Asheville Greenworks Home
Latest News
July 25, 2010
August 10: Carolina Canopy “Urban Landscaping Update” workshop at NC ArboretumNo Comments
Join us inside on this hot summer day to learn about using edible plants in the urban landscape and integrated pest management. Landscapers, urban foresters, professional gardeners, nurserymen and plants people alike are encouraged to attend, with continuing education credits available.
This workshop is co-sponsored by the NC Urban Forest Council, NC Cooperative Extension and Asheville GreenWorks.
AGENDA
| 8:30 am – 9:00 am | REGISTRATION |
| 9:00 am – 10:00 am | Using Edible Plants in the Landscape Sheila Dunn, Extension Master Gardener |
| 10:00 am – 10:15 am | BREAK |
| 10:15 am – 11:15 am | What’s Up with Those Honeybees? Diane Almond, Local Beekeeper |
| 11:15 am – 12:15 pm | Integrated Pest Management Stephen Toth, IPM Coordinator and Extension Entomologist, NCSU |
| 12:15 pm – 1:00 pm | LUNCH, provided |
| 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm | Policy Update on the Landscape Contractors License, Review of LEEDS Certification and the Sustainable Sites Initiative Panel Discussion: Stephanie Pankiewicz, LandDesign, Cliff Ruth, Extension Agent and Amanda Stone, Extension Agent |
| 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm | Sudden Oak Death Update Steve Oak, Forest Pathologist, US Forest Service |
The following continuing education credits are available for attendees: 2 NC Pesticide credits in categories GLNODX and ISA Credits.
REGISTRATION
Registration is $30 for NCUFC members, and $40 for non-members. Please download and print the registration leaflet and mail it with your registration fee to
NCUFC
PO Box 25852
Winston-Salem, NC 27114
LOCATION
NC Arboretum
100 Frederick Law Olmsted Way
Asheville, NC
828.665.2492 or www.ncarboretum.org
Get directions with Google Maps.
FURTHER INFORMATION
Call 828.255.5522 or e-mail Amanda Stone at NC State or Bill Hascher at Biltmore.
Occupying nearly half a block In the heart of downtown Asheville, Tops for Shoes is well-known to residents and visitors alike. It receives our August Environmental Excellence Award for outstanding flowers and street cleanup.
North Asheville’s recycling center, off Merrimon Avenue behind Asheville Pizza and Brewing, is a great community resource. Please don’t use it as a dumping ground for old furniture, household waste and other non-recyclable trash: these need to go to the Buncombe County landfill on Panther Branch Road, or be picked up by appointment. Dumping non-recyclable waste isn’t just a misuse of the facility: it’s also illegal: report dumping by calling the DOT hotline, Swat-A-Litterbug, at 1-877-368-4968.
As part of the Asheville GreenWorks beautification program at Lake Julian Park, Lutheridge Summer Campers visiting from Milwaukee worked to replant all around the playground.
Members of Highland Christian Church teamed up with Asheville GreenWorks and Freckle Farm Landscaping to plant above the Patton Ave. exit.
Is it really safe to re-use a plastic water bottle? Buncombe Green, a new mini-site created by Buncombe County, busts some myths:
You can safely reuse #1 PET or #2 HDPE bottles, as long as you remember to wash them thoroughly with hot, soapy water to remove any germs and bacteria from their previous use.
Visit the site for more information on how small steps to reduce, reuse and recycle can have a big impact on your local environment.
July 20, 2010
Planting and Mulching at Lake Julian ParkNo Comments
Asheville-South Rotary worked with Asheville GreenWorks to plant and mulch at Lake Julian Park in July. Together with landscaper Eric Edwards, they planted sourwood, cherry and holly all around the park.
As part of Asheville GreenWorks’ continued efforts to beautify the overlook next to the Patton Avenue I-240 exit downown, employees of Alcan Packaging Inc. volunteered to plant day lilies:
The Patton Avenue exit to I-240 is often a visitor’s first sight of downtown Asheville. Together with local volunteers, Asheville GreenWorks has been replanting the hill above the exit. Here’s a gallery of Lake Junaluska Summer Campers planting this month:
At the Asheville Parks Examiner, Kristina Toombs writes about Asheville GreenWorks’ thirty years of maintaining Griffing Boulevard Neighbourhood Park:
An Asheville, North Carolina neighborhood and a non-profit organization preserve Griffing Boulevard Neighborhood Park as a sanctuary of roses and memorial trees. The .08 acre park, located in the median of Griffing Boulevard in North Asheville, is highly regarded around town for its rose garden. The home owners of Griffing Boulevard, Asheville GreenWorks, and the City of Asheville make a community effort to maintain the rose garden, grass, and trees…
With expert landscapers, Asheville GreenWorks ensures the park stays pristine. Colin Stone, a young landscaper, is seen regularly weeding the beds. Each spring, Melonye Trivett, former head gardener at the Biltmore Estate Rose Garden, prunes and replants any roses that need care.
“I’ve always enjoyed working with Susan [Roderick] and Asheville GreenWorks…They are willing to do what others are not,“ says Melonye Trivett. “…green spaces are good spaces.”
Read the full piece and see a slideshow of the park in full bloom at the Asheville Parks Examiner site.





























