Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Of your resume.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Oklahoma Union is wholly a FAFSA night on Tuesday to
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(00:23):
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Speaker 3 (00:47):
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Speaker 2 (01:07):
For the holidays, Chris Kindle Market will be held Thanksgiving weekend,
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Tickets to ten dollars for adults, two dollars for children
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News on the air, on the web, on your rapp
and on Alexa. I'm Tom Davis on K one, the
(01:30):
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Speaker 6 (02:32):
Hart, Jane Phillips and Bartlesville.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
Good morning and welcome to the Green Country Gardner Program
right here on K one. Hey, I'm fourteen hundred, FM
ninety three point three and FMT ninety five point one.
The green Huptry Gardner Program with our expert learning class
is brought to you by Green Clumb Nursery and Greenhouses,
United Renlands, cow They Banks Reservice, Roman's Outdoor Power Acces
(03:00):
Pest Control, Ascension Saint John, Jane Phillips and Gateway First
back and good morning, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, Welcome.
It's time now for the Green Country gardner. He's Lorry Glass.
He knows a few things because he's our expert.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
I'm Tom. I just answered the phones and say something things.
Nine one, eight, three, three six.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
Fourteen hundred is our number, Larry. It's a nice soggy
Saturday morning.
Speaker 7 (03:23):
Yes, yes, no, it's our goes Bob, Bob bobbling down.
Frank Phillips. Yeah, Bob, we had two inches of rain
and engage at our house.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
There you go.
Speaker 7 (03:31):
So that's that's pretty good. We need that going into
the winter. That's good for the plants to have the
ground pretty well saturated. They tend to do better, especially
your ornamental grasses, your box woods and new door if
you'll buy everything, does a whole lot better with good
moisture in the ground.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
I've mowed a lot more this year than I've ever
mowed my life since moving to Oklahoma. I think a
lot of people have. Even the books and coffee Villa
are saying, what can it? Put them more away?
Speaker 7 (03:58):
You know now the crabgrass is doing very well.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
Oh yeah, well, folks and independence can tell you about that.
Speaker 7 (04:06):
So anyway, it's not my time to put them over
to sleep yet. I was looking at my yard. It's
turning yellow right now. Lucky you, because I guess I
don't know.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
I means you can put the more away sooner.
Speaker 7 (04:22):
Than yeah, anyway, So I need to give it just
probably just one more go around. We haven't had a
freeze yet, though we've been very lucky. Typically we've had
a bit of a freezer a frost by this time,
usually right around the halloweens when that happens. And they're
looking at the weather forecast for this week, it's not
going to happen this week.
Speaker 2 (04:39):
No, We've got temperatures in the forties and the fifties overnight. Yeah,
in the fifties and the sixties in the daytime. Yeah,
so Seattle, Washington, all over the place.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
Except for the coffee. I got to talk to folks
about that.
Speaker 7 (04:54):
What coffee.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
Coffee? Yeah, a little bit better coffee. I can liver
bit this. Okay, up your game, guys.
Speaker 7 (05:00):
Actually I don't drink coffee.
Speaker 2 (05:01):
I know you don't. You drink that mountain dew. Don't
drink that either, not anymore water you used to.
Speaker 7 (05:09):
Yeah, I know.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
I'll go.
Speaker 7 (05:13):
Anyway. Uh, Trick or treaters are coming this week.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
Yeah, they'll pop up out of your yard.
Speaker 7 (05:18):
And you want to make sure your lawn is clean
up twigs and sticks and hoses and you know, straight
tricycles and things like that that happens. You don't want
to anybody to get damaged or hurt on your front.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
Yard and check your home unders insurance.
Speaker 7 (05:35):
Yeah yeah, so be sure that to pull in the
hoses and all that, just so that doesn't happen. There's nobody,
you know, it's no fun, you know, kid going down
and it's fall over something. I hurt my leg, you know,
and then you know nine. So so a good priority
(05:55):
this week is to make sure the yard is clean
and then so they can enjoy their final for the
trigger treaties. Uh yeah, so right now, let's do that.
Still time to plant cool season annuals like pansies, ornamental
cabbage and kale. But we've been selling.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Lots of that.
Speaker 7 (06:15):
Who've been selling the hound out of the pansies at
the nursery, so so we are still time to do that.
And actually about three weeks ago I prepped one little
bed in my yard for pansies and it's been so
hot and dry that I didn't plant them. Now good
time to do it. So I just might get me
some pansies and plants them. There you go, So that
time here to do that ornamental cabbage and kale. Also,
(06:37):
that's something kind of pretty too that it really hasn't
exhibited a lot of color yet. It hasn't been cold
enough for it to really change colors. So it's all
kind of bluey greeny looking color. But it'll it'll shift
when when.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
A little chill in the air.
Speaker 7 (06:51):
Chill in the air, it'll ship color too. So anyway
that can be done. Also, uh, still time to divide peonies,
Irish dailies and other spring flowering perennials and summer flowering
perennials right now most of them can be divided at
this point. What that does by dividing at this point
and gives them a chance to heal up all with
your long before all the little critters start to invade them.
(07:16):
So let them heal over a little bit before it
gets too too nasty in the spring. So if your
daily lafs aren't blooming, I got some that are refusing
to bloom. They need to be divided those day lazies, yeap,
So time to divide those also. We controlling the yard
it's a little past tense for pre emergence right now
(07:37):
because the stuff's up already. So you need to kind
of look closely at your yard and see if you've
got some some weeds popping up, and there are some
post emergent weed killers for that.
Speaker 2 (07:47):
And if it gets to be a real problem, you
don't want to go take it round up and singing
your whole yard.
