Good Oak News

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Garden Expo 2012 Handouts

For those of you who were not able to get a hand-out at my talks this weekend, or want to share the information with a friend, the links below will take you to PDF files that you can download.



Weed ID sheets for a number of invasive species can be found under the knowledge center link on our website. Search for your own problem weeds on our weed ID sheet page.

Enjoy!

Monday, February 6, 2012

Visit Us at Garden Expo 2012!

If the unseasonably warm weather has you itching to get your hands in the dirt extra early, the Garden Expo is a great place to discover new plants and ideas for your spring gardening plans!

The Garden Expo is this weekend, February 8-11, Friday evening from 4-9 pm, Saturday 9-6 and Sunday 10-4. We'll be manning booth #231 where we'll have some great information available and would love to chat with you!

Frank will be hosting the following inspirational and educational seminars:

  • Native Plants for Any Garden at 12:00 pm Saturday
  • Weeds and Invasive Plants in Our Landscape at 2:00 pm Saturday
  • Edible Native Plants in the Home Landscape at 3:00 pm Saturday
  • Establishing a Woodland Garden at 3:00 pm on Sunday


Also check out the following seminars for more inspiration!


  • Make Your Garden Landscape Sustainable by Barbara Larson from the UW-Extension in Kenosha County at 9:00 am Saturday
  • Birdscaping in the Midwest by Mariette Nowak at 10:00 am Saturday
  • The Basics of Permaculture by Kate Heiber-Cobb from Sustainability on Stilts at 1:00 pm Saturday
  • Energy Efficient Landscaping by Roger Reynolds of Infiltrating Landscapes at 4:00 pm Saturday
  • Going Green in Landscaping by Debbie Paul from Midwest Decorative Stone at 12:00 pm Sunday
  • Designing Attractive Native Gardens by John Gishnock from Formecology LLC at 2:00 pm Sunday


These are just a few of the many seminars and demonstrations where you can learn anything from how to make a gourd birdhouse, to cooking locavore foods on a budget!

For more details and a complete list of all the exhibitors, seminars, and demonstrations you can find at this year's Garden Expo, go to www.wigardenexpo.com

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Backyard Wildlife Gallery

As I'm getting ready for The Garden Expo I'm sorting through some photos to use in presentations and at the booth. I decided to fix up Good Oak's "Backyard Wildlife" album. I tend to focus a lot on plants and flowers, so I thought I should have an album of the critters that these native plants attract. There are over 50 photos in it now of critters that for the most part found there way in to my own yard, but a few photos are from clients properties as well.

Here is the album on Good Oak's Facebook page. And below are a few select photos for you to enjoy as well.





Thursday, December 8, 2011

Brush Clearing Before & After at Speckled Hen Inn

This past week we did some brush clearing for the folks at the Speckled Hen Inn, just north of Madison. This will be the first step in restoring this open oak woodland back to health. On my initial site visit I notice a lot of conservative woodland and savanna species including: doll's eyes, red baneberry, blue cohosh, horse gentian, yellow honeysuckle, yellow giant hyssop and purple joe-pye weed. So there's a great chance for recovery of the woodland flora once brush clearing and hopefully a prescribed burn are completed. We will be working with Robert and Patricia on reintroducing more native wildflowers, grasses and sedges and probably plantings a few bur oaks in the areas where we end up with a good gap in the canopy.

So below are a couple of "before and after" photos from our first day of work on the site. Most of the brush we removed were large buckthorns, but we also cleared a handful of honeysuckle, privet, mulberry and boxelder trees. Bob will be harvesting many of the hackberries (skinny tall trees in the photo) for firewood to further open the woodland canopy.

This is the area we cleared in the morning of our first day working there. There were four of us working on site that day. Click on either image to see them in full-size, and see switch between them to see the dramatic difference!





Here is the area we cleared the afternoon of our first day on site:


Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Honeysuckle: Really Quite Terrible for Wildlife

Clearing invasive brush is a big part of Good Oak's business. After all, most midwestern woodlands suffer from the negative effects of honeysuckle, buckthorn, multiflora rose, Japanese barberry... and others.

People always want to know why these plants are so bad for our local ecosystems. First and foremost they simply displace native plants. Either buckthorn or honeysuckle can effectively take up all of the growing space on the ground layer in a woodland, leaving nothing but bare dirt on the ground below them. They're also bad for our birds, especially migrating birds. I usually explain that both honeysuckle and buckthorn produced berries, but these berries are not nutritious for our birds and other wildlife. Honeysuckle berries for example are the nutritional equivalent of cola. Berries from native plants are more like a glass of milk or orange juice, with protein, fat, vitamins and minerals and more complex carbohydrates.

But some new studies have found that honeysuckle harms wildlife in ways I could never imagine. A study titled Invasive shrub alters native forest amphibian communities recently published in Biological Conservation found that honeysuckle can change the "forest understory microclimate", reducing the habitat quality for native frogs and salamanders. Essentially, I think what is happening is the honeysuckle kills off all the other plants so there are no ground layer plants, and very little leaf litter or duff layer either, meaning the soil and air near the ground dry out faster, which is not good for animals who need to stay a little moist all the time. The abstract of this article concludes "invasive [organisms] may affect native organisms with which it shares no trophic connection, and suggests that changes in microclimate may be one mechanism by which alien plants affect communities where they invade.

It has been known for a while that the red berries of honeysuckle (which, now that fall has come are quite visible on these shrubs in our region) can change the color of bird's plumage. Specifically a study has been done exploring the effects of eating honeysuckle berries on cedar waxwings, with an unknown effect on the mating success of the affected birds.

Now, an new study has found that honeysuckles have created an "evolutionary trap" for cardinals. In essence, consuming honeysuckle berries artificially enhances the plumage of a cardinal, making it look brighter. A bright red cardinal is more likely to attract a mate that a duller one, usually because a brighter bird is stronger and healthier. In this case however, the opposite may be true, since these birds eat more "junk food" honeysuckle berries and have territory in poor quality habitat (infested with honeysuckle)... thus tricking birds into choosing a poor quality mate!

Add to that the fact that not one but two recent studies have found that birds nesting in honeysuckle and buckthorn have less success rearing young than birds nesting in native trees. Suddenly you can what broad ranging effects just a couple species of invasive plants can have on ground layer plants, amphibians and locally nesting and migratory birds.... Basically these plants are causing damage on all levels of the ecosystem and altering natural communities in many profound ways that.

So that is why we work so hard clearing invasive brush from our midwestern woodland and grasslands. Honeysuckle flowers may be pretty in the spring, but we shouldn't trade this fleeting beauty for the long term stability of our ecosystem.

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