Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The following is a p program.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
The opinions expressed are those of the hosts and do
not necessarily represent the views and opinions of w e
r C management employees or advertisers.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
It's the Classic Gardens and Landscape Show on the head
Ready and if you want.
Speaker 4 (00:18):
Show up plants and grass to grow?
Speaker 5 (00:21):
Two and docent Chris, Chris and Chris. No, Chris knows it,
Chris knows it. Chris knows it. Chris knows it. Chris
knows it. Chris knows it. Sure, Chris knows it. Chris
knows it.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
And now you're a host. Chris Joyner and Chris Keith, Good.
Speaker 4 (00:44):
Morning, Welcome the Classic Gardens and Lance Bait Show on
w e RC.
Speaker 6 (00:48):
I'm Chris Keith, I'm Chris Joiner. Hope everybody's doing fantastic today.
Speaker 7 (00:52):
It's pretty this morning. Sure is last night? Boy?
Speaker 6 (00:54):
That got so Chris Keith? And how many miles do
you think we live from each other? To mind where
we're ten minutes?
Speaker 4 (01:02):
Ten minutes at seventy five miles an hour?
Speaker 6 (01:04):
Yeah, ainten, let's just say we'll say ten miles. Well,
man at the came a storm last night, so we
were Sarah Yesterday was our anniversary sixteen. We've been married
sixteen years and uh been to that was two thousand
and nine when we got married, and I think we,
uh we had been together for probably oh man, I
(01:24):
don't know, fives six years before. You know, before that,
we knew each other for a long time. So here's
here's here's my love story. All right, this is a
garden show. If you have any gardening questions, you can
give us a call for three nine nine three seven two.
But Sarah and I knew each other basically Mike and
Anne's oldest daughter, Laura, her and Sarah went to school together,
(01:47):
and Laura and uh Sarah my wife. They they always
I think they always kind of wanted to hang out
with me and whatnot. But I was kind of a
wild child growing up, you know, I had a I
was a free spirit.
Speaker 8 (01:58):
You know.
Speaker 6 (01:59):
I went out in part with the boys all the time,
and they wanted to go to like the you know,
the drive in movie theater or the skating rink or
something like that and just hang out. And I'm like,
I don't want to hang out with them fuddy duddies.
I want to go party with the boys.
Speaker 7 (02:10):
Dress And so they tried and tried and tried.
Speaker 6 (02:16):
And finally, after multiple attempts and me blowing them off
a lot, they finally gave up on me and Sarah
and them quit basically quit calling me. And I was
driving down I was driving down Carson Road. This is
a couple of years after the fact. I was driving
down Carson Road and uh, heading back to the garden Center,
and I just thought.
Speaker 7 (02:37):
I wonder what Sarah's up to these days. I hadn't
talked to her in a long time.
Speaker 6 (02:40):
And so I got back home to my mom's house
when I still lived in Roebuck, and I pulled out
the phone book.
Speaker 7 (02:47):
How about that.
Speaker 6 (02:49):
A lot of people listening to this radio show remember those,
but some might not. So I got up, I got
out the phone book, and I looked up I looked
up their phone number, and the whole time I was thinking, Man,
I hope she didn't go off to college in South
Carolina because she want I think at one point she
wanted to go to South Carolina. Man, I hope she
didn't go to South Carolina. So I looked up a number.
I doubt it, and uh, I don't. I don't remember
who answered, But I sat there on my on my
(03:11):
front sidewalk, pacing back and forth talking to Sarah for
probably two hours that night. And uh, you know, twenty
something years later, here we are, three kids, happily married
in Rock And you know, but I don't know what
made me think about colling Sarah that day, coming coming
back to work, But I guess I'm glad I.
Speaker 7 (03:31):
Did worked out for the beast.
Speaker 6 (03:33):
You know that it's and we're water and oil, oil
and water, however you want to however you want to
say it.
Speaker 7 (03:38):
Uh, I mean.
Speaker 6 (03:39):
We're pretty much completely opposites. And they say opposites even
each other out and that couldn't be further from the truth.
So happy late anniversary to my wife, a lover to death.
We went to Mexican last night. Went a Mexican food.
Get to go to that, right, No big fancy steakhouse.
We're simple to please, but so my my kids, my.
Speaker 7 (03:57):
Kids don't like Mexican food, and so we don't.
Speaker 6 (04:00):
We don't get so we don't get to go a
lot because they always pushed back and say, I don't
want to go do that. I don't want to go
do that. They'd rather go to the steakhouse, and so
for our anniversary. I looked at my kids and I
was like, listen, mom wants to go to Mexican and
we all want to go together.
Speaker 7 (04:14):
So that's where we're going. There.
Speaker 6 (04:16):
You go some some burritos and tacos later celebrate the anniversary.
Speaker 7 (04:20):
Man, they don't like mess.
Speaker 6 (04:22):
They don't know. Wow, I got picky kids. So I
was picky when I was a kid. I would take
I would get the green bean, and I would split
the green bean apart and eat the bean out of
the shell.
Speaker 7 (04:35):
I wouldn't eat the actual pot itself. You know. I
was picky. So that's where they get it from. How
about that.
Speaker 4 (04:41):
I think we got mic on more than Mike. Haw's
it going, Buddy, I've heard.
Speaker 8 (04:45):
A picky before, but man, that's just crazy.
Speaker 7 (04:52):
Now. I'll eat anything. Hey, Mike, here's another funny story.
Speaker 6 (04:55):
I remember we went out to Texas or Colorado at
one of the old Fertiloan meetings, and y'all had ordered
Rocky Mountain oysters. And I'm sitting there, man, and I'm
eating them, and I'm eating.
Speaker 7 (05:07):
I'm like, man, these things are great. Give me more.
Speaker 6 (05:10):
And Mike looks over at the end and they just
start chuckling, and I'm like, what's so funny, and and
somebody said those are Rocky Mountain oysters and I said.
Speaker 8 (05:18):
Huh yeah.
Speaker 7 (05:20):
And Mike was like, those are bull balls and I
was like, man, those are good. Keep them coming.
Speaker 8 (05:26):
Now.