Speaker 7 (07:52):
Do you know it's too early for that? Okay, Yeah,
because the bermuda grass is still actively growing, so is
still actively grow wing. I mean, it's not dormant yet.
So if you put round up in your yard right now,
you won't have a lot in the spring. Yeah, you'll
have to start all over again. So wait till it's
completely dormant before you want to apply some of that.
(08:14):
And and then and round up works kind of retroactively
with the temperature too, so it has to be above
say forty degrees forty eight degrees for it to really
work real well. And also a lot of these winter
weeds have little tiny hairs on them. Yeah, so you
need a little sir factor exactly that the surfactant to
help stop the repulsion it goes wets to leave down
(08:38):
real well. And you know it's not necessarily more than merrier,
it's just how well it's applied. So I always follow
the directions on the on the bottle that helps with anything.
And get a measuring cup while you're there. Don't don't
use your wife's measuring cup.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
You live to regret it.
Speaker 7 (08:57):
You're going to have some rather odd tasting corn bread,
so you want to make sure to use a measuring
cup that's dedicated for the for the garden. Okay, So,
and the more precise you are, the better. And also
use a surfactant. Sometimes on the instructions will say you
might want to use a surfactant. And a surfactant is
(09:21):
something like a soap or something that makes the water
weather and it helps penetrate that hairy layer down to
the leap itself so it can be really absorbed. And
also any herbicide you use on your wage that hiss
the ground is useless. It has to be absorbed through
the leap. So with that in mind, you want to
pick a still time during the day or when it's
(09:42):
not raining, and then apply it with a kind of
a medium mist if you will, but not a lot
of pressure, but just enough to get it more. And
keep in mind anything that dist the ground is wasted.
It has to touch the leaf of the plant for
it to work, unless you're using a pre emergent.
Speaker 1 (10:01):
Then then has to go in use.
Speaker 7 (10:04):
And yeah, well the pre emergent works by arresting the
root developmental plants. So but we're a little late for
that because they're there, these weeds that are up and
the riots are in the ground already. Yeah, so smart
weeds they kind of hide for underneath the grass and
they're incognito. And then it's too late right now. On
(10:35):
pruning your shrubs and things, maybe some minor pruning on
the box woods. I did some of mine last weekend
up by the shed. There's just a little too high,
and I don't like to use a hedge clipper. I
used a manual. Well, you see one that's too big
and you cut it down inside rather than cut it
flush with the top. You have a greater depth of
(10:57):
leaves that way if you if you share it off
like that, you eventually get just a thin veneer of
leaves on the box foot. So I like to do
a little bit. If there's something too tall, you cut
it back down inside and it'll issue new leaves and
it'll actually get denser that way. And I call that
a casual hedge, casual head not not a formal hedge,
(11:18):
but a casual Yeah, I guess so, Tom. But anyway,
it has a nice texture to it. If you do
a casual pruning and they've been there for twelve years
and they're only knee high boxwoods are and it's dense
and full and all that. Just cut out something you
(11:39):
don't like, you go and something else will fill in
the space. And so I did that last week on
the boxwood in front of the shed, which is close
to the barbecue grill. Yeah, all right, let's see other things.
(12:00):
The hassas they're they're kind of losing their appeal right
now at this point. Most people, I say, they look
kind of crispy. Yeah, so I wouldn't cut the leaves
off quite yet, but you want to make sure going
into the winter they have adequate moisture. And also a
little bit later on, if you have a real heavy
clump of hosses, they could be divided, dig it up,
(12:21):
split it, just like a lot of perennials. I don't
like to do it quite yet because they kind of
actually growing and you don't want to spur on some
growth into the winter, So we want to make sure
you have a really good cold spell before you divide
your horses.
Speaker 1 (12:33):
Got it.
Speaker 7 (12:34):
So that's true with a lot of perennials. So except
maybe have mums or something or whatever and other plants.
The cannibulbs are up and doing this great right now.
They love this cooler weather.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
They do have some.
Speaker 7 (12:48):
That are eight feet tall, big old red flowers on them.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
Really quite nice, just really celebrating themselves, aren't they.
Speaker 7 (12:53):
We did a project for somebody and we dug up
the candice from their old house and put them in
the new house. And before we planted them, we left
them in buckets for a while so they can heal
up a little bit and start growing some roots. And
then we planted them. Well, they were probably hip high
or you know, you know, chest high at their house.
They're eight feet tall when they have grown and spread out,
(13:18):
just because the growing conditions were better.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
Than it's the difference with a couple of.
Speaker 7 (13:23):
Watch and whoa man, these are the way where's the house?
You know, great big old things. So this is this fall,
after a freeze, we'll probably divide them for them Okay,
move them around here and there so you.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
Can have more kind of spread, the.
Speaker 7 (13:38):
More more candidates somewhere. But actually, in the case of
this one, we did a lot of ground prep on it.
It was in a part of town with us soil
was really good.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
We got a double plus on it.
Speaker 7 (13:50):
And then we took almost a semi truckload of compost.
That's a lot and no one not that much, and
then prepared the soil with that with existing soil, and
it may something just really dig into and the cat
has just loved it.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
Eight feet tall.
Speaker 7 (14:08):
We didn't anticipate that, but anyway, they're delighted with showy
they are.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
So we're gonna take a quick break, Leary, Okay, it
is now eight twenty and we'll be back after this
two minute time out.
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(14:44):
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Speaker 14 (15:58):
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(16:21):
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Speaker 2 (16:39):
Welcome back to the Green Country Gardener program. Our telephone
line is opened nine three three six fourteen hundred. That
is nine one eight three three six fourteen hundred. Larry,
what are we? Where are we?
