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Angela Lassam's Clematis

It’s Still Just Dirt – June 2023 – Angela Lassam

Climbers for every garden

In every garden you will find climbers and vines, both annual and perennial. Climbers are commonly used to cover a fence or to transform a structure in the garden. Vines can be used in the same way but can be a ground cover although not thought of in that way by most of us. Climbers add a vertical dimension to any garden as a tower or a fence/wall of color and texture with its foliage.


It is said that climbers and vines are the same but there is a difference. Climbers are plants that have a strong root and need support and tying as they grow. Although they grow slowly, over the years they will produce a full cover of blooms throughout the season. The only care they need is to prune out the dead wood in the Spring and remove any suckers growing at soil level. Many climbers are perennial. Vines are more often annual. Vines are different in that they grow quickly and the stems are generally
very thin.


When considering a new plant, a climber will need a large space over time. Allow for its growth and the other plants around it. Climbing roses will grow up to 10 feet tall and at least 3 ft wide. Prune in Spring to allow air flow and prevent mildew. Clematis can be seen in most gardens. There have been many cultivars over the years. They can be
purple, lilac, pink and even white with single or double flowers. One is an evergreen. To grow them successfully it is said ‘heads in the sun’ and ‘feet in the shade’, It likes its roots covered in mulch or surrounded by a ground cover to keep them cool.


Wisteria will cover an arch and keep trailing everywhere without strict control and regular pruning. It is slow to flower, taking up to 5 years to become established. Then it will flower profusely when heavily pruned annually.


Virginia Creeper (Trumpet Vine) is a haven for hummingbirds with its open bright red trumpet flowers. It will become invasive over time even to the point of sending roots underground in grass.


Boston ivy if grown against a brick wall will send roots into any crevice and loosen the wall over time.


All of these are perennial so beware of their traits.


Annual climbers are most often called vines as the roots are shorter and they grow rapidly with fine thin stems. They still need a structure to grow on so that the tendrils can twine around for support. Flowers are varied, plentiful and bright. They will drop many seeds at the end of the year and often it may appear they are perennial. If you do not plan to grow the same seeds next year pick them up in the Fall. Morning glory is a common one and prolific, but the seeds are quite large and easy to pick up. Maybe
share next year with a friend. Another vine called Mexican flag has dark green heart shaped leaves and pendular flowers that start as yellow and progress to red. It creates a striking accent to a wall or fence. Sweet pea is also a vine but a short one with many delicate flowers with a strong fragrance, a nice addition to a deck fence.

Some vegetables are considered vines and can be grown for color, try scarlet runner bean. Cucumbers grown up a wire panel have large yellow flowers followed by the cucumber which can show the progress of the season to children. Make sure they have strong support. A teepee of canes is another way for support.


Do you have climbers and vines in your garden? They add another dimension to the landscape and always give a wonderful show of color all Summer. Climbers are a great way to show future young gardeners how to grow plants vertically and for gardeners to enjoy their own garden space, large or small. Happy Summer!!!!


The Tillsonburg Horticultural Society has a special event on June 24 th A Tour of Gardens – Garden Artistry 2023 with gardens each with a local artist. A bonus is a ballot for Peoples Choice on a quilted flag found at each garden. Tickets are $15 which can be purchased at Tillsonburg Garden Gate, Station Arts Centre and Annandale NHS.


Monthly meetings will resume on Tuesday September 5 th @ 7.30pm in the Senior Centre Tillsonburg Community Centre. Ken Brown, horticultural consultant and judge with tips and advice on gardening.


Everyone welcome, visit as a guest$4 or become a member for $20 annually, come join us. Check out www.tillsonburghorticultural.ca and Facebook-tillsonburghorticultural.

🌷THS May General Meeting ~ All Welcome

When: Tuesday May 6, 2025 

Time: 7:30pm 

Where: Senior Centre ~ Tillsonburg Community Centre (Entrance with green awning) 

🙌 Guests are welcome (non-members) to attend for $5. 

The 2025 annual membership of $20 will be available for purchase at the meeting by cash, cheque, debit or credit card.  

🌷 Sign up and payment before the meeting for the Spring Buying & Garden Tours to Wyoming & Sarnia Region. Members $100 and Non Members $120. Cash, cheque, debit or credit. 

 📅 The 17th Garden Annual Garden Auction and Plant Sale – May 20th. Lots of information to share at the meeting! 

