0:00 Welcome to Oklahoma Gardening #5038!
1:39 Redbuds
Host, Casey Hentges, shows us redbuds aren’t just beautiful when they bloom as we take a look at their colorful foliage.
6:30 Precision Seeder
The Botanic Garden Manager, Connor Schmitz, demonstrates how to use a handy tool that has helped him this spring.
8:23 Low Tunnels for Cool Season Protection
We visit OSU Student Farm Manager, Lynda Carrier, to see how they are protecting their crop as we transition out of winter.
13:34 Ladybug Larvae
Casey spots a friend in the garden.
14:49 Multi-colored Plasticulture
We visit Langston University Horticulture Extension Educator, Micah Anderson, to learn about plasticulture with a new look.
19:41 Sweet Potato Slip Production
Langston University Horticulture Extension Educator, Micah Anderson demonstrates how he grows sweet potato slips.
Airdate (03/16/2024)
Questions?
To find out more information about show topics as well as recipes, articles, videos, fact sheets, and other resources, including the directory of local Extension offices, be sure to visit our website. http://oklahomagardening.okstate.edu/
You can also find us on:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oklahomagardening/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/oklahomagardening/
Oklahoma Gardening is a production of the Division of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources at Oklahoma State University and is produced by the Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture and Agricultural Communications Services.
All products featured on this program are for demonstration purposes only.
No commercial endorsement is intended.
– Welcome to a brand new episode of Oklahoma Gardening. It’s spring and the red buds are popping with color. The Botanic Garden Manager shares with us a little tool that has helped him this spring. We visit the OSU Student Farm to see how they are protecting their crop.
As we transition out of winter, I found something in the garden that I wanted to share with you, and then we head down to visit Mike Anderson to learn about plastic culture with a new look and growing sweet potato slips. Underwriting assistance for our program is
Provided by the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, food and Forestry, helping to keep Oklahoma Green and growing Oklahoma Gardening is also a proud partner with Shape Your Future, a program of the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust shape your future provides resources for Oklahomans to make the healthy choice the easy choice.
I love sharing with you guys the cool things that plants can do. We’re back here at the Student Farm. I wanna share with you a tropical plant that you might find in some Oklahoma landscapes. It’s important to know which plants we are dealing with so
That we can continue to maintain them successfully for years to come Here in Oklahoma, we’ve always had a fond appreciation for our red buds, but the horticulture industry over the last couple of decades has definitely recognized red buds as well. And in fact, they’ve released several new cult of ours.
Behind me here is one of those known as the Rising Sun. And this was actually selected from some collected seeds that were planted in 2004. So the parentage is a little unknown on this, but it was identified by Cindy and Ray Jackson of Jackson Nursery in Tennessee.
And the reason why they selected this particular seedling that they were growing was because of this new growth that comes out with this, this beautiful apricot foliage. You can see as that new foliage begins to develop and mature, it turns to more of a bronze color than a chart color.
And eventually those leaves mature to their traditional green color. So in addition to those pink spring flowers that you get, you also get this nice foliage throughout the season. And in fact, because it will continue to put on new leaves, you have that kind of ombre effect or that transition of all
Of those colors being on this plant at the same time. Now it’s known also because it’s very drought and heat resistant. You can see we have it here in full sun, and it’s doing quite well. It’s been growing here for several years because sometimes they can be more of an understory
Or part shade tree. But this one is done just fine here for us in full sun. The nice thing about this is it’s gonna cap out about eight to 12 feet tall. And so it’s a good small tree for most landscapes. So if you’re looking to add a little bit of foliage color
As well as those spring blossoms, you might consider the rising sun cultivar. Now, while the rising sun red bud is hardy from zones four to eight, here we have one that’s called or known as flamethrower. And this particular one is Hardy from zones five to nine.
So it’s still well within our Oklahoma hardiness zone. And you can see this too, offers quite a unique rainbow effect on the foliage as well. In fact, flamethrower is a hybrid between the one that we just saw, the rising sun, and one known as Ruby Falls, which is a burgundy kind
Of weeping of red bud. And so you can see because of that cross, we’ve got a much more intense burgundy new growth that then kind of fades into more of a chartreuse lime color behind it. Again, setting off quite a unique contribution as far
As the foliage color that we get throughout the season. And again, you’re gonna also see that you have these red petals that are a nice accent against those chartreuse colors as well. You’ll still get those rosy pink flowers in the spring. The other thing to keep in mind about both
Of these hybrids is that they are still our native genina species seas cansus. So like our native red buds that we find often growing around the kind of understory or the edge of the forest, they can appreciate that partial shade, especially in the hotter climates.
