Podcasts about making it grow

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Best podcasts about making it grow

Latest podcast episodes about making it grow

Making It Grow Minutes
To catch an anole

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2025 1:00


Host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" explains how minding "tail autotomy" is key in catching an anole.

anole making it grow
Making It Grow Minutes
Menageries and menu choices

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2024 1:00


Host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" shares more childhood stories of her unusual pets, their favorite foods, and the foods she and her family enjoyed.

choices menu making it grow
Making It Grow Minutes
The unusual childhood pets of Amanda McNulty

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 1:00


Host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" shares a vivid childhood memory of one of the many unusual pets she and her brother used to keep.

Making It Grow Minutes
The beauty and ecologic necessity of the sweetbay magnolia

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2024 1:00


Host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" explains how the sweetbay magnolia helps sustain a variety of wildlife.

beauty necessity making it grow
Making It Grow Minutes
Southern magnolias vs sweetbay magnolias

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024 1:00


Host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" explains her preference of the sweetbay magnolia over magnolia grandiflora, a.k.a. the southern magnolia.

southern magnolias making it grow
Making It Grow Minutes
The fleeting fragrance of tea olive trees

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024 1:00


Host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" enjoys the scent of tea olives this time of year when she opens her windows for a cool evening breeze.

Making It Grow Minutes
Favorite foods of the cattle egret

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 1:00


What and where do cattle egrets like to eat? Host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" explains that some of these birds have very exotic dinner guests at their table.

Making It Grow Minutes
How to identify cattle egrets

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2024 1:00


Are you familiar with cattle egrets? Host Amanda McNulty explains how to identify them on this episode of "Making It Grow."

Making It Grow Minutes
Corn OFF the cob

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2024 1:00


Preparing corn off the cob is a labor of love, but well worth the effort, according to host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow"

preparing corn making it grow
Making It Grow Minutes
The multicultural flavors of corn on the cob

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 1:00


While in Los Angeles, host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" experiences a conversion regarding grilled corn on the cob

Making It Grow Minutes
Preparing the perfect cob of corn

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 1:00


How do you like your corn on the cob? Host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" shares her favorite way to prepare this tasty summertime treat

preparing corn making it grow
Making It Grow Minutes
The difference between kestrels and hawks

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2024 1:21


Host Amanda McNulty of Making It Grow sees the natural beauty of the Wateree floodplain during her daily commute.

hawks kestrels making it grow
Making It Grow Minutes
Cotton species

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2023 1:00


Hello, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. There are 50 species of cotton in the genus Gossypium — basically they're seeds with fibers attached. Only a few are commercially important.

species cotton clemson extension making it grow
Making It Grow Minutes
Rowland Alston and 30 years of Making It Grow

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2023 1:00


Making It Grow celebrated thirty years of being on air with SCETV this year. The show was developed and hosted for much of that time by Rowland Alston, a Clemson Extension agent and son of an agent.

rowland alston scetv clemson extension making it grow
Hélder Favarin
But God... has been making it grow | Hélder Favarin

Hélder Favarin

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2023 32:01


Dr. Hélder Favarin is speaking from ECM (European Christian Mission) Biennial 2023 in Croatia. Hélder encourages and challenges Christians to live out the unity they already have in Christ—an extremely important message for followers of Christ today. This is the third of four Bible expositions he gave during the conference. ___________ ENLACES Web: https://helderfavarin.com/ Publicaciones: https://helderfavarin.com/#publicaciones Eventos: https://helderfavarin.com/#agendanoti... SOCIAL Youtube: https://youtube.com/@helderfavarin?si=v_XvMZ86hsfQwBRY Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/helderfavarin/ X: https://twitter.com/HelderFavarin Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hélder-fa... TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@helder.favarin Telegram: https://t.me/DrHelderFavarin * https://linktr.ee/helderfavarin PODCASTS Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4Tmf0oJ... Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/es/podcast... Amazon Music Podcast: https://music.amazon.es/podcasts/2301... iVoox: https://go.ivoox.com/sq/1317811 Deezer: https://www.deezer.com/mx/show/2826642