Speaker 7 (16:50):
We gotta watch out for those carnivorous plants. Oh well
you just stand the sale of the nursery just from
out with that feemore. No, it's not like that anyway.
Time to plant the pansies. Still plenty of time to
plant Pansy, it's.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
Just like you're gonna do after we get done here.
Speaker 7 (17:12):
Well, maybe that's terrible gully. Anyway, Pansy's ornamble kale cabbage
can be planted right now to give you some color
in the fall. You don't really have to go all
out all over the place groups of it. You can
concentrate your efforts and perhaps just have an area of it,
(17:34):
not necessarily the whole thing, and it's still put on
quite a show. And be strategic about placement too, flanking
the front door or some ways like that where they're
visible around the mail box stuff. I have to look
pretty nice too, So anyways, still time to plant those.
The ground is still warm enough, which is rather odd
for the end of October. Typically it's getting a little
(17:57):
bit chilly, and golly, we had one day it was
kind of cool. I had to try to find my
warmy it was.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
It was getting that cold.
Speaker 7 (18:07):
Is it in the closet?
Speaker 1 (18:08):
Hey?
Speaker 7 (18:09):
But a little chillies a precursor of things to come,
I guess. Anyway, we have trees. A good time to
plant trees, and we have a lot of them right now.
The colors it's just beginning to show on some things
a little bit late this year.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
I've noticed that it's just not here. It's all across
the state, but not here. Oh, I said, it's not
just here.
Speaker 7 (18:32):
Yeah, yeah, it's all So hopefully it looks like if
it gets a little bit cooler, it'll be some good
color in the fall. The October gloor in the red
sunset are among their favorites. And we have some large
pistache trees too, so deliveries included at that price of
the big woods too, but planting by our crew is extra.
Speaker 1 (18:54):
It is.
Speaker 7 (18:55):
So you've got a lot of rock in the yard.
You might want to have a planet just because we
got the back or had the back to leaf in
the equipment and the tools to dig in your yard.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
You have dynamite yet, No, no, I'm just waiting for
you to get you use our muffles.
Speaker 7 (19:12):
Yeah. The moms right now are fully open and full
color for instant show right now. If you get a
new mum plant, remember all the roots are right here
around there, right there. They're not out in the ground yet,
so that the mom is going to use up the
water in that particular area first. So you'll have to
be specific with you the irrigation system won't work for
(19:34):
probably a week or so. You have to be very
consistent with watering it on the plant rather than the
surrounding area because it's going to dry out faster. So
some people they plant them in two days later they say,
my plant died.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
How that happened?
Speaker 7 (19:47):
Will you pull it up? Dry? Bar skull and crossbone
come out of so dry, So you just need to
water a little bit more for it to do well.
Adding some olds on the surface will help.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
Also keep the moisture in.
Speaker 7 (20:01):
Have to keep the moisture into and it moderates the
peaks and valleys of water contoon and the soil, so
it's not feasts or famine when it comes to water.
So keep that in mind when you're planting anything like that,
a shrub or or a mum or anything like that,
that those roots are all right in this little circle.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
Right, then they don't go out too far.
Speaker 7 (20:25):
And if you if you just water around or your
sprinker system puts out an inch an inch of water,
it's not going to go all the way down to
the bottom. So there's no sense of spending all that
money and water to water everything just to get that
one thing wet. Just go out with a hose, give
it a drink and water them, and start water them
daily for say a week, and then alternate it just
(20:49):
slowly so they can send their roots out to the soil.
Don't do fine, okay.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
But you gotta give them a drink, just like a baby.
For all right.
Speaker 7 (20:59):
It's getting time to dig up your tender perennials like cannas.
We talked about cannons, and in this case you don't
have to dig them all up, but dig up enough
to where if we do have a real zinger of
a cold winter, you'll have some survivors. So I do
that with mine every year, dig up three quarters of
them and put them in the garage in a box
(21:20):
in between the vehicles, and they just kind of sit
there all went along, don't care about the middle of
March April. Put them out the ground.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
Come on, buddy, we're going for a walk.
Speaker 7 (21:34):
Dahias and kladiums also need to be dug up in stored.
If you want to keep your cladiums, they can dig
them up too, but they're they're kind of inexpensive enough.
I don't know, but so many perennials can be planning
right now. Usually the selection is pretty nice right now,
don't crowd them. They take a couple of years for
(21:55):
really a good perenial to be established and so on.
So we have lots of renals and golly, the monarch
butterflies this year of a crazy own on our slippiest plants.
They were really putting on a.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
Performance, not a show.
Speaker 7 (22:10):
Yeah, and the customers are coming, Oh my gosh, look
at all those monarch butterflies are just trowling around the
nursery all the fly and we try to have flowers
out there that they really like, just because everybody enjoys
seeing the butterflies and it's kind of cool.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
And that's their favorite stop on the way to Mexico.
Speaker 7 (22:28):
Their little suitcases.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Yeah, you know, it's.
Speaker 2 (22:30):
Kind of like going to BUCkies. When they go to
your place, look at something for me.
Speaker 7 (22:36):
Hopefully they get enough calories out.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
Wuk out of BUCkies.
Speaker 7 (22:43):
Great number of calories exactly.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
And that's just looking not even tasty.
Speaker 7 (22:49):
Right. So also your house plants, it's trying to kind
of bring them into the house a little bit, and
you might want to check them for bugs and things.
So you don't want that. You don't want that business
in your house. So things like ants and stuff sometimes
can hit it right on your on your on your
tropical plants you have outside, so check them out first.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
Make sure they're not carrying any passengers.
Speaker 7 (23:09):
Yeah, I don't care any how, you wake up everywhere.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
Hey, where'd you come from?
