WATER SMART GARDENING FESTIVAL NOV. 14: MORE BEAUTY WITH LESS WATER
Printer-friendly version Attendees eligible to win a free Home Landscape Re-design–$700 value! (RANCHO SAN DIEGO, CA)—Fall is here–San Diego’s second planting season. The Water Conservation Garden celebrates with an exposition of drought tolerant landscaping on Saturday, November 14, 2009, 9am-3pm, at the Water Smart Gardening Festival. Admission and parking are free. Plant vendors will offer a variety of drought tolerant plants with colors and textures that prove that water-wise does not mean compromise; beauty in the landscape is possible despite the ongoing water shortage. Gardening experts, including local gardening author Nan Sterman, will help novice and experienced gardeners get from bare dirt, or anywhere in between, to the water smart landscape of their dreams with short lectures and Ask the Experts booths covering water smart gardening, composting, vegetable gardening, tree care, and irrigation. Visitors in the planning stages of a new landscape design won’t want to miss the Ask the Designers program featuring free 20-minute landscape design consultations with a professional designer. Appointments can be reserved ahead at 619-660-0614, x10. Visitors can also enter to win a free home landscape re-design sponsored by local water agencies. Landscape designer Chris Wotruba provides the lucky winner with a home consultation, a professionally rendered design, and plant recommendations for a new water smart landscape that can then be taken to a landscape construction professional for installation. Tickets can be purchased before or during the event, and entrants do not need to be present to win. A series of short lectures includes special guest, Diana Lindsay at 1pm, parabotanist for the San Diego Natural History Museum, and author, presenting Indian Use of Local Desert Plants, with a demonstration of how Native Americans used local plants to thrive in their desert communities. For children, Ms. Smarty Plants, the Garden’s educational mascot, will return with her energetic “Plantastic” show to inspire children of all ages to conserve water and care for planet earth. The fun for kids continues throughout the day with face painting and a children’s activity booth sponsored by local water agencies. The Water Smart Gardening Festival helps San Diegans take advantage of the fall planning season by providing the plant materials and the expert advice people need to get their drought tolerant landscapes in the ground and well established for a colorful show in the spring. And, the few scattered showers that happen now and in the winter, help reduce the time and money homeowners spend watering. The event program includes: Lectures (30-45 minutes long, in Garden classroom) 10:00AM The Protea Species: Exotic Options for Drought Tolerant Gardens Walter Parkola, Owner of Blossom Valley Protea 10:45AM Green Roofs and Living Walls Jim Mumford, Good Earth Plant Co./Green Scaped Buildings 11:30AM Fire Safe Landscaping Tom Jesch, Designed II…/Dalylily Hill Nursery 12:15PM Saving Water with Mulch Sharon May, Agri Service, Inc. 1:00PM Indian Use of Local Desert Plants Presented by Diana Lindsay, Parabotanist for the Natural History Museum, and author, with a demonstration of how Native Americans used local plants to thrive in their desert communities. 2:30 PM How to Start a Water Conserving Garden Connie Beck, Landscape Designer The Water Smart Gardening Festival is sponsored in part by SDG&E, American Water, Miramar Wholesale Nursery, Mountain States Wholesale Nursery, American Society of Landscape Architects and Agri Service, Inc., A complete event program can be viewed at www.thegarden.org. The Water Conservation Garden was named a Top 10 Destination Garden in the April 2009 edition of Sunset Magazine. The Garden is a not-for-profit 501 c 3 organization. _____________________________________________________________________________________ Directions to the Garden: The Water Conservation Garden is located at 12122 Cuyamaca College Drive West in El Cajon, where Jamacha Rd. (not Jamacha Blvd.) and Hwy 94 meet. From Hwy 15 or Hwy 805, merge onto Hwy 94 East to Cuyamaca College Drive West. From Hwy 8 take the 2nd St. off ramp in El Cajon, which turns into Jamacha Rd and then turn onto Cuyamaca College Drive West. Information about the garden, including detailed directions and a map, can be found at www.thegarden.org. Printer-friendly version
VACCINES ARRIVE FOR H1N1 FLU, CLINICS OPEN THIS WEEKEND
Printer-friendly version Pregnant women, children, healthcare workers and infants’ caregivers urged to get vaccinated October 24, 2009 (San Diego) – A new shipment of 102,000 doses of the H1N1 flu vaccine arrived in San Diego on Friday. Seven public health clinics will be open extended hours over the weekend from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. to vaccinate high-risk individuals. The shipment includes both nasal spray and injectible forms of the vaccine. To learn location of clinics, visit www.sdiz.org or call 211. If enough vaccine is left after the weekend, vaccinations will also be offered weekdays from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Doses will also be distributed to hospitals for vaccination of healthcare workers and hospitalized patients. “We know that it has reached pandemic proportions,” Supervisor Dianne Jacob, Chair of the Board of Supervisors, said of the H1N1 flu virus which has killed 25 San Diegans , hospitalized at least 348 individuals, and spread to at least 29 area schools. The vaccines will be provided to highest-risk groups including pregnant women, children from preschool through middle school, healthcare workers/emergency responders, and people with infants under six months in their homes, since young babies cannot receive the vaccine. “More will be coming in. We have been promised about 411,000 doses,” Jacob said, adding that shipments are arriving slower than expected. “Everybody still needs to be reminded to exercise good hygiene,” the Supervisor added. She urged people who are ill to stay home from school and work. Avoiding shaking hands and coughing into one’s sleeve also helps limit spread of the disease, she noted. Dr. Wilma Wooten, County public health director, urged people to come to the County clinics if your doctor hasn’t ordered the vaccine or if you don’t have a primary care physician. For individuals who have a primary physicians and who don’t fall into the high-risk categories listed above, Wooten asked, “Please be patient…Check with your doctors.” Physicians should be receiving supplies over the next several weeks, she added. Dr. Mark Sawyer, medical director of San Diego Immunization Partnership, offered assurances that the vaccines are safe. Common side effects of the injectlble version include sore arm, redness, and sometimes low-grade fever. These side effects typically last one day and are most common in people receiving a flu vaccine for the first time. Side effects from the nasal spray vaccine may include stuffy or runny nose or sore throat, typically lasting one day. “There is nothing different about this vaccine than any other influenza vaccine,” Sawyer assured, adding that the H1N1 vaccine has gone through the same manufacturing, testing and approval process of any flu vaccine, with monitoring systems in place for side effects. To learn more about the H1N1 outbreak in San Diego County, visit http://www.sdcounty.ca.gov/Portal/flu/H1N1vaccine.html and http://www.sdcounty.ca.gov/Portal/News/swineflu.html. Printer-friendly version