Making It Grow Minutes
Homemade mayonnaise

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2023 1:00


Hello, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. In the winter time, cooking a frozen pizza is my easy go to supper. We have a gas stove, which adds heat to the kitchen, so I never turn it on in summer if I can help it. Hot weather suppers revolve around vegetable sandwiches, cucumber or tomato. White bread, peeled sliced cukes or maters, lots of mayonnaise. There're lots of discussions about what kind of mayonnaise, all made more complicated by other concoctions similar looking to that white stuff in a jar, wildly different tastes. Most people I ask say they use what their momma's used -- my mother didn't even put mayonnaise in the refrigerator, maybe the acidity in the tomatoes saved us from potential food poisoning. Now I see recipes calling for – get ready for this --bacon mayonnaise. More on that to come.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Making It Grow's 30th anniversary

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023 1:00


Birthdays, anniversaries, various milestones – all reasons for getting together. When having fun time flies and that's just what's snuck up on Making It Grow, we've been on the air for thirty years.

Making It Grow Minutes

Herrick Brown is the new curator of the A C Moore Herbarium at the University of South Carolina, taking over from our friend Dr. John – a k a Dr. John Nelson. Fasciation was the feature of some specimens Herrick brought to Making It Grow recently – a weird type of plant growth when the something goes awry in the apical meristem – the specialized group of cells at the tip of a plant –and instead of elongating they flatten out and divide.

Making It Grow Minutes
Synchronous firefly displays

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2022 1:00


Agent Carmen Ketron, recently on our SCETV program Making It Grow, told us she'd seen the synchronous firefly display at the Congaree National Park. This phenomenon occurs at the end of May or early June for about two weeks every year.

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Making It Grow Minutes
McKissick Museum

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2022 1:00


Hello, I'm Amanda McNutly with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. As a young child, I began using U S C's McKissick Museum - at that time it was a library. Today its mission statement includes these words “The University of South Carolina's McKissick Museum fosters awareness and appreciation for the diversity of the region's culture, history, and natural environment.” When the state of Pearl Fryar's topiary garden and Mr. Fryar's health was brought to director Jane Przybysz attention, she began work on a way to preserve this regional and national treasure. Eventually, with cooperation with the Atlanta Botanical Garden, the museum got funding for a topiary artist in residence – I'm sure that's a first, and Mike Gibson, a self-taught and self-described property artist, is working with Fryar in his Bishopville garden. McKissick is to me an overlooked treasure for our state, please visit it on the old horseshoe.

LeCorner - International
#24. CONCACAF - Jason Roberts - From playing football to making it grow: the vision and transition of a former player off pitch

LeCorner - International

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2022 53:11


We are delighted to share this new LeCorner - International Episode with you as we are receiving Jason Roberts, an old and good friend of our Chief Strategy Officer JB.  Jason is a former Premier League footballer player. He started his career at Hayes Football Club and played almost 500 matches in the United Kingdom.   Prior to the end of his career, Jason founded the Jason Roberts Foundation, a charity dedicated to providing young people in the UK and the Caribbean with the opportunity to learn, build confidence and broaden their perspectives through sport.  In 2017, he was appointed Concacaf's Director of Development to lead the Confederation's efforts across coaching education, corporate social responsibility, women's football, and professional football.  For this 23rd episode of LeCorner, we went through his journey as a professional footballer as well as his “second life” and the challenge that surrounds it.  Episode timelines:  - Jason's passion for football, and his journey as a football professional - Get the best out of a professional football career   - Jason's transition from on to off pitch  - Jason Roberts Foundation - What advice to give to youth to succeed as a professional footballer  - Jason's duties at Concacaf as Director of Development - How Concacaf uses data to help develop national football associations - Player career management in the US vs Europe  - Recommendations:  Football Club Management: Insights from the Field - Ian Lawrence  / The Last Dance If you had good time listening this episode, do not hesitate to support us: 1. By subscribing, it's just a small click

Making It Grow Minutes
Plants at Zoo Exhibits

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2020 1:00


I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. On our visit to film at Riverbanks Zoo and Garden, we learned about displays designed to reflect the native areas of a specific animal. We started out at the sealion and seal exhibit. Obviously, there weren't plants in the water, but curator Melody Scott Leach has planted the surrounding areas to resemble the wind-swept California coasts home to these animals. She explained that she studies photographs of the animals' place of origin then designs topography and selects plants with similar appearance that can thrive in our climate. Her choice of distorted conifers and plants with silvery-colored foliage set the scene of that windswept habitat, heightened by the barks of those animals. For the koala exhibit, different species of the eucalyptus plants grow, as you'd expect, but the one they eat isn't hardy in South Carolina and is shipped to Columbia.

Making It Grow Minutes
"Furniture" in Zoo Enclosures

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2020 1:00


I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. During our filming with horticulturist Melody Scott Leach at Riverbanks Zoo and Garden, we learned about what animal exhibit specialists call furniture. This means plants or other items placed inside the animal enclosure. For example, the rhinoceroses need shade but these massive animals could easily destroy trees by rubbing against them. Scott-Leach has planted trees but placed large boulders around them to keep these animals from scratching their backs on the tree trunks. But don't think that they have to suffer an itching spot –there is a suspended brush that automatically comes on and spins its bristles against their tough hide. We watched a very content animal enjoy this feature during our filming. At the walk-through kangaroo exhibit, strategically placed fans cooled these animals on a hot September day, the exhibit keepers and the MIG team enjoyed them, too.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Immersion Horticulture for Zoos

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 1:00


I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. As part of putting our toes back in the water during these difficult times, Team Making It Grow is looking for outdoor places to film. Recently, we visited Riverbanks Zoo and Garden in Columbia. There's a special branch of horticulture for areas that involve animal exhibits. Melody Scott Leach fills that role there and she gave us a fascinating tour and explanation of that subset of gardening. The trend began in the 1980's with the idea of immersion horticulture for zoos. Instead of just choosing plants for a beautiful display, the exhibit designers and horticulturists strive to recreate as nearly as possible an enclosure that provides animals with a semblance of their natural environment and choose plants for outside the enclosure that also reflect the areas of origin but will thrive in the climate of each zoo's location.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Volunteering in Outdoor, Public Spaces

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2020 1:00


I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. At our recent filming at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens, we met several people who help our friend Katie Dickson by volunteering, working year round in summer's heat and winter's cold. We talked with some of them who said they get more in sharing friendships and learning than they give with their valuable skills. Many, many public gardens rely on generous hearted volunteers who help with greenhouses, planting and the inevitable and unfun task of weeding. Working outside with others, masked and socially distanced, is a way to stay engaged and physically active. Even our State Parks has an act passed by the legislature to allow persons to help in those beautiful areas. Last December, we visited the festival of lights at Brookgreen and everyone in the parking area was a volunteer. Find ways to get involved in the outdoors.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Magnolia Plantation and Gardens

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2020 1:00


I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Team Making It Grow is going back out to film interesting places to share with our viewers. Public gardens seem like just the ticket in these times, especially now that the temperatures are lower. Our first trip was to Magnolia Plantation and Gardens where our friend Katie Dickson is in charge of seasonal displays for lots of WOW. We began our tour at a fabulous collection of sun coleus, many I'd never seen before, set off by the chartreuse leaves of a border of dwarf durantas – aka golden dew drops. A relaxing but visually exciting trip was the bed she's planted for color along the path that borders the Ashley River-- where we could also watch birds fishing in the water. For the younger set, the children's garden has a sensory theme – including ways to make noise and explore textures.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Legislating Measures to Save America's Birds

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. In an effort to stop the potential extermination of native birds being used in the millinery trade, Congress passed the Lacey Act in 1900 which made it unlawful to transport illegally procured animals across state lines. Meanwhile, a new threat emerged as Florida's homesteaders' act gave them preference to land under control of the General Land Office. Pelican Island was about come under this act which would allow pro-feather collecting people to buy it. Theodore Roosevelt was now president with many national issues to address, but he remembered vividly the dead pelicans he'd seen years earlier. He called a meeting of ornithologists and government wonks and asked if he could just flat out declare Pelican Island a Federal Bird Reservation. He did just that and eventually put over two hundred million acres of land in national parks, forests or wildlife refuges.

