April Meeting—2026

April Meeting—2026

Event: April Meeting—2026

Speaker: Pat Smith

Topic: Famous, Fabulous, Free-Spirited, Fetching–French Gardens in All Their Glory

Date: Thursday, April 23, 2026  •  7 p.m.

Location: Shepard Garden & Arts Center
3330 McKinley Blvd, Sacramento

Patricia Beach Smith, a retired journalist and opera singer, an avid traveler who gets great pleasure tromping in and around gardens, wherever she may find them!

Her April program will take us to some pretty amazing French gardens, from eclectic and off the beaten track to some we will likely all recognize.

A photo of Pat Smith.
Spring Plant Sale—2026

Spring Plant Sale—2026

Event: Spring Plant Sale—2026

Dates: Friday & Saturday, April 10–11, 2026
9 a.m.–1 p.m.

Location: 1911 Bannon Creek Dr., Sacramento CA 95833

Our member grown plants will include:

  • Organically grown veggies, berries and herbs—Tomatoes, peppers, squashes, eggplants, cucumbers, oregano, basil
  • California natives—Clarkias, Poppies, Buckwheat varieties, Penstemons, Monkey flowers, Lupines and many more!
  • Lots of perennial and annual flowers to brighten your yard through the spring and summer—Zinnias, Sunflowers, Nasturtiums, Yarrows, Black-Eyed Susans, Fuchsias to name a few!
  • Drought tolerant varieties—Salvias, orchid cactus, succulents
  • Trees and shrubs—Manzanitas, Ceanothus, many beautiful Abutilons

Also at the Spring Plant Sale—
Stan, The Tool Man
Garden tool, scissor and kitchen knife sharpening; container drilling

Spring Plant Sale flyer.
March Meeting—2026

March Meeting—2026

Event: March Meeting—2026

Speaker: Darcie Nunes Paulin

Topic: Beautiful Container Planting—Tips for Success from One of the Best

Date: Thursday, March 26, 2026  •  7 p.m.

Location: Shepard Garden & Arts Center
3330 McKinley Blvd, Sacramento

Darcie Nunes Paulin is the expert landscape design and construction specialist behind Custom Plantings, a premier service known for their design excellence and attention to detail. In her program she will create a container garden, step-by-step sharing techniques and tips along the way. We will gain insight into how to select a container, what soils work best and plant selection.

A photo of Darcie Nunes Paulin.

21st Annual Gardener’s Market—2026

21st Annual Gardener’s Market—2026

Event: 21st Annual Gardener’s Market

Date: Saturday, March 7, 2026  •  9 a.m. – 3 p.m.

Location: Shepard Garden & Arts Center, 3330 McKinley Boulevard, Sacramento

We have a great lineup of returning favorite and new vendors bringing in some unusual plants and garden treasures. The proceeds of this event help fund the club’s Grants Program, monthly speakers and community gardening projects.

For more information, contact Lili Metzer (lmetzer@wavecable.com) or download the 21st Annual Gardener’s Market flyer.

Culinary herbs.
Colorful ceramic plates.
Several succulents in ceramic pots displayed on a table.
A display of several packs coasters with images of flowers, animals, and nature.

February Meeting—2026

February Meeting—2026

Event: February Meeting—2026

Topic: Introduction of the 2026 Saul Wiseman Grants Awardees

Speaker: Saul Wiseman Grants Committee

Date: Thursday, February 26, 2026  •  7 p.m.

Location: Shepard Garden & Arts Center
3330 McKinley Blvd, Sacramento

Our February meeting will focus on celebrating the 2026 Saul Wiseman Grants awardees.

A raised garden bed with vines growing on trellises.

January Meeting—2026

January Meeting—2026

Event: January Meeting—2026

Speaker: Lorraine Van Kekerix

Topic: Spring Blooming Bulbs that Naturalize Well in Sacramento

Date: Thursday, January 22, 2026  •  7 p.m.

Location: Shepard Garden & Arts Center
3330 McKinley Blvd, Sacramento

Bulbs provide bright, cheerful pops of color in the winter/spring garden, then go dormant and disappear until the next fall/winter. A wide variety of plants are included in the bulb category. Some, but not all, bulbs can grow and thrive with limited water in our area.   

Lorraine has 30 years experience growing bulbs in Sacramento limited water gardens. She will identify spring flowering bulbs that reproduce and naturalize in this area. Plus, discuss the kinds of conditions they need to thrive.

Lorraine has degrees from UC Davis and Utah State University. She is a Sacramento County Master Gardener and a past president of the Perennial Plant Club (PPC). She currently helps to organize the PPC plant sale, propagates plants (including bulbs) for the sale, and volunteers at many PPC events.

A group of blooming white flowers surrounded by fallen leaves

Drip System Repair

Drip System Repair

A irrigation tube covered in several layers of black electrical tape.If you have a drip system in your garden, you will sooner or later have leaks. Most commonly these are caused by severing a half inch supply line with a shovel, but there are numerous other causes like critter damage. The tubing shown in the first photo was damaged by sun exposure over many years that left it brittle, and then being stepped on which led to severe cracking. You can see that I solved it with multi-layers of electricians tape. Surprisingly, that worked for months, but when several leaks appeared, additional tape did not stem the flow.

