Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Digital Commons Network

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 30 of 65

Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network

Directory Of Landscape Professionals Trained In Ecological Landscaping For Water Quality Protection The Individuals And Businesses Listed Have Completed Unh Cooperative Extension Training Programs For Professionals As Indicated, And Have Agreed To Be Listed In The Directory. Individuals Looking For Related Products Or Services Are Encouraged To Contact One Or More Of The Professionals Listed In Your Area. Updated 2023, Michelle Lemos Apr 2023

Directory Of Landscape Professionals Trained In Ecological Landscaping For Water Quality Protection The Individuals And Businesses Listed Have Completed Unh Cooperative Extension Training Programs For Professionals As Indicated, And Have Agreed To Be Listed In The Directory. Individuals Looking For Related Products Or Services Are Encouraged To Contact One Or More Of The Professionals Listed In Your Area. Updated 2023, Michelle Lemos

Advisory Council

No abstract provided.


Directory Of Landscape Professionals Trained In Ecological Landscaping For Water Quality Protection (Updated 2023), Michelle Lemos Jan 2023

Directory Of Landscape Professionals Trained In Ecological Landscaping For Water Quality Protection (Updated 2023), Michelle Lemos

UNH Cooperative Extension

Many property owners want to implement ecological landscape practices that protect water quality, but don't have the knowledge, skills and/or desire to do it themselves.

The landscape contractors and other green industry professionals listed in the Directory have completed UNH Cooperative Extension training programs as indicated and have agreed to be listed in the Directory. You may contact one or more of the professionals listed in your area for a consultation. However, no endorsement of any individual or company by UNH Extension is implied.


Collecting Plants On Public Lands For Utah Landscaping, Larry Rupp, Mark Williams, Candace Schaible Jun 2019

Collecting Plants On Public Lands For Utah Landscaping, Larry Rupp, Mark Williams, Candace Schaible

All Current Publications

This fact sheet provides information of collecting, transplanting, and establishing native plants in a landscape. It includes the rules and regulations for collecting plants from Utah wildlands.


10 Low-Water Trees Ideal For Water-Efficient Landscapes In Eagle Mountain, Utah, Adrea Wheaton, Larry Rupp, Michael Caron May 2018

10 Low-Water Trees Ideal For Water-Efficient Landscapes In Eagle Mountain, Utah, Adrea Wheaton, Larry Rupp, Michael Caron

All Current Publications

This brochure describes 10 low-water trees to help homeowners of Eagle Mountain select landscape plants that will be successful in this area.


Selecting Trees For High Elevations, Michael R. Kuhns, Megan Dettenmaier Aug 2015

Selecting Trees For High Elevations, Michael R. Kuhns, Megan Dettenmaier

All Current Publications

This fact sheet describes the importance of careful species selection when planning and planting cultivated landscapes in unique, high elevation conditions in Utah. We recommend native and non-native tree species that can stand the stresses of living above 5,000 feet.


Gardening In Sandy Soils, Katie Wagner, Michael R. Kuhns, Grant Cardon Jun 2015

Gardening In Sandy Soils, Katie Wagner, Michael R. Kuhns, Grant Cardon

All Current Publications

This fact sheet covers the basics of clay, silt and sand soils with an emphasis on gardening in soils with a high sand content. It includes information on the composition of sandy soils, gardening tips for managing sandy soils, and the types of plants that grow best in sandy soils.


Gardening In Clay Soils, Katie Wagner, Michael R. Kuhns, Grant Cardon Jun 2015

Gardening In Clay Soils, Katie Wagner, Michael R. Kuhns, Grant Cardon

All Current Publications

This fact sheet covers the basics of clay, silt and sand soils with an emphasis on gardening in soils with a high clay content. It includes information on the composition of clay soils, gardening tips for managing clay soils, and the types of plants that grow best in clay soils.


Gardening And Landscaping Practices For Nesting Native Bees, James H. Cane May 2015

Gardening And Landscaping Practices For Nesting Native Bees, James H. Cane

All Current Publications

This fact sheet describes simple landscaping and gardening practices that can provide essential nesting needs of native bees, including ground nesting, twig and stem nesting, and wood nesting.


Cost Free Landscape Water Conservation Ideas, Kyle Frandsen, Larry Rupp Feb 2015

Cost Free Landscape Water Conservation Ideas, Kyle Frandsen, Larry Rupp

All Current Publications

This fact sheet gives tips on simple and free things that can be done to help conserve water in the landscape, without changing the existing landscape.


