Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's the classic Gardens and Landscape show on the hand.
Ready and when you want show up plants and grass
to grow two and doercent Chris, Chris and Chris No,
Chris knows it, Chris knows it.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Chris knows it.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
Chris knows it.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Chris knows it. Chris knows it. Sure, Chris knows it.
Chris knows it.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
And now you're a host.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Chris Joiner and Chris Keith, Good morning, Welcome the class
of Gardens of Landscape show on w e r C.
Speaker 4 (00:36):
I'm Chris Keith, I'm Chris Joiner.
Speaker 5 (00:38):
I hope everybody's doing fantastic today. If you want to
call and talk to us, four three nine nine three seven, Yeah,
there you go.
Speaker 4 (00:46):
This this number you need.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
You know, all the time we're we're talking about you know,
half the time me and Chris are obviously we're talking
about landscaping and you know, long care and and irrigation
and night lighting in patios and land clearing and forest
multon and all that good stuff. But we really like
to hear what's going on in your yard and we
want to fix any problems that you've got in you're
(01:09):
at your place. So if you want to call us again.
It's two, five, four, three nine nine three seven to two.
I'm a little bit under the weather.
Speaker 4 (01:16):
But you look like you feel fine.
Speaker 2 (01:17):
I don't feel that bad. I just don't need to
run to the mailbox.
Speaker 5 (01:23):
Yeah, it's one of those things where you sound bad
and you're out of breath, but you really don't feel that.
Speaker 6 (01:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
I don't really feel rough. You know. Last week, let's
see what I so, we came back to work.
Speaker 5 (01:38):
This is sick that we were six? Did we we
came back? He came back to six. We came back
in the six. But did we work that day?
Speaker 2 (01:46):
Yeah? We sure did.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
This.
Speaker 5 (01:47):
Man, my days are so messed up because we've had snow.
We've had some rain. We're fixing to get into more
cold weather. Last week with the snow, that just kind
of threw us off. I think we only worked half
the week. We came in Monday, turn in the irrigation,
never watered everything, turned the irrigation off. But it was
It's just a brutal day, I believe. I don't think
(02:08):
any of we just came in and did odds and.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
Ends Monday wouldn't bat well. I think you're thinking about
maybe the next Monday, maybe so, so the first Monday
we came back.
Speaker 5 (02:17):
See, see, my days are all messed up because I
hadn't gotten into into a routine until like.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
I still ain't there, you know between all right, So
I come back that Monday and I'm I'm you know, five,
I'm five weeks out of double carpal tunnel surgery and
I'm in pretty good shape. And I go to uh
So we go over to uh fellas a young couple
out and cook Springs, and Justin's been doing some land
(02:46):
clearing and forest multing out there for this purity place.
But man, you talking about in the sticks. If you
go out in the woods and you think you're far
enough out in the woods going the other three miles,
I mean they are out there in a beautiful place
out there, the old kind of rustic cabin field house
with about a acre and a half pond out there
(03:07):
that they've had Doug. They've got kind of their own
little pet and zoo. They got a pot belly pig
and a little pony and two or three goats, and
I think they're planning on expanding that and everything. So
the whole plan was they went in here and took
out all the understory trees and all the scrubby undergrowth
and everything. We forest marched all that stuff out and
(03:28):
then a monk's doing that. We cut some cut some
bigger trees out and just kind of thin things out
some so we can grow grass in there. So now
the ideas that go in there and seed probably about
it looks like he's got about four or five acres
that's cleared now, you know, and he can go in
there and seed it. Then he'll have it ready for
(03:48):
his livestock then, so we have a pretty good area
for his horses and stuff like that. And then on
from there. We've got a customer up in Limestone Springs
that we have we've done. We treat Jackshaw, Yeah, yeah,
we treat We treat well, I know we treat several
up there. But uh, Jack Housh he works off a
(04:08):
budget and he about four or five thousand bucks at
a time. He went in there and his yard was
bermuda grass. He got two maple trees in the front yard.
They dealt him misery as far as growing grass and
the bermuda it just wasn't happening. So every every year
year and a half, Jack could call us up and
(04:29):
he'll say, look, I got about five thousand bucks to spend.
I want you to come out. And saw this area
of the yard and we went in there and phases
for about this is Phase four was the last phase
and went in right before the grass went dormant. I
told Jack, I said, look, you got to give me
the go ahead now, right now, like today, so I
(04:51):
can spray this and kill the bermuda out before it
goes dormant. So we can come in here and Harley
rake out the yard and uh, you know, and we
won't have to worry about this bermuda coming back up
in the zoisa. So he go went on ahead and
gave me the thumbs up. That was back and before Thanksgiving,
and uh, I told him, I said, we may may
not get to it before Christmas. I'm going to be
(05:13):
out with my hands screwed up. So uh, we never
got to him. We got to him, you know, the
first week we were back. So now Jack has a
pure emerald zoys yard top to bottom.
Speaker 4 (05:24):
Thank goodness.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
After the fourth. After the fourth.
Speaker 4 (05:27):
Time, that'll make our treatment one second.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
We established well we did this, that's phase four on
the side and a year ago. We went in and
ripped all of his shrubs out and put new shrubs in.
So that was kind of last week before you know,
the snow moved in. And once the snow moved in,
obviously that was you know, Thursday going into Friday. So
(05:50):
we were just out of luck, you know. That Thursday
I started to get a little bit of a scratchy throat,
and then obviously Friday, you ain't getting the no doctor.
So I went to the dock in the box Saturday
and they put a band aid on bullet wound, and
uh didn't give me enough medicine and everything to take
care of the problem. So came in Monday, worked about
(06:12):
a half day, but really felt crummy. Uh, came on in,
stuck it out. I said, man, I just got to
get over this, you know. So Tuesday I worked. I
just bowed up, you know. Then Uh, Tuesday and Wednesday
worked through it, you know, pushing a wheelbar around a
house and cold morning, what you know, breathing that cold
air and all that stuff. And I got in, Uh
(06:33):
got in Thursday evening and I mean we went to Mike's.