Speaker 7 (23:15):
So anyway, Uh. And Also I wouldn't really cut back
the house plants at this point because in the house
they get just a fraction of the amount of light
outside and they're going to grow and it's going to
be kind of spindly. So reserve the cutting back of
your tropical plants until March April or so, and then
they'll start to put on some growth and then we
move outside they'll growing naturally. But in the house, like
(23:38):
this window over here, all the light is coming from
that source rather than overhead, and they're gonna want to
grow towards it like that.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
Let's get that lean going on. We got a couple
of those.
Speaker 7 (23:49):
And they also the cells and the stems, the elongate
like that, trying to reach for that. And then when
you bring them outside, they're all flopping and they kind
of break up. So yeah, bring him in the house,
but don't try to encourage a lot of unless you
a lot of growth unless you have a significant amount
of light for your houseplants, they're all like going, reach
(24:09):
for the window.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
Reach for the window. Can you turn that around here?
Speaker 2 (24:16):
And starting to really start to lean to the point
where it's getting creepy exactly.
Speaker 7 (24:20):
So it's getting time. I would go ahead and bring
them in and get them used to the house. It's
under bit shirting. And you don't want to, like I said,
you don't want a lot of growth, and you want
to watch the moisture levels too. Some people over water.
If you bring in in a plant that's been draining outside,
you want to put it on a saucer, put some
gravel in that saucer and let it float above the saucer,
(24:43):
not into saucer. That'll alleviates root rot. And also the
moisture coming up from the gravel below will help the
humidity around the plants too. So try not to put
it in a saucer and leave water in the saucer
because you're going to get a terrible case of root rot.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
You don't want that.
Speaker 7 (25:01):
And when the time spring comes around, the things all
spend and all that don't want to do anything. It's
a good time to pot them up too in a
larger container, maybe for them to winter also to send
out some roots into that new stuff. And still don't
let the water. Let them sit in water below it
(25:22):
give kind of you know, stinky, it's.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
Putting them mildly. Hey, you what we need to take
a little bit of break. We will be back after
this two minute time out.
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great savings closing their door and passing the savings onto
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(25:55):
brand items and stuff get twenty percent off retail pricing
on specially ordered items.
Speaker 6 (26:00):
Love to Sleep and Refine.
Speaker 8 (26:02):
Highway seventy five next to Freddays.
Speaker 15 (26:08):
A focus on the family stat shows that the first
time a child sees pornography is between eight and eleven
years old. It's not a matter of if your child
will see pornography online, it's when.
Speaker 6 (26:20):
As a parent, how would you respond.
Speaker 15 (26:21):
Heart Matters wants to help provide the tools you need
to address online dangers. And be the first to speak
with them. We offer parenting presentations that provide practical steps
you can take to help safeguard your child. The schedule
a presentation call Heart Matters at nine one eight three
three six nine one five one.
Speaker 16 (26:40):
Heart Matters Makes a Difference. Heart Matters presents they guard
their Heart Awareness Fundraiser Thursday at six pm at the Center.
Enjoy a steak dinner here speakers and learn more about
what Heart Matters is all about. Register at Heartmatters hyphen
okay dot org, shya.
Speaker 17 (26:59):
Construction say and progress at Skyway Honda, Highway seventy five
South and Bartlesville and Josh. People need to stop by
and see if they've got the Honda that they want.
Speaker 11 (27:08):
That's right.
Speaker 18 (27:09):
Our lots a little bit in shambles because of the construction.
But if you don't see it, we probably have it.
Just give us a call or swing by. We'll help
you out.
Speaker 9 (27:18):
Shy Way Honda.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
Alrighty, yeah, back. We are with the Green Country Gardner.
Speaker 2 (27:41):
Programming is eight thirty three fifty four degrees and our
phone line is open at nine one, eight three three
six fourteen. One hundred folks are saying, boy as sure
is rainy. I don't know what I can do today. Well,
you can make plans, and that's what we're talking about
here is planning for the winter, planning for the fall,
planning for just about anything.
Speaker 7 (28:00):
Yeah, yeah, true planet is very important. I got some
plans on the drawing.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Board, that's what you're telling me.
Speaker 7 (28:06):
And I texted some out the other day and she
really liked them. See what happens. But anyway, cool. Yeah,
I could communicate with email or text or print either
one on your high tech. Yeah, they like getting those,
they do.
Speaker 1 (28:24):
Look at my phone.
Speaker 2 (28:25):
I got these the flowers and stuff coming up, the
whole landscape thing.
Speaker 7 (28:30):
This is cool. I know it is kind of cool.
So that can That's typically what I do in it rains.
Get caught up on that. And then we had to
do some repairs at the nursery this last week too.
It's easy to do. The greenhouse skin had come out
one and so we took that before the rain. That
has to be inflated. It's like a balloon and actually
(28:53):
when when when it's under full pressure, you could walk
almost walk on it.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Really, that's amazing. I did not know how how that that.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
God, it does.
Speaker 7 (29:01):
Yeah, so if you weigh a hundred and fifty pounds.
You can walk on it. You wouldn't want me on that, No,
you probably fall through, like me, Hey tell me, it
says yeah. Anyway, So we worked on that and we're
doing a sprinkler system now, an absolute solid.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
Rock oh wow challenge.
Speaker 7 (29:24):
We're going to use the trench that we have used,
picks and shovels the whole way, and we're using this
new new pipe called a blue line, which is a
high density poly ethylene. It's tough stuff and you assemble
it just by like come, I pect fitting wow, pop
it together. And we've been using it now for four years.
