By JillAnderson
Archive for the ‘Nature’ Category
Wine Tastings at Hidden Oaks Nature Center
Saturday, December 12th, 2009By JillAnderson
Most of us have sipped wine while at an art opening but have you ever sipped wine while enjoying a Park? I mean besides while picnicking? Well, now you can!
Join Total Wine’s Dan Roninson, wine/spirits educator, as he guides wine enthusiasts in an array of topics.
As you treat your taste buds, discover the latest nature highlights from a Hidden Oaks naturalist.
These six special wine events will be held over the course of a few months; beginning next Saturday, December 19th. Register Today and Mark Your Calendars!
- Sat. December 19, 2009 – 7-9 p.m.
Basics of Wine Tasting - Sat. January 9, 2010 – 7-9 p.m.
East vs. West Coast Wines - Sat. January 23, 2010 – 7-9 p.m.
Great Local Buys from Faraway Places - Sat. February 6, 2010 – 7-9 p.m.
Local Vineyards - Sat. February 20, 2010 – 7-9 p.m.
Hearty Winter Reds and Light Reds for Spring - Sat. March 6, 2010 – 7-9 p.m.
The Great White Wines
Dan Roninson has practiced his art for over ten years and wine manager for the last two years at Total Wine in Alexandria. He has traveled extensively in France and California honing his craft.
Registration limited to 30 per session. Registration and prepayment by cash or check required. Checks are payable to Friends of Hidden Oaks and mailed to FONONC, 7701 Royce Street, Annandale, VA 22003
Sponsored by Friends of Hidden Oaks Nature Center. Proceeds benefit environmental education programs.
Hidden Oaks Nature Center is located conveniently inside the beltway at Exit 52B, Little River Turnpike/Rt. 236. Take the exit east to left at the first light onto Hummer Road. Turn left onto Royce Street to the nature center which is the first building on the left at 7701 Royce Street, Annandale.
For more information contact Kevin Holland at kholland11@verizon.net
or call the nature center at 703-941-1065.
On a side note, it has come to my attention (Thank you Betsy) that many of our parks are having to come up with clever ways to generate revenue in light of the tremendous budget cuts – upwards of 18% this year in addition to similar cuts last year. If you enjoy walking around our parks (Green Spring Gardens, Hidden Oaks, Huntley Meadows and others), please consider contacting the Board of Supervisors ASAP to voice your opinion about our parks and the proposed budget cuts.
Wait! Leave Those Leaves
Friday, November 13th, 2009By BetsyWashington

- Image via Wikipedia
Vast piles of leaves are hauled to our streets to await an army of county trucks that haul them away, all amid clouds of dust and exhaust fumes. Ironically, next spring we will rush to garden centers and county recycling and waste centers and buy bags of prepackaged fertilizers or soil amendments and truckloads of mulch, to be spread by expensive lawn crews and laborers. Whew! It makes me feel tired and poor just thinking about it!
But wait! Isn’t there a simpler and better way? By leaving fallen leaves to decompose in our gardens, we are mimicking the natural processes that have sustained life on earth for millions of years. Through the process of decomposition, thousands of beneficial soil borne microorganisms began the process of breaking down all those leaves and turning them into rich, dark humus – nature’s own fertilizer. With annual additions of decomposing leaves each fall, even the heaviest clay soils became rich and moisture retentive, teeming with life. The naturally amended soil acted like a sponge, holding a wealth of water and nutrients readily available to plants. Plants living in soils rich in leaf mold are healthier and live longer. And no wonder – scientists have discovered that soils rich in organic matter, contain a broad array of natural antibiotic and fungicidal compounds that prevent a host of plant diseases and pests.
It’s no wonder that plants in our undisturbed forests and natural areas live for hundreds and even thousands of years, with few outbreaks of serious diseases or pests. Compare this to the life expectancy of trees in our own gardens, which are measured in decades, not centuries.
So this fall, why don’t you follow nature’s example? Leave your leaves as a natural mulch under trees and shrubs. If nature’s bounty of leaves threatens to completely engulf you lawn, give nature a hand, and try running your lawn mower back and forth over the leaves, breaking them into small pieces. Simply leave these small pieces in the lawn and reduce your fertilizing needs by over 50%, or use a mulching or bagging attachment on your lawnmower, and collect this fine mulch to spread around your trees and shrubs. A weekly mowing of leaves, will take care of most of your leaf surplus, and save energy and money by avoiding the backbreaking bagging and hauling of leaves to our landfills and waste centers. Consider starting a compost pile. This can be as easy as creating a large pile of leaves in an out of the way place. Nature will take care of the rest – in a year or two you will have your own supply of rich, crumbly leaf mold.
