Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, May 22, 1982, Image 49

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    Using wood ashes
Like lime and fertilizer, wood
and coal ashes can be used on your
garden, but they must be used
properly to be effective.
Wood ashes contain alkaline
elements such as calcium,
magnesium and potassium all
valuable plant nutrients. Because
of their high alkalinity, wood ashes
are also effective in neutralizing
acid soil, according to Extension
soil specialist Leo Cotnoir.
But there are some problems
related to using ashes also.
For one thing, wood and coal
ashes are different.' Coal ashes
have little fertilizer value and may
even leave undesirable residue
such as selenium, which could
accumulate in plants. So use coal
ashes in your muddy driveway, or
put a little in your clay soil to help
improve its physical properties.
Wood ashes are strongly alkaline
(pH 11-13) as compared to ground
limestone (pH ft-6.5). Also they’re
water soluble as compared to
ground limestone, which is water
insoluble and can be used even on
foliage without barm. For this
reason, wood ashes must always
be used on soil because they will
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injure plant leaves, as chemical
fertilizer does.
Just as you can use too much
lime especially on sandy garden
soils so you can get into trouble
with wood ashes. Their acid
neutralizing capability ranges
form nearly equal to ground
limestone when fresh and dry, to
only 50 percent as effective when
damp or stored exposed to air. But
keep in mind the difference in
speed of action. Wood ashes
behave like chemical fertilizer,
while limestone takes effect over a
year or more. Incidentally, says
Cotnoir, never use ashes around
acid-loving plants like azaleas or
rhododendrons.
Ashes vary greatly in com
position, depending on the kind of
wood burned, the type of stove, and
how they’re stored. Hardwoods
such as maple, hickory, apple and
even birch have more nutrients per
cord of wood. Airtight stoves
burning at higher temperatures
eliminate more of the carbon that
otherwise ends up as a dilutent in
the ash. Stored ashes pick up both
carbon dioxide and water vapor
from the air if left exposed. So it’s
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AN ALLIS CHALMERS COMPANY
NEWARK, Del. - Richard
Laghty, developer and coordinator
of the University of Delaware’s
Longwood graduate program in
ornamental horticulture, has
received one of the highest honors
awarded nationally in this field.
The Arthur Hoyt Scott Garden and
Horticulture Award, given an
nually by the Scott foundation of
best to keep them in a metal can
with a tight-fitting lid.
The general rules for using wood
ashes call for applying either 20
pounds of fresh dry ash or 50
pounds of open-stored ash per 1,000
square feet of garden. (Twenty
pounds of dry ash is approximately
five quarts.)
Don’t use ashes on your plot
unless a soil test indicates a need
for liming, cautions Cotnoir. Apply
them so they can be mixed with the
soil during seedbed preparation
This will dilute them for greater
safety.
Ashes can also be used around
cabbage plants, as you would
sidedress fertilizer, to help ward
off clubroot disease The same
practice may help keep cutworms
and slugs away from stems of
tomatoes, peppers, and other
transplants
Ashes are versatile and
valuable, says Cotnoir. In early
days they were worth 10 to 15 cents
per bushel and were sometimes
used in lieu of scarce cash. They
were refined into potash and pearl
ash for export to Edropc for
making soap. Ashes were also used
for glass making, bleaching and
probably for insect control. —DK
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rice
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MARTIN'S REFRIGERATION SERVICE
Richard Lighty
Swarthmore College, was
presented by Lighty earlier this
month by the college’s president,
Theodore Fnend.
An avid gardener and noted
plantsman, Lighty is a recognized
authority on woody ornamentals
and herbaceous plants. He
currently serves on both the
council and executive committee
of the Pennsylvania Horticultural
Society He is a former president of
both the North American Lily
Society and the American
Association of Botanical Gardens
and Arboreta, and has served on
numerous committees relating to
horticulture, horticultural
education and regional
beautification. He has also been a
consultant to international in
stitutes, municipalities, public
gardens and landscape architects.
In the spring of 1976 he was
awarded the Silver Medal of the
Massachusetts Horticultural
Society. In 1979 he received the
North American Lily Society’s
E H. Wilson Award.
Lighty has led student study
trips to Honduras, El Salvador,
and Costa Rica and has traveled in
Europe and Africa. In 1976 he took
part in a four-month expedition to
Korea in search of ornamental
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Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 22,1982—1 S
plants. In 1977 he received the
/American Horticultural Society’s
teaching citation in recognition of
his work with the Longwood
graduate program, now in Us 15th
year
Lignty holds the rank of
associate professor in the
department of plant science at the
University of Delaware He earned
his B.S. degree from Penn State
and his M.S. and Ph D from
Cornell
In addition to his current
teaching and administrative
duties, he is presently writing a
book on the organization and
management of American
botanical gardens and arboreta
The Arthur Hoyt Scott Garden
and Horticulture Award was
established in 1929 to honor in
dividuals who have had a broad
and significant impact on
American horticulture Given in
memory of a Swarthmore
graduate of the class of 1885, the
award consists of a gold medal and
11,000.
Previous winners from the
northeastern U S include Liberty
Hyde Bailey, plant taxonomist,
profile author, and former dean of
the agricultural college at Cornell,
John Wister, authority on her
baceous and woody plants, land
scape architect, and former
director of the Scott Horticultural
Foundation and the Tyler Ar
boretum, C Stuart Gager, first
director of the Brooklyn Botanical
Garden and a fertile thinker in
developing the philosophy of the
public garden; and Russell
Siebert, former director ot
Long wood Gardens
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