Speaker 7 (05:26):
I'll eat anything I don't care.
Speaker 8 (05:29):
Yeah, kids are typically picky eaters. And I were talking
about that just the other night when we had four kids,
and typically, you know, four kids, growing family, you don't
have much money to go out to eat anyway, but
occasionally explurge and then all the kids start, I don't
want to go there, one would want to go here,
one would go there. I say, look y'all, shut up,
we're going where I'm going to go, or we're going
(05:50):
to turn around and go home, you know, And you
just have to You can't please please all four of
your kids, so you just pick what you knew they'd eat,
whether they were whining about it or not, you know,
changing the subjects lightly, I was, you know, I've had
Cabota z turns, cabotatractors. I can go back fifty years, well,
(06:12):
in the business, thirty five years. I remember when I
bought my first Cabota tractor, and uh, you know, even
back then they had four wheel drive and that was
a new thing for tractors. And I brought it to
the Garden Center. It's so long ago, was it at
the Garden Center or when I was demo at the dealer.
But he had a cross tie land, just an old
cross tie and I said, you think they'll run over that?
(06:34):
And they said try and say, of course, it climbs
right over across those things in climber rock wall. But
I was so impressed. And I've had Cabota attractors. I've
got the little b X twenty two hundred, the smallest tractor.
It's an actual tractor that Cabota makes. It's twenty two
horse power. You know, it's got the PTO lift on
(06:55):
the back at three point hitch. And anyway, also got
their biggest track on my farm. And all the kinds
of tractors in between. You know, they've got excavators, skid steers.
We use that stuff in our business every day. And uh,
but anyway, back to my store. I was down at
Cahaba Tractor in Pelham and one of my z turns
(07:17):
I've had for about three years. One of the casters,
I notice the inside I guess you call it axle
and broken, not the axle. But anyway, I needed a
new castor you know, like ten bucks for so my
deck would ride right. And I was in there and
they got such good help behind the counter their parts department,
and I always know exactly what I'm talking about, even
(07:38):
when I don't. And then I ran into Brian Gamble,
manager there, owner, and uh we had a good chat,
and I just told Brian, I said, I'm going to
talk about I've been talking about Cabodas on the radio
for years. You guys use them, I use them.
Speaker 6 (07:53):
Uh yeah, yeah, So I know that uh Coboda mowers, man,
you cannot. I don't care if you're cutting hayfields. I
think Chris Keith probably cuts hayfields with his handlers. Those
things are bad to the bone.
Speaker 4 (08:08):
Well, you know, we've got that little fifty thirty at
the Garden Center and it literally has two thousand loader
hours on it. Like every time it cranks, it's loading
something with the front bucket. And I mean outside of
just regular maintenans, we have not had to do anything
to that thing.
Speaker 9 (08:24):
And uh crazy, I mean, yeah, I'd hate to be
a I'd hate to be a Kaboda dealer because you
buy one thirty years later you still got it.
Speaker 8 (08:35):
It's not like a car that every three years you've
got to get a new and the tractors last forever.
And uh yeah, we've had that tractor two thousand loader
hours on that thing and AND's typically the one loading.
Speaker 4 (08:49):
Yeah yeah, and you know that's the thing too. And
not not talking about Ann because you know, a woman
can do anything a man can do, but anybody can
jump on that tractor. It's it's hydrostatic, so you know,
you push forward, it goes forward, push backward, it goes backward.
You know how to run the loader? You got it whooped,
you know, so you can.
Speaker 8 (09:10):
Yeah, the loader is the tricky part. But yeah, you're right, Chris.
I mean driving a tractors like driving a car. It's
really simple. But you'd still be surprised at the number
of men when Anne jumps on there to load them. Whoa, whoa, whoa.
He you don't go, don't hit my truck. She'll kid
with and she'd been doing it for well before we
were marriage. Is on a farm driving tractor, so her
(09:31):
whole life basically, but she'll kid with him, say well,
I hand hit a truck yet this week.
Speaker 6 (09:36):
Yeah, we were doing a landscape job years ago, Mike,
and you had your tractor out there, one you keep
at your shop that had that big grapple on it,
and we were cutting down a bunch of old, big
dead pine trees. And I bet you those pine trees
are fifteen feet long and you know, two feet across.
And I remember using that tractor grabbing those that Kambota tractor,
grabbing those pine trees with that grapple and just toking
(09:59):
them across the where we were stacking them up. And
it just it didn't even check up on the strongest tractor.
Speaker 8 (10:03):
No. I love that grapple now, I love that grapple.
That's probably the best tool I've got from my Cabo
detractor that I have at home and in Leeds, which
I moved around from time to time. Some time it
goes to farm, sometime it goes to the landscape job.
It's it's my only personal tractor, not my only one
only anyway, the only one in Leeds. I've got several
(10:27):
on the farm in Livingston. But changing the subjects slightly, guys, Hey,
Chris Keith, I was out to the job in moody. Yesterday,
Justin called me and said, hey, can you go pick
up the enclosed trailer off the job. They're done for
the week. And I went down and looked at y'all's
handiwork man, that job's looking really sharp.
Speaker 7 (10:44):
It is, buddy.
Speaker 4 (10:46):
Not to say it's been a struggle because of the rain,
but it's kind of been a struggle because of the rain.
We had to put off of it day before yesterday.
We got about six six hours of rain that night
and it turned that job side into a sludge pit.
And uh, we got back on it yesterday and got
a good bit accomplished yesterday.
Speaker 7 (11:07):
But yeah, it's it's shaw.
Speaker 8 (11:08):
You know, I've never seen a fire pit kind of
placed off center, like half on the patio and half
off like y'all did that one. That's a that's a
cool feature.
Speaker 4 (11:18):
Well, you know what I got to talking to the
felt I was like, you know, the patio is only
twelve by ten. I said, uh, you know, you take
just say a nice Adirondick chair and you set around
the edge of this and you put that pattern, you
put that fire pit in the center of this patio.