However, they do like to have some sun exposure. We have it planted on the west side of some pine trees, and this particular one’s gonna get bigger than the rising sun. So actually it’ll get to be about 15 to 20 feet tall with about a 10 to 15 foot spread,
Which you might be thinking, well, this is kind of a small area that we’ve planted it in amongst these pine trees here. However, I will say that we’re sort of succession planting. We’re planning for the future because these pine trees are quite old. And we have seen some decay.
In fact, we lost one last year, and we’ve got some others that we’re keeping an eye on. And so it’s gonna take some time before this one actually gets to that mature height. So we’re going ahead and planting it, getting it established, while it still has that kind of protected environment.
But eventually, knowing that these red buds might, or excuse me, these pine trees might come down and it’ll allow for this red bud to have more room to grow. But both of ’em are moderate sized trees. And a great addition to your Oklahoma. – I’ve got a new seed starting tool today
That we have started using at the Botanic Garden quite regularly. So it is a handheld precision cedar. Sometimes you have seed that’s really, really small or seed that’s really expensive, or maybe you only have 10 very rare seeds and you wanna make sure that every single seed makes it
Where it’s supposed to go. So I use this precision cedar for those kind of instances. So what you do is that it has several needle nose tips on it, and you select the appropriate size tip for your seed, place it on, let all of the air out by squeezing, place it
So that you can pick up your seed and gently start letting that air suck in. It’ll suck the seed up onto the needle nose, and you’ll be able to place it exactly where you want it to. And then with just a little bit of a squeeze, it’ll let go
Of that pressure and place the seed precisely in the hole. So if you are looking for a tool to help with seeding, if you’re seeding precision, if you have expensive seed, or maybe even if you have a little bit of dexterity issues and you need help picking up the seed, something like
Mini handheld precision cedar would be perfect for you. – It is late winter early spring, and we are back here at the student farm at OSU. And joining me is the manager, Linda Carrier. And Linda, as we know yesterday it was 85. Today we’re experiencing a little bit cooler temperatures today.
Definitely. So you guys have some cool season crops, so let’s talk a little bit about what you’ve got going and how you’re protecting and mitigating those temperature swings. Okay. – Yeah, because we do have the Oklahoma weather where it’s 81 day and 20 the next we’d
To have them covered just in case it gets really cold. These are cool season crops, so they can handle some cold. Last week we were supposed to have a LOA of about 28, and I think it got down to 22. So it did bite some of these pretty good.
But they will come back. Okay. The, the new growth on ’em is good and it looks good, – So, so as long as you’re just seeing a little burn on the leaves. Right, you’re okay. Yeah. But as far as the crown, it’s still green and good. Yeah. So, okay,
– So, so in case that should happen again where we get a really cold snap and – Likely will. – Yeah, we likely will. And last year, you know, we thought well, we’ll be okay. And the kids all left for spring break and we had a really cold snap come in and Matt
And I were out here and we covered eight rows pretty much by ourselves. We had a little help from the tan garden students, but, and shoveling this, was HR not – An easy task, is – It? No, I was a little sore. – So let’s talk about, you know,
The materials you’re using here for these low tunnels is what they’re called? Yeah. Low tunnels or row covers. Yeah. Either – Row covers low tunnels. Yeah. Okay. – So what are we using here? Is that thin plastic? – Yeah, it’s got, it’s perforated. It has holes in it.
