« April 2009 | Main | June 2009 »

May 14, 2009

VanRidge Garden Club Plant Sale

Many garden clubs hold plant sales each year to fund their public service projects. This weekend, VanRidge Garden Club is holding their plant sale. The project funded by this plant sale is an annual scholarship at Clark College.

Friday May 15, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Saturday May 16, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

Pleasant View Church
801 N.E. 194th Street
Ridgefield, WA

Exit at the 179th Street Exit from I-5, proceed north on 10th Avenue (on east side of I-5, parallel to I-5). Turn west (toward freeway) at 194th Street.

Plants are grown by garden club members.

Plants for sale include:

Veggies, herbs, berries, and grapes

  • Tomatoes - multiple varieties, primarily heirlooms
  • Red Runner Beans
  • Swiss Chard
  • Curly Kale
  • Lettuce
  • Chives
  • Shallots
  • Chinese Stir-fry Cabbage
  • Brussel sprouts
  • Cucumbers
  • Zucchini
  • Sweet Banana
  • Jalapeno Peppers
  • Horse Radish
  • Cicely
  • Rosemary
  • Tarragon
  • Gold Oregano
  • Bergamot sage
  • Sweet Woodruff
  • Cat Mint
  • Orange Mint
  • Spearmint
  • Angelica
  • Fever Few
  • Cornation Gold Yarrow
  • Raspberries
  • Grapes

Ornamental plants

  • Bishops
  • Hosta
  • Emerald Gaiety
  • Pink Violet
  • Wood Hyacinth
  • Forget-Me-Not
  • Nastursiums
  • Siberian Iris
  • Lady's Mantle
  • Pink Nettle
  • Bleeding Heart
  • Sedum
  • Horehound
  • Ground Covers
  • Ivy - Varigated
  • Pine Trees

Garden Seeds

  • Fox Glove
  • Curly Kale
  • Sweet William
  • Delphinium
  • Kale
  • Sparky Marigold

Garden art including birdhouses and bird feeders

And more!!!

May 05, 2009

Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive, Mother's Day Saturday

The "Stamp Out Hunger" food drive is this Saturday, sponsored by the National Association of Letter Carriers. Held each year on the Saturday before Mother's Day, it is one of the largest food drives in Clark County, and key to stocking many emergency food pantries and food banks. Simply put out a bag of non-perishable food by your mailbox, and

I Support Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive — May 9th, 2009

How To Help

The idea could not be simpler. Help the hungry without leaving your home.
  1. Place bags of non-perishable food items next to your mailbox
  2. Your letter carriers and volunteer helpers will pick them up
If you forget about the drive early in the day you can also bring non-perishable foods down to the Daniels Street Post Office at 1200 Daniels Street on your way to the Vancouver Farmer's Market. Thank you for your help.

For Further Information

http://www.helpstampouthunger.com

May 04, 2009

Honey House Farms, Inc.

Fifteen years ago, Clarence and Marge Herz visited Marge’s family in Wisconsin where her cousins are third generation beekeepers. After returning home, when Clarence told Marge they were going to start beekeeping, she “thought he was nuts” but believed in his vision. Clarence had a truck for sale which he traded for cash and bee hives. That was the beginning of something that evolved into a very successful honey business which consists of eighty percent wholesale sales. The remaining honey and all of the honey-related products are sold directly to the customers.

HoneyHouse.gif

In the beginning, Clarence worked with longtime Clark County beekeeper Jim Wiemer who was his mentor until Wiemer’s retirement when Wiemer also sent many of his customers to Clarence. Sadly, Clarence died earlier this year, but their son, Steve, has “jumped in” to take care of some of what Clarence did and has added more to the business. Honey House Farms have always limited their business to family and one helper and do not seek commercial work; the customers find them. Honey House Farms sells to a large variety of customers including produce markets, feed stores, a dog food store, farmers markets, and health food stores.

The honey is all natural and local with two exceptions. They purchase coast wildflower honey for those customers who have a taste for that and have one eastern Washington honey supplier they occasionally use. All other honey is produced in southwest Washington area, primarily Clark County. Honey House Farms no longer keeps bees and uses as its chief supplier a local commercial beekeeper from whom they purchase honey by the barrel for processing.

Marge, who is Women’s Chairman for Clark Cowlitz Chapter of Washington Farm Bureau, said honey is a “great product, a perfect product, bacteria will not grow” in it. She said that everything from the hive is healthy, the propolis (called Russian penicillin), royal jelly, bee pollen, the honey and even the wax. Many people purchase the Ambrosia (one of Weimer’s recipes) believing it is helpful in fighting allergies.