Mike and Ann's just dropped by there right quick. Mike
had a couple of trees or something that he wanted
us to stick in. He had some old scrap or
something there we wanted to haul off. So we ran
by there real quick and nabbed that. And he said, Chris,
walk up to the house with me and the you know,
(06:55):
helped me load these trees or whatever. Now by the
time I walked to his house, you just bou had
a wheel bury me back down to the I said,
this ain't right. So I went back to the doctor,
my doctor, and he said, now, Chris, you got pneumonia.
He said, we won't give you two more shots. We
will give you five more prescriptions of crawd. I mean,
I've got every kind of medication there. I left the
house a minute ago. I took like a cocktail of
(07:18):
not nine pills.
Speaker 5 (07:20):
Well, I think Anne told me Thursday. She was like, yeah,
Chris is going up to his doctor. And I told Anna.
I was like, man, he must feel bad, because you know,
when God created Chris Keith, he like custom built a mold.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
You know what I'm saying. If I go to the doctor.
Speaker 4 (07:34):
Chris Keith, don't go to the doctor. You just worked
through it. Oh man, I was.
Speaker 5 (07:42):
I actually went to treat Jack House's yard earlier this week,
and uh, I guess it was just you know, it
was a north facing, north facing slope or something like that,
but it was still four inches and man, I couldn't
even see the new side because I.
Speaker 4 (07:56):
Went up Donniano.
Speaker 5 (07:58):
It was earlier on this week and there still snow
on half the yards up there. They must have gotten,
They must have gotten a lot more than over there.
Speaker 2 (08:04):
Where his house is too. You know, he's north facing
and he's he's kind of the back of it goes
up like a bluff, so.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
That sun probably never hits the front yard.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
This time of year. It doesn't hit none of it.
And you know when we laid that sad that day,
I tell you it was that cold. People asked us,
you know, is it can you even lay saw this
time of year. I'm like, sure, if you can stand it,
because it doesn't hurt the sod at all, sowd as
dormant as it can be. Now, we did tell you so.
We we got our side from the South Dallas turf.
(08:38):
They delivered it down to the garden. Said they do
a fantastic job. We buy our sad from them all
the time, And uh, so we got our sawd. They
delivered it to the garden center. I told Ann, I said,
stick it in the front greenhouse because that morning it
was supposed to be like twenty two degrees. When the
front greenhouse that's where the house plants are, so it
(08:59):
stays about fifty five in there. So we had the
sod in there. The crisp fifty five degrees and nice
and nice and warm. So that next morning when we
came in, we we got a little late start. I
think that day we might have came in at eight
or something, so it wasn't twenty three degrees, it was
twenty eight degrees. And UH loaded or saw it up,
(09:20):
and UH took it up to took it up the
limestone springs, and UH jumped off and hearty wrecked the
yard with the little machine prepped that thing, and UH
and got his sod laid and everything, and our side
wasn't frozen. But a lot of times we lay sod
this time of year. May even if we have to
lay a few pieces from the garden center. You know
(09:41):
what we do is we'll take if we haven't left oversawd,
we'll lay it out at the garden center and then
if we need, you know, thirty or forty pieces of
patch in on a job, or even a hundred or whatever,
we'll have a little bit laying there. But if you
got to pick it up, I mean, like next Monday,
it's supposed to be like fourteen or fifteen degrees in
the morning with a windshiel like seven, you got to
(10:02):
pick it up. And as hard as a supply.
Speaker 4 (10:05):
Stiff like it doesn't, it doesn't bend right.
Speaker 5 (10:07):
And that's the only reason y'all put it in the greenhouse,
not because it was gonna hurt the sod or anything,
but y'all wanted to be able to lay it.
Speaker 2 (10:13):
You got to be able to.
Speaker 4 (10:15):
Be frozen solid.
Speaker 2 (10:16):
I've honestly, but before i've I've I've laid saw it
before where I had to pry it off the palette
to get it just up off there. Yeah, that's not practical.
You know, you're not You ain't making no money. It
takes you five times longer than you can get it
off the pallet, you know what I mean. But you can.
Speaker 5 (10:31):
You can lay sad three hundred and sixty five days
a year, don't matter whether it's one hundred degrees outside
or whether it's two degrees outside.
Speaker 2 (10:38):
Well, what do they do. They build a house every day,
that's right, every single day, and the last thing you
do is latest sad yep, you know, and then put
the bushes in so you can do it anytime of year.
Speaker 5 (10:48):
I got eight thousand square feet of grass in my
backyard and most of that was laid in the middle
of winter.
Speaker 4 (10:53):
Because that's when I had time to do it, you know.
But it's and that's one of the big things.
Speaker 5 (10:57):
You know, a lot of homeowners this time of year
will tend to they'll out, well, I'm just gonna wait
till spring to lay the sod or to plant plants.
Landscaping fantastic time to plant plants.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
Yeah, well, you go by any you know, any supplier,
you know, the big time supplier, you know, even the
secondary ones like we get some shrubs from like just
say Sight one or like Warner Landscapers, you know, a
place like that. If you go by there, at most
out there, all they're going to have is a big
(11:27):
white cloth over the top of their shrubs. You know,
they're not going to go in there and take every
shrub from outside and put.
Speaker 4 (11:34):
It into it inside of it.
Speaker 5 (11:35):
And that's that's at best, and that that white cloth
is just for some of your very sensitive plants, you know,
maybe if they've got gardenias out there, or maybe we've
seventy degrees one week and we're going down to you know,
for seventy degrees for a few weeks, and then we're
going down to below freezing, you know, for twenty four
or forty eight hours.
Speaker 4 (11:52):
That type deal.
Speaker 5 (11:53):
I forget what the place is down going down towards
the beach, I think, I think, really, I think if
you go down towards the beach, matter how you go,
whether you're going to Gulf Shores or whether you're going
to Pensacola or destined ay, you'll pass some of the
big some of the big grower flower wood lots, and
it's like all you see is acres and acres and
(12:13):
acres of black pots and plants, all corazella all over
the ground. And don't think it doesn't get cold down there.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
Yeah, And they never cover that.
Speaker 4 (12:20):
They never cover that, never cover their stuff up.
Speaker 7 (12:22):
We know you if you go now, there are a
few things, you know, that great heavy cold we had
two or three years ago where it was like, you know,
sixty hours below.
