Monday 16 January 2017

GARDENING, MEET THE MAN WHO BROUGHT MERLOT, CABERNET AND SNAILS TO CARLIFORNIA.

If you happen to be a local oenologist — a winemaker, that is — the name of Antoine Delmas could well be near and dear to your heart. If you happen to be a gardener, however, this same name could evoke highly charged negative emotions, to say the least.

Antoine Delmas, you see, who arrived in the Santa Clara Valley in 1849, is famous for being the first to bring into California two important commodities: one for praise and one for execration. Delmas was the first person to introduce French grapevines, merlot and cabernet varieties prominent among them, into the state.

But Delmas also bears the burden of being the first person to import European snails into the state.
Delmas considered snails — escargot in French — to be a tasty delicacy, best washed down with select varietal wines. As it turned out, the only way a gardener could possibly accept the presence of European snails was if he became regularly inebriated from serious imbibition of merlot or cabernet.
Delmas deposited his snails on the west bank of the Guadalupe River, near San Jose.

 Fifty years later, a correspondent from San Jose reported that the snails had reached the east side of the river and had “multiplied to such an extent that, in some instances, they are troublesome in the gardens.” It should be noted that Delmas had also traveled south to Los Angeles with a batch of his snails and that his prized gastropods proved even more precocious in our area than up north, no doubt due to the fact that our climate more closely resembled that found in the Mediterranean habitat of the European snail.
Snails are not all bad. There are 240 California native snail species and none of them are garden pests. They live off fungi, terrestrial algae, and other micro-organisms.


A major factor in the snail’s rapid reproduction is its hermaphroditic status. This means that every snail coupling results in a double impregnation. With each snail laying 80 eggs at a time, and with five or six impregnations per year, it is easy to see how a snail population could explode by geometric proportions in a short time.
Snails also have a highly sophisticated osmoregulatory system, allowing them to eliminate water loss during a drought and deny entry of water — which could cause them to freeze to death — when the weather gets cold.

Although they would not be found in a kosher restaurant, snails and snail eggs are widely available as comestible fare.

When it comes to cost, snail eggs are expensive, nearly rivaling fish eggs or caviar at $50 an ounce.
Beginning gardeners may regard snails as a serious problem that requires drastic control measures. Metaldehyde is the chemical of choice for killing snails, but it is toxic to pets, so dog and cat owners may resort to Sluggo, a product that is deadly to snails but pet-friendly.

Veteran gardeners are much less aggravated by snails, regarding them more as an occasional nuisance and knowing that diligent handpicking will keep the mucinous mollusc menace at bay.

An early morning snail hunting foray into the garden on a daily basis, or a nightly search with a flashlight, where snails are simply removed from wherever they adhere or slither and dropped into the trash, will take care of most snail problems in a matter of several days to a few weeks, depending on the severity of the infestation.
Again, though, if you monitor your plants on a daily basis, year in and year out, snails should never gain a foothold in your garden.

It has also been my experience that snails are more of a problem in a hygienically clean, non-mulched garden where soil is bare than in a “dirty” garden where a layer of mulch is constantly decomposing on the soil surface.

Now is an excellent time to collect fallen leaves and spread them around between your plants. This sort of rough mulch will serve admirably as a snail deterrent.
Raising chickens for a steady supply of fresh eggs, which seems to becoming more commonplace among Los Angeles gardeners, carries the added benefit of a reliable snail patrol. Just as a posse of cats will often eliminate a rodent problem, a chicken or two will gladly gobble up snails wherever they show their lovely helical shells.

Snails are not omnivorous and many plants can grow among them without suffering any damage.
Just as in the case of gophers, it seems that snails are also deterred by plants with strong fragrances.

 The list includes lantana, geraniums, rosemary, sages (Salvias) of all types, mints and ornamental ginger (Hedychium). Non-fragrant but still snail-resistant plants for your flower beds include impatiens, bedding begonias, fuchsias, cyclamen, crocosmia, hellebores and foxgloves. Baby tears are snail-resistant and so are ferns of every description, as well as hydrangeas. California poppies and ornamental grasses are resistant, too.
It seems that snails are mostly interested in annual flowers and vegetables, although they will climb the trunks of citrus trees to munch on leaves and fruit.

One way to keep them out of vegetable boxes and citrus trees is through the use of copper. Copper bands or foil (Snail-Barr is one recommended product) ringed around tree trunks or stapled along the perimeter of a planter box serve as no trespassing signs where snails are concerned.

When, in time, copper becomes tarnished, it loses its snail deterring effect but can be reactivated when polished with a little vinegar and water. Make sure your banding or foil is 8 inches wide to eliminate all chance of snails moving over it. Bordeaux mixture (copper sulfate plus hydrated lime) will also provide one year’s snail protection when painted on trunks of susceptible trees and will give two years’ protection when white latex paint is added to the mix. NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD.

GOVT INTRODUCES PLANS TO ATTRACT YOUTHS INTO AGRICULTURE.

