One of the great FREE programs offered through University of Georgia's Cooperative Extension is a certificate program in Sustainable Turfgrass Management for the lawn-care guys who seed/sod, mow, fertilize, irrigate, and apply weed killers. The program has four major components.
The first section, called "Know What You Mow," teaches how to identify the six major turfgrasses found in Georgia and the unique needs of each kind of grass.
The second is "Creating Tough Turf," and it emphasizes how to care for and maintain grasses in ways that lead to healthier turf that needs less water.
The third section, "Water Smart Turf," includes how to troubleshoot basic irrigation system problems and how to change a damaged sprinkler head.
The fourth, "Smart Start Turf," explains pre-planting issues including site preparation and turf cultivar selection that can give a new lawn a healthy start.
At the end of the program, each participant receives a Certificate of Completion. If a company is interested in just one section of the training - for example, the training in troubleshooting irrigation system problems and in changing sprinkler heads - that also can be arranged (and Certificates of Completion for that component awarded).
Also when the training is completed, the company can advertise that its employees are certified in Sustainable Turfgrass management (or in a particular section of the training, if only one section was done). For smaller companies needing an edge in the marketplace, this can provide a real boost.
Participants receive checklists and easy-to-use tables to keep on hand (or in their trucks!) that will help them know the best times to plant each kind of turf, what the seeding rate should be, when to fertilize, and more.
The program and materials are offered free of charge, both to any landscape company or group and to its employees, as part of the outreach of the University of Georgia.
For more information, contact Becky Griffin (pictured above, in red), Turfrgass Program Associate, through Cobb County's Cooperative Extension Office at 770-528-4070 or uge1067@uga.edu.
The Cobb County Extension office provides trainings, programs, resources and services as the educational outreach of The University of Georgia.
Monday, February 4, 2013
Friday, January 25, 2013
Upcoming Events
Green Industry Update
Tuesday, Jan. 29, 8:30 a.m. (registration until 9 a.m.) to noon.
Recertification credits: 21/23/24/27 = 3 hours; ISA = 3 hours; Private = 2 hours. $10 per person at the door; Pre-register with emily.harper@cobbcounty.org or by calling 770-528-4070.
Weed ID for Weed Control: Winter Weeds, with Neil Tarver, Cobb County ANR Agent; Future Direction for Georgia Pesticides Division, with Eric Olsen, Agricultural Compliance Specialist; Lawn Herbicide Effects on Tree Roots, with Paul Pugliese, Bartow County ANR Agent.
Mushrooms
Friday, Feb. 8, Noon to 1:00 p.m. Free and open to the public. Bring your lunch and enjoy the presentation! Presented by president of the Mushroom Club of Georgia, Cornelia Cho, at the Cobb County Cooperative Extension 2nd-floor classroom, as part of the ongoing Lunch & Learn presentation series of Cobb County Cooperative Extension's Master Gardener Volunteers of Cobb County. Cornelia will give us a new understanding of mushrooms including information about their medicinal uses and how they help us take care of the environment.
My Favorite Winter Plants
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. Free and open to the public. Presented by Cobb County Master Gardener Terry Barton, at West Cobb Regional Library on Dennis Kemp Lane in Kennesaw, as part of the ongoing Gardeners Night Out presentation series of Cobb County Cooperative Extension's Master Gardener Volunteers of Cobb County.
Seed Starting for the Vegetable Garden
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 6:30 – 8 p.m. $5 fee (cash or check) to cover cost of materials. Presented by Cobb County Cooperative Extension. Learn how to start your own garden transplants from seed, with Horticulture Program Assistant Amy Whitney at Cobb County’s Cooperative Extension Office, 678 South Cobb Drive, Marietta, 2nd floor classroom. Part of the evening includes participants’ starting some plants to take home. Pre-register by calling 770-528-4070 or email uge1067@uga.edu.
Growing and Care of Blueberries, Blackberries, Raspberries, Figs, and Grapes
Monday, March 4, 6:30 - 8:00 p.m.. Free seminar. Cobb County Cooperative Extension Agent Neil Tarver will explain how to plant and care for these small fruits. The seminar, held in conjunction with the Cobb County 4-H Plant Sale (link to information about the sale is at the bottom of our home page), will take place at the County Water Lab at 660 S. Cobb Drive (the smaller brick building at the back of the property). Registration is required. Call 770-528-4070, or register by filling in the appropriate box on the pre-paid Plant Sale order form.