🌺Guest Speaker: David Hobson, Writer

Topic: Behind the scene guided tour of the Chelsea Garden Show

David is a well-known writer, with 22 books under his belt and writes a gardening column for the Waterloo Record. David will be taking us on a behind the scene guided tour of the Chelsea Garden Show in London England. This garden show is a must see if you love gardens.

☕️ “Lug A Mug” ~ The THS is encouraging members to bring their own mug for a hot or cold beverage and dessert following the meeting.

🗓️Next General Meeting  June 3, 2025 

OHA District 10 AGM – Stratford

Thank you to the Stratford and District Horticultural Society for hosting the District 10 Annual General Meeting. The day offered District 10 business information, 2 great guest speakers, a lovely lunch and a flower show. 

Seven THS directors attended the event on April 26 in Stratford. THS members entered flowers and photos in various categories in the flower show. Congratulations ladies – 

Sue’s orchid came in 2nd place in the Houseplant Grown for Flowers Class. Her begonia came in 1st place in the Houseplant Grown for Foliage Class. 

Christine’s Cherry Blossom branch came in 2nd place in the Flowering Branch Class.

Cathy’s daffodils came in 3rd place in the 3 stems large-cupped narcissus/daffodil Class 3a. Cathy’s Split Corona yellow daffodils came in 2nd place in the 3 stems split corona narcissus/daffodil Class 3B.

Mary’s cream and peach daffodils came in 2nd place in the 3 stems small-cupped narcissus/daffodil Class 3C.

Sherry and Kathy’s tulip, came in 2nd place in the One stem of any other Flowering Bulb Class 4

Cathy’s photo of the Aurora Borealis came in 1st place in the Photography Section, Colours of the Aurora Borealis Class 15.

📷 Cathy and Barb 

🌧️THS Spring Workshop🌷

A great morning had by all at Ramblin Road Brewery for the THS Spring Workshop! Thank you to Patty P for hosting, instructing and co organizing with Barb Q. Awesome work ladies👏

Twenty THS members arrived with hammers and a couple nail guns to construct garden fan trellis and a star trellis. We all had fun and worked together on the garden projects. 

📷 Pat 

🪴THS April General Meeting

~ All Welcome

When: Tuesday April 1, 2025
Time: 7:30pm
Where: Senior Centre ~ Tillsonburg Community Centre (Entrance with green awning)

🙌 Guests are welcome (non-members) to attend for $5.
The 2025 annual membership of $20 will be available for purchase at the meeting by cash, cheque, debit or credit card.

🧑‍🌾 Guest Speakers: “The Fancy Farmerettes” – Irene Kicak and Veronica Tunzi.

The Fancy Farmerettes, will enlighten us on “Hemp for the Homestead”. The talk is about hemp as a sustainable product for hobby farmers and gardeners alike. oh

☕️ “Lug A Mug” ~ The THS is encouraging members to bring their own mug for a hot or cold beverage and dessert following the meeting.

🗓️Next General Meeting May 6, 2025

IMPORTANT INFORMATION
😷Following Public Health guidelines, there are no COVID vaccine requirements and no masking, though you are welcome to wear a mask, should you feel more comfortable.

Logo Credit: Fancy Farmerettes

“It’s still just dirt” – April 2025

By Sue Healey, Tillsonburg Horticultural Society 

Once winter loosens its chill grip, I am seized with the need to be outside. There doesn’t seem to be a moment to waste now that the sun shines more readily and there are full days of warmth. But I’ve learned over my years in the garden, to tread lightly in these early days of spring. The ground is cold and frozen in the shadows. Digging and planting are weeks away. There are many good things still at rest in the garden. Beyond dormant plants and yet to bloom bulbs, is a world of beneficial insects nestled in the leaf cover, burrowed just underground, or sleeping in last year’s stalks. 

Pollinators, natural predators and their prey are important aspects of a healthy garden and many need time to come out of hibernation. Instead of tidying, I’ll use these early weeks of spring to refresh my knowledge of what lies waiting to emerge, the good bugs and the bad.

On the most common garden pests, aphids, has a natural predator that is just as well known. Lady Bugs (Coccinellidae), the dotted beetle of nursery rhyme fame is a voracious aphid hunter. They can be found, along with their alligator-shaped offspring in amongst the colonies of aphids, happily impaling and consuming them by the dozens. I watch every spring as my Euonymus’ new growth is curled by hordes of aphids, only to be wiped out within a few weeks by the Lady Bugs and their young. The sight is truly a marvel and one I encourage you to seek out.