Making It Grow Minutes
Refuge for Pelicans

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Although we often think of Theodore Roosevelt as a relentless hunter of trophy animals, he combined that a passion for understanding the habit, habitat and lifestyles of not only those but other animals in nature. As he waited for transit to Cuba during the Spanish American War, Roosevelt renewed an earlier interest in pelicans, this time spending endless hours observing them in nature from his posting in Tampa. Fortunately for the conservation movement, he saw and was sickened by a sixty-foot high pile of dead birds on the docks awaiting shipment to the plumage sales in New York. Coincidentally, the Curator of Ornithology at Roosevelt's old stomping ground, the American Museum of Natural History, was attempting to purchase Pelican Island as the millinery trade was buying nearby tracts of land that were breeding grounds for the birds whose feathers they coveted.

Making It Grow Minutes

Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Dixon Lanier Merritt, American humorist wrote: A funny old bird is a pelican. His beak can hold more than his belican. Food for a week He can hold in his beak, But I don't know the helican.

american food pelicans clemson extension making it grow
Making It Grow Minutes
Victorian Fashion Included Hummingbirds as Ornament

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. I wonder how many more hummingbird feeders we've added to our gardens since the pandemic started as birding resource sites report there's been a huge interest in ornithology recently. Sadly, there was an equal fascination with hummingbirds during the times when features and even entire birds were used as adornments in the world of fashion. There was a massive use of hummingbird bodies mounted on Victorian fans. Their beautiful heads were often fashioned into dangling earrings. In the tropics, hunters would hold poles covered with glue near flowers to capture the birds before killing and shipping them to market. Catalogue entries for only three feather sales in London in 1911 give the horrifying figure of forty-one thousand hummingbird skins offered for sale; the estimate is that 223,000 birds were killed just these three events.

Making It Grow Minutes
The Historic Toll of Fashion on Bird Populations

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. One early falsehood spread by manufacturers of hats adorned with feathers was that the feathers were gathered from the ground. But as whole birds or parts of birds began to adorn hats the specious nature of that story was revealed. The Empress of Germany Bird of Paradise measuring over two feet from beck to the end of its exquisite tail was hunted almost to extinction and entire stuffed birds were incorporated into hats. In the United States alone, almost 5 million birds a year were killed for the millinery industry. With feathers selling for as much as thirty-two dollars an ounce, and factory workers being paid a fairly good wage of two dollars and fifty cents a week, the plumage wars became an example of conservationist pitted against people trying to make a living, with poachers eventually shooting some game wardens.

Making It Grow Minutes
Cruel Fashion

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Woman were blamed for their heartlessness in wearing hats covered with the feathers and body parts of cruelly harvested wild birds. But with time, knowledge of the consequences of this practice prompted many socialites and educated women into campaigning against this practice. We spoke earlier of Boston socialite Harriet Hemenway who used invitation to tea parties to convince nine hundred equally influential woman to join her campaign against feathers in fashion. With the widespread authority that the Audubon society was receiving, women promoted Audubonnets – hats that were decorated with ribbons and lace. Florence Augusta Bailey promoted citizens to study birds through her writing, published in the book Birds Through an Opera Glass. And adored German opera singer Lilli Lehmann, with a commanding presence, would give autographs if fans agreed to stop using feather to an effort to be glamorous.

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Making It Grow Minutes
The History of Gourds as Containers

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Gourds were human's earliest containers. Their diversity in size and shape let early peoples select them for a variety of purposes. Some were cut in half and filled with food, hot rocks were added to cook those contents. Others with flat bottoms and long necks held and easily dispensed liquids. Early on they were decorated as we humans want to add beauty to our homes, be they caves, teepees, or fiber covered structures. In Kenya, where gourds were essential to life for ten thousand years, the proliferation of plastics led to a decline in their use. With the help of the International Plant Genetic Resources Institute, a museum there preserves the most diverse germ plasma for bottle gourds in the world and teaches woman decorating and marketing practices. I wonder if art galleries in the future display lovingly decorated Tupperware?

