Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Garden Guild: A Fun Way to Support Duke Gardens!



The popular Garden Guild Holiday Craft Sale

by Chuck Hemric
Director of Volunteer Services

The Garden Guild at Sarah P. Duke Gardens is a group of talented crafters who gather weekly to create beautiful nature-focused items as a source of financial support for the Gardens. Their annual Holiday Craft Sale continues to grow and increase in revenue.

 Garden Holiday Guild Craft Sale
Members of this group join for different reasons. One of the members recently commented, “You get to meet fun-loving people with like interests, which provides great weekly mental health .... Fun and laughter is the best medicine.” Yet another stated, “The sale is the pinnacle of our hard work, and the excitement builds as the day approaches. We are glad to see our work appreciated and purchased.”

Garden Guild members
This talented group is looking to expand its membership and breadth of “crafty” ideas. It does not matter if you possess certain skills or not - the main requirement is that you are teachable. The group meets on Mondays from 1:30-4 p.m.

One of the Garden Guild's favorite craft items
Anyone interested in joining the Garden Guild can contact Chuck Hemric at 919-668-1705 or chemric@duke.edu. See below for more fun Garden Guild crafts!




Photos by Erika Zambello and Chuck Hemric

Sarah P. Duke Gardens creates and nurtures an environment in the heart of Duke University for learning, inspiration and enjoyment through excellence in horticulture. The Gardens receives roughly half of its operating budget from Duke University. The rest comes from people like you, who value all that this public botanic garden has to offer. Duke Gardens is at 420 Anderson Street. Learn more at gardens.duke.edu.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Journaling for garden planning

Magazines and seed catalogs can help you envision
your goals in your garden journal

Despite all indications, winter is a great time to garden -- virtually.

New seed catalogs are arriving every day, new varieties are available, new plants are introduced, and that hard-to-find plant you have been dreaming of is now listed at your favorite nursery. It’s almost more than a gardener can take in – so many plants, so little space!

The season of winter bestows one large gardening benefit: the time to evaluate and plan. Spending your winter assessing last year’s garden will help you move closer to your ideal in next year’s garden.

Start a garden journal to organize your notes and thoughts. Perhaps you have a stack of plant labels and seed packets from this year? Take the time now, while it is fresh in your mind, to make notes about what you like about these plants and what did not suit you.

In the journal, make a rough sketch of your garden and add notes about plans, changes you are considering, stubborn areas that just won’t become the garden you want. Most gardeners move back and forth between general ideas – “I want more fragrance in my garden”  – to specific solutions – plant a paperbush here, a daphne there, and so on.

Make note of specific problems so you can prepare for them this year. Perhaps one area of the garden did not get sufficient water. Can you install a simple soaker hose irrigation system? Is one are infested by a noxious weed or pest? Spend some time this winter researching how you may control that problem.

Gardens journals can help you plan for the garden next year as well. Create a calendar with seed-starting schedules, planting dates and transplant dates. The calendar could also list your favorite plant sales -- for example the Duke Gardens Spring Plant Sale on April 5.

Do you have multitudes of photographs of your garden through the years? Now is the time to organize those and use them as a tool to plan ahead. With digital photography and camera phones so prevalent, most of us have files of photographs that require hunting and searching through to find the image you recalled.

This winter may be an ideal time to organize those photos so they are useful to you. There are terrific tools that allow you to organize and then easily find any photo in your digital files.

One example is Adobe’s Lightroom. You can devise a system to organize photos by key words -- for example, color notations, season notations, flower, plant or landscape view notations. These key words will help you locate the photographs again when you are looking for all spring views or all red flowers in your garden. Each photograph can carry multiple key words, so you don’t have to choose only one definition for an image. Lightroom also helps you edit and make adjustments to the image, improving lighting or cropping to frame it better.

Duke Gardens is offering a 5-session course in Lightroom beginning Feb. 6. Students may bring their own laptops to class and work with instructor Al Gorham to learn all of Lightroom's capabilities. For more information or to register for this or other Duke Gardens classes, please call 919-668-1707.

The time to assess, re-imagine and contemplate additions and subtractions is one of the pleasures of gardening. The anticipation keeps us out there planting, weeding, and seeking that perfect garden.

Sarah P. Duke Gardens creates and nurtures an environment in the heart of Duke University for learning, inspiration and enjoyment through excellence in horticulture. The Gardens receives roughly half of its operating budget from Duke University. The rest comes from people like you, who value all that this public botanic garden has to offer. Duke Gardens is at 420 Anderson Street. Learn more at gardens.duke.edu.

Columnist Jan Little is director of education and public programs at Duke Gardens. This column first appeared in the Durham Herald-Sun.


Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Species Spotlight: Mandarin Duck


Duke Gardens is home to our very own Mandarin duck, Aix galericulata. Native to Russia, China and Japan, Mandarin ducks live in forest ponds and streams. While the females are brown and drab, the males are a beautiful mix of red, yellow, blue, orange and purple - so bright, in fact, that one Gardens visitor  calls him "Skittles."

Beyond their colorful feathers, Mandarin ducks are known for their long-distance migratory flights and, according to the University of Michigan, "have been known to cover 500 miles in 24 hours." Our bird, of course, does not migrate. He came from the Sylvan Heights Waterfowl Park in Scotland Neck, N.C.



Mandarin ducks are well loved in all parts of the world, and in addition to delighting visitors to Duke Gardens, Sylvan Heights and elsewhere, they also serve as a symbol of happiness and marital fidelity in Asia. Unfortunately, habitat destruction has decimated their breeding grounds, and their population could be as low as 20,000. Luckily, Mandarin ducks have a notoriously awful taste, and are thus not very vulnerable to predators.


Mandarin duck (right) and the similarly beautiful native wood duck.
 Both are members of the Aix genus, but from different parts of the world.
Come to Duke Gardens and check out our very own Mandarin duck in the Culberson Asiatic Arboretum's pond. Post on our Facebook page to share your photos and comments on our most colorful waterfowl resident!

To learn more, visit the University of Michigan's Animal Diversity page.

Blogger Erika Zambello is a graduate student studying Ecosystem Science and Conservation at Duke's Nicholas School of the Environment.