Speaker 5 (12:33):
Frames that was like then once in a lifetime type
thing it went. I think the temperature dropped what from
I mean it was one of those seventy degrees one
day and like three degrees the next.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
That was my biggest thing. Nothing to got acclimated. Everything
has still had lush green leaves on it, and man,
when it flopped like that, it just smoked everything. Yeah,
we've been consistently cold. Yeah, you know this year we
hadn't just been bone shilling, but but it's been enough
to get the plants acclimated and let them go into
a dormant state. You may have some plants that you
(13:07):
might want to pitch a sheet over a pitasporum seems
to be a little bit finicky, uh, you know, a
brand new to steal him if it's got some lush,
tender growth on it or something like that. Or a
guardena you might want to pitch a you know, pitch
of sheet over it or something like that. But as
far as really going into an extreme, you know, I
(13:28):
gotta go out here and throw a blanket over everything
in my yard. You ain't got to do that unless
next for you a few days, it's not gonna get
that cold.
Speaker 4 (13:35):
Unless you just want to you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (13:37):
But hey, a better safe than sorry, I can tell
you but uh.
Speaker 5 (13:40):
And I but I tell you you know, we're here here,
we are talking about cold. But man, we're going into
slingshot mode now. Yeah, Old Earth is rotating around the
sun and we're fixing the being spring.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
Man, I'm ready for it.
Speaker 5 (13:50):
And I know Long Cares is starting to gain traction
and a lot of people are starting to wake up.
I was out yesterday just doing bids and we'll talk
about that after the break, but I'll out doing bids
getting people signed up for long Care. And it ain't
gonna be long and we're gonna start getting those phone calls,
you know. I people hadn't done anything with their yard.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
Oh they want it fixed, yes.
Speaker 5 (14:10):
Or they got off the bandwagon in the fall, thinking, hey,
it's winter, so I don't have to do anything to
my yard. And that's exactly the opposite of what you
need to be doing. So right now is the time.
Like what we're doing now is prepping the yard for
the spring in the summer months, and we're starting to
get a jump on any weeds that might be coming
up in the yard.
Speaker 4 (14:30):
So now's the time.
Speaker 5 (14:32):
You can give our office a call eight five four
four thousand and five, get set up for long care,
and we'll come out and give you a quote to
do that. Landscaping, irrigation, nightlighting, forest mulching. Chris Keith, we'll
talk something about that too, because you know that's a
fantastic way to clear land without tearing everything up. So
we'll talk a little bit about that on the other.
Speaker 4 (14:52):
Side of the break. This is a classic Gardens and
Landscape show on w RC. We'll be right back.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
It's the Classic Gardens in Landscape Show.
Speaker 8 (15:01):
Get advice from two of the South's premier plaid guys,
Chris Joiner and Chris Keith on the Classic Gardens and
Landscape Show.
Speaker 6 (15:10):
Russell green Hodge has been insuring my business, my home
and my farm for over twenty years. You see Russell
as an independent agent. He gets to shop the insurance
industry to bring me the best possible insurance and price.
Green Houge Insurance is a family run business with his
wife Marcia and son Adam involved. As Russ eases up
(15:32):
a little, Adam is stepping in. I remember when my
home on my farm burned down to the ground. I
called Russ that afternoon and the next morning I had
an adjuster standing next to me on my farm. My
memory is a little foggy, but the way I tell
the story is he wrote me a check on the
spot for the full amount of the policy. If it
(15:53):
didn't happen that way. It was so easy to work
with them that it seemed it happened that way. I
also remember when my house in Burna, Mingham had tornado damage.
I called green Houge late on a Saturday, prepared to
leave a message on the phone. Russ answered. I said, Russ,
why are you work so late on a Saturday. He said, Mike,
there is a storm and I'm expecting some phone calls
(16:14):
from my customers. It might be hard to believe, but
that's the kind of service you get from Green Houge Insurance.
Give Russ or Adam a call today nine to sixty
seven eighty eight hundred and tell them that Mike sent
you News.
Speaker 3 (16:28):
Radio one oh five five. Hell ueerc you have.
Speaker 6 (16:31):
Been hearing me talk about Caboda on this program for
thirty three years now. When I first went into business,
I had to have a tractor. I didn't know much
about Koboda, but that it was a pretty tractor and affordable.
Only later did I find out how dependable they are.
Another key component is where you buy your Koboda. Blunt
County Tractor established nineteen forty seven and Josh Fallen in
(16:55):
Auniana is where I go six two, five, five, three
eight one. Anly run business. Josh and his wife Oddie
newture a growing business. Whether you're looking for a small tractor,
a mid size or a large tractor, Caboda and Blunt
County Tractor have them all, and so do I. I
own the smallest tractor and the largest tractor Caboda makes.
(17:17):
I don't think any of my tractors are newer than
twenty years old. At every time I use them, they crank,
they run, they get the job done, and they are
dependable and comfortable. Blunt County Tractor also has a complete
line of Z turn mowers. Man These are the best.
I have a small one from my home in town
and the largest one they make for my farm, the
(17:37):
Z seven two six X. It's a beast and you
cannot stop it. Blunt County Tractor also has a complete
line of any attachment you might need for your tractor.
Call Josh Fallon at Blunt County Tractor in Auniana today
six two, five, five, three eight one, and tell them
that Mike sent you.
Speaker 9 (17:56):
Ferd alone, ferd alone, my love, my furd alone. I'm
a bird alone, ferd alone on my ferd alone, my
bird alone, ferd alone, my love, my ferd alone, ferd alone.
Speaker 4 (18:10):
Love to use my fird alone.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
Tell you why it makes my plants grow and it
makes weeds die.
Speaker 3 (18:17):
When Chris San Chris South talking plants.
Speaker 9 (18:20):
My long has died a fighting chance because of Ferdalan.
Speaker 2 (18:25):
Yeah, you gotta have you fertilong. It's time for pre
emerging now, Chris. We pushed a bag of gold in March,
and we put it in September. There ain't a bad
time to do it. If you want to do it
in January and July, you can do it. That's no problem.
I guarantee you, though, if you put a pre emerging
out right now, you won't have crab gress.
Speaker 4 (18:42):
That's right, you won't have crab rep.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
I guarantee you one thing, though. If you don't put
a pre emergent by about March, you're gonna have a
hell of them.
Speaker 4 (18:50):
Then we'll have that bunch of it.
