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Beekeeping

air date: November 11, 2017

Beekeeping is the latest locavore pursuit for distinctive honey that rivals craft beer. Get top tips from three beekeepers, how they got started, and why bees swarm. Find local beekeepers, including swarm relocation. Educator, storyteller, musician and author Kim Lehman does a few magic tricks to impress the whole family (and teach them about pollination) from her book Beekeeper’s Lab: 52 Family-Friendly Activities and Experiments Exploring the Life of the Hive. Daphne explains why trees fall over after heavy rains and how to correct. Looking for a small native tree for wildlife? See how to plant possumhaw holly for gorgeous winter berries and structure all year long. Trisha gets your craftsy on with homemade herbal swags to soothe, cook, or give to your favorite feline friend.

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Episode Segments

On Tour

Meet Three Beekeepers, Why Bees Swarm, and Top Bee Tips

Beekeeping is the latest locavore pursuit for distinctive honey that rivals craft beer. Three beekeepers explain why they got started, how they do it, and what’s important to know.  From relocating swarms to honey collection, get the buzz from Tanya Phillips and Chuck Reburn at Bee Friendly Austin, Tara Chapman from Two Hives Honey at the Sustainable Food Center, and family beekeepers, Christine Giordano and Ryan Thomas.

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Question of the Week

My healthy tree just fell over from the roots. What happened and can I fix?

Our question this week is one that I’ve gotten from many people recently, regarding trees that have fallen over. Having experienced this in my own yard, I know how nightmarish it can be.

Almost a year ago, after the abundant and unusual amount of late summer and early fall rain we received, and during a particularly heavy storm, my 5 year old Monterrey oak toppled over. Luckily, this wasn’t the result of the trunk breaking, but rather the entire rootball heaved up out of the ground.

I wasn’t able to deal with the issue for a few days, and so I didn’t hold out much hope for the tree’s survival. Of course, I could have gone ahead and removed the tree, but I decided to stake it and see what would happen, having lost nothing but time and the cost of a few T-posts if it didn’t work.

So with a little help, I righted the tree back to vertical and tied it, with strong rope, to three stakes, which I left in place for about nine months. Today, you’d never be able to tell that anything ever happened. The tree didn’t lose a single branch and seems perfectly fine.

But, I know that below the soil it isn’t fine, and the roots have a long way to go before I can reliably believe that the tree is stable, so I’m still hoping for the best.

In another instance of tree toppling, we recently lost a mature Texas mountain laurel in our demonstration garden. In this instance, the problem was more severe. Back in June, one entire side of the multi-trunked tree snapped off at the baseline, leaving no opportunity for repair. I knew that if we had any hope of saving the remaining half of the tree that we’d need to stake it, but I got busy and lost track of time.

And sure enough, only two months later, the other half of the tree broke at the base, and toppled over.

So, what’s going on with these falling trees? Years of drought have kept them from growing a healthy, widely-dispersed root system, so even though they’re most likely branching and putting on top growth, they aren’t able to develop and sustain much root mass to support that growth.

Then, more recently, we’ve had an overabundance of rainfall, leading to wet, unstable soil. In the case of my Monterrey oak, it was young and not as heavy. But with our Texas mountain laurel, it was quite mature, and the recent rainfall allowed and encouraged it to produce a heavy crop of seeds. Also, it had other plants around it, and the trunk was staying far too wet, leading to rot. Unfortunately, there isn’t a lot we can do to prevent these situations from happening.

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Plant of the Week

Possumhaw Holly

Possumhaw Holly

Ilex Decidua

Possumhaw holly (Ilex decidua) is a native deciduous, medium-sized shrub that can be trained into a small, multi-trunked tree. Covered with striking red berries all winter, possumhaw holly brings beauty to what might otherwise be a colorless winter landscape. Those berries are also a great winter food source for birds. Also known as winterberry, for obvious reasons, possumhaw holly does well with very little care or maintenance, although you might want to prune it a bit, to shape it. Plant in full sun or light shade, and water sparingly once established. Getting only 15 to 20 feet tall and branching to almost as wide at maturity, possumhaw holly tends to have a twiggy growth habit that some may not find attractive. But if you have an area that you tend to leave a bit on the natural, even wild side, this shrub will look right at home.

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