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June 2002, Vol 1 Issue 4
 Purdue Extension
GardenTIPS
 ENewsletter


Welcome to the Garden TIPS E-Newsletter.
Listed below are tips and links to articles, or follow the headers to the main
GardenTIPS Web site for more information and links at: http://www.extension.purdue.edu/gardentips/



Harvest Gardening Ideas at Purdue Garden Day

Purdue Horticulture Gardens
Photo by Rosie Lerner
Gardeners, mark Saturday, July 13, on your calendar for Purdue University Garden Day! This annual open-house event will be held from 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. at the Purdue University Horticulture Building and Gardens on the West Lafayette Campus.

The festivities include guided tours of the ornamental gardens, a gardening information booth, and gardening lectures, presented by Purdue staff, Master Gardener volunteers and local experts. Morning tours of the Horticulture Greenhouses will also be available.

This year's ornamental garden features a "stars and stripes" theme with contrasting rows of multi-colored bedding flowers arranged in a symbolic pattern. In addition, many different perennials, including over forty cultivars of choice hosta and daylilies will be in their prime.

The gardening lectures, held in air-conditioned comfort, will cover orchids, garden diseases, and children's gardening.

Full Story, http://www.extension.purdue.edu/gardentips/


Tomato Packs More Cancer-Fighting Punch

Photo by Peggy Greb
USDA Agricultural Research
Service
Forget the attack of the killer tomato, this is the attack of the healthy tomato: A team of scientists has developed a tomato that contains as much as 3.5 times more of the cancer-fighting antioxidant lycopene.

It turns out that the antioxidant-rich tomato was a happy accident.

Scientists at Purdue University and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service were working to develop tomatoes for food processing that were of higher quality and would ripen later.

They accomplished that, but in the process they discovered that the new tomatoes also had significantly more of the antioxidant than conventional tomatoes.

"We were quite pleasantly surprised to find the increase in lycopene," says Avtar Handa (pronounced "Honda"), professor of horticulture at Purdue.

Full Story, http://www.extension.purdue.edu/gardentips/


Physiological Leaf Spot of Tuliptree
Hot weather of summer brings with it yellowing and premature drop of tuliptree leaves. This unexplained disorder, apparently caused by environmental stress, commonly develops in tuliptrees during hot, dry weather. An additional symptom that frequently accompanies the leaf yellowing is the appearance of circular, black spots between the veins of the yellowing leaves.
http://www.ppdl.purdue.edu/ppdl/update/02/Update06-17.html#diary

Give Asparagus and Rhubarb a Break
Asparagus and rhubarb may be the earliest garden crops to be harvested, but they may also be the first crops you stop harvesting as well. Because of their perennial nature, asparagus and rhubarb must be given a chance to rebuild food reserves so that a bumper crop can be produced again next year.
http://www.agcom.purdue.edu/AgCom/news/archives/2002/Jun/020620YG.html

Japanese Beetles Emerging in the Rain!
How will the rain affect the white grub populations this year? Wet weather this spring will have little effect on grub populations. Japanese beetle adults are just starting to emerge in southern Indiana and will emerge in full force throughout the state within the next few weeks.

http://www.ppdl.purdue.edu/ppdl/hot02/Whats_Hot6-14-02.html

Southern Blight of Hosta
The destructive fungal disease known as Southern Blight is an aggressive stem-rotter of a wide range of species, including not only flowers and vegetables, but also some field crops and fruit trees. This soil-borne fungal pathogen is favored by high temperatures and high humidity. Controlling Southern Blight is difficult because the pathogen has a wide host range, and because the sclerotia persist in the soil.

http://www.ppdl.purdue.edu/ppdl/weeklypics/Weekly_Picture6-17-02-1.html


GardenTIPS is a Purdue University Extension gardening Web site. This E-Newsletter is sent out twice a month. Browse our garden tips, information, and links at: http://www.extension.purdue.edu/gardentips/.

If you are having trouble receiving this E-Newsletter, please contact the list owner at: extension@purdue.edu

If you wish to unsubscribe or switch to the Text only version, go to the Garden TIPS Subscription page at: http://www.extension.purdue.edu/gardentips/subscribe.html.

 

 For more information:

http://www.hort.purdue.edu/ext/vegecd.html
Beginner's Guide to Vegetable Gardening CD


http://www.ppdl.purdue.edu/ppdl/weeklypics/Weekly_Picture6-10-02-2.html
Tuliptree Flower


http://www.agcom.purdue.edu/AgCom/news/archives/2002/Jun/020620cal.html
July Garden Calendar



http://www.extension.purdue.edu/gardentips/insects/mosquitoes.htm
It's Still A Hot Topic...Mosquitoes



http://www.extension.purdue.edu/gardentips/
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