(29:45):
Haven't had a single problem with it. It's been pretty
good stuff. And it's it's the inside diameter of the
one inch pipe is just a little has a little
bit more capacity than say, it's such a forty pbc
and it does carry water real nice. But you, like everything,
you have to design it, you know, properly, keep your
(30:05):
pipeline velocity down, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. Wh Yeah, you don't
want it to go bam, But kylie, when you put
those joints together, you cannot take them apart. You have
to have a special key to release them. And we
tried to be pulled, pulled, pull two of us pulling
on that thing would not come undone. So it's proving
itself to be very reliable, very good, very reliable stuff,
(30:30):
and we really like it. And it's it's the IPS standard,
so if something goes wrong, you can get parts down
at plumbing source something to fix it. So pretty cool
stuff indeed. So anyway, that's a sprinker systems. Also we
put rain rain sensors on them and the worm we're
doing now that the customer has had an existing system
(30:50):
and we're basically putting this on top of the old one.
And I can see why because they use that real
thin wall PBC and it's real brittle, just real thin.
I mean, put a shevel, it just shatters. So put
a shovel on it just shatters. Solar replacing it with
the stuff. So it's kind of cool.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
Indeed, I'm taking this thing probably you know, as fragile
as a tater chip.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
It is.
Speaker 7 (31:20):
Yeah, the lightweight two hundred psi PVC is kind of thin,
kind of lightweight, and it just doesn't have the longevity
of the schedule forty. There's nothing wrong with PVC schedule forty.
It's good stuff, but I like the HDPE a little better.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
Good.
Speaker 7 (31:38):
So sprinkler systems also telephone based controls.
Speaker 1 (31:44):
Oh good that you can watch it on your phone.
Speaker 7 (31:47):
Yeah, you can control it from your living room. People
actually looking out their back door and pushing a button
and the water turns on. That's kind of cool. So
you might consider maybe an irrigation system and just make
sure it's engineered properly. You want to keep your pipeline
velocity down to a certain level. There's so many feet
(32:08):
per second and so on, and that stops water hammer.
It's one of the biggest problems with the irrigation systems
when I think shuts. If you get this bang in
the house, and if it is connected on the same
connection as your water meter, you can hear it turn
off and on because you have too much pipeline velocity
(32:28):
it So you got to look at the source of
the water and the size of the meter, etcetera, etcetera,
and then design your irrigation system accordingly. For instance, if
you have a three quarter inch line coming into the house,
be kind of sealing to upscale it to a one inch.
Oh yeah, but you can still upscale it to a
one inch. You'll be fine, But you want to keep
your consumption down to twelve fifteen gallons per minute at
(32:51):
the most. That way, you don't get this backfiring in
the house.
Speaker 2 (32:56):
You don't want that. I want to put out the
phone number once again. It looks like I may have
missed one nine eight three three six fourteen hundred. Nine
one eight three three six fourteen hundred. Get you on
the oar of the green Country gardener.
Speaker 7 (33:08):
So in irrigation says some get it. Get it if
you get somebody to do one, or you get somebody
who's going to install it for you. Get a drawing,
Make sure you get all your building permits, get all
the utilities flagged. All this other stuff has to be
in place before you can start good. So there you go.
Speaker 2 (33:27):
All right, take a quick break. We'll be right back
after this two minute timeout.
Speaker 14 (33:32):
Nothing says fall and mums pansies, an ornamental kale, and
fall has fell at green thum nursery and greenhouses with
an abundance of mums, pansies and ornamental kale get thirty
percent off Japanese maples, crape myrtles, and rows of sharing
plus They always have new shipments of trees and shrubs,
new shipment of house plants, African violensts, including carnivorous plants.
(33:54):
Now's the time to soak escu seed and green Thumb
has five stark esc seed in five to fifty pounds
back eggs and stock green them nursery and greenhouses on
the What a road open Monday through Saturday, ninety four.
Speaker 17 (34:08):
Shy Way Honda, Skyway Honda Highway seventy five South in Bartlesville.
Speaker 10 (34:12):
Evan far back with Josh Mattney.
Speaker 17 (34:14):
Josh twenty twenty fives are out the door and some
deals at Skyway Honda.
Speaker 7 (34:18):
That's right, Evan.
Speaker 18 (34:19):
Honda just announced zero point nine to nine percent for
sixty months on all remaining twenty twenty five ridge lines.
Speaker 10 (34:26):
That's the cheapest rate I've seen in months.
Speaker 9 (34:29):
Shy Way Honda.
Speaker 6 (34:36):
Who do I call to get my trees trimmed?
Speaker 11 (34:39):
Kelly Banks Tree Service?
Speaker 6 (34:40):
Who can grind up these stumps in my yard?
Speaker 11 (34:43):
Kelly Banks Tree Service.
Speaker 12 (34:44):
There's a dead tree right by my house and I'm
nervous it might fall.
Speaker 11 (34:48):
Well, you better call Kelly Banks Tree Service.
Speaker 6 (34:50):
What's that number?
Speaker 13 (34:51):
It's nine one eight three five seven thousand. It's nine
one eight three five seven zero zero zero.
Speaker 12 (34:58):
Call it today for your tree trimming, stop grinding and
trap removal needs.
Speaker 13 (35:02):
That's none one eight d three five seven zero zero
zero nine one eight day three five seven thousand.
Speaker 10 (35:10):
Hi, this is Terrence Howard.
Speaker 19 (35:11):
Colorectal cancer is the second leading cancer killer. But you
can prevent this disease. If you're fifty or older, get screened.
Please do everything that you can to stay around for
yourself and for your family.
Speaker 10 (35:25):
Screening saves lives.
