Thursday, September 21, 2017

Greenhouse Weekend Duty Blog Entry: September 15th – 17th, 2017
By Matt M. and Norna H. 

Toward whatever ends we pursue a career in horticulture, we are united by our desire to learn how to care for our floral friends, and the satisfaction that comes with having greater connection with nature. As we return for our final year of our program, we look forward to what practical skills this year will yield over the theory-focused first-year curriculum.
As the first group to start this semester’s schedule of weekend duties, we hardly knew what to expect. However, we have found our work to be both valuable in a practical sense, as well as surprisingly holistic in exposure to plant life stages. In conjunction with regular greenhouse maintenance and housekeeping, we monitored the growth of cuttings, transplanted established plants, and cared for this year’s plants intended for later sale!
At the moment, gardens are partially in a transitional phase: the weather outside isn’t cold enough to over-winter plants yet, but it is too late in the season to effectively plant or seed most plants. Inside the greenhouse, however, is not season-specific. As the Fanshawe horticulture program has done for many years, this year’s crop is various cultivars of Euphorbia pulcherrima… Poinsettias!




On Wednesday before our rotation, we were given a briefing tour by our professor and program-director Sue Millar. We wanted to be as familiar as we could with the green house to get ready for the big weekend. Later, on the following Friday, Jeff Rowley (our program’s greenhouse technician) supervised us for our first day on our weekend duty. We were given a collective list of things to accomplish by both Sue and Jeff, who made us clearly aware of the many risks and responsibilities ahead of us. They were probably thinking: “I hope on Monday that the greenhouse is still standing upright!”. That was our hope too. At 4pm, we found ourselves in charge of our year’s crop, and our program’s main facility, but we were armed with cutting edge technology… and a lot of support just a phone-call away. It was a treat to work in a facility so ideally equipped for our work.






As we settled in we found our tasks were standard-issue greenhouse life support positions: water, space, monitor, re-arrange, fertilization, and sanitation. Not everything in this industry is glamorous, but we know that it all adds up. The plants we care for and sell fly off of our shelves into gardens and offices everywhere around London and beyond.
Unexpectedly, we also had the chance to get acquainted with the irrigation system, even installing a few new emitters (drippers) and a new valve.  Another interesting task we both enjoyed very much was identifying the mystery plants brought in from Thunder Bay, creating new stock-pots for future propagation, and even attaching the newly identified plants in their hanging baskets to our recently installed drippers! We have to toot our horn a little bit!
In the end, we hope that Sue and Jeff feel that they left the greenhouse in good hands. We made every effort to make that poinsettia crop happy, healthy, and spotless!
  

It may seem like having one type of plant could make our greenhouse inventory a little boring, but there is always something interesting going on in Fanshawe’s greenhouse that peaks our interest! We love our stock plants and their unique variations on relatively common plants! Until the poinsettias really start showing their colours, however, our curiosity was especially piqued by the unknown plants waiting for us to identify them.

Special: Pinellia ternate
During weekend duty on Wednesday I was given a brief run down by Sue. As we walked through the greenhouse the poinsettia’s seemed to be the main focus, but in the corner of my eye noticed a tray of seedlings that were unmarked and it was like lightning struck me. I said, ‘Those look like Arisaema!’.” – Matt M. 

It was a very close guess! The mystery only deepened since the plants had been labelled as Pinellia ternata “Crown Dipper”, which threw off initial searched for information! It soon turned out that it was actually a Crow Dipper – a type of Arum!
Crow Dipper, part of the Araceae family, which is shared by the very identical genus Arisaema, is a herbaceous perennial native to China and Korea, and is thought to be an invasive weed in parts of North America. Its hardiness is between zone 5a - 8b USDA, which is a huge detail in terms of what they can be used for (Brickell, 2011). Flowering in late spring to early summer, Pinellia ternata’s elongated spathes form green berries which ripen in mid- to late summer. Pinellia ternata’s seeds have been used in traditional medicine in China. Left alone or unrefined the seeds are poisonous (Brickell, 2004)!

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Bibliography
Brickell, C.B. (2011). ENCYLOPEDIA OF PLANTS & FLOWERS REVISED AND UPDATED. London, England. Dorling Kindersley.
Brickell, C.B. (2004). Canadian Encyclopedia of Gardening. Ontario, Canada: Dorling Kindersley.




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