Society Meeting – May 29

Society President Colleen Green opened a well-attended meeting [below left] with a special welcome to our guests from the Sophiasburgh 4H Flower Power Extravaganza Club [below right].

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Following a brief recap on important upcoming events – the County Garden Show in June and the Members’ Picnic in July – and a mention of a few items of general interest, Colleen introduced the meeting’s guest speaker – Chef Tina Moorey – who would be speaking about cooking with herbs.
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Chef Moorey got the presentation off to a good start by ‘volunteering’ a couple of audience members to move around the room offering simple and delicious treats such as beetroot hummus with cilantro served on a pita bread section.

She followed with a rapid fire presentation on simple preparation tricks of the trade and how common herbs can be worked into your cooking – inexpensive, home-growable, delicious – in a manner of different ways.

Following the presentation, the audience had many questions and requests for advice, all of which were answered constructively and helpfully. Now pass me some more of that beetroot hummus …

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Mini-show entries were judged by the members at large. 1st place went to Kim Katanik-Kuris for her arrangement of herbs and flowers [opposite] set in a classic enameled milk jug. Click the image to see a larger version.


Photo-credits: Bert Jenkins

Archive Materials needed

The PEC Horticultural Society has been in existence for almost one hundred and fifty years, and yet if you visit the Prince Edward County Archives at the Wellington Library you’ll find only three pages of historical documents in our file!

To find out how you can help add to our records … read more 

Help needed for The County Garden Show on June 8th.

We look set to have a great and revitalized Garden Show on June 8th at the Crystal Palace. However, the Executive can’t be everywhere at once and we need your help to make this Garden Show be the success we are hoping for. We need volunteers in the following areas:

Set up and Take down
. Set up will take place on the evening of June 7th and the morning of June 8th. Take down will occur at 5PM on June 8th as we have to get the place ready for the Green Trust’s Music Festival to be held at 7PM that evening.

Admission Takers at the door
. This year we are charging $2 admission, so we need people on the door to take the money.

Ticket Takers for Paul Zammit.

Ticket Takers for the Victorian Tea.

Victorian Tea helpers
, serving, washing up etc.

Raffle Ticket and Membership Booth needs help selling tickets and memberships.

Miscellaneous – to help wherever help is needed.

Please email Howard Hunter or Anne Reeves by using the email form on the Contact Us page of this website to let them know where you would like to help.

Thank you for your support in this exciting venture.

Society Meeting – April 24

Howard Hunter opened the meeting by welcoming members and guests as well as new members, and reminded all to sign in on the meeting sign sheet which would be passed around.

Howard also reminded those present that the County Garden Show needed volunteers on the day to help with set-up, door admission, Victorian Tea, and the Raffle Table. A sign-up sheet was available at the meeting, and a page with a reminder and details can be found here.

Walter McGee gave an overview of the Flower Show rules and categories including the ‘provincial flower’ category – a somewhat whimsical category combining actual flowers with artifacts. Full details on the categories, etc. are in the Flower Show brochure which is available for download here [486 kb pdf].

Walter and Marianne Malachowski reminded members about the Green Trust’s Music Festival to be held following the County Garden Show and beginning at 7:00 pm with the younger performers and continuing on until 10:00 pm. Tickets can be obtained from Walter at $5/ticket. More details of the music festival to be posted later this month.

Anne Reeves gave the members an update on the vendors and sponsors for the County Garden Show (full details here). Anne noted that interest was high and the vendors and sponsors were pleased with the greater level of advertising we were doing. Remember to support these vendors and local sponsors!

apr_pic5Howard introduced the meeting’s speaker – Court Noxon – who would be presenting on wild flowers of PEC. The presentation’s special emphasis would be on the species that he believed to be endangered or that had disappeared completely over the past 20+ years he had observed and documented wildflowers in the varying habitats found in PEC.

PEC has seven distinct habitats each of which has a difference mix of plants (and animals); beaches, dunes and pannes, forests, meadows, marshes, fence bottoms, and alvars.

Sea rockets have been absent from PEC beaches for at least five years. In the dunes and pannes, fringed gentian and lobelia are ‘vulnerable’; the beach pea and hoary puccoon are both no longer found in the dunes and pannes.

The forests in the interior of Sandbanks are changing as the climate and environment changes. The American beech has become stressed and is more susceptible to insect damage; the pinesap and yellow lady’s slipper flowers are no longer in the forest.

Meadows and marshes are two habitat types that are gradually disappearing or changing. Monarch butterflies – which once filled PEC’s meadows are now an ‘at risk’ species. Changing marshes have caused a loss of river otters and snapping turtles and wild rice, southern wild rice, and cardinal flowers are plant species no longer found in PEC marshes.

The ‘fence bottom’ habitat, though widespread, is changing. As farming practices change, hedgerows are disappearing which affects the air flows across the fields. Butternuts are rarer because of hedgerow clearing, wild grapes, wild plum, and hawthorn are also almost all gone.

In the alvars, early buttercup and prairie smoke – despite intense conservation efforts – are almost all gone. The overall alvar habitat is naturally changing and many of the ‘traditional’ alvar plants are becoming less populous.

While biodiversity reduction is ‘bad news’ no all change is bad. Court closed his presentation by mentioning some good news, like the arrival (or first sightings) of corn cockle and Nora Barlow columbine.

Court’s web site provides a comprehensive and easy-to-use database of descriptions, habitats, colours, images and more about PEC’s wildflowers. You can also get a copy of Court’s lavishly illustrated book entitled Field, Forest, Hedgerow’ from Books & Company in Picton.
 
The mini show topic was ‘forced bulbs or wild flowers which you have dried or self-taken photographs of wild flowers’.

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Mini-show entries were judged by the members at large. 1st place was shared by Gwen Reilly and Kim Katanik-Kuris [upper pair above], 2nd place went to Mary Jenkins and 3rd place to Arline de Bourbon [lower pair above]. Click the images to see larger versions.

Photo-credit: Bert Jenkins