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Making It Grow Minutes
Ancient Bottle Gourd

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. As a non-traditional, i.e. older, student, I took one horticulture class with David Bradshaw and my life was changed for the better. Among his infectious passions is an interest in heirloom seeds and he helped establish an heirloom seed repository at Clemson. One website offers his purple martin bird house seeds, our topic of the week, the ancient bottle gourd, Lagenaria sicenaria. For over fifty years, he's been selecting seeds with the best characteristics for this purpose. Purple martins travel to South America in the winter and come back in spring to mate and raise their young. Natural nesting cavities are few and far between in our urbanized country; purple martin condominiums offer a safe place for these birds. Members of the swallow family, they'll delight you with their aerial acrobatics as they catch and eat insects on the wing.

Making It Grow Minutes
Bottle Gourds

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Bottle gourds have been used by ancient and modern peoples for over ten thousand years now. For religious rites, they've been crafted into masks, musical instruments, or sounding devices. From a utilitarian standpoint, bottle gourd uses are incredible diversity -- a container, a dipper, wheels, even flotation devices. When dried, they are especially light weight and have undeniably made contributions towards improvements in the lives of humans. The eventual shape can be manipulated when the fruits are young by tying vines or twine around them to achieve a certain shape, or hung for a straight neck, or sat straight up on its base for an upright vessel. In some Papua New Guinea cultures, they are used as unusual body protection devices, called kotekas, which we might consider primitive but are not so different from equipment worn by football players.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Instruments Made from Plants

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. . In many cities these evenings, people go outside at seven and make noises to communicate their appreciation for front line workers in the covid 19 pandemic. My daughter and her boyfriend in Los Angeles have been participating. Casey, a trained saxophone player, has alternated between blowing two flutes at one time (a common ancient practice) and a digeridoo. Eliza Frezil shakes a tambourine. All three instruments have ancient origins – the digeridoo most probably eucalyptus trunks hollowed out by termites. The flutes from plant stems and bamboo, and the tambourine originally a dried gourd whose seeds made the shaking sound. Gourds are the source of more nature-based musical or sound-making implements than any other natural object. Lagenaria sicenaria, the ancient bottle gourd, still grown today, probably originated in Africa but 10,000 years ago was already in the New World and Asia.

Making It Grow Minutes
During Pandemic Some Farm Produce Once Bound for High-End Restaurants Now Available for Home

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Many specialty good growers rely on high end restaurants to pay top dollar for their meticulously produced crops, often produced on a small acreage farm. With the ban on indoor dining, many restaurants have closed their doors as takeout orders don't fit with their fine-dining experience. Consequently, their suppliers are taking quite a hit. Some of them are now offering ways for us to enjoy their products and help keep the afloat. At the South Carolina Department of Agriculture home page, the first image is a field with the phrase COVID-19 (Coronavirus) Outbreak. Click there for a listing of topics. One is how to find local farm-fresh food, including farmers markets, individual growers, and you-pick operations. These outlets have rules to ensure food safety and correct physical distancing and some require orders made in advance.

Making It Grow Minutes
Clemson Extension Agents Still On the Job

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. The Clemson Extension Horticulture team interacts with professional fruit and vegetable growers as well as home-based clients. Although restricted by safety guidelines during these times, Extension office phones are working and hort agents are available to solve residential and commercial problems. Agents are also offering a variety of programs on line, from environmentally sustainable landscaping to step-by-step instructions on renovating your lawn, check out the Clemson Horticulture Facebook page. The Ag Service lab will accept soil samples in zip lock bags from residential customers and the Plant and Pest Diagnostic Clinic also is operating. Please call your local extension office for information on what is required to submit materials to those agencies by mail or private carrier. The Home and Garden Information Center agents are answering phones all day long advising clients on plant and food problems or questions.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Essential Activities of Agriculture Continue During COVID-19 Pandemic

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. During a recent interview, Commissioner of Agriculture Hugh Weathers detailed the breadth of agricultural activities considered essential during this time of national crisis, and that there is no evidence that food product can transmit the corona virus. His staff, most working remotely, is still performing all activities necessary to keep human and animal food and fiber production, inspection, and distribution safe and operating at levels that can supply demand. If you search South Carolina Department of Agriculture, the first image is a field with the phrase COVID-19/ (Coronavirus) Outbreak. Click there to get a listing of related topics ranging from loan programs for producers to listings of farms, retail markets and other outlets legally open to consumers wanting to purchase fresh, locally produced vegetables, fruits, dairy, meat and more, and rules for safely visiting those outlets.