Government has rolled out a program aimed at enticing the youth into agriculture.


According to the Minister designate for Agriculture Dr. Owusu Afriyie Akoto, the program is expected to revamp the sector, create jobs and ensure food security.


Speaking at the opening of the New Year School at Legon, Dr. Akoto emphasized that the initiative known as operation planting for food and job will depend heavily on ICT.


On his part, President Nana Akufo-Addo said his government places great premium on modernizing the sector with the introduction of ICT.


He said: “It is clear that ICT has brought to the fore new ways of doing things. Given the rapid penetration of ICT in our society today, particularly the use of mobile telephones, there is a realisation that ICT should be integrated to be effectively used as facilitating tools in agricultural development to boost its impact on the lives of our farmers.”


“ICT provides easier access to markets and information resources and I have no doubt that if this is mainstreamed into our agricultural practices, productivity within the sector will be increased to ensure that not only will farmers’ input increase but also the nation’s food security will be guaranteed,” he added.

BIRD FLU OUTBREAK REPORTED IN UGANDA.

Authorities said precautionary measures have been taken to prevent the disease from spreading further.


He said bird owners must keep them indoors to avoid them interacting with wild birds and animals and added that people must not touch or eat wild birds or other wild animals that are found dead, but report these instead.


The bureau said it first identified H7N7 and H7N8 avian flu subtypes near the Yilan farm in December, raising the alert that led to a three-month monitoring process to determine if more deadly flu strains were also present in the area.
The H5N8 strain, which is deadly for pou

ltry but has not been found in humans, has spread in Europe and the Middle East since late past year, leading to the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of farmed birds and the confinement of flocks indoors.


In a statement, Christopher Kibazanga, minister for agriculture, animals and fisheries, said local wildlife authorities on January 2 had reported the "mass death of wild birds, seen by fishermen at Lutembe beach at the shores of Lake Victoria near Entebbe".


Uganda announced on Sunday it had detected bird flu among migratory birds, without specifying whether it was the particularly virulent H5 strain detected this season in countries worldwide.


According to the World Health Organization, avian influenza viruses do not normally infect humans but there have been instances of certain highly pathogenic strains causing severe respiratory disease in humans. NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD.

LATEST BIRD FLU WARNING FROM NATIONAL GAME KEEPERS ORGANISATION.

The Government has come together with countryside and shooting organisations to issue important information about the latest outbreak of bird flu, of concern to everyone involved with gamebirds
 
 
The information, endorsed by Defra, the Scottish, Welsh and Northern Ireland governments and collated by seven leading countryside and shooting organisations (BASC, CA,CLA,GFA,GWCT, NGO and SGA).

Key bird flu warnings, advice and action in brief

  • H5N8 bird flu is a serious and notifiable disease and continues to be found in wild birds and some kept flocks in the US.
  • Avian Influenza, also known as bird flu, is a disease that affects gamebirds, chickens, ducks, geese and other poultry. It can also occur in many species of wild birds
  • The H5N8 strain can be passed from wild birds to kept flocks, causing birds to fall ill and die
  • It can be transmitted  from bird to bird or from bird droppings or on people and equipment
  • Risks to human health from H5N8 are very low
  • Bird flu does not post a food safety risk
  • There is currently a legal requirement in the UK for all captive birds, including game birds, to be housed or kept separate from wild birds
  • The law says you must register with the Government if you keep 50 or more game birds or other poultry.
  •  Cleanliness, disinfection and attention to detail when moving and mixing birds are crucial in game bird management, particularly now
  • Do not allow dogs eat any dead wild birds and do not feed uncooked shot birds to animals
  • Separate different gamebird production stages, keeping laying birds away from hatching and rearing facilities
  • Use footbaths containing government-approved disinfectant products
  • Ask your vet for advice on biosecurity
  • Brief staff thoroughly and restrict access by non-essential visitors.
  • Keep food and water clean and, as far as possible, inaccessible to wild birds.
  • Symptoms of avian flu in affected birds include;  loss of appetite, swollen heads, respiratory problems and multiple unexpected deaths. BY CHARLOTTE PETERS.

CHINA CONFIRMS 1 MORE HUMAN DEATH FROM H7N9 BIRDFLU.

A man in China's central Henan province has become the latest person reported to have died this winter from H7N9 bird flu, the state news agency Xinhua said on Saturday citing local health authorities.


The 36-year-old roast duck salesman developed a fever and a cough around Dec. 25 in coastal Zhejiang province, near Shanghai, and returned to Henan in early January, Xinhua said. He was diagnosed with H7N9 on Jan. 10 and died the next day.


Bird flu is most likely to strike in winter and spring. In recent years, farmers have stepped up cleaning regimes, animal detention techniques, and built roofs to cover hen pens, in their efforts to prevent the disease.


China's last major outbreak killed 36 people and caused more than $6 billion in losses for the agricultural sector. NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD.