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Learn land management methods from local experts

Interested in learning the key methods and techniques of preserving natural areas and using the best adapted plants for the Illinois environment?

Reservations are being accepted for Garfield Farm Museum's 29th annual Natural Area Management Seminar, set for 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 21.

Experts Jack Pizzo, Conner Shaw, Jerome Johnson and Abby Fronk will help explain the best techniques and methods to increase and maintain native plants communities. There is a $55 donation for the all-day seminar, which includes lunch and refreshments. Half day attendance without lunch is $25.

The day's outline will consist of researching property history; identifying native plants; identifying invasive species; and the use of fire, herbicides, cutting and brush stacking equipment. Special topics include professional installation and management services; pollinator gardens; and the use of native trees and shrubs in home landscaping.

Most all property owners spend time, money and effort on caring for their landscape. What once took a few hours a week now has many property owners hiring professional landscape services. Since such businesses depend on a uniform way of doing things, yards may be well-maintained but long-term costs, sustainability, and mother nature are disregarded or ignored.

Growing plants native to an environment can reduce time spent on landscaping; provide much-needed food sources for pollinators; control and improve water on the property; and make for a more interesting yard.

Museum biologist Jerome Johnson will open the seminar with research methods to identify natural area landscapes followed by native plant identification.

Jack Pizzo of Pizzo & Associates brings over 25 years of experience discussing professional methods for restoring existing natural areas, creating a sustainable landscape on corporate campuses, and helping homeowners' association manage their community resources. Based out of Leland, Illinois, his firm has done projects from Michigan to Missouri.

After lunch, Abby Fronk, who just achieved her Gold Award from the Girl Scouts, will share a presentation on creating a pollinators garden.

The growth of food sources for all types of pollinating insects is vital to the nation's food supply. Many native bees and insects require food throughout the growing season so strategically planting flowers that bloom in sequence is necessary to sustain these populations. She will share her methods used for anyone who has a few square feet to plant.

Following Fronk, Conner Shaw knows native trees and shrubs. His experience includes finding seed, propagating it, and raising young trees and shrubs that have a high concentration of roots so they will thrive once transplanted. Since 1978, his Possibilities Place Nursery in Monee, Illinois, has been one of the few sources for Illinois native "woodies." For homeowners in town who want just the right tree for their backyard, Shaw knows what will grow in such suburban conditions. For larger properties, his combinations of native shrubs like the viburnums and deciduous oaks or Kentucky coffee trees makes one's landscaping truly grand scale.

Completing the day will be a presentation by Jerome Johnson on management techniques. For property owners who are looking to turn their backyard into a natural area to large acreage owners, Johnson will bring his 30 years of experience to the table. This seminar has both a history and method unlike any others. It offers information that can be directly taken to the field and put in place. Participants are welcome to return in March to gain hands-on experience in the museum's controlled burns.

Garfield Farm Museum is five miles west of Geneva, off Route 38 on Garfield Road. For reservations call (630) 584-8485 or email info@garfieldfarm.org.

Space is limited; last year the seminar was fully booked.

Visit www.garfieldfarm.org.

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