tons of deicing salt are applied to state and municipal roads to keep the roads safe for vehicles to travel. Salt is spread near houses to avoid pedestrian injuries. This is necessary for safety, but did you know excessive salt can cause widespread damage to trees ? possibly leading to permanent decline and even death?

    According to the Tree Care Industry Association, a non-profit organization dedicated to the tree care industry, even severe salt damage might not be visible on a tree until the end of summer, leaving homeowners wondering what might have caused the problem.

    January 28, 2010

  • Making it through That was a cold spell of what we used to call "Biblical proportions." It was made perhaps more interesting locally by the old heat-pump in the house, which died on New Year's Eve. For a week, the household was maintained by an old Franklin stove in the living room, and by the old owner, who had to carry in firewood so it could be fed every hour or so.

    January 21, 2010

  • University of Oklahoma team wins college fishing event ZAPATA, Texas -- The University of Oklahoma team of Mark Johnson and Chip Porche won the National Guard FLW College Fishing Texas Division event on Falcon Lake Saturday with six bass weighing 34 pounds, 8 ounces.

    January 14, 2010

  • Great Western Feedout entry deadline Friday It is time to start entering for the Great Western Feedout of 2010. For those of you not familiar with it, the Great Western Feedout is a producer information feedback program that allows cattle producers the opportunity to evaluate the genetic merit of the calves they produce for feedlot performance and carcass value following weaning and a winter stocker program.

    January 14, 2010

  • Part-time lakes are of full-time importance For the unlearned, old age is winter, for the learned, it is the season of harvest.

    --Hasidic saying



    Today's topic is the most important wetlands you've never heard of: Playa lakes and oxbow lakes. Playa lakes are usually saucer shaped natural low places with clay bottoms located in dry landscapes.

    January 14, 2010

  • Christmas Bird Count yields unexpected rewards What am I doing here? It is incredibly cold morning and I am crouched here in the dark in the willows on the banks of the South Canadian River with a few stalwarts indulging in an activity called "owling.

    January 7, 2010

  • Increasing deer population leads to ornamental and garden plant damage STILLWATER -- With more than a half million white-tailed deer in Oklahoma, many landowners experience nature in its purest sense as the deer can be viewed at close range.

    However, this has become a problem over the years as the deer population has increased, forcing thousands of these animals into peripheral suburban areas, leaving homeowners to deal with damage to ornamental and garden plants.

    December 17, 2009

  • Wildlife Department to host town hall meeting Sportsmen will have an opportunity to voice their thoughts on wildlife, hunting and fishing related issues at a town hall meeting hosted by the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation.

    The meeting, one of a series, is set for 7 p.

    December 10, 2009

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