When Honey House Farms started branching out into products, the first tried was sauces by daughter Karen. A local restaurant bought those first sauces and found customers were taking the containers of sauce so made arrangements to offer bottles for sale which was very successful. Jams were also tried and very popular. Then they started offering many other honey products as well as beeswax candles, soaps, jelly, syrups, lotions, etc. Marge said, “We have a lot of fun with the honey, the beeswax, anything that comes out of the hive ...” Marge’s favorite part of the business is the responses from the customers, everything is so welcomed with both the honey and the additional products. Customers have reported to her that they have sent honey and gifts to at least 46 states. Julie Wing, who works closely with Marge, also uses her clay-making skills for handmade bee-related gift items. Several times during the year, Honey House Farms, located in downtown Hockinson, has special events including an open house with a gift shop during the Christmas season. Visitors are welcome at prescheduled times; it is a working shop so call first if you would like to visit.

Contact Information

Honey House Farms, Inc.

Marge Herz

(360) 892-2875

honeyhouse@netzero.net

For Further Information

May 03, 2009

"The Dirty Dozen" and Pesticides

The Environmental Working Group is a 501(c)(3) non-profit, founded in the 1990's for public education on issues of environmental health. Among other things, it publishes an annual list of "the dirty dozen," twelve kinds of produce that are most likely to contain pesticide residues. More recently, they have also begun publishing a list of "the clean 15." The lists are available online.

Malathion

Pesticides are Poison, Often Neurotoxins

In Latin the ending "-cide" indicates something that causes death. "Homicide" is the killing of a human. "Suicide" is the killing of the self. "Patricide" and "matricide" are the killing of parents and our modern words "pesticide" and "herbicide" were coined to refer to chemicals used to kill plants and unwanted animals. At a basic level, most pesticides are poisons, and most pesticides used on foods for sale in the United States are organophosphate nerve agents. Organophosphates are considered less dangerous than the organochlorides (such as DDT) they replaced, but they are still neurotoxins. For this reason, many people choose to avoid pesticide residue in their food.

The Dirty Dozen for 2009

Conventionally-grown crops having the highest level of pesticide residue are sometimes referred to as the "dirty dozen" and tend to include soft-skinned fruits or low crops: those just above ground level that are most prone to insect attack. For this reason, many people prefer to spend a little extra to purchase these foods as organics
  1. Peaches
  2. Apples
  3. Bell Peppers
  4. Celery
  5. Nectarines
  6. Strawberries
  7. Cherries
  8. Kale
  9. Lettuce
  10. Imported Grapes
  11. Carrots
  12. Pears

2009's Clean Fifteen

The "clean fifteen," by contrast, are those organic foods which have the lowest levels of pesticide residue. These tend to be crops with thicker skins.
  1. Onions
  2. Avocados
  3. Sweet Corn
  4. Pineapple
  5. Mango
  6. Asparagus
  7. Sweet Peas
  8. Kiwi
  9. Cabbage
  10. Eggplant
  11. Papaya
  12. Watermelon
  13. Broccoli
  14. Tomatoes
  15. Sweet Potatoes

For Further Information

May 01, 2009

Honey Bees in Your Backyard

Monique Dupre and Rory Bowman found a unique way to celebrate May Day this year. They spent late afternoon on May Day collecting a swarm of honey bees that alighted in the tree near Hi-School Hardware on Main Street. Ms. Dupre of Sustainable Living on a Budget was prepared for new bees and brought her hive so the queen and her workers could be placed directly into their new home.

BeeCatching.gif

Backyard beekeeping is becoming more popular and is a tremendous asset to home gardeners. Typically, it takes one acre of land to support one hive. If the flowering plants and trees on a city block are abundant, that would mean that one hive would be supported and pollinate the flowers and gardens on that block and nearby.

When a hive has reached the point that it is time for the bees to start a new hive, they swarm which is what happened for the cluster of honey bees to be in the tree at Hi-School Hardware. This typically happens in the spring when the weather has warmed up and the bees become active. The bees themselves decide when it is time to produce a new queen and prepare for her. When the new queen has matured and is ready, the queen and her helpers leave and swarm to a new site to establish their own colony. When collecting a swarm, the queen must be included for the bees to stay; their life purpose is to protect and care for the queen as well as nurse and raise more worker bees.

Clark County is home to several beekeepers, many of whom belong to the Clark County Beekeepers Association which meets the second Thursday of each month at 7:00 p.m. in the C.A.S.E.E. Center in Brush Prairie. They have a display at the Bee Barn at the Clark County Fair each August.

The prime purpose of commercial beekeeping is pollination of food crops. In the spring, farmers and orchardists hire beekeepers to bring in hives of honey bees which are the most effective pollinator for most crops and are critical to our food supply. Contrary to popular belief, the honey is usually a secondary product of the commercial beekeeper's operation. Most sell their honey by the bucket or barrel to others for processing for retail sale to such companies as Honey House Farms.

If you see a swarm of honey bees, contact the Clark County Beekeepers or C.A.S.E.E. Center so the honey bees can be retrieved for their new home. Because the attention of the honey bees is on the queen while she searches for a new home, they are primarily docile so just wait patiently for the beekeeper to arrive to transfer them to a more suitable location. As long as they are not disturbed, only the scouts will leave the cluster while they search for a new location and report back to the queen.

If you are considering keeping bees, contact the Clark County Beekeepers and attend their meetings, and be sure to take an appropriate class. Many are offered in our area.

For Further Information