And that’s good for the ventilation because when you do have the hot days, you need that to vent out so you don’t cook ’em under there. Right. And then it still provides enough protection on the cold days that it keeps it warm enough. Okay. So it has a dual purpose there. So if
– Anybody’s using just solid plastic or something like that, you know, I mean, it could be just 60 degrees and it could get really hot inside of there. Yeah. So you wanna make sure to open ’em up. Definitely. But with these holes, it allows that. – Okay. Yeah. Yeah, definitely. So,
– So let’s talk, you’ve got the sides buried. Is that to help seal in that temperature? Yes. Or what is the purpose for – That too? The purpose of that is to keep the plastic from blowing away. Okay. Because, and that’s, I’ve told when we cover these back up,
You’ve gotta make sure you cover every inch of that that’s on the sides. ’cause any little opening that gets wind under it, that hole, it’ll rip it off. You get a, you know, 40 mile an hour wind like we do in Oklahoma and it’ll just, it’ll tear all this off
And it’ll be you Nice down the street. – Cut. Yeah. Yeah. So you’ve kind of changed your method from last year, you and Matt doing it solo for the most part. Yeah. Learned a few lessons, right? We – Did, one thing we found out is when we,
We make our raised beds, we, you know, it pulls all that dirt up and then the tire tracks kind of leave it compacted on the sides, and then we go back over those sides again with a tractor to when we’re transplanting. So your sides of the beds get really hard and firm.
And last year Matt and I shoveled and shoveled and it’s so hard that it was very difficult to do. So we decided this year we’re gonna come up with a way to loosen the sides. So we took an old cultivator and kind of revamped it where we,
It was a little five row cultivator and we took the three middle rows out and left the two on the outside and actually made ’em the right distance to where we could go down the sides of the bed and easily loosen that soil up.
Oh. And that has made a world of difference as far as being able to cover the sides. – Okay. So it sort of pre dug it for you a little bit. Yeah. And then you still have to go with the shovel and then put it over the – Plastic.
You do, yeah. But now you’ve got loose soil and clumps the soil that are so much easier to get over the – Plastic. Right, right. Okay. So we’ve just got some metal thin metal rods, wire hoops, wire hoops under here. And every five, six feet basically to – Support this we’re, yep.
Exactly. Yeah. Okay. So, and they’re, they come in pieces that are probably, I think they’re about five or six feet long. And then we just stab ’em on one side and then go over to the other side and make our little hoop around them. And so
– How long will you likely be leaving this out here Till April 15th, or probably beyond then? – Probably, yeah, I would say close to April 15th, just depending on the weather. If the forecast looks like it’s gonna be real warm, we might remove them a little sooner, but,
But yeah, we’ll probably leave them on as long as we can. All right. – Well, it looks like the plants are happy under there, and I know we need some more protection ourselves out here today. Yes, – Definitely. It’s cold out today. – Thank you so much, Linda, for sharing this with us.
– Sure thing. You’re welcome. – You guys, I just wanted to tell you about this little guy that I just found in the garden. And it looks like a little alligator I always think, but this is actually a ladybug larvae. They don’t look anything really like a ladybug.
They are black and they sort of have some orange spots on the side of ’em. But this is the good guy right here. So if you see this and you’re not familiar with the ladybug larvae and it kind of freaks you out a little bit, please don’t let them be,
We’re gonna put this guy back out in the garden, because these are the ones that are really eating all the aphids that you might find in your garden. So that’s really what they’re doing. In fact, the, it’s this juvenile state that eats more aphids than the actual adult lady beetles do themselves.
So this is a good guy, and we’ll put him back in the garden today. We’re back with a familiar friend, Micah Anderson, who is an extension horticulture educator at Langston University. But we’re actually in Micah’s personal yard today. Micah, thank you for having us here. I always love learning from you.
– Well, thanks for coming. Yeah, we, this is my garden here. The, the soil is a little heavy, but we’re gonna keep working on it and try to keep making it better. So – We’re just north of Piedmont, so people kind of have an understanding of where we’re at
And what kind of soil and and environment we’re working with. But one of the things that you are sort of experimenting with this year, you’ve always done plastic culture. We’ve done several segments with you about plastic culture, but the colors look a little Christmasy this year.
Tell us why you’re experiment with these colors. – Okay. So in plastic culture, you can get a lot of different, you can get different colors. We have some red over here, which is supposed to be good for strawberries and tomatoes, and that the strawberries could be somewhat sweeter and higher production.
And also on tomatoes to get a higher production. And we did do some, some stuff on red back when I was at the palm of Ag. And it seemed like we did get higher production on tomatoes, but I never did it with strawberries.
– Okay. And I’ve heard of that using different red color underneath tomatoes before. So there, there is a little more research with that. Is the red plastic very similar to the black plastic? Or has there been any issues with that? Yeah, – Yeah. Well, it’s, it is a little different.