Speaker 7 (35:26):
A message from the US Department of Health and Human Services.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
You know, Larria, dultrainy and everything. It's been nice and
sunny and beautiful. I kind of forgot the Octoberfest music
there for a little bit, I know, and I know
our friend Christmas really.
Speaker 1 (35:44):
Missing it, and you know that's for him anyway.
Speaker 2 (35:48):
It's fifty four degrees eight forty two and our whole
line is open here for the Green Country Gardener Program
at nine one eighty three three six fourteen hundred.
Speaker 13 (35:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (35:58):
This irrigation system we're doing now, there's a digital line,
a telephone line, three electrical lines put in the backyard.
So we had to do a redesign based on that.
Oh no, And instead of crossing it at every spinsterhead,
we crossed it in one place and then divided it
over there on that side to avoid the possibility of
(36:19):
breaking somebody's Internet.
Speaker 2 (36:22):
You don't want to hear about that.
Speaker 7 (36:26):
So actually we did that without incident.
Speaker 2 (36:29):
They're not chilled with the Netflix if you catch their internet.
Speaker 9 (36:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (36:33):
And actually the cable one did a very good job.
Speaker 1 (36:35):
Of putting their identifying it.
Speaker 7 (36:37):
Yes, yeah, I number one identifying it, but having the
wire encased in an orange colored yeah, so when you're
digging you can see it, so you very gingerly go
over that one thing over there. The electric electrical LINESPY
code had to be three ft deep, so that's not
a problem. But the digital thing sometime rocktick line is
(37:02):
who knows where, and you're out there with a paint
yard paint brush for the toothbrush. So we did, we did,
We had everything marked, so we had we had did
that system without any incident as far as that's concerned.
So anyway, so make sure you're prepared on that when
you're doing an irrigation system, because you can inconvenience your neighbors.
(37:24):
And we did that one time. We were putting a
French strain in in somebody's backyard and it's right on
the inauguration of about two presidents ago. And we had
everything marked, but they forgot the mark one line and
one of the guys his first shovel was right through
the line.
Speaker 4 (37:46):
Oh what do you do?
Speaker 7 (37:47):
I can't see the inauguration, so you're not missing much,
you know. So we called it a bunch of words.
I got my pocket knife out and was able to
put it together so she can watch it. Where the
cable company came.
Speaker 1 (38:04):
It's all fixed, ma'am.
Speaker 7 (38:05):
So yeah, yeah, I go ahead, Yeah, I can see
it now. It's just fine. So we called them anyway,
and they replace the line day. They're apologetic about them
not marking the line, although everything else is marked with
this one.
Speaker 1 (38:16):
Oops.
Speaker 7 (38:17):
So so just make sure everything you've That's kind of
the same thing with planting trees too. You're digging a
hole and you've found this wire and these parts from
flying out to go and did the whole day look
what I did. Yeah, that can be It can also
(38:40):
be kind of expensive too.
Speaker 1 (38:41):
We've got a call here, so let's go ahead and
take it. Good morning. You're on the air with Larry.
You got a question to comment. I have a question.
Speaker 7 (38:49):
I was wondering us too, like to do anything about
danny lions this year.
Speaker 9 (38:52):
I haven't three lots and then just pulled with darned lions.
Speaker 7 (38:56):
Yeah, you could use a post emergent control typically trimech
or two four y E or something like that would work. Temperature, though,
is an issue, and I think the rest of the
week it's going to be warm enough well about sixty
five fifty five degrees, so oh yeah, it should work. Yeah, yeah,
so that post emergent control. Also, if you have for vitograss,
(39:18):
it's starting to go dormant, and if you can wait
just a little while longer, what's the permutiograss is dormant,
you can apply some round up to them too.
Speaker 9 (39:27):
All right, I appreciate that.
Speaker 7 (39:29):
All right, thank you very much, Thanks for coming.
Speaker 1 (39:32):
Appreciate it. Great call.
Speaker 2 (39:34):
All right, it is now eight forty five. That means
we've got one line cooking here for you.
Speaker 7 (39:41):
Add nine six fourteen, got another column? Nope, no, okay,
any Like I said, roundup, it works through leaf absorption.
That's the way that that's so physiologically how it works.
So once Au bermutigrass goes dormant's kind of open open
seas for wee, but you don't want to use, you know,
(40:03):
too much of it. Always use a spreader sticker with
it too, because a lot of these plants have, like
we mentioned earlier, little tiny hairs member bill possy little
tiny hairs, and it makes the water droppers bounce off.
And also you just have to wet the leaves of
the plant. That's the way it is absorbed. Lifehas goes
(40:23):
in through the leaves, So just to do it, you
might have to have a lot of them to do
a general application. But if you just have a few
here and there, just enough to dampen those leaves and
be just be plenty of adequate, and then the plant
absorbs it and as it gets cool, if it's a fact,
is going to be less obvious. It takes more time,
(40:44):
but it will work on it eventually, so to be patient.
When it's cool, there you go, we we or you
can pull up the dandelions and make a salad of them.
You told me that that's pretty edible. Lines are a superfood.
Speaker 2 (41:02):
Okay, so I would have never guessed that, but I've
heard you say it before.
Speaker 1 (41:07):
And you say it makes a good soup, but I'm thinking.
Speaker 7 (41:12):
There's really good with rents, dressing and stint whatever. But anyway, okay, yeah, yeah,
look it up. Look up. Dandelions can eat dandelions. And
you see a lot of accolades, vitamins and things on them.
Not saying, let's dandelions, but is.
Speaker 1 (41:27):
That what they called field greens? When you get the bag.
Speaker 7 (41:29):
There get gold. But if you've been applying.
Speaker 1 (41:32):
You're dandelions son, You just don't know.