Speaker 5 (18:52):
And that's that's the name of the game right now,
Chris Keeth. I was walking around before the radio show
and I got you some flowers.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
All right, man, there's that's why we're honey circle.
Speaker 4 (19:01):
No, that's for Cythia.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
Oh is it walk?
Speaker 4 (19:04):
I walked to my and there and there you go and.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
Looked at your winter honey.
Speaker 5 (19:08):
So I did so I was was probably that's so
that's why I'm talking about. It's wearing slingshot mode, you
know what I'm saying. So like spring is fixing to
be here, you know, we're it was just so for
forcythia's your yellow bell. That's one of those kind of
harbingers of spring. They always say when you see the
Forcythian bloom, that crabgrass is is on the germination. And
(19:30):
now that's probably a little bit a little bit early
for for Cythia to be blooming, but you know, or
for crabgrass to be germinating. But like weed, seeds germinate
all year long, three hundred and sixty five days a year.
It's not like it's not like all these weeds have
some like you know, radio channel, and they're all around
the southeast basically coordinating their germination.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
All right, guys, let's come out this time.
Speaker 5 (19:54):
It's March twenty fourth, at three fifty one pm. Let's
all germinate. It don't work that way, you know what
I'm saying. Weed seeds Germany at year round, especially like
with our weather, our weather in Alabama. If you've lived
here long enough, you know, it's like a roller coaster. Gosh,
you know how many Christmases have we spent under tornado
warnings out there in shorts and tank tops, you know
(20:15):
what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (20:16):
I mean even this past week.
Speaker 5 (20:19):
This past week, it was sixty degrees during the day,
fantastic weather. Cold in the morning, but it was it
was super warm during the day. So you got to
get started. And that's one thing I was. I was
out doing bids, signing people up for long care, and
you know, I was telling them, you know, hey, we're
starting with a pre mergent because you have to get
that down before the weed seeds Germany. So you start
(20:42):
out the year with the pre mergent, and that ensures
that you know, crabgrass, h spurge, gripe weed, stuff that
you're going to see later on during the growing season,
that you're ahead of it and that you don't have
that stuff growing in your yard. Crab grass is a nightmare.
Once that stuff comes up, it's hard to get rid of.
And you know, even the best weed.
Speaker 2 (21:02):
Killed it's like Poe Adam.
Speaker 5 (21:03):
Yeah, it's just tough, tough, tough to get rid of.
So you know, with all these kind of harbingers of
spring coming on, had forcythia and bloom that's old uh
and uh and tulip tulip magnolia right there, it's got
buds all over it. It's fixing the bust out. I
got edgeworthy out there. That's that's that's fixing the bloom.
I was gonna pick one and bring to you, but
the blooms hadn't opened up yet. And my winter honeysuckle,
(21:26):
it's got buds.
Speaker 4 (21:26):
All over it, but it's a little late, but.
Speaker 5 (21:29):
It hasn't it hasn't put on any any uh any blooms,
because I was gonna pick you a piece of that
and and bring in here.
Speaker 2 (21:35):
Now, winter honeysuckle is a neat plant. It's it's an
ugly plant. We'll go ahead and tell you it's ugly.
Speaker 5 (21:42):
It's just like a old trash grubby shrubs you would
probably cut.
Speaker 4 (21:46):
Down out of the out of your landscape if you
didn't know what it was.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
You stick this thing out there in the natural area,
and you don't want a dozen of them. One one
will do all you need to do. You stick it
out there in the middle of nowhere where you don't
have to purn it mat It's kind of a big,
burdly looking bush. This time of year, it buds up
and it'll have buds all over the thing, and then
it'll start blooming here in another week or two and
(22:11):
it'll bloom for about a month and a half. But
the cool thing is you can take it right now.
Those buds are just swelled up and just doing their thing.
You can cut them, you know, cut you a half
a dozen twigs off of it or whatever. Bringing in
the house where it's warm, and the thing of bust
and when it busts, you get this man just fragrant smell.
(22:32):
It is like a citrusy smell that will just ring
through your house. This smells fantastic. Yeah, they are, and uh,
bus out of the yard because everything's dead and dormant
and looking all terrible when you can't really see the blooms.
Speaker 5 (22:46):
Like kind of like a tea all of t I
don't have like a big showy bloom, but they smell
for a mile. Yes, sir, I don't even think we have.
We had about six or seven at the Gordon Center
because I was treating the yard years ago.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
Nobody asked for.
Speaker 5 (23:00):
Except for me, and that's why we had them, because
I was like, hey, I sent picture a picture to
Ann and I was like, what is this plant? Because
it smells terrific And it was one of those things.
I walked through the gate and I smelled it and
I was looking around and I'm looking for something in
bloom and I don't see anything, and come back through
the gate, I turned and I'm fallowing my nose like
(23:21):
a dog, you know, looking for something. And I came
up on that winter honeysuckle and I said, An, what
is this? And she said, Oh, that's winter honeysuckle. That's
the old school. That's one of the Grandma plants that
we talk about.
Speaker 4 (23:30):
You know what I'm saying. People don't plant that anymore.
Speaker 5 (23:33):
And I think I said I need one of those
from my yard, and I think she ordered about six
or seven of them. I don't we don't have any
of the Garden Center anymore, I don't think. But that's
just it's a it's a neat little plant. Edgeworthy is
the same way that Edgeworthy that I have in my backyard.
Speaker 4 (23:46):
I want to say. We probably had our garden center
for ten years.
Speaker 5 (23:50):
Yeah, and the thing was like split in half and
just you know, on its on its last leg. And
I was like, all right, I can I can nurse
this thing back to health.
Speaker 2 (23:59):
That's a plant too. It is Edgeworthy is really tough
that it grows more like a tree on us. It
looks like an oly ander. Yeah, it has kind of long,
leathery leaves. But man, I think blooms in the sport,
you know, blooms in the wintertime when nothing else is blooming.
We got to still got that customer, Chris, that's got
that big one in the backyard down there on the
(24:19):
golf course in downtown.
Speaker 4 (24:21):
Yeah. Uh Smith's turn tall. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (24:25):
You can find a million golf balls in her backyard
every time you go there. Oh yeah, we did landscaping
four sot at her front yard years and years ago.
She's on the golf on the burn I think is
Birmingham golf course right down on off Claremont.
