June 2016 KCDS Newsletter - Kitsap County Dahlia Society
Transcription
June 2016 KCDS Newsletter - Kitsap County Dahlia Society
June 2016 KITSAP COUNTY DAHLIA SOCIETY P. O. Box 502, Silverdale, WA 98383-0502 www.kitsapdahlias.org Inside this Issue KCDS Officers 2 KCDS Board Notes 2 Meeting Schedules 2 Mayhem in the Garden 3 KCDS Plant Auction 4 2016 Dates to Remember · June 16, 6:30 PM General Meeting · July 7, 6:30 PM Board Meeting · July 18, 9 AM—3 PM Summer Federation Workshop in Seattle · July 21, 5:30 PM Club Picnic, Brownsville Marina · July 25, 9 AM—3 PM Judge’s Workshop Burlington, WA · July 25, 9 AM—3 PM Judge’s Workshop Olympia, WA · Aug 4, 7 PM Board Meeting · August 6 & 7 ***KCDS SHOW*** Chimacum Sam, ST BR General Meeting Drew Brant will give a tutorial on using the ADS Classification Guide at our upcoming June meeting. At first glance, these booklets may look a bit confusing, but when they are “deciphered” they are an invaluable resource to understand how the classification system works and how you can use the information for a variety of purposes. Bring your classification guides to use at this month’s meeting, together with any older copies you would be willing to share with new members who may not have guides to use during Drew’s discussion. Included in this month’s newsletter is a reprint of an article Dave Smith previously wrote for the newsletter. Now that the tubers are planted (for the most part), we feel this very informative article is timely for those striving for the perfect show flower—whether it be for show in the garden or entered in one of the many ADS shows this season. Have fun experimenting with disbudding and disbranching to see what works best for you. At last month’s meeting Leone encouraged us to harvest seeds this fall. She gave a description of how bees travel through the garden gathering and distributing pollen, and encouraged us to think about that as we select mother plants this summer from which to capture seed. She wrote an article last year on the process to harvest seeds from dahlia plants and that information will be featured in a newsletter later in the fall. HAPPY GARDENING! Dave and Leone brought in an example of a dahlia that has a virus and should be culled (pictured below). Leone reminded us to check our tubers and discard any that look suspicious. Dr. Hanu R. Pappu’s article, Dahlia Mosaic Virus, a pictorial guide to symptoms and diagnosis, can be found at http://plantpath.wsu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Binder11.pdf, and has more examples of diseased dahlias. 1 June 2016 KCDS 2015 OFFICERS: President Dan Van Natta 360-908-8054 Vice President (programs) Drew Brant 360-473-3131 Treasurer Bill Jones 360-297-2134 Recording Secretary (minutes) Kim Van Natta 360-692-7231 Corresponding Co-Secretaries (newsletter) Allyn Arnold 360-621-0699 Debra Kurre 360-373-8346 Regular Board Meetings Held on the first Thursday of each Month at 6:30 PM LOCATION: All Star Lanes, Silverdale, WA Sunshine Committee Carol Derrick 360-782-0802 Contact any of these people regarding club events. [email protected] 7 July 4 August General Meetings Held on the third Thursday of each month at 6:30 PM EXCEPT FOR: July (Club Picnic) August (Club Show) LOCATION: Crystal Grange 2160 NE Paulson Rd Poulsbo, WA 98370 BOTH meetings are open to all. If you have an item for discussion, contact Dan Van Natta by the Tuesday before the meeting and he will put you on the agenda. REFRESHMENT SIGN-UP June—Bob and Donna Overly July—Picnic August-Show September—Dave and Leone? Email or call Allyn or Debra to sign up for 2016 [email protected] REMEMBER: Snacks for monthly meetings are reimbursable up to $15.00 per month. Provide the completed KCDS reimbursement form, KCDS BOARD NOTES · ADS Representative Leone Smith Federation Representative Drew Brant Please forward all comments & suggestions to: Board Meeting Dates [email protected] Trustees Steffany Mootry 360-731-7114 Pat Paulsen 360-698-0123 Bob Overly 360-377-4531 KCDS NEWSLETTER E-MAIL ADDRESS · · · The KCDS show in August is the next big event for the club. Member support will be needed to make the show a success. Dan is reviewing show procedure books and has submitted the information for the reader board at the fairgrounds. The Board will use Wanda’s show spreadsheet as a guide for this year. Drew provided the spreadsheet to the Board and volunteered to update status and maintain the master. The club trailer is at Bob’s house. Bob will inventory the show items to determine what needs to be replenished for this year’s show. Bob will host a show staging discussion at his home the Tuesday before the show, August 2nd. Drew advised that there is a new form required for the club insurance. He will prepare it and send off. The insurance has been paid. Watering systems have been installed at Pt. Gamble and Silverdale gardens. National Avenue gardens will be watered by hand again this year. The tubers are coming up ! 