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K-State Turf and Landscape Blog

Author: Cheryl Boyer

Pushing Snow

Many of you are busy “pushing snow” with the recent cold weather, and there will likely be more snow to push in the next couple of months. Please take a few minutes to train your staff on protecting ornamental plants when clearing hard surfaces like parking lots.

While clearing the lot, driveway, or sidewalk is the most critical objective, “do no harm” should also be a goal. Far too many plants are crushed by the push and weight of snow in winter months. Sometimes, the mystery summer problem is actually a clear winter problem.

There is a tendency to pile snow on top of green spaces in parking lots. However, plants in those spaces continue to need to photosynthesize (evergreens) and exchange gases and are likely to die or suffer severe dieback if the cold weather persists and the snow takes a significant time to melt. Piling snow in planting areas can also contribute to soil compaction and root decline, causing problems later in the growing season.

De-icing chemicals are often mixed into snow that is pushed into landscape settings. As the snow melts, it dumps salt into the planting area, damaging shoots and roots for the long term. To minimize the landscape impacts of clearing snow, consider alternative de-icing salts like calcium chloride and calcium magnesium acetate and follow the label instructions when possible. Sand can also help provide traction.

With your staff, practice identifying an appropriate place to pile snow that isn’t in landscape areas, offers a place to collect runoff, and won’t result in slush that can splash onto plants. When possible, make these decisions before snow is on the ground—snow can cover a lot of detail and make it easy to lose track of the areas that need to be preserved.

Study each site individually and develop a plan for human, pet, and plant safety when winter storms hit to avoid problems in the future and establish trust with your clients.

New 2023 USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map Released

2023 Kansas USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map

On November 15, the USDA released an updated Plant Hardiness Zone Map (https://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/). The new map reflects data from significantly more weather stations, a sophisticated algorithm, and new tools designed to be interactive and internet-based. Users can now search by zip code for Plant Hardiness Zones detailed within a half-mile radius. New data reflects microclimates like urban heat islands and cold mountain tops.

For Kansas, most of the state shifted about a half zone warmer. We still have pockets of Zone 5 in the north, but the range of Zone 7 in the southern part of Kansas is more extensive. As industry professionals, we should continue to focus on recommending plants that can handle Zone 5 plant hardiness because we will continue to experience extreme weather events. However, many of the more southern communities in Kansas can also expand their plant palette with species originating in slightly warmer climates–horticulture is always an adventure with new-to-us species and cultivars. These zone changes may also reflect longer season extension for some food crops.

The USDA Risk Management Agency uses the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map to set crop insurance standards. Other scientists use the data in models that might indicate the spread of weeds, insects, or diseases.

It’s important to note that these warmer plant hardiness zones do not indicate global climate change. Data used for this map is extensive, about 30 years worth at over 13,000 weather stations, but it is not the required 50 to 100 years of data that will provide reliable evidence of global climate change. It simply reflects greater available detail, tools, and methods.

More information can be found at the USDA Press Release and Map Creation web pages.

We will work on reviewing and updating our plant recommendation publications for Kansas. Let us know if you have questions or thoughts–please reach out!

 

Online Marketing Course for Horticulture Businesses

Next week, the 7th annual Center for Rural Enterprise Engagement (CREE) Insight Summit Course launches. There is still time to register! The course covers all aspects of digital marketing through the lens of agriculture with many specific horticulture examples. It is primarily a self-paced online course (with videos, interactive learning tools, and lots of unbiased, research-based information) with Zoom sessions and office hours (with me!).

Topics covered include trends in social media, CREE Research, building your business’s narrative, establishing a new-media baseline, analytics, e-newsletters, Instagram, e-commerce, improving visual content, cybersecurity, and more!

Each participant will receive access to the online course, access to the national team of experts, an exclusive Insight Summit Facebook group community, a set of printed resources mailed to you, an online strategy for your organization or business, and lots of ideas and plans for content development and delivery.

The investment price of Insight Summit is $199. You will receive hands-on experience in an intimate setting from the comfort of your own workspace. All you need is access to a webcam and high-speed internet to participate.

Take back the trajectory of your business with the tools and strategies provided through the 2023 CREE Insight Summit. I can’t wait to see you there!

 

Looking for Interns?

By Cheryl Boyer, Professor and Extension Specialist, Nursery Crop Production and Marketing

Believe it or not, students at K-State are already looking for 2024 internships. You can attract interns for next summer right away at the All-University Career Fair, Opportunities in Agriculture on September 19 in Bramlage Coliseum on campus in Manhattan.

Get connected with our students! Everything you need to know about how to engage with K-State students is available here: Welcome Employers!.

The university uses a tool called Handshake to help connect students with employers. Invest some time in getting set up on the platform so you can identify top-notch students for your internship and employment opportunities.

As always, we treasure having our industry members–YOU–meet with students. Whether you’d like to visit campus and engage with a class or student club, or you’d like to invite a class to your business to see how you approach turf and landscape work, just reach out to us and let us know. We’ll get you connected.

The more often students see you and your business represented in their engagement opportunities through Kansas State University, the more likely they will consider working for you in an internship or full-time employment after graduation. If you decide to join the All-University Career Fair on September 19, please let us know so we can help spread the word. See you soon!