Speaker 2 (24:37):
Man hers. When that thing blooms, you can smell it
all over that golf course, I know.
Speaker 5 (24:41):
But all these flowers in bloom, and then we're getting
you know, staying daylight longer, ere the sun setting, you
know longer.
Speaker 4 (24:47):
So it was five point thirty. Sadie and I were.
Speaker 5 (24:51):
Actually out two days ago, and you know, the Forcythia
bushes that I have at my house, I dug up
from my in laws and it's just basically where kind
of leaves had piled up on some of the branches
and they'd rooted, and they keep spreading further and further out,
and I've got it. For Cynthia is one of those
you can't kill that thing. It's a it's bulletproof.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
It's tough.
Speaker 5 (25:11):
Silas transplanting some of those to make a little hedgerow
alongside of my property, but mit set. Sadie and I
were out transplanting those the other day and I told
Sadie as a Sadie, look at the time, it's five
point thirty and we can still see outside, you know,
you know what I'm saying. So springs right around the corner.
You got to get on a lawn fertilization and we'd
(25:33):
control program.
Speaker 4 (25:35):
I was.
Speaker 5 (25:35):
I was met with a with a gentleman that bought
a house in December, US. His white House was his name,
and we were looking and I was showing him Poana
and bittercrest that was about a sixteenth of an inch tall,
and he, you know, he'd mentioned, He's like, when do
you think I need to start on a lawn fertilization program.
I was like, listen, let's get you signed up today
and we can swing back by next week and go
(25:57):
ahead and get started spray and pre merging, and then
will also be doing a post emergent application as well.
And I started to show them these weeds Poanna and bittercress,
and there was some hen bit that was popping up
and it was like a sixteenth of an inch tall.
He's like, oh wow, man, it's amazing that you can
see stuff that that's small. And I was like, yeah,
(26:17):
well right now it's teeny tiny.
Speaker 2 (26:19):
Give it a month.
Speaker 5 (26:20):
Give it a month and that stuff is gonna explode.
And he's like, oh yeah, to look like a nightmare.
I was like, no, I want because we're gonna be
out here. It'spragnant for you and that and the bad
thing about that time of year is like the grass
isn't growing, but like weeds are, you know. So people
aren't into a regular mowing routine out there cutting every
single week. So if you, if you, if you need
to get on a pre emergent program like now, now's
(26:44):
the time to start doing that.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
There's not a bad time. But man, if you don't
want any crabgrass, you gotta start yesterday. Yeah, I mean
you gotta get on it.
Speaker 4 (26:50):
Yeah, that's right. So, and I want to say hey
to mister Clark.
Speaker 7 (26:54):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (26:54):
He's he's an avid radio show listener. Mister Clark said.
He popped her head down here earlier. She had two
Caprice sons. She looked at me to smile, and she
ran back upstairs. David David Clark is one of our
longtime customers, and he treated his yard himself. I was
out there this past week and gave him a quote
for us to take care of it. And I said,
(27:15):
we're gonna start taking care of mister Clark sharp, make
his life a little bit easier so he.
Speaker 4 (27:19):
Can do other things.
Speaker 2 (27:20):
Man, I love his lot.
Speaker 4 (27:21):
That's a beautiful lot.
Speaker 2 (27:22):
I can cut his Japanese maples for him back. Uh,
I guess well, that was in July, and I shared
some my mom's a gosh sour crowd with him. It
was my mom make my mom and dad make homemade
sour crowd. They do it. It's not if you make
homemade sour crowd, it's not as tangy and you know
(27:44):
out there at the stuff you buy the grocery store. Yeah,
and uh it's.
Speaker 4 (27:47):
A little bit just a little bit more subtle.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
It's pretty dang good. Yeah, boy, yeah, I mean it's
really good.
Speaker 5 (27:52):
So that was mister Clark signed him up, mister white
House brand new homeowner. And then mister Borges lives a
Rocky Ridge Road area, another one like mister Clark. We've
been delivering products to his house for years and he
treats it himself.
Speaker 4 (28:07):
But he had I met him.
Speaker 5 (28:10):
I was, I got ahead of schedule and I called
him and I said Scott was his first name, said
Scott Man. I was like, hey, I'm down off Rocky
Ridge Road. You mind if I swing by real quick?
Oh yeah, I'm here, uh seeing a few minutes. And
so I pull up to the yard and his his
wife was at the mailbox walking back up, and he
had he had recently had an ankle surgery, and so
(28:30):
he was on one of those scooters you know where
where you put your knee up and you kind of
scoot along. I get out and I was like, hey, Scott,
what did you do?
Speaker 2 (28:37):
Back?
Speaker 5 (28:37):
Talk to your wife and she hit you with the
nine iron at the boat start laughing. But uh, he'd
had ankle replacement, and I don't I've never heard of
ankle replace I'm I'm, I'm obviously, I know it's a
it's a sill, but I've never met anybody that had
an ankle replacement.
Speaker 4 (28:52):
And he was telling me about it.
Speaker 5 (28:54):
You know that rehab wise, it was no different than
probably like a hip replacement, knee replacement.
Speaker 4 (28:59):
You know, you get up, you get moving, you do
rehab and everything.
Speaker 5 (29:01):
But he, you know, he's like, I ain't gonna be
able to push a spreader, And joking around with him,
I was like, man, I can.
Speaker 4 (29:06):
I could put a motor on.
Speaker 5 (29:07):
That scooter for you, and I can put a hopper
on there, but uh, we're gonna be We're starting to
take care of his yard right now.
Speaker 2 (29:14):
Now.
Speaker 5 (29:14):
I love starting out with guys like that, you know that,
you know, they just get tired of treating it themselves,
and uh, you know, we come out, we give them
a price, and you know, price wise, it's typically not
much more of a difference. Sometimes it's more, sometimes it's less.
But their yards are already in good shape because they've
been following our program.
Speaker 4 (29:32):
For just about everything.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
Just about every one of our life for customers from
the garden Center, at some point just gets too old
or just gets to the point where they say the
heck with it, I don't want to do it no more,
and then we wind up doing it for them. It
just happens. Yeah, God, I know we're up for break, Chris,
let's go ahead and do that. I want to say,
hey to Scott out in Mount Brook. We did a
landscaping job for him. Gosh, I get we did that one.