Perils and Pitfalls of Gardening
Friday, March. 8, Noon to 1:00 p.m. Free and open to the public. Bring your lunch and enjoy the presentation! Presented by Master Gardener Dr. Bruce Gillett at the County Water Lab at 660 S. Cobb Drive (the smaller brick building at the back of the property), as part of the ongoing Lunch & Learn presentation series of Cobb County Cooperative Extension's Master Gardener Volunteers of Cobb County. Dr. Gillett will talk about how to avoid, prevent, recognize, and treat diseases and disorders to which gardeners may be exposed.
Tuesday, Jan. 29, 8:30 a.m. (registration until 9 a.m.) to noon.
Recertification credits: 21/23/24/27 = 3 hours; ISA = 3 hours; Private = 2 hours. $10 per person at the door; Pre-register with emily.harper@cobbcounty.org or by calling 770-528-4070.
Weed ID for Weed Control: Winter Weeds, with Neil Tarver, Cobb County ANR Agent; Future Direction for Georgia Pesticides Division, with Eric Olsen, Agricultural Compliance Specialist; Lawn Herbicide Effects on Tree Roots, with Paul Pugliese, Bartow County ANR Agent.
Mushrooms
Friday, Feb. 8, Noon to 1:00 p.m. Free and open to the public. Bring your lunch and enjoy the presentation! Presented by president of the Mushroom Club of Georgia, Cornelia Cho, at the Cobb County Cooperative Extension 2nd-floor classroom, as part of the ongoing Lunch & Learn presentation series of Cobb County Cooperative Extension's Master Gardener Volunteers of Cobb County. Cornelia will give us a new understanding of mushrooms including information about their medicinal uses and how they help us take care of the environment.
My Favorite Winter Plants
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. Free and open to the public. Presented by Cobb County Master Gardener Terry Barton, at West Cobb Regional Library on Dennis Kemp Lane in Kennesaw, as part of the ongoing Gardeners Night Out presentation series of Cobb County Cooperative Extension's Master Gardener Volunteers of Cobb County.
Seed Starting for the Vegetable Garden
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 6:30 – 8 p.m. $5 fee (cash or check) to cover cost of materials. Presented by Cobb County Cooperative Extension. Learn how to start your own garden transplants from seed, with Horticulture Program Assistant Amy Whitney at Cobb County’s Cooperative Extension Office, 678 South Cobb Drive, Marietta, 2nd floor classroom. Part of the evening includes participants’ starting some plants to take home. Pre-register by calling 770-528-4070 or email uge1067@uga.edu.
Growing and Care of Blueberries, Blackberries, Raspberries, Figs, and Grapes
Monday, March 4, 6:30 - 8:00 p.m.. Free seminar. Cobb County Cooperative Extension Agent Neil Tarver will explain how to plant and care for these small fruits. The seminar, held in conjunction with the Cobb County 4-H Plant Sale (link to information about the sale is at the bottom of our home page), will take place at the County Water Lab at 660 S. Cobb Drive (the smaller brick building at the back of the property). Registration is required. Call 770-528-4070, or register by filling in the appropriate box on the pre-paid Plant Sale order form.
Perils and Pitfalls of Gardening
Friday, March. 8, Noon to 1:00 p.m. Free and open to the public. Bring your lunch and enjoy the presentation! Presented by Master Gardener Dr. Bruce Gillett at the County Water Lab at 660 S. Cobb Drive (the smaller brick building at the back of the property), as part of the ongoing Lunch & Learn presentation series of Cobb County Cooperative Extension's Master Gardener Volunteers of Cobb County. Dr. Gillett will talk about how to avoid, prevent, recognize, and treat diseases and disorders to which gardeners may be exposed.