Making It Grow Minutes
The Benefits of Owning Woodlands

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. There're many benefits to owning timberlands besides the income from harvesting your trees. Some families enjoy hunting or while others gain income by leasing hunting rights to others. Wildlife ecology goes along with hunting in some cases when owners plant food crops and conduct prescribed burns. For many it's the joy of hearing the wind as it sings in tall pines and the voices and glimpses of birds and wildlife; all reasons to enjoy and protect your family's woodlands which are enjoyed as much by women as by men. Traditionally men make more management decisions concerning these properties, and yet according to the Census Bureau, eighty percent of men die before their wives. We have a Making It Grow Extra podcast with Clemson's Janet Steele about a program, Women Owning Woodlands, to help females new to forest management gain knowledge.

Making It Grow Minutes
Women Owning Woodlands

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Janet Steele is a regional Clemson Extension forestry agent based in Orangeburg. She came to Sumter recently to tell us about new program she, Clemson Forester David Coyle and others are offering. In South Carolina eighty-five percent of woodlands are privately owned by companies or families. Eighty percent of married women outlive their husbands. So often while adjusting to the loss of a spouse, these persons also must learn how to manage their family's properties; a task which most often had been the purview of their husbands. Women Owning Woodlands began nationally to address these needs and issues and now is being presented in our state, where timber and associated businesses account for $21 billion in our state's economy. To find out about workshops being offered specifically for this target group, call Janet Steele at the Orangeburg Extension Office.

Making It Grow Minutes
Important Members of the Nightshade Family

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. The family, Solanaceae, has the common name of nightshade, which sounds like something to avoid like the plague, includes some of our favorite vegetables. Besides tomatoes, other members are peppers, eggplants, and potatoes, and still an important agricultural crop, tobacco. Flowers include Datura, brugmansia, petunias and nicotiana. One important gardening and farming practice is crop rotation. If you plant the same crop over and over again, diseases that favor that plant family will build up in the soil, you should wait at least a year before planting other members of that family in the same spot. Deadly nightshade is one plant you probably won't have on your list – it was the source of belladonna which women used to get those dilated pupils – or bedroom eyes. In Italian Belladonna means beautiful woman but too much of it can be deadly.

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Making It Grow Minutes
The Bumblebee is an Important Pollinator

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Mated female bumblebees overwinter in sheltered underground locations, emerging in early spring to find a nesting site, collect pollen to lay eggs. Newly hatched bees take over the pollen and nectar gathering and the hive increases. Although social insects, bumblebees are relatively docile and generally not a threat. They don't make much honey as the colony, which may reach several hundred individuals, dies when winter comes. Since bumblebees are large bodied, they can emerge and visit flowers when it is too cold for honeybees to be active and are important early pollinators. With habitat loss due to urbanization, these bees need our help. Leave some portions of your property unplanted so that bumble bees and other ground nesting bees can find places for their nesting sites. And plant redbuds – an early food source for the important blueberry bumblebees, too.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Pollinating Commercially Grown Tomatoes is a Challenge

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Field grown tomatoes can be effectively pollinated by wind but the addition of powerful buzz-pollinating insects, bumble bees and the much-maligned carpenter bees, improves the outcome. When growing tomatoes in greenhouses, the producers can either use mechanical pollination or maintain colonies of bumblebees. Effective mechanical pollination requires workers to vibrate each fruiting cluster with devices, sometimes battery-powered toothbrushes. A University of Pennsylvania study concluded that it took 15 hours of manual labor per day to perform this task. Compare that with the perfect combination of bumblebees and tomatoes. A hive of these strong-chested buzz pollinators not only eliminated the toothbrush approach, but the plants produced more tomatoes, up to a 25% increase. Sounds like a no brainer. The caveat is that growers must practice skillful and careful integrated pest management to avoid harming those confined and hard-working insects.