(29:58):
Let's see, that was Tuesday and Wednesday we were working
over there at his place. We did a complete demo
his front shrubs. Brought the Mini X out there and
we can do this for you too. I mean he
literally had you know, seven foot tall as alias and
big box woods and we only kept six shrubs. In
front of the house. There was three high draines on
(30:19):
either side that looked pretty uh well, they don't look
pretty now. They were neked and dormant and looked ugly,
but they'll be pretty in the spring. And we went
around there and ripped out everything out with the excavator,
hauled everything to the to the road, took the excavator,
walked it out there and loaded up all of his trash,
got all of his new shrubs in, made his bed
(30:39):
smaller and you know, shrunk it was about a pallet
and half a sod and got him fixed up and uh,
he's good to go. So I want to say hey
and thank you to Scott for having us out on
his place and doing business with him. And uh, we'd
love to do business for you too. So if you
want to call and see up the appointment for landscaping or
or long irrigation, night lighting, patios, retaining walls, forest mulching,
(31:04):
land clearing in that stuff, if you call us eight
five four four thousand and five. If you want to
call us on the radio show, you can do that now.
It's two o five four three nine nine three seven
two and we'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
It's the classic Gardens of Landscape show, all the half
ready with you'll watch up Lance.
Speaker 9 (31:36):
And grass to grub two ncent because Christy.
Speaker 3 (31:40):
Chris no, and now you're a host, Chris Joiner and
Chris Keith.
Speaker 2 (31:47):
Then we're back for the second half of the Class
of Gardens of Landscape show. We would love to hear
from you if you want to call us us two
O five four three nine nine three seven two. We
do mention, need to mention. The garden Center is open
Monday through Friday eight to four. Y'all come see us
you obviously it's time to do pre emergent uh where.
Over the next few weeks we'll start having more and
(32:09):
more shipments of shrubs and things coming in because uh man, spring.
All it takes is the flip of a switch man
and spring will be here. You ain't wrong, brother, I mean,
if you really looked right now, like if you walked
out in the yard and really look close, your daffodils
are probably sticking up about it in.
Speaker 4 (32:25):
I was looking for him this morning.
Speaker 2 (32:27):
I was out there.
Speaker 5 (32:30):
And everything back when I was looking at us for
Cythia's and the magnolia and the Edgeworthia, I was looking
for daffodils.
Speaker 4 (32:36):
But I probably just wasn't digging in the right spot.
Speaker 2 (32:38):
Well. My birthday is in a week and then Mike's
birthday is in the middle of February, and usually depending
on how the weather he is. Now mine's too early, Like,
you ain't gonna see none blooming the twenty seventh. That
ain't gonna job. But if you get around into the
first second week of February, you lable to see some
uh you know, starting to blow around the tenth yep,
(33:01):
you know what I mean, just the odd one somewhere.
So yeah, that for seeing those daffodils start blooming. Next thing,
you know, you'll start seeing the first winter jazzmine blooming.
You'll see a quince or to start blooming, and then
those Forscithia is gonna start kicking in, and when they do,
everything else is gonna fall suit. Usually by then we'll
(33:22):
get that nice good spell where the croppie season just
really kicks.
Speaker 4 (33:26):
Off, like yes, sir, yeah, going on with that.
Speaker 2 (33:31):
Yeah, and then uh, you know, once that happens, then uh,
you know, you'll get into dogwood blooming and you know,
the saucer Magnoi's and all that stuff's going blooming, and
then you really get into the grappi sees.
Speaker 5 (33:44):
I need it, man, you gave me some of that
crappie at the end of the last season, and you said, hey,
go in my go in my barn, open up that
refrigerator and grab your sack of crappie. File as goodness,
I showing up did and uh, I think it was.
It was right then the pool season and man, I
set out there, everybody swimming, I'm sitting there frying up
some fish.
Speaker 4 (34:00):
And touch puppies. Man's some fine food.
Speaker 2 (34:03):
I love doing a fish fry to better than anything
because man, you can literally you can fry out one
hundred flays at about ten times no time, and everybody's like,
oh god, that's fantastic.
Speaker 4 (34:15):
And it was the easiest thing in the world to go.
Speaker 2 (34:17):
It's so fun.
Speaker 4 (34:18):
It's like my birthday.
Speaker 5 (34:19):
Party we're having tomorrow, and I know we're getting off track,
but Sarah's Sadie's birthday is I'm not Sadie Claire's birthday.
Speaker 4 (34:26):
She'll be dang twelve twelve years old.
Speaker 5 (34:30):
Goodness gracious, right, you're asking a dad, asking dad how
old you got?
Speaker 2 (34:35):
Three?
Speaker 4 (34:36):
I got twelve, got twelve, ten and five? Right, It's funny.
Speaker 5 (34:40):
If I ever have to pick up medicine from the
from the pharmacy girls. They'll walk up and you know,
I'll tell them. I was like, all right, you know,
Carolina Winter, what's her birthday? And I'll joke around, but
like you know, you're asking a dad what the child
birthday is. I can get the days, but the years
I get the year, I get all messed up.
Speaker 4 (34:59):
But something.
Speaker 5 (35:00):
Anyway, Sunday we're having her her birthday party because we
got some in laws coming into town from uh from
Virginia and uh doing a Boston butt baby. Talking about food,
that's I love doing. Talk about Boston button. I'm smoking
a Boston button. I'm smoking a whole chicken and I'll
pick it apart and do barbecue and I'll have food
(35:21):
for for a few days after the fact. But uh,
you talking about you're talking about frying crappy. I love
smoking chicken and Boston. But birthday parties and everything. And
we're getting pizza for the kids because some of the
kids don't like that.
Speaker 4 (35:33):
But I don't like going.
Speaker 5 (35:34):
To a birthday party or you know, get together and
people are like, yeah, we're doing pizza.
Speaker 4 (35:39):
Yeah, put forth some.
Speaker 2 (35:40):
Effort, really, if nothing else, just some Bubba Burgers.
Speaker 5 (35:44):
You know what I'm saying, go with steps man. It's
just amazing, how how the how the kids grow up.
I know you got you got kids fixing and get married,
both of right.
Speaker 2 (35:54):
And uh, I'm going to look at wedding venues when
I leave.