While Lady Bugs need no introduction, but pale green Lacewings (Chrysopidae) might. An important predator of aphids, scale, mites and other pests, this delicate looking insect has a slender body with large, veined wings and dark, round eyes. Lacewings are skilled hunters in almost very stage of their lives; their nymphs (juvenile offspring) are so ferocious, they are dubbed “aphid lions”. Lacewings lay their eggs on the underside of tree and shrub leaves, so letting leaves lie is an important step to encouraging beneficial insect populations. Providing over-wintering, nesting and feeding sites will encourage populations for generations. If natural predators are in short supply, they can be purchased at some garden centres or online. 

Scale, another sap sucking insect that we often find on our shrubs and trees, protects itself with a waxy or cottony outer shell. While they feed on many types of plants and can sap the life out of them if left unchecked, scale is also a food source for many beneficial insects. Lacewings, syrphid flies, and parasitic wasps all feed on scale’s various life stages and can keep most populations in balance. When numbers do get out of control and native predators are overwhelmed, dormant oil sprayed over affected limbs can be an effective control measure. In some cases, only the removal of the affected plant will ensure that the scale does not spread to neighbouring plantings.

We all have caterpillars of one sort or another in the garden. There is a thin line between friend and foe when we think of the caterpillar. They are the larval stage of so many things, moths, butterflies, beetles. They are destroyers of crops, like the codling moths (Cydia pomonella) that leave worms in your apples. Theyare producers of the crop, like the silkworm (Bombyx mori) that spins the finest thread. They are magicians, weaving themselves into objects of pure fantasy and delight. So, I go with a light hand when hunting in the garden. I rely on manual control, and only when numbers threaten the health of it’s host. But mostly, I let the wasps do my pest control. Of all the beneficials I have discovered, wasps have been perhaps the most wickedly wonderful. 

There are hundreds of types; tiny to large, metallic to dull, thin waisted and long legged. Almost all are natural predators of caterpillars, scale, mites and leaf hoppers. Waspsboth feed directly on their prey and use them for their young. Live prey can be stuffed into chambers along with unhatched eggs or laid directly on their prey, a ready meal once eggs have hatched. More macabre still, some wasps lay their eggs inside the host so that it is consumed from inside. Viburnum Leaf Roller, Tomato Hornworm, and even June bugs are all parasitized by different types of wasps that are readily found in our gardens. Native wasps and bees are usually solitary, incidental pollinators and harmless to humans. While they feed on other insects, they also use nectar and pollen as food sources and can be attracted to the garden with flowering plants such as sea holly, sweet alyssum and statice. Nesting sites include dead tree trunks, hollowed plant reeds and underground burrows.

There are others that have come to visit and taste what lives around my home. There are bugs and weevils, leaf hoppers and miners but most don’t do much damage before they move on. There are spiders and assassin beetles to ward off the worst, birds and dragonflies to guard the skies. They are all welcome and wanted, all part of a healthy and vibrant ecosystem.

Refocus that spring cleaning energy on your local Horticultural Society. Volunteers are welcome at a variety of society events and programs. 

April’s featured speakers are Irene Kicak and Veronica Tunzi who will present “Hemp for the Homestead”.

Tuesday, April 1, 2025, Tillsonburg Seniors Centre, 7:30 pm. Membership $20/year or guest $5/meeting. 

Come as guest, stay as a member.

📷 S Healey

🌷Welcome Spring🌷

Spring flowers are starting to peek through the garden at Bert Newman Park.  Bert Newman Park is in the heart of Tillsonburg. The Tillsonburg Horticultural Society volunteers plan, plant and maintain this lovely garden. 

Thank you Director Cathy for sharing the photos.

🌷THS Spring Workshop🌷

Come and join us to make 2 projects. A garden pot trellis and a star trellis! 

Date: April 5, 2025

Where: Rambling Road Brewery

2970 Swimming Pool Road, La Salette, On

Time: 10:00am-2:00pm

Cost: $20.00 ~ Only cash accepted on the day of the workshop.

All you need to bring is your hammer, your lunch and your own mug.

Register at tbhsspeaker@gmail.com before March 22, 2025.

Total number for the workshop is 20 participants, so register soon!

Register a friend and bring them along for the fun.

Seniors’ Health & Wellness Fair

The THS proudly participated in the Seniors’ Health & Wellness Fair 2025 at the Senior Centre.

Our focus was on the health benefits of gardening.

Gardening is good for your heart.
Gardening is good for your mental health.
Gardening is good for your bones.
Gardening is a source of community. Gardening is good for your body.

Thank you to the Senior Centre for organizing an amazing event. Thank you to Tillsonburg Garden Gate Ltd. for the beautiful spring flowers and to the THS volunteers.