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Inexpensive fall centerpieces bloom with beauty

COLUMBIA, Mo. - Look no further than your back yard for inexpensive fall centerpieces.

That's the advice from Kim Martin, manager of Tiger Garden, the student-run floral shop on the University of Missouri campus. The shop celebrated its grand re-opening recently with special events and workshops.

Interesting looking weeds, vines, leaves and plants can make attractive and economical arrangements for a fraction of retail costs, Martin said.

A vase can be purchased for $2 or less, or vases from garage sales can be repurposed. Chicken wire is one of the cheapest, simplest and best ways to keep flowers from shifting in the base. A small piece of chicken wire can be cut and taped with florist's tape or any other sturdy tape. About 50 cents of burlap ribbon placed snugly around the vase with glue dots available from local craft stores can create an attractive holder. "In the floral world, we're all about the tricks," she said.

Start by filling the container with greenery gathered from the yard to create a sturdy foundation. Martin recommends grouping items such as dusty miller, coleus, ivy, tree leaves, plumed fescue-type grasses and woody shrubs. Cut the ends with kitchen knife or scissors and strip foliage from the bottom part of the stem. Make sure the stem is long enough to reach water in the vase.

If you don't have annual favorites such as zinnias, marigolds, dahlias or cockscomb to choose from, buy stems of flowers at local grocers, florists and discount stores for approximately $5.

She recommends making fabric flowers from wired ribbon or buying silk or straw flowers and adding colored ribbon to give arrangements a pop of color.

Locally grown flowers are preferred over imported flowers in some situations, Martin said. In the flower world, "locally grown" means in the continental U.S. More than 75 percent of all flowers are imported from other countries, and many stores' flower inventory is 95 percent imported, she said.

Imported flowers leave a greater carbon footprint because of the fuel and labor required to transport them to the U.S. Additionally, because imported flowers may spend anywhere from a few days to two weeks in transit, they may not last as long.

Tiger Garden offers the following classes:

  •  Oct. 2: Tiger-ize Your Door!
  •  Oct. 24: Build Your Own Terrarium
  •  Nov. 20: Impress Your Thanksgiving Guests!
  •  Feb. 26: Warm up with a Spring Wreath!
  •  March 19: Lettuce Help You! (a lettuce garden)
  •  April 30: Spice up Your Kitchen with a Salsa Garden

Source: AGEBB


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Why Invest in Canada’s Seed Future? | On The Brink: Episode 3

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Darcy Unger just invested millions to build a brand-new seed plant on his farm in Stonewall, Manitoba so when it’s time for his sons to take over, they have the tools they need to succeed.

Right now, 95% of the genetics they’ll be growing come from Canadian plant breeders.

That number matters.

When fusarium hit Western Canada in the late 90s, it was Canadian breeders who responded, because they understood Canadian conditions. That ability to react quickly to what’s happening on Canadian farms is exactly what’s at risk when breeding programs lose funding.

For farmers like Darcy, who have made generational investments based on the assumption that better genetics will keep coming, the stakes are direct and personal.

We’re on the brink of decisions that will shape our agricultural future for not only our generation, but also the ones to come.

What direction will we choose?

On The Brink is a year-long video series traveling across Canada to meet the researchers, breeders, farmers, seed companies, and policymakers shaping the future of Canadian plant breeding. Each week, a new story. Each story, a piece of the bigger picture.

Episode 3 is above. Follow Seed World Canada to catch every episode, and tell us: Do you think the next generation will have the tools they need to success when they takeover? How is the future going to look?