It it, if you hold it up to the sun, you can see through it. And what we found out when we done it with the tomatoes before, we got a lot of grass going under. So what I I, what I’m doing now when I do red or green,
And both of ’em is the same issue as I’m putting black underneath it. Okay. And so these have black underneath there, so I won’t get any vegetation growing underneath that. – Okay. So it’s a two layer of plastic that way. Yeah. All right. And so what is the green about? What’s,
– So the green, I, what I red was that it, it’s, it could be good for cucurbits, canales get higher production, even maybe watermelons and cucumbers. So after, right now I’ve got cold crops planted here from cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower. And when that comes out, I’m going to put the,
The cantaloupe and the cucumbers in there. – Okay. So there’s not any necessarily effect on the cool season crops. You just are Yeah. Utilizing it while you have it here, – Right. Yeah. And I, yeah, there’s nothing that I read on that I know of on the cool crop.
But what we did do is we put cabbage, sheer cabbage there, broccoli, we put some on both just to see if there’s any difference. Okay. – All right. And of course you got, it looks like a, a frost blanket on ’cause we’re in that time of year when you never
Know what’s gonna happen. Right? – Yeah. ’cause we, we planted these plants, it was got to 25 degrees in 40 mile an hour wind that night. So we covered them up. Okay. And then it blew off of some of it back here and, and we totally lost them.
But the ones that didn’t cover that could say covered seems like they may make it. – Okay. Now, and there’s different types. This is one that’s a little bit more of a, the, the woven type, not perforated, but it is woven kind of a spun material. – So, and it, there’s different sicknesses.
This one here is a very light one. Okay. It only gives you about three degrees, three to four degrees. There’s heavier ones that gives you five or six degrees. Okay. Of, of protection. – So this, do you have to take this off pretty regularly or can you leave this on?
Will it actually hold too much heat in there? – I just left it on, we, we usually leave it on and, but now that since this is a cold crop, once I take it off, I’m gonna leave it off. Okay. Okay. But the main reason I had it on there
Because it hadn’t got rooted. Okay. And 25 degrees is pretty cold. – Alright. Well Micah, thank you so much for sharing this with us and we look forward to hearing more about the plastic culture. – Yeah, we, well I will definitely let you know how it goes.
– So Micah, looks like you got some sweet potatoes laid out here. It’s a little early in the season to be planting them. Right. But what, we’ve got another project, tell me a little bit about it. – So this is a set up to bed sweet potatoes
To grow sweet potato slips to replant in your, my garden later or the cell slips. Okay. So we, we laid out four different varieties here. So – Let’s talk a little bit about the varieties. This one looks like a white one, obviously that you have here. Yeah.
– This one is called Bonita. Okay. It’s a white sweet potato in it. Let’s see. See, very white, – Got a white flesh – That to it. They, they’re very good. It’s very sweet. – Now at this point, these sweet potatoes, they are last year’s crop.
Is that correct? So they’re a little wilted down, kind of dried out looking, and you’re really growing these just for the vegetative slips that are gonna be produced off of this. – Right, right. Okay. Yeah, these are sweet potatoes that I harvested in this garden, in this,
In this area right here last year. And we, we ate off of ’em through winter and we stored ’em in the, in the garage. And we actually actually cooked some last week, so, – Okay. Yeah. So they’re still edible. But at this point, you’ve got your kind of stock here.
Tell me a little bit about what the process of growing sweet potato slips is. Really – What you usually want to do is you wanna put, make a bed and you want to put compost some good composted material in there. We put some rabbit litter in here.
We put some really good soil that the fox farm soil, we mix that in there. And so that is gonna, ’cause they’re gonna put roots down and that gives ’em energy to keep producing more slips as they, as the season goes on.
– Okay. And, and a slip is a, basically a vegetative growth that comes off of these and you just pull those off. And then sometimes they’ll have roots attached, sometimes they won’t. But then that’s what you plant, right? Yeah. Or your actual sweet potato production for next season.
– Right, exactly. Okay. Okay. Yeah. So yeah, we, we’ll pull these slips off of these and then, we’ll, we, we’ll plant ’em or we’ll put ’em in a sand dune or something until we get ready to plant ’em. And they’ll just keep putting more slips on.