You're gonna you're gonna scort your knees and uh. He said,
(11:39):
you know, if you take you know, the fire pits
four feet wide, you take that and you put it
in a ten foot patio, you know, that only gives
you six foot around the patio, so you really don't
have room. And I said, you're gonna have to set
that fire pit off this side, and that gives you
plenty of room to put chairs all the way, you know,
around half of the half of the thing. And you know,
you then you're just looking back out towards the woods.
(12:01):
He's got a nice setting behind him and he said,
you know, that sounds like a decent idea. And I said, well,
I'm gonna go get the pit. You got thirty minutes
to think about it, right, So he came out and
he said, I really liked that idea. So that's where
we sat it.
Speaker 8 (12:17):
That looks good. And then those natural quardstone steps you
have going up the side, man, they're sitting just perfect.
The whole jobs coming together really nice.
Speaker 4 (12:26):
Yeah, that job has got a lot of you know,
we talk about we do patios and retaining walls, and
we do step treads, and we do drainage, and that
job's got a little of all of.
Speaker 8 (12:38):
It on it, and it's gonna have some landscaping when
we getting done with all the hard scaping. But guys,
I'll let you go. I know you've got a radio
show to do, and I appreciate it. Appreciate you. Let
me add a few things to it.
Speaker 4 (12:51):
All right, But no problem. I'm going all right, boy,
and it is time for break.
Speaker 7 (12:58):
Chris.
Speaker 4 (12:58):
Let's go ahead and do that. Our number if you
want to alls, it's two O five four three nine
nine three seven two. Again, that's two five four three
nine nine three seven two. You're listening to Classic Gardens
and Landscape Showing w RC.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
It's the show in the know with all things that grow.
It's the Classic Gardens and Landscape Show with Chris Joiners
and Chris Keith.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
Russell.
Speaker 8 (13:20):
Green Houge has been insuring my business, my home, and
my farm for over twenty years. You see, Russell is
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 a little,
(13:42):
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 bought for
the full amount of the policy.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
If it didn't happen that way. It was so easy
to work with.
Speaker 8 (14:05):
Them that it seemed it happened that way. I also
remember when my house in Birmingham had tornado damage. I
called green Houge late on a Saturday, prepared to leave
a message on the phone.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
Russ answered.
Speaker 8 (14:17):
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. Give Russ or Adam
a call today nine to sixty seven eighty eight hundred
and tell them that Mike sent.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
You News Radio one oh five five weerc The only.
Speaker 8 (14:41):
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that we have to have known each other for a
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everything personally and professionally must be perfect well. Steven Sia
meets all of these requirements. I can't even tell you
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(15:05):
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Stephen is our go to man. My house at old
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(15:25):
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(15:47):
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Speaker 1 (16:05):
You a news radio one oh five five U E
R C.
Speaker 8 (16:09):
I'm here actually to talk about a guy that does
a lot of work with us in our landscaping, Mark Whitfield,
Cahaba Tree. Many many times when we're doing landscaping, there
needs to be a tree removed, and uh, we'll call.
I'll tell the client. I said, I'm going to give
you Mark Whitfield's name, and uh, I'm going to give
(16:31):
Mark your name, and the two of them get together.
I don't get involved in the middle of it. I
let Mark Whitfield make his own deals. Cahaba Tree. If
you're looking for a license, insured, honest, hard working, shows
up when he's supposed to, a lot of those things
you just can't find in a tree man or a
landscape company, call Mark Whitfield, Cahaba Tree two zero five
(16:54):
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Cahaba Tree to zero five four zero five one three
three six.
Speaker 7 (17:18):
It's the long Rainger, a long tractor with the speed
of light. I go soil and a.
Speaker 8 (17:29):
Hearty high Holdford long the long Ranger.
Speaker 4 (17:36):
Say we're back in the classic gardens and Chris Joiner
with his man.
Speaker 7 (17:40):
I tell you, curious, Chris, did you come here in
a boat this morning? Did you? Did you launch your
batch boat and drive here? Because I figured that's how
you are.
Speaker 4 (17:48):
I was running so far behind. To be honest with you, Chris,
I think I would. I think I was running so
fast I wouldn't touch in the ground.
Speaker 7 (17:56):
So we went to meet. We went out to eat.
Speaker 6 (17:58):
Yesterday we started on this story and I got sidetracked.
I got a side tracked on my love story. But
we uh went out to eat, and then uh, we
were just kind of walking around downtown Springville, you know,
all little shops and everything.
Speaker 7 (18:10):
And then I mean out of nowhere, it's just bla
bloom bla bloom blah bloom.
Speaker 6 (18:14):
I mean, lightning bolts are striking everywhere, and we're like,
we gotta go.
Speaker 7 (18:18):
And uh, we were.
Speaker 6 (18:20):
Heading back down and I like taking detours when I
go home, So we're heading back down.
Speaker 7 (18:24):
We passed the high school.
Speaker 6 (18:25):
When I shoot off Washington Valley, it's like, let's let's
ride through the valley. And I just, you know, look
at all the pastures and everything's real, pretty real pretty
country side back there. And uh, man, I'm telling you what.
Speaker 7 (18:35):
The bottom dropped out.
Speaker 6 (18:37):
And then we got to our house and it was dry,
and it was dry your house because I texted you
and said, hey man, it's coming a flood in Washington Valley.
And then not long after that, I think you've probably
got about six inches of rain in about US twenty minutes.
Speaker 4 (18:50):
And I told you before the show, I said, it
literally felt like God like dipped up half the ocean
and dumped it on Springy.
Speaker 7 (18:58):
You got stuck, You got stuck at the bar. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (19:00):
So I went down there at the barn and I
cut all the grass around the pond, and uh, I
cut all the peninsulas every once a week, and then
I cut around the lake. I make like two passes
because it's actually a hayfield. I'll be due to cut
hay in two or three weeks, but so I keep
that clean that way. If anybody wants to come there
(19:22):
and go fishing or whatever, they ain't walking around in
a hayfield.
Speaker 7 (19:26):
But uh, my daughter, I got out there.
Speaker 4 (19:28):
Yeah, I got out there and cut all that stuff.
Yesterday I'd cut all the rest of my grass and
I had to get down there and cut around the pond.