Red Currants In The Garden, Sheridan Hansen, Tiffany Maughan, Brent Black Oct 2014

Red Currants In The Garden, Sheridan Hansen, Tiffany Maughan, Brent Black

All Current Publications

This fact sheet describes red currants, recommended cultivars, how to grow, nutrition, pests and diseases, and uses.


W276 Rain Barrels Make Good Sense, Brian Leib Aug 2011

W276 Rain Barrels Make Good Sense, Brian Leib

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

Version 2.0


Topsoil Quality Guidelines For Landscaping, Rich Koenig, Von Isaman Dec 2010

Topsoil Quality Guidelines For Landscaping, Rich Koenig, Von Isaman

Gardening

No abstract provided.


Topsoil Quality Guidelines For Landscaping, Rich Koenig, Von Isaman Dec 2010

Topsoil Quality Guidelines For Landscaping, Rich Koenig, Von Isaman

All Archived Publications

No abstract provided.


Sp290-C-Dogwood Borer, Infestation, Damage And Control, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Apr 2010

Sp290-C-Dogwood Borer, Infestation, Damage And Control, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

The flowering dogwood (Cornus florida) is one of the most popular ornamental plants in Tennessee landscapes. Native trees also flourish in the forest understory.

The dogwood tree is damaged by the feeding activity of the dogwood borer larva under the bark of the trunk and limbs. In a single year, one borer can completely girdle and kill a tree 4 inches in diameter, but death is more often brought about by the combined activity of several larvae or by successive infestations with concurrent mechanical injury or pathological problems. Cultivated trees growing in full sun are usually more heavily infested than …


W175-12 Common Landscape Mistakes And How To Avoid Them, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Apr 2010

W175-12 Common Landscape Mistakes And How To Avoid Them, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

No one today would doubt that we live in the Information Age. It would be nice to say that some credit should be given to people submersing themselves in well-written books and magazines, but let’s face it— we can find pretty much anything we want on the Internet and from watching a huge variety of do-it-yourself cable programming. Yes, there is so much data at our fingertips that it doesn’t take too long before we have the confidence to believe we can do everything ourselves.

One of the areas where folks feel most tempted to bypass the advice of professionals …


Sp290-E-Azalea Lace Bug, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Sep 2009

Sp290-E-Azalea Lace Bug, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

Since its introduction from Japan in the early 1900s, the azalea lace bug has become a destructive pest of azaleas. Although this bug prefers evergreen azalea varieties, it will infest deciduous varieties. Mountain laurel can also become infested.


Pb1619-Pruning Landscape Trees, Shrubs And Groundcovers, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Feb 2009

Pb1619-Pruning Landscape Trees, Shrubs And Groundcovers, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

Pruning is one of the most important cultural practices in landscape management. Proper pruning helps keep plants’ attractive and vigorous and will add years to the plants usefulness. Many people are apprehensive about pruning, but knowing how, when and why to prune will end these fears.


Firecracker Penstemon In The Landscape, Heidi Kratsch, Graham Hunter Jan 2009

Firecracker Penstemon In The Landscape, Heidi Kratsch, Graham Hunter

Gardening

No abstract provided.


Apache Plume In The Landscape, Heidi Kratsch Jan 2009

Apache Plume In The Landscape, Heidi Kratsch

All Archived Publications

Description: Apache plume is an evergreen shrub that can reach five feet tall and wide in a landscape setting. This plant’s most distinguishing and attractive feature is the feathery, red- turning-pink seedhead that emerges after the white rose-like, five-petaled flower fades. In the same family as Mexican cliffrose, both species produce similar deeply lobed small leaves; Apache plume’s leaves are lighter green and more finely textured. The bark becomes red and exfoliating with age. Apache plume is a dioecious species, requiring both male and female plants to produce viable seed.


Prince's Plume In The Landscape, Heidi Kratsch, Graham Hunter Jan 2009

Prince's Plume In The Landscape, Heidi Kratsch, Graham Hunter

All Current Publications

No abstract provided.