A trip to Home Depot revealed something new. Rather than having a bunch of bins for fittings of slightly different tube sizes, there were only 3—straight, elbow, and T. This new design accommodates all variations of half inch” tubing. So, I used 2 couplings to insert a new 3 foot section of tubing and buried it this time.

A view of drip system parts needed for repairs.The one thing I want to caution you about is the amount of strength required to force tubing into the coupling. One of the joints leaked. I foolishly tried to solve the leak with tape. Finally, I realized that all I had to do is force the tubing farther into the coupling. Duh. Now, I dont mean to discourage your use of electricians tape. Generally, it will solve minor leaks. Just remember to really stretch the tape tightly as you wind it around the tubing. The second photo shows a new coupling and a handy small roll of tape next to an old repaired leak that has worked well.

-Stan (Just call me Dr. Drip) 

P.S. You cannot use these couplings to repair severed soaker hose. The hose walls are too thick to fit into the coupling. You will need to use an internal barbed coupling.

Summer Pot Watering

Summer Pot Watering

Several potted plants being watered in a black plastic tub.You know the rule about watering potted plants—water until the water runs through. I watered the plant that LaVille is holding just last night. Well, water did run through, but look at the dry section she is pointing out. I was surprised at how quickly the passion vines had been wilting. It is obvious the water was just channeling through without soaking the soil. We thought the rapid wilting was due to the pot being too small, so LaVille started repotting into 2 gallon pots. As soon as the first gallon pot was emptied, it was obvious what the problem was. She decided to go ahead and repot all 12 passion vines anyway. We then soaked the new pots into the tubs shown in the second photo.

 

So, I guess the lesson for you is this: If you let a potted plant get really dry, watering so that the water passes through may not insure thorough soil dampening. You might try lifting the pot after watering so see if the weight indicates water retention. I suppose you could insert a moisture probe deeply into the pot to check moisture at different levels. And, of course, if you choose soaking the pot, dont forget to remove it. A drip pan would be another solution.

 

Incidentally, we found over a dozen caterpillars on these plants. We transferred them over to the huge mother plant. We will soon have a yard full of gulf fritillary butterflies. You could experience that same joy.

 

Stan, The Soaker Man

Got Knitting Needles?

Got Knitting Needles?

It has been a long time since I sent out a blog. No one has complained, but I will ignore the possible inference.

A cardboard box full of multi-colored, mismatched knitting needles

I just watched a video on TikTok (yes, I watch TikTok a lot). It showed another technique for testing the moisture content of a potted plant. Ya know how you stick a toothpick into a cake that you are baking to see if it is done. If stuff sticks to the tooth pick, you know it needs to go back to the oven. Now I have never done this myself, but LaVille seems to relish this procedure. Anyway, if you stick a knitting needle into a potted plant, where soil sticks to it upon removal tells you the depth of the moisture. I know I have touted the use of moisture meters, but I have found that the soil texture can vary the results. Besides, here is something new for you to experiment on. (Dont you just hate it when a sentence ends in a preposition?)

 

As you can see, I have quite a collection of knitting needles. I bought this batch probably 30 years ago at a garage sale for a little bit of nothing. Other than using several pairs to teach the grandkids to knit, none of these has been used by us because we prefer circular needles. (You should see some of my scarves.) So, if the box appears dusty, its because its been in the attic all these years.

Stan, The Knitting Man

Soulful Sneakers

Soulful Sneakers

Long-handled shoehorn atop a pair of sneakers

Once again, I am sending you a blog not as a fellow gardener, but as a caring friend. You can see in the photo a shoehorn laying on top of sneakers. Now these are not just any sneakers—these shoes have a soul that can communicate with the wearer. In this case, these sneakers perceived the moans and groans as I bent over to tie these shoes. In a soft and gentle voice, they told me to tie the bows in a knot.

They said to remove the sneakers at the end of the day, simply use one shoe to press on the heal of the other. Then use your bare foot in a similar fashion to remove the other shoe. They said to immediately search on Amazon for long handled shoehorns. There I would find 2 shoehorns under the Velette brand for $15. Now, these wouldn’t arrive for 2 days, so I was told to plan on wearing a different pair of shoes until my order arrives. The shoes said to order a second shoehorn because they had heard moans and groans from the other side of the bedroom.

 I have been to a lot of estate sales, and it was not uncommon to find a long-handled shoehorn among the estate remains. It always made me somewhat sad that whoever had died, had to resort to using such a device. Well, guess who must be getting old?

 When that time arrives for you, you may find your soulful sneakers talking to you. If you bought them at Fleet Feet, they were expensive. That’s the price you pay for English speaking sneakers. If you bought them at an outlet store or a store like T.J. Maxx, you paid less, but the language spoken won’t be English. You will need to use Google Translator unless you happen to be lucky and can speak that same language.

 In the meantime, don’t fret. When that day arrives, simply listen to your sneakers and do what they say—life will be easier if you do.

Stan, The Old Man