When I got I got done with that, I got
back to the barn and Teresa was on the phone
and uh talking to her sister, and I said, well,
I know that'll be a solid hour. So I went
out there and picked my squash and pick corn and
(19:49):
I'm just scoping things out and like, yeah, man, my
peas are coming on all that stuff. You know, I
picked corn last week. I picked about nine hundred ears
of corn last night. Everybody at everybody, Yeah, I mean
I gave corn to all of you know. I sent
some home I am, and I Sergio took a five
gam now, I mean he took like a twenty five
(20:09):
gallon pot full of the house. And I put up
two hundred ears and I sent one hundred and fifty
to my sister. And my dad became picked sixty seventy eight.
And he's probably got twelve to fifteen rows of corn
at his house to be ready in two or three weeks.
Speaker 7 (20:23):
It's behind. But he don't want fertilize like I do.
Speaker 4 (20:26):
But uh, we got put that concoction on that stuff
and I ho fertil on.
Speaker 8 (20:31):
Man.
Speaker 4 (20:31):
Listen, it went nuts. So yeah, the garden's killed it.
But yeah, right when I got done with that, I'm
sitting there and I got that. I got those big
doors on the barn, so my barn's really more like
my hangout. And I opened those big doors and I
just kicked back in my easy chair. And I'd rather
do it. I'm not a TV person, so I'd rather
sit there and look out over the farm and just
(20:53):
hang out. And uh, I just hit my chair and
I'm looking as a man, it is about to come
my monsoon, and I didn't. I said, well, I'm gonna
shut the back doors on the bar, get this thing
ready to close up. And when I shut those big doors,
and when I did, the bottom fell out before I
could get the front one shut, and I was stuck
(21:13):
for an hour unless I got drownded. I was there,
so I wrote it out right there, and buddy it
man with that old tin roof on that barn.
Speaker 7 (21:22):
Lord, it was loud in there. I probably kicked back
in that chair, and take I.
Speaker 4 (21:26):
Did as well. I was stuck.
Speaker 6 (21:30):
Well we have certainly, I know that May was the
third wettest May in recorded history. And I don't know
what the numbers for June r But we can't be
we can't be too far behind that.
Speaker 7 (21:42):
Man.
Speaker 6 (21:42):
I tell you what, the rain has been great. I
mean it has really been fantastic for Chris Keith's vegetable.
Speaker 7 (21:47):
Garden for lawns. Honestly, I know one thing that I
was looking at.
Speaker 6 (21:53):
We were at the some friends lake last week and
so I didn't we didn't get to keep up on
the yard work. But I was walking around so cut grass.
I love it when we cut grass and then the
next day it rains because it just kind of washes
all the clippings and stuff in and it makes everything smooth.
But I've got to I see a bunch of weeds
coming up in my flower beds, so I've got to
(22:13):
I've got to get my kills all out and start
spraying that. So you have and that, you know, Chris Keith.
That's one thing that where people make a mistake is
they wait too long on their flower beds before they
start like a weed control you know type application.
Speaker 7 (22:28):
Uh, you can't let it get ahead of it.
Speaker 6 (22:29):
You got to you gotta catch it before those weeds get,
you know, knee high. Because with the rain and the
heat that we've had, Man, stuff is growing. I got
some Virginia creeper climbing up the side of my house
that's already eight feet tall.
Speaker 7 (22:40):
That wasn't there like two weeks ago.
Speaker 4 (22:42):
I have done more spraying. I think I've sprayed. I've
sprayed three times already this year, and I usually i'll
spray three times in a whole season. It's just, uh man,
it you know, when you're when you getting as much
rain as we have, just back to back to back,
it just makes stuff grow so much faster. And like
(23:03):
you said, Chris, I went my buddy up the street
from me, mister Sam. I went up there and shook
some pine straw out for him about a month ago,
and I sprayed the entire bank up there at his house.
And he hollered back at me and he said, you
know this is a month later. He said, can you
come back up here and spray for me again? He said,
(23:24):
I get out there on that hill and I about
bust my butt every time I get out there, because
you know, it's kind of on the slope. And he
got all that pinestra also at slippery, and he said, man,
the weeds are just taking me over. And I went
back over there and it little like I hadn't even
sprayed it. I mean, it just coming on like crazy.
So you, like you said, Chris, you got to stay
on top of it. I tell you something else is
(23:45):
popping up like crazy, and that's fire inch. I mean,
if you're not, if you're not treating your yard with
some type of fire ant poison. Uh you got fire
iNTS all over the place because they have they're just
like everything else. They got to come up to breathe
and uh so, man, they build those ant hills now
like crazy, and they're all over the place. I used
(24:05):
some extinguish on mine the other day on the yard
because I bet you I had thirty an heels pop
up in my yard. Well all just all at one time.
We have one of these pop up showers, and man,
they were all over the place.
Speaker 6 (24:17):
Extinguished is one we sell our garden center and that
is a fantastic product.
Speaker 7 (24:21):
And a little bit goes a long way. I know
what we had.
Speaker 4 (24:24):
Had a little shaker can it does like five acres?
Speaker 6 (24:26):
Yeah, all right, And then there's some bags that I
know we sell Mike and interviews at the farm and
we've we've we've sold it to people that have you
know property, and I think that one bag does like
twenty seven acres. I mean it goes, you drop like
a pellet here and a pellet here and a pellet there.
And that's that's fantastic stuff.
Speaker 7 (24:45):
Man.
Speaker 4 (24:45):
There's that's one product that I you know, just stand
behind one hundred percent.
Speaker 7 (24:49):
Another one is mill organite.
Speaker 6 (24:51):
That is oh yeah, especially you've if you've got Centipede
and Saint Augustine, you know it's you have to be
very careful fertilizing those two great asses during the summer months.
Mill organite that is one that is that is fantastic.
It'll even to your bermuda and zoysia. It will turn
it just as green as it could be. And the
good thing is it doesn't really promote a tremendous amount
(25:13):
of growth. We I blend that in so our fertilization
we control program where we come out and uh and
fertilize your yard. I get that blended in with just
about every single one of our fertilizers. And it doesn't
it doesn't stain either, So the iron in it doesn't
stain concrete. And man, I'm telling you what, it's a
little earthy smelling, but boy, oh boy, you want to
talk about a different shade of green.