Speaker 7 (41:35):
If you've been applying insecticides and oversizing all that to you,
RD I wouldn't do it.
Speaker 2 (41:39):
No, it's got to cancel the vitamins and just damp
up the poison.
Speaker 7 (41:42):
You know, you wind up with green eyes or something
something that you want to avoid eating your dandelions. If
you use a lot of sides, don't do that. But
so lawns. Actually, if you're getting to the end of
your planting and established cool season grasses like fescue, lungs
and things kind of at the end of that. Right now,
(42:04):
it's a lot of the people's fescue seed is probably
at the Cheney River right now. The fescue should be
about two and a half inches for the fall of
winter cutting and the broadly we luiks like dental ions
can be controlled in October with the roundup or two
forty or something like that. And you can mow your
(42:28):
warm season grasses. Don't mow them really low. New a
lot of people. I want to cut my grass down
looks a little better. If it's cut down real low,
it's fine. But we don't know what's going to happen
this winter temperature wise, so you need at least some
insulation to protect your stolens, which are the little runners
that brings come from.
Speaker 15 (42:49):
Ye.
Speaker 7 (42:49):
Yeah, and if you eliminate all that insulation on the top,
there's a good chance it'll get too cold and you
have some sporadic die off in the winter, so be
careful with that, and then.
Speaker 1 (43:02):
You know what comes up in the place of die off.
Speaker 7 (43:05):
Crabgraph.
Speaker 2 (43:06):
Indeed, it's like whoa, thanks for the invitation.
Speaker 1 (43:12):
I'll just make minds to help at home.
Speaker 7 (43:14):
Crabgrass is an annual grass, and it is they come
up and the seeds are there on the ground winter,
and when it warms up they come up. So caep
cap from udograssom fairly high. Same with soiser grass, keep
it fairly high. At this point. You want to do
your dethatching, and you're scalping in March, late March or
the April around there, because it's a little bit warmer
(43:38):
and you need that insulation for the We don't know
what's going to happen in the window, so you need
some insulation to help them out.
Speaker 2 (43:44):
You're usually pretty good at prognosticating. Uh zingers. Been a
little bit since we had one.
Speaker 7 (43:51):
It's been a while since we have a good snow, actually, it's.
Speaker 1 (43:54):
True, but we might get lucky this year with that.
Speaker 7 (43:57):
Well, with the weather trains lightly on. It's rain we're
having right now, and so on and so on. All
able to have instead of a bunch of little ones,
just one big storm.
Speaker 1 (44:06):
Big dump, the big dump twenty twenty six.
Speaker 7 (44:11):
Little little dnkle here and there, but dumps and dingleers,
okay there, but it's a big We're allowble to have
a finger like we had in February of twenty whenever it.
Speaker 1 (44:22):
Was twenty twenty, it was yeah, it was twenty one.
Speaker 2 (44:27):
Because Phil and I were looking out the window and
somebody had a couple of American flags hoisted up and
for a week it started out as freezing rain. Then
the wind just started blowing it started getting cold. Those
flags were frozen straight out. They were frozen straight out. Cool,
no cold, it was cold. I said, you know, you
(44:49):
normally have to have a dry flag at thirty five
miles per hour to get it done. Furl like that. Yeah,
and that thing's wet and it's frozen. Said, my gosh,
that's for the Smithsonian. I don't know about that, but
well it was pretty cool look at for about a
week until you got out and you're like.
Speaker 7 (45:08):
Oats a little bit too. Yeah, we've had some really
good snows. Yeah, and typically that happened in late January
February around there, so we've got a few months, about
two or three months for that started to come in.
So but with the rain we haven't having in the
precipitation so on, it's kind of trending a little bit
wetter this year than you look at. The weather charts
(45:31):
were a little higher than normal. So typically we might
have a another let's go buy snowshovel this year.
Speaker 2 (45:38):
This year you can't in years past. I always felt
for the folks who have ice rinks in their communities
because right around Christmas it seemed like it was getting
into the seventies, maybe a little bit like upper sixties. Yeah,
it's kind of tough to keep that thing frozen. And
then right after Christmas, oh my gosh, it was down
(45:59):
to the zeros and the minuses. And then we're talking
like wind chills, it'll take your lips off and uh,
and it's just like, wow, you want to talk about
two seasons back to back in the matter of a
couple of weeks, Just like, hey, what gives around here?
Speaker 7 (46:15):
That reminds me when I was young living up in
suburban Chicago. Oh yeah, we had tennis courts for the community,
big big tennis court. Yeah, and it snowed. It was
really really could well. We as kids, you know, thirteen
twelve year old kids, we shoveled the snow around the
edge of the tennis quartz and called the fire department
(46:37):
and they put water on that. We had an ice
skating rink. Nice. Yeah, it's so fun.
Speaker 1 (46:43):
Nice.
Speaker 14 (46:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (46:44):
I don't wonder if it's thought out already in fifty years.
You got a three inch four inch Yeah, they came
out and put water on it, and thing, you know,
you get about fifteen minutes. It was frozen.
Speaker 1 (46:55):
I'm ready to go.
Speaker 7 (46:57):
With ice skating, and.
Speaker 1 (46:58):
You didn't have to worry about anybody fallen through, and.
Speaker 7 (47:01):
You know exactly yeah, so that that worked out real
I remember, that's one of the fondest memories of the kid.
Speaker 2 (47:06):
Here you go, let's take a little bit of a
break here real quick. We will be back after this
two minute, forty second time out.