You can hasten the process by chopping the leaves first with your lawnmower or shredder, and by layering green material such as leafy food wastes, grass clippings, or alphalfa meal between layers of leaves and turning the pile once or twice. Either way, your garden will be far healthier and will shrug off droughts and climbing temperatures without the need for extra watering, and your soils will be naturally rich with little if any need for extra fertilizers that risk the health of our lake.
And you will save money and help in greening the planet, all by following nature’s example. Sustainable indeed! Before the days of pre-packaged amendments and fertilizers, leaves were left where they fell as a natural mulch and soil amendment. Leaves were raked under trees and shrubs to decompose and enrich the soil.
For more on the benefits of leaving your leaves, check out: www.finegardening.com or http://fairfieldweekly.com
Related articles by Zemanta
- Composting Process Beneficial (hbb2obm.com)
- How To Start An Organic Garden (huffingtonpost.com)
- Grow Greener: Start a Sustainable Garden (howto.wired.com)
- How to use compost for potting up plants (telegraph.co.uk)
- Organic Lawn Care: Doing Your Share In Saving Mother Earth (hbb2obm.com)
The Surprise in my Garage this morning
Thursday, November 12th, 2009By JillAnderson
My husband had just left for work. I had just emptied a milk carton and wanted to put it in the garage for recycle. As I stepped into my garage, the first thing that I noticed was a strange smell – it reminded me of the spray of animals that I often smell when walking in the woods.
As I came around my car, there was my surprise — a small red fox.
He was just sitting there trying to stay out of the rain. He was as surprised as I was but yet he didn’t run immediately. He sat there eying me for a moment before heading out of my garage and onto my front porch.
I ran back inside to grab my camera. Unfortunately, the only shot that I got of him didn’t come out. You’ll have to use your own imagination.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Solar Birdhouse: Giving Birds the Edge Over Mother Nature (treehugger.com)
- Also the foxes like sweet grapes (themanfrommoselriver.wordpress.com)
Fall Leaves are Beautiful
Tuesday, October 27th, 2009By JillAnderson
I have always loved Fall – the changing colors of the leaves, the cooler weather, football, sweatshirts, warm food. This really is my favorite time of the year.
I snapped these photos yesterday as I walked by this beautiful tree planted in one of my neighbors’ yard.
You still have four (4) days remaining to submit photos for the LB Photo Contest. Email Joel Gregorio today with your submissions.
Let’s Green Up Our Neighborhood, Not Our Lake
Tuesday, September 29th, 2009By BetsyWashington
Re-posting from Lakelink with Permission from author Betsy Washington:
I am starting to see quite a bit of algae along the shoreline of the lake, and since fall is the best time to fertilize cool season lawns like fescues, please be sure to use the fertilizer that WID sells – with NO phosphorous. Your lawns do not need phosphorous and it will simply runoff into the lake, causing algal blooms. Large algal blooms can release toxins and use up oxygen killing fish and wildlife, and even make humans sick.
WID sells No PHOS fertilizer to residents at a great price and will even deliver it to your door! What could be easier? Please make sure your lawn service is using this fertilizer or one with No phosphorous and slow release nitrogen.
The lake, pets and wildlife will thank you.
For truly organic lawn care, apply ½ – 1” or more of fine compost to your lawn at least once a year in fall. Using compost tea and bacterial compost teas can create stunning results in a very short time, and will restore the health of your soil. After only a couple of years, you will find you have healthy soil, a healthy lawn, and healthy microorganism populations. They will deter diseases, help retain soil moisture without extra watering, and will even prevent any thatch build up in your lawn. You will be able to sit back and enjoy the fall.
If you are interested trying some of the organic techniques, or are skeptical and want to read more, check out last Thursday’s article in the NY Times on “The Grass is Greener at Harvard”. It will make you sit up and pay attention!
Let’s green up our neighborhood, not our lake!
September is also the ideal time to re-seed any bare or thin spots in your lawn. This is one of the simplest and best ways to prevent weeds and erosion and the resultant run-off into the watershed. Just rake or loosen the top few inches of soil in any bare spots, mix in some fine compost, and sprinkle some certified grass seed such as tall fescue over the area and keep moist until the grass germinates in 10 days or so.





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