Speaker 4 (25:36):
You know, I put my I put my brother in
law on it back several years ago. I said, man,
you know he wanted he's that guy in the neighborhood,
like that has the real more and you know, cut
his great he ain't no more because he just got Yeah,
eventually you get where you just tired of cutting grass
every three days.
Speaker 7 (25:55):
But at that point he is that dude.
Speaker 4 (25:57):
And man, he was putting mill organite on his yard,
and his yard was like three shades of greener, and
everybody else in the they couldn't figure out, and everybody
else trying to figure out his secret kind of thing.
And he's getting Yard of the month like a like perennial.
Speaker 7 (26:10):
Like he's the guy, you know, let's do it yourself.
Speaker 6 (26:14):
People that basically control their universe in their yard to
a certain extent.
Speaker 7 (26:20):
Man, it's hard to compete with that. I love that guy.
Speaker 4 (26:23):
Everybody else in the neighborhood those hates and like we're
never gonna win Yard of the month. I saw the
one of those yards of the month. I was at
my father in laws. Yeah, I dropped him off some coin, right,
I dropped him off some corn over there, because you know,
we're working in Taylor's cove. And I had all this
corn and I went head and shucked his and cut
it and you know, cleaned it and all that stuff,
(26:45):
and I put it in a cooler and put his
my ice on it and all that stuff. And I
just went by there and dropped him off a cooler
with thirty years in it. And uh, yeah, he had
Yard of the month in his yard. So the way
to go down, Yeah, I willing it.
Speaker 6 (26:57):
We were there fertilizing, I guess just about a week
and a half go, and I saw the sign.
Speaker 7 (27:00):
I was like, h I love it.
Speaker 6 (27:03):
Hey, I want to say before we go to break
Chris Keith at our garden center is closed for the
week of the fourth of July, So don't come on,
don't come in and do that.
Speaker 7 (27:13):
We'll still be working.
Speaker 6 (27:14):
We'll still be out working fertilizing yards and landscaping, but
the garden center itself will be closed the week of
the fourth of July. And then when we come back
from the fourth of July vacation, our hours are going
to change and we're only going to be open Wednesday
through Friday eight to four we'll post all that on Facebook.
We'll send out emails to all our garden center customers
(27:36):
that are on our email list. So just be aware
that our hours are changing moving through the rest of
the summer. So heck yeah, don't want you to show
up to closed gates because things changing.
Speaker 7 (27:47):
A little bit. Ten four. We'll still be working sun
up to Sunday. And if you call us at if.
Speaker 6 (27:54):
You call us at the garden Center, you'll still get
somebody because we'll be there answering phones and landscaping and
fertilize and making patios and retaining walls and putting in
step treads and making yours all that.
Speaker 4 (28:07):
One and stuff. Well, curious that it's time for that break,
let's go ahead and do that. Our number, if y'all
want to calls is two five four, three nine nine
three seven to two. You're listening to Classic Gardens and
Landscape Show on WRC.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
It's the Classic Gardens and Landscape Show. Get advice from
two of the South's premier plan guys, Chris Joiner and
Chris Keith on the Classic Gardens and Landscape Show.
Speaker 8 (28:31):
I love doing business with top notch people. Dixie Sod
Farm is coming up on their fiftieth year in business.
Classic Gardens lays a lot of sod and we depend
on Dixie Sod Farm, the premier supplier of Zorzia and
bermuda in the South, a family run business. I was
just visiting with owners Matt Smith and his wife Whitney
(28:52):
last week. Matt was telling me about working on the
sod farm as a kid and how things have changed
since then. His wife Whitney runs the office very efficiently,
I might add. And then I see Heather or manager
at most functions at Briarwood Christian. So you see, not
only do you get top quality sod at Dixie Sod Farm,
(29:13):
you're dealing with top quality people. Dixie Sod Farm two
zero five three three eight three five eight one. They
deliver anywhere you can hear my voice. Dixie Sod Farm
two zero five three three eight three five eight one.
Called Matt and Whitney and tell them that Mike sent you.
Speaker 3 (29:32):
It's the class in gardens and landscape. Show am and
ready a girl if you'll want.
Speaker 5 (29:40):
Up lands and grass to grow twocent because Christy gris no.
Speaker 1 (29:47):
And now you're a host. Chris Joiner and Chris Keith and.
Speaker 4 (29:51):
We're back on the second half of the Class of
Garden the Landscape Show, and if you missed it, Man,
we had been talking a lot of garden, and I
talked a lot about my vegetball garden because man, I'm lived.
Speaker 6 (30:00):
In this last everything's come on strong, had this man so,
and we've talked a lot about rain because man, if.
Speaker 7 (30:08):
It's done plenty of it, Oh we've had it.
Speaker 6 (30:10):
Ain't no doubt about that. So with the with the
amount of rain that we've had, Man, fungus is like
running a rampant in yard right now, brown patch and
dollar spot. I think that's pretty much ninety percent of
what I did last week is right around town treating fungus.
And I was at one house, Steve's yard and in Graystone,
and he's been a long time customer, treated several of
(30:31):
his houses. He lives in Graystone Legacy, and and he'd
called he had white patches all over his yard. I
knew exactly what it was, and he pretty much did too.
But got there he had dollar spot all over the place,
and uh, he wanted us to go ahead and treat that.
But I'm standing there loading my spreader and I'm looking
around at like the five or six yards that are
you know, neighbors to him, and it was like every
(30:52):
single one of them had fungus in it. Oh my goodness.
So that the rainfall that we've had, the humid weather,
I mean, it's just if you've got polka dots all
in your yard, that's what it's. That's what you got
right now is dollar spot and brown patch will be
like and most of the time you'll see just like dinner.
Speaker 7 (31:10):
Plate size.
Speaker 6 (31:13):
Rashes patches in your yard. Sometimes you can see them
as big as car hoods. But funguses rampant, and if
you don't take care of that, it'll continue to spread.
Particularly with the rainfall and the humidity that we're having, well.
