Feb. 19, 2008 Flower & Garden Show: Let King County’s experts help you ‘plant right for your site’
Stop by King County's educational booth at this year's Northwest
Flower & Garden Show, Feb. 20-24, at the Washington State
Convention Center in Seattle, and learn how to plant right for your
site this season.
This year's booth will provide an
interactive experience with county experts available to answer
questions and provide information on the use of Pacific Northwest
native plants and natural yard care to ensure the safety of children,
pets and the environment.
This year King County is
partnering with EnviroStars, an innovative regional program that
certifies businesses for their efforts in preventing pollution and
reducing hazardous waste. Professional landscapers from the EnviroStars
program will be on hand to talk with guests about resource efficient
and pollution prevention landscape maintenance practices.
Washington
State University Master Gardeners will also join King County experts in
the booth for the duration of the show to answer questions and provide
insight on the latest techniques for creating beautiful gardens and
landscapes.
The booth will also offer free sample
packets of GroCo, a naturally composted mixture of three parts sawdust
and one part biosolids. King County residents can register to win GroCo
for their yard. Information about GroCo, contest details and entry
forms will be available at the booth.
King County staff will also offer seminars on specific topics during the show, including:
- Converting Lawn to Healthy Garden Beds Seminar
on Sunday, Feb. 24 at 1:45 p.m. in the Hood Room 2 features Greg
Rabourn with the King County Native Plant Salvage program. Learn which
Pacific Northwest native plants will not just survive but thrive in
your garden.
- Demonstration gardens will
be on display during the duration of the show, which will display how
to manage and conserve stormwater with green roof and rain water
gardens.
- Rabourn and Doug Rice, the stars of the popular King County TV show, Yard Talk,
will answer gardening at the King County booth on Sunday, Feb. 24 from
3 to 6 p.m. Some gardening questions and answers could be used during
an upcoming Yard Talk show.
King
County continues to promote natural yard care as the best way to build
a beautiful garden and yard without the use of harmful pesticides.
Simple yard care practices can save money, time and the environment,
while conserving natural resources by raising awareness about a
pesticides-free approach to gardening.
More information on the 2008 Northwest Flower & Garden Show is available at http://www.gardenshow.com/seattle/index/index.asp. |