Speaker 5 (35:57):
Here now about that, and you know Claire's Claire's Uh.
I think I may have talked about this last time.
We painted our girls bedrooms over Christmas break. And they've
gotten to the age where now they want to get
ready upstairs in their own bathrooms for school, you know
what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (36:15):
So they get they get their hair, they get dressed.
Speaker 5 (36:16):
They could do their hair and all that kind of
stuff upstairs because they're getting older and they want to
just have their own have their own space where you know,
just a couple of months ago, you know, everybody's piled
in our bathroom getting ready and getting dressed and everything
for school.
Speaker 4 (36:31):
So my little babies are growing up.
Speaker 2 (36:36):
The daughters have a soft spot and dat I can't
I remember the first time and act Kaylee inn as
she was just little, she was smaller than Sadie, and uh,
she went missing. She was in the living rooms, went missing,
and I went looking for and the bathroom door was
cracked in there or whatever. And I opened the bathroom
(36:56):
door and she's sitting on the toy and she says,
I don't need no audience, and she slammed the door
in my face. I said, all right, that's something of that.
Speaker 5 (37:06):
You said, Yes, ma'am, you learned your place. Oh man,
that's funny, grown man, you know had we were at
out gardening. So when Sadie and I were transplanting that
for Scithy, A great time to transplant plants right now
as well, Chris Keith, You say the months with Jay's right,
But Jay, that's a that's a perfect.
Speaker 4 (37:27):
Time to transplant plants.
Speaker 2 (37:29):
Perfect time to prune. Man, if you've got a tree,
you need to get up and then and thin. Uh.
You know, I know there's people all over the place
right now murdering crak myrtles. Uh. You know, I've come
to think of it, Chris, as the homeowner just feel
sorry for the dude that cuts his grass and says, man,
(37:50):
won't you just come cut my crape myrtle so you
can make some money.
Speaker 4 (37:53):
Is there anything you can do around here to make
some money? And there you go.
Speaker 2 (37:58):
I'm just I think the home owner just feel sorry
for the cruts his grass. Uh you don't cut the
tops air trading worlds.
Speaker 4 (38:05):
People don't do it.
Speaker 2 (38:07):
Don't do it anyways. Uh, great time of year if
you want to go up in and thin a tree
or limb up a tree or anything like that, it's
a great time to do.
Speaker 4 (38:16):
You know.
Speaker 5 (38:16):
We I was with Ms Mackenzie the other day. We
actually treat the whole family's yard. You know, we treat
Cooper's yard over in Liberty Park. That's that one that
had that monstrosity of an irrigation valve on the other
side of the driveway that had that had I mean
that thing had roots running as big as Hulk.
Speaker 4 (38:34):
Cogan's bice up theythons.
Speaker 2 (38:36):
Well they they I don't even know how they built
the manifold like this, crisscrossed like a like a Alabama flag. Yeah,
and uh it was the darnest thing that the guys
had to just to cut the whole thing out and
completely rebuild it. And uh it had juniper roots and stuff.
The guy had juniper was like seven feet tall going
(39:00):
down the side of the driveway. And uh when we
first saw it, I think it was right before the
holidays last year, and Uh, me and me and Sergeio
pulled up and we're looking at it like man and somebody.
Speaker 4 (39:13):
You couldn't even wrap your head around it.
Speaker 2 (39:14):
I know. And it was like it was like one
thirty on a Friday, and I was like, man, we're
not even gonna tackle this right now. And the grass
was I think the grass was dormant to anyway. And
it was like, he don't even need irrigation right now.
Let's let's pun on this because we need to come
out here the first thing in the morning one day.
And first off, we even give him a price, and uh,
(39:36):
because it's gonna be expensive. And uh, we had to
go in there and dig excavate the whole thing out,
you know, by hand, and then cut all this out
and completely rebuild this whole manifold. It was.
Speaker 4 (39:47):
It was a nightmare.
Speaker 2 (39:48):
I wasn't there to build it, but I know what
it was gonna be.
Speaker 5 (39:51):
So I went out there with the landscapers that day,
helping them with Sergio and Nardo, and that.
Speaker 4 (39:55):
Was a nightmare.
Speaker 2 (39:56):
I knew it was gonna be tough.
Speaker 5 (39:57):
I was at his mom's house this past week and
she was asking about or his mom and his mom
and his mom and his sister lived together and sisters
out there, and we were talking about our jack maple
and she was talking about, you know, I have a
tree company, come out here, give me some advice. I'm like,
pruning this crape myrtle, and I start or the Japanese maple.
(40:18):
I start talking to her and I'm like, listen, you know,
I know, people kind of get intimidated when it comes to,
you know, pruning a Japanese maple because they're big, they're pretty,
they're expensive as there's a prestige when it comes to
to uh, Japanese maples. But it's really not difficult. Don't
don't overthink it, you know. You again, you want to
prune those when the SAP's down in the roots, which
(40:41):
is like January, or when that's fully leafed out, which
is you know, June July time frame. But you basically
just kind of and I was showing her, you just
kind of step back and you look at the tree
and you look at what branches you want to keep
and what branches you want to take out. And she
had a couple that were kind of like hanging out
onto the onto the sidewall where you had to duck
to get under him if you were over five feet tall,
(41:04):
and I was like, you know, you just you take
this limb out, and you take this limb out. You
come all the way back to you know where it
meets at the branch what's called it like the shirt
that looks kind of like a shirt collar, and you
just and you prune it right there and you just
cut that whole limb off, and uh that's all you
got to do. Just look at it and and uh
take out whatever limbs you don't want.
Speaker 2 (41:23):
As not much to it. It's not hardber I always
always remember you can't put it back.
Speaker 4 (41:30):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 2 (41:31):
So you know, less is more, start with les and
then you know, go from there. But you can't put
it back.
Speaker 4 (41:37):
Nope.
Speaker 2 (41:38):
Chris's time for break. Let's take that last break of
the show. Or number if you're on a callis you
might have a second two O five four, three nine
nine three seven to two.
Speaker 3 (41:49):
It's the show in the Know with all things that grow.
Speaker 8 (41:52):
It's the classic gardens and landscape show with Chris Joiners
and Chris Keith Russell Green.
Speaker 6 (41:57):
How it has been ensuring my business, my home and
my farm for over twenty years.