Speaker 4 (31:24):
The grass just send that time to dry. I mean
it's like if you walked around with you know, in
barefoot with in a swamp for two three weeks straight,
then chances are you gonna wind up with you know,
athletes foot. It's the same thing that grass just doesn't
have time to doesn't have time to dry out. I mean,
you should see my tomatoes right now. I'm starting to
(31:46):
get there, already starting to flare up with fungus on them.
But I mean, what do you do?
Speaker 7 (31:50):
I mean grass.
Speaker 6 (31:50):
You know, there's dew on the grass until eleven o'clock
and then it burns off for about forty five minutes,
and then the and then the afternoon thunderstorms have been
coming through, so, uh, Fungus is rampant in the yards
right now.
Speaker 7 (32:07):
You know.
Speaker 6 (32:07):
Chinch bugs are one thing that my guys are starting
to find left and right. They really start to become
active when you get when you get into the hot
part of summer. So if you've got dead patches in
your yard that keep expanding, and you know it's not
drought damage because we hadn't had any dry weather this year,
but big dead brown patches in the yard, and the
maybe around the edges of those, like around the fringe
(32:30):
of that dead patch, it's kind of yellow. That's chinch bugs.
And chinch bugs can be hard to find. I mean
you could probably fit two dozen of those things on
your thumbnail. I mean they're teeny tiny little bugs, but
they will absolutely destroy a yard if you don't take
care of them. And I'm not I that is my
(32:50):
least favorite insect to find in a yard because they
literally why when they pierce the grass blade, they basically
suck the sap and the sugars they feed off of
the south in the grass blade. But when they puncture
the grass blade, they injected toxin into it that basically
cuts off the circulation so that it can't take water
up and take fertilizer up, so it literally kills, literally
(33:13):
kills the grass. And they can do damage real fast,
real bad. So that's something that need to keep an
eye on if you've got big dead patches popping up
in your yard. Especially He's Oysa love. They absolutely loves Oysa.
We got a yard off of Old Lee Droad. I
went to last year and he had somebody else treating
(33:33):
it and he'd been watering like crazy. And he called
and listens to the radio shows, name's Philip. He called
and he's like, man, I'm water in my yard. My
company keeps telling me it's drought damage, but I know
that it is not drought damage, and it keeps getting worse.
And so I went out there and got down on
my hands and knees and I started digging and you
(33:55):
could just see chinch bugs scurrying all over the place.
Speaker 7 (33:58):
And then I went to.
Speaker 6 (33:58):
The sidewalk and you could see them crawling all over
the sidewalk. Well, the neighbor's yard is bermuda, and their
neighbor and their yards butt up, and it's like those
chinch bugs ate every single inch of zoysier grass up
to that property line. And it's like they stopped at
that bermuda and then they just started going down towards
towards Old Eat Road. Uh So, it's it's funny how insects,
(34:21):
you know, they have their preference of grass.
Speaker 7 (34:23):
Army worms would be right at the opposite, right the opposite.
Speaker 6 (34:25):
You can have a patch of zoysia mixed in with bermuda,
and those army worms will absolutely take every inch of
that bermuda down to the ground. And they wan't touch
they want to touch that zoyser grass. It's a string
ear it's a string ear grass. So they don't like
to to eat that. But chinch bugs are a notorious
man and they will absolutely jack up the yard.
Speaker 7 (34:46):
Kill it, kill it dead.
Speaker 4 (34:47):
Yeah, I've seen a few spittle bugs in some of
the yards, Chris. I know, it doesn't appear to be
a problem.
Speaker 6 (34:53):
Not yet seen always, you know, And you can always
find a couple of little spittle bugs here, even like
dick around. I could go to every single person's yard
and dig around and probably find a grub or heck,
you can find army worms in march, you know, so
you can always find a few little bugs. So you
have to try to you have to, you know, obviously
(35:13):
do a survey of the yard and and and justify
you know, applying insecticide because.
Speaker 7 (35:18):
There's there's always a bug out, always a bug out there.
Speaker 4 (35:21):
I mean, you can't put insecticide out seven times on
every yard we've got, I mean, just that's just overkilled.
Speaker 6 (35:29):
Yeah, but those are the two big things going on
in yards, fungus and spittle bugs. And then this is
like this is the year for nutgrass. I'm gonna go
ahead and tell you right that all your sedges and
all your ky lingasu man, they have been prolific because
they love wet weather, and nutgrass is one that's tough, tough,
tough to get rid of. I'm a member on my Facebook.
(35:52):
There's this there's this group. It's like turf and Ornamental
pesticide Applicators and it's a nationwide, you know, Facebook group
based and some of the all a lot of the
technicians on there have been posting like, man, have y'all
seen nutgrass like this ever in your life? I'm just
like everybody's like, no, Man, all the rain that we've had,
that stuff is growing like crazy.
Speaker 4 (36:12):
Well, you know, it's always prebling. Those yards where people
just set their irrigation to run every freaking day.
Speaker 7 (36:18):
And it's like it's like flouring down rain and the
irrigation and.
Speaker 4 (36:21):
The irunegations run and they don't have a Yeah. I mean,
you go by some people's house and the irrigation is
I mean it's raining and the irrigations running, and you're like, man,
they ain't gotten they have no clue, I mean.
Speaker 7 (36:36):
Anyways.
Speaker 6 (36:38):
And that's bad about commercial properties too, and neighborhoods like Hoa's.
There's one on uh, there's one coming down chalk for
Mountain Road. You probably know which one I'm talk about.
It'll be uh, it'll be it'll be February and uh,
you know, below freezing and you look out there and
the whole yard.
Speaker 7 (36:55):
Is just ice because it ran the night before. Yeah,
my god, just turn it off. Man.
Speaker 6 (37:01):
Y'all gotta know y'all because y'all come in and out
of that day and it's like it's not like it's
running at two am. I'll drive by there at six
thirty six forty five on my way into work and
it'll just be running wide open.
Speaker 7 (37:13):
See, no people see it regardless.
Speaker 4 (37:16):
It's crazy that man. You talking about a yard that
does look nice, Chris. I had to go over. I
went the other day. Let's see, it was Carrington Lake.