Usually in a week’s time when you pull the slips by another week, they’ll have more slips. Okay. And so you can plant slip, you can plant sweet potatoes from May all the way to probably July through the end of July. And you, you know, if just,
Unless there’s some varieties that are a hundred days, but most of these are like 70, 80 days. And so you do need to kind of know that. Okay. – But that would be too late to start your slip. So that’s why February march is really when you wanna start this process.
So we’ve got a couple more. These look, look a little more of a red type. Is that? – Yeah, these is the Becca purple. Okay. Which is, which you have in your hand – A nice purple one. And you’ve actually got some of these, oh yeah. It’s a beautiful color there.
You’ve actually got some of the slips already starting, just that little bit of vegetation growing there. So how long do you wait for those to come up? How long will those get before you actually go through and pull those? – They’ll, we, we want ’em to grow about eight inches or so.
Okay. To, you know, tall. And then you’ll pull ’em off and then let ’em grow some more. – Okay. All right. So what are these last two varieties that we – Have here? This one here is a called a Masaki, and it’s another white sweet potato.
– Oh, okay. But there, it’s got a red skin to it – Though. Yeah. It’s very red on the outside. Okay. And it’s almost as red as the back of purple, but it’s white inside. – Okay. And then your last one looks, looks orange
– One here, the, it’s just a orange sweet potato that most people are pretty familiar with. It’s called Covington. – Yeah. That’s the little more traditional look that we’re often traditional – Sweet potato. – So when you’re growing slips like this, they’re planted pretty close together. There’s not as much concern about spacing
Obviously, or anything like that. ’cause you’re just wanting that vegetation. Right, – Right. Exactly. And you, yeah, you don’t want ’em to run too much. ’cause then they’ll, I don’t want ’em to run into the other ones ’cause they don’t know which ones are which.
Okay. But, so I separated them a little bit so I could tell the which ones I’m getting the – Varieties. Okay. So now what’s the, the process, are we gonna bury these and then Yeah, these are a tropical plant too. Yeah. And it’s, it’s march,
– So, so what we are gonna do is we’re gonna put some good soil on top of them. Okay. And then we’ll run the drip tape down through here and then we will build a little mini hoop house over top of them. So when the sun hits that hoop house,
It warms it up even more. Okay. And it’ll cause them to grow the slips. – So how long do you think it will be before you get some slips that you can harvest from? – I think that since we’re planting our 1st of March here, we’re probably gonna have slips probably,
Probably at least by the middle of April. Okay. May before. – Okay. So you’ll be almost garden ready to then just go ahead and put them straight into the garden at that point, your slips. Okay. All right. Yeah. Well Micah, thank you for showing this
And I guess we’ll finish this project up, huh? Okay. – Alright. – There are a lot of great horticulture activities this time of year. Be sure and consider some of these events in the weeks ahead. Next week on Oklahoma Gardening, I’ll share with you five ways to have a successful garden this season.
We wanna congratulate former Oklahoma Gardening host Steve Dobbs on his recent retirement from OSU as the Director of Landscape Services. Thank you Steve for all that you’ve done for OSU. To find out more information about show topics as well as recipes, videos, articles, fact sheets, and other resources, including a directory
Of local extension offices, be sure to visit our website at Oklahoma gardening dot OK state.edu. Join in on Facebook and Instagram. You can find this entire show and other recent shows as well as individual on our Oklahoma Gardening YouTube channel. Tune into our okay Gardening classics YouTube channel
To watch segments from previous hosts. Oklahoma Gardening is produced by the Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service as part of the Division of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources at Oklahoma State University. The Botanic Garden at OS U is home to our studio gardens and we encourage you to come visit this beautiful Stillwater Gem.
We would like to thank our generous underwriters, the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, food and Forestry, and Shape Your Future, a program of the Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust. Additional support is also provided by Greenleaf Nursery and the Garden Debut Plants, the Oklahoma Horticulture Society, the Tulsa Garden Club, and the Tulsa Garden Center.
3 Comments
No longer watching now that this entity is taking stolen money provided by TSET.
I've turned into a Cercis Nut. lol I've got 12 different cultivars plus our native beauty on the northeast corner of Cleveland Co. Oh my thanks for info on the seed tool! You guys rock!
@AcreHomestead Have you seen the precision seeder? It's at the 6:30 mark in this video. Very cool!