Making It Grow Minutes
Tomato Plant Pollination

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Tomatoes need movement for pollination. Their pollen containing anthers have slits or pores in them which release ripe pollen when stimulated by wind or vibrations. As wind moves the flowers pollen is released and falls on the female stigma. The best insect pollinators are not honey bees but bumble bees and carpenter bees. These insects which have super strong chest muscles frequently visit flowers in the nightshade family, which includes tomatoes. Using a technique called buzz pollination, they hold onto the flower with their jaws and with their wings in a resting position powerfully vibrate their flight muscles, up to one hundred ninety times a second. The pollen rains down on the stigma and the bees. The female flowers get pollinated the bees take collected pollen back to their colony for food, and we get big juicy tomatoes.

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Making It Grow Minutes
The Challenges of Growing Tomatoes

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Growing the delicious garden tomato becomes more and more elusive for me and others as well. Back in the day, my parents would put a few tomato plants in amongst the foundation plantings and we'd have plenty of those summer treats. Now with increased disease and insect pressure, I‘ve become an aficionado of cherry tomatoes which seem easier to grow; although you need a really sharp knife if you are going to slice them for BLT's. There're also tasty greenhouse grown tomatoes, with brown skins and lots of flavor available all year. Growers of hot house tomatoes often use colonies of bumble bees for pollination as there isn't enough air movement inside those structures to be effective. Bumble bee hives are short lived, sometimes only a few months, so growers protect them using integrated pest management to limite pesticides applications.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Ogeechee Lime

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Although the AC Moore Herbarium list of South Carolina's plant distribution shows Ogeechee lime, Nyssa ogeche, as documented in only Jasper and Beaufort counties, there is a specimen growing at Moore Farms Botanical Garden in Lake City. It's obviously a female tree, which has mostly female flowers but also some perfect ones, as it produces fruits. Stan McKenzie, aka the Citrus Man, who lives in nearby Olanta, has gone over and collected the juicy fruits this tree produces (they're used as a substitute for limes due to their bitterness). They germinate readily when planted right away and Stan has a nice collection of them in his nursery. I'm planning to ride over one day soon to get some and plant them in my yard – it doesn't matter if they're male or female both are magnets for pollinators.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Honeydew Honey

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. If you like the pine resin flavored Greek wine retsina, I have a honey suggestion for you. At Honey Travelers Single Flower honey page, they talk about forest or honeydew honey. Honeydew is the substance that aphids excrete – it is the bane of many gardeners as it coats the surface of lower leaves this sweet substance upon which sooty mold grows. But in the fir and spruce forests of Europe, certain aphids feed mainly on these conifer needles and their exudate, is not only filled with sugars but also resinous substances produced by the trees. Aphids are vegetarians so the excess fluid they excrete is practically nothing but sugar-filled sap. The bees collect the excreted substances instead of nectar, taking it back to their hives were it is transformed into honey. This dark complex honey is apparently an acquired taste.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Honey Varietals

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. I'm not very picky about honey although Maynard Door near Sumter gave me some special honey he didn't mix in with others as its flavor was so delightfully floral. Lots of people are honey aficionados and have their favorites for different purposes. There are even listings for honey varietals, just like wine! For example, the website Honey Travelers has information on a honey competition in the Mediterranean region. The top winner, and this is a weird one, was the Strawberry Tree Honey from Sardinia. It's described as being relatively dark with a grey-green overtones, a strong odor – not fragrance, and bitter! How different from the Ogeechee honey described as lightly floral and pairing well with strong blue cheeses. And I thought I was putting on the dog when I sweetened a dipping sauce for fried brussels sprouts with honey from the pantry.

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Making It Grow Minutes
Ogeechee Honey

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2020 1:00


Hello Gardeners, I'm Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. If you look at the USC Herbarium's plant distribution list, you'll see that only in Jasper and Beaufort Counties has Ogeechee lime, Nyssa ogeche, been documented. It's greatest distribution is in a swath of Georgia and the upper panhandle of Florida. Bee keepers take hives into these sites, sometimes floating them on platforms, to produce this very valuable white ogeechee honey. It's high fructose to sucrose content helps prevent crystallization. It's considered a single flower or monofloral honey, and boy, oh, boy, the bee keepers really have to work to produce it. Other plants including other species of nyssa bloom earlier, bees are allowed to collect from those plants but then new combs must be inserted when the later blooming Ogeechee species come into flower. The honey is actually analyzed by pollen to insure its truly from just those trees.

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