Pb1621-Best Management Practices For Planting Ornamental Plants, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Sep 2008

Pb1621-Best Management Practices For Planting Ornamental Plants, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

While spring is a popular planting season, fall may be the best time to plant. Fall planting can help woody ornamental plants survive in the landscape. In fall, plant shoots need fewer nutrients because winter dormancy is approaching. In fall too, carbohydrate plant “food” is produced in leaves and moves to roots, which helps plant growth and survival. Importantly, roots continue to grow until soil temperatures drop below 45-50 F (7-10 C). It is extremely important to water when planting in fall because October and November are usually very dry months with little rainfall. But fallplanted plants also will not …


Pb1621-S-Prácticas Gerenciales Óptimas Para La Plantación De Plantas Ornamentales, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Sep 2008

Pb1621-S-Prácticas Gerenciales Óptimas Para La Plantación De Plantas Ornamentales, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

Aunque la primavera es una época popular para plantar, el otoño puede ser la mejor época para hacerlo. La plantación en otoño puede ayudar a que las plantas ornamentales leñosas sobrevivan en el jardín. En otoño, los brotes necesitan menos nutrientes porque se está acercando el estado latente del invierno. También, en otoño, los carbohidratos que sirven como “comida” para la planta, son transportados de las hojas, donde fueron producidos, a las raíces. Esto ayuda al crecimiento y supervivencia de la planta. Las raíces continúan creciendo hasta que la temperatura del suelo baje a más de 45°-50° F (de 7°-10° …


Water-Wise Landscaping: Plant Maintenance, Taun Beddes, Heidi A. Kratsch Feb 2008

Water-Wise Landscaping: Plant Maintenance, Taun Beddes, Heidi A. Kratsch

Gardening

No abstract provided.


Sp685 Landscaping Guidelines To Protect Your Home From Wildfire, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Oct 2006

Sp685 Landscaping Guidelines To Protect Your Home From Wildfire, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Forestry, Trees, and Timber

As Tennessee’s population continues to grow, more people are building homes in rural forested areas. Each year Tennessee experiences approximately 2,000 wild (forest) fires. With the influx of new homeowners in and around forest land, the chances of wildfires damaging home structures increase. Improper landscaping around homes increases the likelihood of fire damage, while also hindering the activities of firefighters.


Landscape Design Series 13 Landscaping For Energy Conservation, Larry A. Sagers Jan 2005

Landscape Design Series 13 Landscaping For Energy Conservation, Larry A. Sagers

All Archived Publications

No abstract provided.


Waterwise Gardening And Landscaping, Larry A. Sagers Jan 2005

Waterwise Gardening And Landscaping, Larry A. Sagers

All Archived Publications

No abstract provided.


Water-Wise Landscaping - A Guide For Water Management Planning, Larry A. Sagers Jan 2005

Water-Wise Landscaping - A Guide For Water Management Planning, Larry A. Sagers

All Archived Publications

No abstract provided.


Pb1585-Annual And Perennial Flower Shade Gardening In Tennessee, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Sep 2004

Pb1585-Annual And Perennial Flower Shade Gardening In Tennessee, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

Gardening in the shade can add interest and color to the restful recesses of your landscape, but it can be difficult and challenging. Shade gardening presents a new set of problems as compared to gardening in the sun. Both the homeowner who instructs his or her builder to leave “every tree possible” and the gardener who one day looks up and finds that the maple and oak saplings planted years ago now flood much of the landscape with shade have trouble finding suitable plants which can add color in these areas of their landscapes.

Perennials, plants which flower year after …


Sp290-R-Whiteflies In Ornamentals, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Sep 2003

Sp290-R-Whiteflies In Ornamentals, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

Whiteflies are economically important insects on ornamentals grown in the greenhouse. Although these pests are most serious in the greenhouse, whiteflies may also attack ornamental plants grown outdoors. Some of the preferred woody ornamental hosts include barberry, redbud, Fucshia, honeylocust, black locust, Hibiscus, Lantana, coffeeberry, rose and Jerusalem cherry.


Sp290-T-Holly Leafminers, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service Sep 2003

Sp290-T-Holly Leafminers, The University Of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Service

Home Garden, Lawn, and Landscape

Holly leafminers are the most injurious pests of holly in the eastern United States. The holly leafminer was introduced from Europe. This insect is a primary pest of American or Christmas holly. Injury results from the larval mining activity just under the upper leaf surface. Additional damage is caused when females repeatedly puncture the leaves with their ovipositor (egg-laying structure). Punctured leaves become deformed.