2 June 2016 MAHEM IN THE GARDEN By David Smith This may be considered a test of your mental competency. If any of this makes sense to you psychoanalysis is in order. About this time of year those of us who have nothing better to do start breaking off pieces of perfectly good dahlia plants in order to make them better and maybe win something at a dahlia show, or just to show what “with it gardeners” we are. Maybe this has more to do with being a control freak. Anyway here is what I do. The point of this is to get big perfect blooms and it starts about this time of year with STOPPING. This means breaking out the topmost part of the plant, maybe about 1/2 inch, so that the strength of the plant will flow into the lower part of the bush. Now, there are all sorts of little rules about how to do this, but for plants with large blooms leave fewer sets of leaves. If you are crazy enough to do this, experiment with different plants and see what they produce. If you want a REALLY EARLY BLOOM don’t break off the leader, but do remove the side branches further down, not the leaves, the side branches. All of this is about funneling the strength of the plant where you want it. A word about timing (in a normal year) for the Kitsap show disbranching is in order at about 60 to 80 days after topping for the perfect bloom. This depends on the weather so top some earlier, some later and some not at all. Because it has been so cold and wet this spring I would expect to see a lot of terminal blooms brought to the show. (Note, this article was written a couple of years ago, so this may not apply) The next step in insanity is called DISBRANCHING. This has to do with limiting the number of side branches. Even if you don’t stop your plants until they get many sets of leaves you can still limit the number of side branches to any number you please by breaking off the ones you don’t want. In general for big blooms leave four side branches. Leave more for smaller blooms and maybe only stop poms and miniatures, but don’t disbranch them. A good question is when to disbranch. Keep in mind that the larger the branch you break off the less of the plant’s strength is flowing to make great blooms, so disbranch earlier rather than later. The third part of this is DISBUDDING. Later in the season this gets to be an obsession and you will find visitors to your garden disbudding flowers without even knowing it. Most blooms come in triples, a larger center bloom and two side blooms. The center bloom matures a little earlier than the side blooms. Most of us disbud the two side buds and go with the center bud. For a later bloom, maybe a week, go with one of the side buds and remove the other two. There are more potential buds further down the branch that can also be removed, rubbed out. In general the more buds you remove the larger the remaining flower will be. The rule for me is that for large blooms remove every bud on the branch except one. For smaller blooms remove fewer buds, and when you get to poms no buds are removed. Some people do remove the side buds from poms, but others only take them off after cutting the bloom. This is another area that calls for experimentation. Nothing is written in 3 stone. ~ June 2016 KCDS ANNUAL PLANT AUCTION KCDS club members’ gardening interests are not limited to dahlias! This year’s plant auction was a huge success, with proceeds adding to the club treasury. Thank you to those members who donated beautiful plants and vegetables, together with the members who participated in the auction. Dan prepared auction cards this year so each participant would have a unique number. This turned out to be especially helpful as the bidding action ramped up. Eric and his “ladle gavel” kept the auction moving along smartly. Aurora kept her eyes out for bidders, and tirelessly ran plants to the winners. Wendy volunteered for the hectic job of accountant, and kept track of purchases and payments. A big thanks goes to our auction team! Lucky winners — specimen trees and amazing vegetables were a few of the items available for auction. 4