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Favorite Veggie Varieties of Cobb's Master Gardeners
A request went out to Cobb County's Master Gardeners for their one or two most favorite vegetable varieties for each of the plants/crops they grow. This is the result:
Tomatoes
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Better Boy
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Mentioned by two respondents. One said, “My personal favorite is
Better Boy for a full size tasty tomato that bears up until frost.”
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Park’s Whopper
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Brandywine
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Kellogg Breakfast
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Sweet 100 (cherry)
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“I love the sweet, small fruit that is prolific most of the summer.
When the heat, drought, insects and disease have stifled my other tomatoes, I
know I will still have cherry tomatoes from my Sweet 100 plant!”
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Brandy Boy
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Big Mama
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“best for putting up”
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Early Girl
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4th of July
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Black Cherry
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“just wonderful”
|
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Wuhib (paste type)
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“Amazing productivity and disease resistance.”
|
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Beans, Pole
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White Mountain Half Runner
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One gardener will only grow the ones from the Ferry Morse seed
company.
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Blue Lake
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Rattlesnake
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Chinese Yard Long
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Musica
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“a VERY heavy producer”
|
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Kentucky Blue
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Beans, Bush
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Roma
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Mentioned by two respondents.
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Festiva
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Soleil (a yellow bean)
|
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Emerite (French filet bean)
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“tiny and tender and flavorful”
|
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Peppers, Sweet
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Sweet Goliath
|
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King Arthur
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Chocolate Bell
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Sweet Banana
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Christmas Bell
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Camelot
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Big Bertha
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Colossal
|
||
Peppers, Hot
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Lemon Drop
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Bhut jolokia (very hot)
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Jalepeno
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Mentioned by two respondents.
|
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Lettuce
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Red Sails
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Mentioned by two respondents.
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Black Seeded Simpson
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Mentioned by two respondents.
|
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Heirloom Speckles
|
||
Marvel of Four Seasons
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Buttercrunch
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Mentioned by two respondents.
|
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Red Oak
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Swiss Chard
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Rainbow
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Perpetual Spinach
|
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Watermelon
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Moon & Stars
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Georgia Rattlesnake
|
||
Spinach
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Renegade
|
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Shallot
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Ambition
|
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Garlic
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Mr. Pope’s
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“being developed by Southern Exposure Seed Exchange”
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Peas, Green
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Sugar Snaps
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Mentioned by two respondents.
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Telephone
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Sugar Ann
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Peas, Southern
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Purple Hull
|
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Pigott Family Heirloom
|
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Zipper Pea
|
||
Kale
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Tuscan Lacinato
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Fennel
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Fino
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Florence
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Potato, Sweet
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Vardamon
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Potato, white/Irish
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Fingerling Russian Banana
|
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Yukon Gold
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Russet
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Kennebec
|
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Purple Majesty
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Red Pontiac
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Pumpkin
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Rouge d’etampes (Cinderella)
|
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Knucklehead, Goosebumps
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From the “Superfreak” Series
|
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Turnip
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De Milan Rouge
|
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Squash, summer
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Yellow Crookneck
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Yellow Straightneck
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||
Squash, winter
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Chinese Pumpkin Squash
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Okra
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Clemson Spineless
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Collards
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Morris Heading
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Beets
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Chioggia
|
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Cantaloupe
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Ambrosia
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Hale’s Best
|
||
Cucumbers
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Any burpless hybrid
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Straight Nine
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There are so many varieties available that choosing is difficult, and there are some varieties in catalogs and on seed racks that won't work well in our soils and climate and with our diseases and pests. The hope is that this list will help other gardeners as they plan their upcoming gardening year.
UGA also lists vegetable varieties that have been shown to do well more generally in gardens across Georgia. The list is part of the Vegetable Planting Chart that helps gardeners decide when to plant each kind of vegetable. Dates on the chart are for middle Georgia, which means that gardeners in Cobb County will need to adjust the planting dates by one to two weeks (later for spring planting, earlier for fall crops).
UGA also lists vegetable varieties that have been shown to do well more generally in gardens across Georgia. The list is part of the Vegetable Planting Chart that helps gardeners decide when to plant each kind of vegetable. Dates on the chart are for middle Georgia, which means that gardeners in Cobb County will need to adjust the planting dates by one to two weeks (later for spring planting, earlier for fall crops).
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