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One of the best gardening magazines in publication Horticulture Magazine is holding a free (FREE) online workshop, called Design a Work of Art with your Garden, with famed garden designer, Derek Fell. The live workshop will be held tomorrow at 2pm (EST).  Derek will offer forty minutes of teaching, then twenty minutes of live question and answer with the audience.

Derek Fell is a highly respected writer and photographer with art, travel and garden books totaling more than 2.5 million in print, plus a photo library numbering more than 150,000 images.  As a highly sought contributor for Home and Garden Television, The Outdoor Living Channel, and PBS, Derek also writes for Architectural Digest, Veranda, Royal Horticultural Society Magazine, Garden Design, Hemispheres, American Nurseryman and countless other publications. He served as a garden design consultant for the White House Gardens as well as several luxury tourist destinations.

In this Design a Work of Art with your Garden workshop, Fell will be teaching gardeners worldwide how to plant gardens fit for award winning photographs and breathtaking moments.  “Derek rarely provides free seminars and we are extremely excited to be able to offer gardening enthusiasts everywhere this opportunity to gain a wealth of information, insight and ideas that they can then use to create their own gardens,” said Patty Craft, publisher and editorial director of Horticulture. “And, with the ability to talk live with Derek, this workshop is one that folks won’t want to miss.”

The live webinar is limited to the first 1,000 registrants, so sign up here right now! But, even if you don’t get into the live workshop, Horticulture will keep the entire presentation available for download on their website.  You can watch it anytime!

What are you still doing here– Go sign up!!

Hazel.

This week’s guest post comes from Amanda Thomsen, the hilariously irreverent gardener who pens Horticulture Magazine’s Kiss My Aster blog. She’s a horticulturist who has worked for more than 10 years in the industry, enjoying various titles, such as: Herb Specialist, Perennial Know-it-All, Container Queen and Landscape Designer. She’s a Master Gardener and currently works in landscaping in Chicago. Landscaper by day and blogger/podcaster by night, she’s also one half of the podcasting team on Good Enough Gardening. A little funkier and a little punkier, The Kiss My Aster Blog is the winner of the prestigious Mouse and Trowel Award for the best company blog.  Follow her on twitter at @KissMyAster or join the facebook fan page


If I had to pick the best pest to get? It’d be aphids. Easy peasy to find and eliminate. Or wait, maybe slugs are easier than aphids… a bigger target, a more alcoholic bait.

Or what about galls? You just leave them alone to fester until POP GOES THE WEASEL. Nothing is easier than galls.

Whatever you get and sooner or later you’ll get something- it’s going to be better than spider mites, or heck- thrips!
Except you know what pest I wouldn’t wish on my greatest enemy? You know what is usually quite hard to notice, gross to look at when you find it, isn’t that easy to kill and likes to poop on everything?

Scale.

It’s really gross.

This scale-infested Sago Palm bit the dust after this photo was taken.

What does it look like?: There are thousands of kinds of scale, including mealybugs (yuck), but the kind I see most often look like little scabs (flat and reddish) on the undersides of leaves. Chubbier ones frequently hang out on stems and sometimes on bark. Sometimes they look like someone dribbled wax on the underside of a leaf.

What does it do?: It sucks the life out of your plants. If you have a plant that looks a little weak, check under the leaves.

What else does it do?: Well, everything that eats- eventually poops.Most scale are serious little poopers. They excrete a clear but incredibly sticky substance anywhere they hang out. You may have parked under a tree that had a bad case of scale and had this honeydew drip all over your car and you thought it was sap. Remember how hard it was to get off the windshield?
Scale fact: Scale poop is called “honeydew” for some ironic reason.

How to get rid of it?: Well, it really depends on what you’ve got it on. I like to be chemical-free so I try to go with horticultural oils, insecticidal soap and removing them by hand- with q-tips or thumb nails or lots of pruning. If you have scale on a very tall tree, it gets a little harder. You may need to resort to chemicals if your infestation get icky enough. Foliar sprays or systemics can work- but if the infestation is bad enough you may be out of luck. As with anything, make sure to read and follow the manufacturer’s instructions, even if it’s organic.

My first run-in with scale was on the job a billion years ago. They were big, fat, juicy things on a big, fat, juicy King Sago Palm. The task given to me was to dip q-tips into rubbing alcohol and swab the scale off or the option was given to me to flick them off with my thumbnail- I passed on that option. It took weeks of q-tipping, but it worked. I just lost a Sago to scale this winter, I just wasn’t willing to do the work. Keep in mind that a happy, healthy plant isn’t susceptible to pests and diseases- it’s only when they aren’t getting what they need that they become food for every tiny sucker around.

A few years later I was tasked with ridding some Euonymus coloratus of it’s habitual scale. I had to put on latex gloves and rub each leaf with horticultural oil. Yes, each leaf. It was no small task.
BTW- Euonymus has its very own scale, Euonymus scale, so I grow no Euonymus.

Now I just scratch them off with my nails- getting a red, dead scale body residue under my nails. It doesn’t bother me anymore… until I forget to wash my hands and go to eat lunch!

For more information about scale, try this.

This guest post is, in part, in celebration of our new partnership with Horticulture Magazine.

One of Kathy Peterson’s new designs is the grand prize of the Horticulture Magazine sweepstakes.  To enter to win this FABULOUS garden bistro set, hop on over to their page (just click that big picture!) and sign up!