Speaker 4 (42:03):
You see Russell.
Speaker 6 (42:04):
As an independent agent, he gets to shop the insurance
industry to bring me the best possible insurance and price.
Green Hoouge Insurance is a family run business, with his
wife Marcia and son Adam involved. As Russ eases up,
a little, Adam is stepping in. I remember when my
home on my farm burned down to the ground. I
(42:26):
called Russ that afternoon and the next morning I had
an adjuster standing next to me on my farm. My
memory is a little foggy, but the way I tell
the story is he wrote me a check on the
spot for the full amount of the policy. If it
didn't happen that way.
Speaker 4 (42:41):
It was so easy to work with them.
Speaker 3 (42:43):
That it seemed it happened that way.
Speaker 6 (42:45):
I also remember when my house in Birmingham had tornado damage.
I called green Houge, laid on a satdery prepared to
leave a message on the phone. Russ answered. I said, Russ,
why are you work so late on a Saturday? He said, Mike,
there was a storm and I'm expecting some phone calls
from my customers. It might be hard to believe, but
that's the kind of service you get from green Houge Insurance.
(43:08):
Give Russ or Adam A call today nine to sixty
seven eighty eight hundred and tell them that Mike sent you.
Speaker 3 (43:23):
It's the long Ranger.
Speaker 5 (43:27):
For a lawn tractor with a speed of light, a
bag of soil and a.
Speaker 3 (43:34):
Hearty high hold for the loan. The lone Ranger Hio
for the away. Yes, it's the lone Ranger.
Speaker 4 (43:43):
Chris Joyner with his dusty companions.
Speaker 2 (43:47):
Hot, I'm dusty, old dusty man. Were getting back after
it for real. If y'all want landscape and no joke,
call us eight five four four thousand and five. I'd
love to come out there. I don't care if I
had to bring an excavator truck and chain. Most of
the time we can do just about anything with our
little Vermire machine. We'll bring a grapple out there and
(44:10):
you know, a chain and we can go in and
just literally dig out all your shrubs in no time.
I think we had Scott shrubs out the other day
in about an hour. And uh yeah, we had a
whole big trade a load of a trash we hauled
out from over there, and uh when we left, man,
it looked a lot nicer and really cleaned up his
whole his old area. And you know, as we could
(44:33):
have probably done that job in a day, but just
on account of obviously we've had so much moisture with
all the snow and then it rained down in South Alabama,
so trying to get side was a little bit of
a problem. Uh there for a day, so it pushed
us into a second day with that. Otherwise, Uh, we'd
have probably finished that one in close to a day.
(44:54):
But uh, it still worked out really good, and he
was totally happy with everything and all that stuff, so
it was working with him.
Speaker 5 (45:00):
You know, that's our bread and butter type landscaping. What
do you say, Chris Keith, We've always said about every
fifteen years roughly, that's about when a landscape gets out
of bounds.
Speaker 2 (45:11):
It depends on the homeowner really, I mean, and what
was there before? So you know, if you if you
pick the right shrubs to begin with, you want to
go with something that's low and slow, then you don't
have to worry about coming in there and you know,
five or six years and replace it. You can't just
go to the nursery and grab the first lord pedal
(45:34):
you see and stick it in front of your house.
There's varieties that get as big as an eli agnus,
and there's varieties that won't get over you know, ankle high,
So you have to make sure that you're getting the
right one for the application that you're working with. It's
the same thing with a zel as. You can't just
go in there and say, hey, I want to pink
azelia or hey I want a white azelia. There's twenty
(45:56):
five or thirty different varieties, maybe more than that of
different and azalias. Some of them get as big as
a tree, you know, and some of them won't get
over you know, the little gumpo isis won't get you know,
foot tall. So you have to make sure that you're
getting the proper size for what you're wanting to do. Obviously,
every shrub, the lower it stays, the slower it grows.
(46:19):
So a shrub that gets eight feet tall or ten
feet tall, or they say get eight or ten feet tall,
is gonna get there much faster than a shrub that
only supposed to be maintained at about three or four
feet tall. Keep in mind also, plants aren't like us.
They don't get to six foot or five foot ten
or whatever and stop growing. They continuously grow regardless of
(46:41):
whether the tax says, well, this plant gets three feet tall.
If you go out there and you plant a yopin holly,
and thirty five years from now that plant still there,
it's probably gonna be seven feet high. But they say
that the plant's only going to get three foot tall.
But the plant never quits grow one the plant hints
(47:02):
a spot where in its mature form, it dramatically slows down.
So keep that in mind too when you're putting in shrubs.
You know, no plant just gets to a certain height
and quits, So you're gonna constantly have to do some trimming.
There's there's no such thing as no maintenance on shrubs,
but there are a lot of shrubs that are super
(47:23):
low maintenance.
Speaker 5 (47:24):
Yeah, and that's what we try to put in for
that's what we do put in for homeowners because nobody
likes trimming shrubs. Now, there's a few people out there
that do, but that's few and far between. Ed Kline, Yeah,
Ed Kline ain't got a difference. He ain't got a
he ain't got a thing out of.
Speaker 4 (47:39):
Place in his yard. It's it's beautiful.
Speaker 2 (47:41):
Frank Montgomery, there you go that there's just a handful
of dudes like that, you know that. Just I mean,
if there's a if there's a leaf out of place,
they're plucking it.
Speaker 5 (47:52):
But everything that we do for the homeowners, we look
out for their for their work, you know what I mean,
Like we make it as easy for them as po
whether it's landscaping or whether it's fertilization, we control. We
want to make their life easier, you know, so that
they can spend time with family, They can hang out,
watch the ball game, go to the ball fields, cook
Boston butts, all that kind of stuff.
Speaker 4 (48:13):
Yeah, we are low maintenance, load maintenance.
Speaker 2 (48:15):
That's it. Man. Well, y'all that means our that music
means our time is over. Y'all. Come see us to
the garden Center. We're at eighteen fifty five Carson Road
where there are Monday through Friday eight to four. If
you need landscaping, irrigation, night lighting, if you need a
patio or a taining wall, if you need forest multing,
land clearing, any of that stuff, you call us eight
(48:36):
five four, four thousand and five. Then we'll be right
back next week on the class of gardens of landscape
ships be