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[Lawn & Garden Home] [Nutrients & Fertilizer] [Demonstration Garden]
Demonstration
Garden and Lawn
A
demonstration garden at the Grand Lake Visitor Center
(9630 Hwy 59 North, 1 mile south of Sailboat Bridge) highlights less polluting
lawn/garden management practices and strategies.
The
garden (shown to the right) includes
3 raised beds and a lawn:

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Native plant garden (on right)
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Vegetable garden (back center) - new
raised bed with lower nutrient soil
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Herb garden (on left)
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Nice lawn with low nutrient levels in
the soil
Oklahoma Native Flower Garden
Flowers native to
Oklahoma have
the following benefits:
- Adapted to
the local climate - low need for fertilizing and watering
- More
resistant to problems related to local pests - low need for insecticides
- Attract
native wildlife - f. ex. -butterflies need specific native plants to
lay their eggs
- Beautiful
In all, there
are 32 different Oklahoma native plants in the garden that are visible at different
times of the year.
FREE DOWNLOAD!! Download a file with photos of all 32 plants in the
garden with information about bloom time, needed soil conditions, sun
requirements, etc.
Instructions: (PC users: right-click on the link below and
choose "Save Link Target As..." to save the file onto your computer.
Mac
users: please
hold down the mouse button over the link below to save the file.)
Native plants document
(1 MB - MS Word document)
A few photos of flowers from the native plant
garden:
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Purple Coneflower
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Rose Verbena
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Ohio Spiderwort
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Wine Cups
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Sweet Black-eyed Susan
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Spanish Needles
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Pale Purple Coneflower
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Indian Paintbrush
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Mexican Hats
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Come back often to see how the same garden changes
over time!
Herb Garden -
The herb garden
contains several hearty plants including mint, sage, basil, chives, etc.
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Herb Garden
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Chives
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Oregano
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Purple basil
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Blue Sage
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Vegetable
Garden
- The vegetable garden
contains pest-resistant tomatoes, and other vegetables.
- The nutrient levels are managed
mainly with compost created onsite, only when a soil test indicates the
need.
Demonstration Lawn
The Visitor Center has a great lawn with low impact on water quality because it:
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Currently uses no commercial fertilizer
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Has suitable, yet low, nutrient
values in a recent soil test (April 2006)
Compare
this to the soil and compost mixture that was brought in for the first two
raised bed gardens. This soil turned out to be excessively high in
nutrients:
These results forced us to find
local soils with a lower potential for leaching nutrients. The final raised bed, now the vegetable garden,
has such a soil.
NOTE: Bringing in soil for
your lawn or garden may result in adding a nutrient pollution source to your
landscape.
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Recommended Soil Test Values |
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pH |
5.5-7.0 |
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Nitrate-N |
20-40 lb/acre |
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Soil Test P Index |
65-120 |
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Soil Test K Index |
250-350 |
Related
photos
See photos of the
garden construction and planting:
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Construction of raised beds (Click here
to see how it was done)
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Planting of
a summer vegetable garden with volunteers from the Delaware County Master
Gardener Program (Click here for photos)
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Signage with nutrient management
information installed at the garden in 2008 (on right)
[Lawn & Garden Home] [Nutrients & Fertilizer] [Demonstration Garden]
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