So I went over to the Lanstons and uh, we
have treated their yard, I think like twice since we
laid it, but they signed up for long care when
we put that yard in. He had a bunch of
(37:38):
big trees in the front yard and uh and and
in the backyard. We hadn't done anything with the backyard yet,
but the front yard he uh it, he didn't even
have grass, the trees were so big. And went in there,
and I think Mark Whitfield came in there, look, haba
tree took his took his trees out before we ever started.
(38:00):
And then we went in and regraded the whole front yard,
added topsail, uh and just smooth that whole thing out
and relate it with Emerald Zoija and I went by
there to show him how to work his irrigation system.
He's like Chris the irrigation system virtually hasn't run because
we put a rain sensor on it. When when we
(38:20):
put his sodd in, we put the irrigation system in,
and uh, we put a rain sensor on it, and
the rain sensors virtually kept the thing off, you know,
three quarters of the time. He said, this running when
it's supposed to run. But man, the rain in that
rain sensor works like a chump because it's it's barely
even kicked on. And but boy, you see his yard,
(38:41):
it looks fantastic. I mean, it looks like it's been
there for ten years.
Speaker 7 (38:46):
You can't they saw it.
Speaker 4 (38:48):
It looks good now, and uh.
Speaker 7 (38:51):
That's a good thing.
Speaker 4 (38:53):
Look at this right here. Oh that's a good zoyasy
yard right there. And I swear it looks like it's
been there for ten years.
Speaker 6 (39:00):
Green is as slick as you can get. Laid two
pallets of bermute in my front yard, and it's the
same way I think I had the water it like
maybe two or three times when we first.
Speaker 7 (39:10):
Put it in. Yeah, you can't tell it from that
now it's just now it's just as slick as glass.
Speaker 4 (39:14):
Looks good that Uh, yeah, this has been the year
to lay saw it. I mean, honestly, if you can
get it dry enough where you can get out there
and and uh work it and lay it. Man, this
has been the perfect year for it. The yards that
we laid two months ago, you can walk out there
on them and you honestly can't see a seam that
looks good. And I was at Lynda Baker's so we uh,
(39:38):
we've done work for Linda. Now this is the third
time she's up in. She's up in Long Meadow. Worst
yard you ever worked with in your life. It was
rock on rock and I'm not exaggerating.
Speaker 6 (39:53):
And uh, I know, alice pickings and help you pick
up some equipment and stuff.
Speaker 4 (39:57):
And then when we when we first worked for Linda,
somebody had h for lack of a better word, screwed
her on an irrigation system. They come in there and
they started it and took her money and didn't finish it.
And uh so we came in behind her or behind
them and put her in an irrigation system up there
(40:19):
and it is nothing but shirt rock and went back
in after that. You know, we cleaned up our trenches
and did everything, but she just hated that old scrub
scrubby commercial bermuda grass that was in the yard. So
we went in sprayed it, killed all that stuff, and
relayed zoyas in the backyard in the front. You know,
(40:41):
she had a good irrigation system, so she's been watering
like crazy when she had to.
Speaker 7 (40:45):
But same deal.
Speaker 4 (40:46):
We put a rain censor on it, so it's been
kicking on and off when it was supposed to and
all that. And her yard looks fantastic too. But we
went back out to Linda's and she we had put
in a little bit of chopp rock for and she
one of the rest of her beds lined with chopp brocks.
We went in there one day last week and put
in another one hundred and eighty feet of chopped rock
(41:08):
on the edge.
Speaker 6 (41:08):
You heard that chopped rock or chopped block is like
rectangular pieces of it's three inches for inches and you
can line your flower line your flower bed with them
for real pretty border.
Speaker 4 (41:20):
Yeah, So we and we used that already on her
yard some. So we went in and finished out the
rest for beds. She had a little bit of bark
washing out of the beds and just wanted something in
there that was you know, that would just hold that
bark in a little better.
Speaker 7 (41:34):
So you need that right now.
Speaker 6 (41:36):
That's what after the radio show, I'm going through raking
bark back into my bed from last night.
Speaker 4 (41:41):
Ain't hard for bark to wash right now. I think
when I came down Cross Street this morning, it looked
like there was you know how like when the water
gets completely over the road and you'll have those dams
of like.
Speaker 7 (41:54):
Debris, yeah, sticks and leaves. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (41:57):
Well, there was stuff in my road like big as
your leg.
Speaker 6 (41:59):
Yeah, out there with your Cambo detractor pushing it all
out of the way, right.
Speaker 4 (42:05):
And see where it crossed the road, like got above
the road where my hayfield is, So it was probably up.
Speaker 7 (42:12):
In my garden. You know.
Speaker 4 (42:13):
It got so high yesterday and I never seen the like.
Speaker 7 (42:17):
I ain't complaining though, no, I mean it.
Speaker 4 (42:20):
Hey, listen, in another week and a half two weeks,
we keep saying that in another week and a half.
Speaker 7 (42:26):
Two weeks, it's gonna dry.
Speaker 4 (42:28):
Yeah, right, all that water's gonna be in the Golf
of Mexico, which it's headed that way.
Speaker 6 (42:33):
We were going to go canoeing up at this place
up the road from us, but I just saw Facebook
feed that they're closed better take a hard.
Speaker 4 (42:40):
Pass on that one. If you go to a if
you go to Cahaba Outfitters chanting our Canoe Creek Outfitters,
chances are you're going to be winding up in uh.
Speaker 7 (42:50):
Golf of Mexico.
Speaker 4 (42:52):
You'll be winding up in Neely Right. Well, Chris, it's
time for the last break. Let's go ahead and do
that our number. If you want to call us, you
got last minute, you better do it now. Two five four,
three nine nine three seven two will be right back.
Speaker 2 (43:07):
These guys know they're dirt. It's the Classic Gardens and
Landscape Show with Chris Joiner.
Speaker 1 (43:13):
And Chris Keith Russell.
Speaker 8 (43:15):
Green Houge 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. Greenouge
Insurance is a family run business with his wife Marcia
and son Adam involved. As Russ eases up, a little,
(43:37):
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.
