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304 599-6611

3360 Collins Ferry Road
Morgantown, WV 26505

wisdom unencumbered


An Introduction

My stand on flora initially developed as a hobby, followed by at least 42 years of growing Morgantown. That’s right, just Morgantown, not even Fairmont, so this website works best for Morgantown, West Virginia. Our soil, weather, and conditions — like humidity and temperature — are unique to us. If a lawn or garden technique works somewhere else, super, but I don’t think you will have the same success here.

I have been blessed by the person I think is the world’s most beautiful and supportive wife. If you’re interested in asking, she will tell you I am very opinionated. Diane will also be happy to tell you I love to teach, and she’s the happiest when I teach someone other than her!

So, with these pages, I’m going to give you the answers you need to have a successful garden in our hometown. They come from my many years in your lawns and gardens and working with some of the best mentors Morgantown had to offer.


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Preparing for a Real Winter

Weather really is just weather, another part of lives over which we have no control. We have become complacent with our nice weather over the last 10 years.  

Following are examples of what we should be doing from our old check list. They come to you with a word of warning: It’s probably too late this winter for any of these at this point.

  1. snowOn tall shrubs, like arborvitae, we used twine to circle the shrub, spiraling up and then down so the heavy snow could not pull the separate branches out and break them. We were then prepared when the snows came, and we knocked it off before the whole shrub collapsed under the weight. We used twine because it would rot and fall to the ground before the next year was over, if we had not removed it before then that is.
  2. For the last three mowings of the year, we reduced the cutting height, starting at 3 ½ inches, then 3 inches, then 2 ½ inches. Why? One problem we had the first 30 years of business was snow mold. We regularly mowed this way and still installed fungicides to protect the grass. There is a lot of information on the Web about snow mold. Hopefully, we will not learn the hard way about it again in the spring.
  3. We were really anal with our leaf blow outs under the shrubs and trees. Those leaves, covered with snow, create a terrific incubator for bugs and funguses. Snow feels cold to us, but it is an insulator for little critters. They grow in these warm, wet, nutritious conditions almost as well as they do in summer turf.

Taming the Urban Jungle