Speaker 20 (47:16):
Although a Republican, Frank Phillips was a man who wisely
hedged his bets, and so it was that even though
he backed the other candidate, in December nineteen thirty five,
he invited Elliott Roosevelt, the son of President Franklin Roosevelt,
to wool Rock. According to reports, the menu for the
day was elk, barbecue and beer. Mister Phillips had already
(47:36):
cooked up a plan to make the weekend a bit
more special for Roosevelt and for the other guests. Roosevelt
wanted to shoot a buffalo, so Frank gave him a
rifle and out they went to stalk their prey. Elliott
Roosevelt was considered an excellent shot, but as the herd
of massive animals roared past, Roosevelt fired once and then twice,
(47:57):
but no buffalo hit the ground. Frank's ran banch manager,
Griff Graham, seized the gun from Roosevelt, took quick aim
and killed the buffalo. Roosevelt was embarrassed to have been
such a poor shot in front of friends and his
distinguished host, and he took a good natured ribbing for
his shooting skills throughout dinner, when finally mister Phillips, roaring
(48:17):
with laughter, admitted they had loaded the gun with two blanks.
That evening, mister Phillips had to leave the ranch for
a meeting in Chicago, but Roosevelt remained behind to try again,
this time with live ammunition. The next day, Roosevelt wired
Frank Phillips the following message, sixteen hundred pounds in a
beauty and this one only took one shot. The magic
(48:39):
of Woollarock just as it is today. Come see us
soon and welcome home to Woollarock.
Speaker 10 (48:48):
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Speaker 10 (49:11):
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Speaker 6 (49:47):
Jane Phillips and Bartlesville.
Speaker 2 (50:04):
Already it is eight to fifty six and fifty fort degrees.
A little bit on the rainy side today, but I
think after a couple of days of this, we're kind
of used to it. Nine one, eight, three, three six,
fourteen hundred. Captain on the bridge, how are we doing there?
Speaker 7 (50:17):
Larry Hey, pretty good, golly trees said, good time to
plant some trees. Yeah, this last week we planted a
whole bunch of trees. So throw them in the truck.
Go to the house, dig a hole, big a hole,
or chisel a hole, or you bring a fledgehammer and bring.
Speaker 1 (50:32):
A little I'm still wait for you guys. Have last.
Speaker 7 (50:36):
Sometimes we'd pull up the dog on this big rocks.
I see it. People say it's worth it.
Speaker 1 (50:44):
They pull up that rock. You said, good, a little
over there. I'd be kind of dickerative.
Speaker 7 (50:48):
Yeah, do you want this?
Speaker 1 (50:51):
Yeah, it looks cool.
Speaker 7 (50:52):
This is the wordamental rock right over it looks really nice.
Speaker 1 (50:54):
Hose it down little on it, put some shine.
Speaker 7 (50:58):
But anyway, so yeah, so we planned to. And the
fall blooming trees are real popular. Red now October glory,
red sunset, et cetera. And the Chinese pistache is a
good one too.
Speaker 1 (51:09):
Oh yeah, good good.
Speaker 7 (51:10):
Fall color. Typically mind is starting to turn color. My
wild one is starting to turn a little bit of
color the south east side of it. So hopefully we'll
have some cooler weather, normal more normal weather, and maybe
a bit of a freeze, and perhaps we'll have some
fall color. Typically this time here. Things are really kind
of showing some color. But it's been warm.
Speaker 1 (51:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (51:32):
I drive down to a Toka quite a bit back
on the weekends, and I keep waiting for the fall
show to kick in. I see a couple of small
little bits of yellow. Yeah, I haven't seen that bright
red stuff yet. I'm thinking probably hearing about a week
or two, we might we just might be in for
some trees.
Speaker 7 (51:51):
Yeah, so I trade the week would be the pistache
and also we include the October glory maple and the yeah,
the red sunsets, et cetera, all kinds of things. Red
maples put on some good color. So, but it's not
happening so far because odd weather. What's gonna happen is
it's all going to turn at once and just fall.
Speaker 1 (52:11):
Suddenly.
Speaker 2 (52:11):
You gotta you got a yard full of leaves, and
you said, well, that was a jip I didn't get.
Speaker 7 (52:17):
We have a lot of tour buses full of Difel
fuel right now, just waiting to go.
Speaker 1 (52:22):
You know the folks in Callahena where the.
Speaker 7 (52:25):
People golly another shrub we want to talk about, of
course on an ending this and boxwoods. They're kind of
the workhorses in the landscape, ponds and so on. So
I like to use those for some seasonal stability as
far as the landscape it's concerned. Use them as a backdrop,
(52:47):
and be careful when you pick out these plants how
tall they get to. If you have some low windows
to plant low shrubs. I see these houses where I
got one on my block. Somewhere behind these shrubs there's
a how.
Speaker 1 (53:01):
Can you wave about the window? Hey, come on, run,
you know you covered up.
Speaker 7 (53:05):
But anyway, so make sure when doing a landscape designed
you pick out some plants that don't get just so
awful big that you can you can't manage them. And
it's very important. And a lot of these plants are
prefaced by the word dwarf. Dwarf dwarf preferred holiday gets
pretty tall. So but there's some others that will get
(53:28):
pretty big eventually. So anyway, keep that in mind. And
also don't put something big real close to the house.
Japanese maples need to be ten feet away. You can
configure your bed toward it. It will grow real well. Anyway,
come by the nursery and check out ourselves. We've got
a great selection of Japanese Maples. They're on sale right now.
Encore Zilias are bloomy. We got some us, no rams,
(53:51):
we got plenty of us over there to nursery, and
golly Tom, it's time to call it a day. Keep
that shovels sharp.
Speaker 1 (53:59):
We will see next week, all right, news is next day.
Speaker 11 (54:01):
TOUB Advanced hearing care helping ears hear better since two
thousand and six. K WN Bartles will k two twenty
seven