Speaker 7 (43:49):
On my farm.
Speaker 8 (43:50):
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, it was so easy to
work with them that it seemed it happened that way.
I also remember when my house in Birmingham had tornado damage.
I called Green Houge late on a Saturday, prepared to
leave a message on the phone.
Speaker 1 (44:11):
Russ answered.
Speaker 8 (44:13):
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 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.
Speaker 1 (44:32):
You News Radio one oh five five WERC.
Speaker 8 (44:36):
The only way I will advertise for you on this
show is that we have to have known each other
for a long time, done business together for a long time,
and everything personally and professionally must be perfect. Well. Steven
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you exactly how long I've known Stephen, but I can
(44:56):
tell you that anytime one of our landscape jobs require
a deck, a pergola, a gazebo, or any other carpentry work,
Stephen is our go to man. My house had old,
worn out skylights in it. Siah Creations took out those
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built my son's house from start to finish. Then when
(45:20):
Chris Joyner from this show, when Chris's brother's house burned down,
Stephen tore down the remains of the old structure and
built to a brand new, beautiful house. Stephen can even
bring in his house design team to help you create
your dream house from small decks to new houses. Siah
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(45:43):
licensed and insured. You can call two zero five five
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five five six five one zero three five and tell
them that Mike sent you.
Speaker 3 (46:01):
Don't don't don't tell no, don't don't.
Speaker 5 (46:04):
Don't don't I'll don't don't no, don't don't don't don't
know your plants.
Speaker 4 (46:10):
Know your plants, you better know we know our plants.
And let me tell you we got tea long line
of morning tea lest she knows we know our plants.
Speaker 10 (46:17):
Yes you do, good morning, hey, two quick things, but
if you don't have time in second and let me know.
So I did the the furlong to cemic drench on,
insect drench on my friends Rose, I think go code.
Speaker 4 (46:26):
You got that.
Speaker 10 (46:27):
So now it's exloded like you would see a firework explode.
You how they go out and fountain kind of make
a fountain look, So that's what it's doing. So should
she cut it back? And it's got like, I don't know,
twenty five boys on it, which usually has two or three,
and it's just it's taller than I am. I'm not
that tall, but it's taller than I am. So yeah,
(46:49):
cut it back or does she just leave it alone?
Speaker 4 (46:51):
What you might want to do is like wait till
it hits a lull and blooming. So like right now,
it's just prolific and going nuts. Usually do that for
a little bit and then it'll it'll hit like a
stunt like it'll it'll put on everything it can possibly do,
and then it like hits a lotwle when it hits
a little pernit.
Speaker 10 (47:12):
Okay, all right, so that's good on that, all right,
Actually it might have to the other one is the
seaton that we planted that just seems to have got
at the cemetery. And do you think that down under
its still underneath the ground that I put some of
the systemic systemic inst drench on that and it might
come back up or is it just gone gone?
Speaker 4 (47:31):
I think if it's gone, it's gone.
Speaker 7 (47:33):
If if you're not seeing it, it's growing right now,
it's gone. Man, stem is drowned.
Speaker 10 (47:37):
Okay, all right, okay, yeah, all right. And last thing
is the grass thing you said? All right, so I'm
hearing all these different bugs that like all these they
got their choice grasses they like. Is there grass that
that no bug likes astro turf.
Speaker 7 (47:53):
Because you'll probably still get ants an astro turf.
Speaker 10 (47:56):
Yeah, all right, they covered it.
Speaker 7 (47:59):
They I appreciate it.
Speaker 4 (48:03):
Hey, that's as honest as it telling you. Let's get done.
Good morning done. How's it going, buddy?
Speaker 7 (48:10):
Hey, good morning guys. That quick question.
Speaker 8 (48:14):
I guess they're they're not African violets, but it's the
wild violets that grow and pop up in your yard.
Speaker 6 (48:19):
Oh yeah, what is what is the best way to
get rid of those things?
Speaker 4 (48:24):
I've got my monkey grass.
Speaker 7 (48:27):
That's a that's a tough one. Wild violets are hard
to get rid of.
Speaker 6 (48:30):
We've got a long cair customer that lives over in
the Mountain Brook area and I think we've been battling
wild violets around his flower beds for probably since he's
been a customer twenty five years ago. And we'll beat
him back and they're you know, to the point where
it's like, yes, we finally got these things out under control.
And then uh, and then we get a year like
(48:51):
we've had this year where there's just a tremendous amount
of rains and the things just explode. They grow, they
they have a tuber on them underground, and so their
root system is almost just indestructible. There's a now in
in a lawn there's the weed free zone that we
sell works fantastic on them. But you can't spray that
(49:14):
right now because it's too hot.
Speaker 7 (49:16):
Uh.
Speaker 6 (49:16):
So you can catch those in early spring or in
the fall when the temperatures are cooler, and that works
very very good on on those in grass, but in
monkey grass and flower beds, that's tough because you know,
you don't obviously you want to keep the monkey grass.
So you know a lot of times you come in
there and just kind of have to try to hand
weed those out.
Speaker 7 (49:37):
That's what you know. Image image is on the label.
Speaker 6 (49:42):
Image is listed for different types of ario open and
mondo grass, So that may be something you look into.
Do a little test, a little test sample spray in
a spot in there, see how how well that works.
Speaker 7 (49:57):
So as so is the weed free zone that a
Is that a liquid or you smart as a liquid? Yep?
You mix it in the spot spray. Yep. I'm gonna
do that when the temperatures are cool for sure. Okay,
thanks guys, appreciate it. I appreciate it, buddy. That music
means we're out of time, y'all.
Speaker 4 (50:14):
Come see it's in the garden Center eighteen fifty five
Carson Road, or call us eight five four four thousand
and five, Big.
Speaker 7 (50:19):
Landscape and Irrigation.
Speaker 4 (50:21):
Not lighting it in a patio or retaining wall.
Speaker 7 (50:24):
You can call us and.
Speaker 4 (50:24):
We'll see you next week on the Classic Guardian's Landscape show.
Happy fourth of July on God Bliss