Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Check out this plant


We emailed this one as our plant of the month for December. I thought everyone would enjoy seeing it on the blog...yes I am just now getting to it, busy, busy! this is a new PlantHaven variety, Euphorbia 'Ascot Rainbow'. We will have a limited growing season here in Texas as I can't see it surviving the heat and humidity of the summer, yet I still could not resist!

The weather has been nippy for us Texans this year.  We hope we get some warmer, sunny days soon so the little plants can start growing for spring!  It is hard to grow when there is not sun, warmth and we don't water for 10 days so no fertilizer either!

Next week I head North to freeze some more.  Holly and I will be at the MANTS show in Baltimore from January 6th-8th.  If you are there, come by and see us, we love company!  Also we will have our new grower calendars there.  this year we made them smaller at 8.5" x 11" so hopefully it will be better on the bag load as our previous year's calendar was a little over sized.

I hope to writeup a 2009 summary.  I get internet at home Monday, yippee!  So this should make things easier as the evenings are the best for me to sit down and sort my thoughts!

Happy New Year to all!

Thursday, December 3, 2009

It's gonna be CHILLY in Texas!



Whewww, we just got ready in the knick of time.  A cold blast of air is headed our way tomorrow with a low of 26F, unheard of in Southeast Texas!  I know some have experienced much worse but we are not acclimated to such weather, throw us some 100+ degree weather and we are right at home. 

We got the quonset covered this morning, I was worried we might not get these done as the wind and rain have been bad all week but today was nice.  All of the walls are up, houses buttoned up a, the heaters are primmed and the propane tanks are full.



Then as we were still putting plastic on the semi full of peat moss showed up, of course everything has to happen all at once!  So much for the 24 hour warning from the shipping company.  Fortunately we had an employee here that could drive the lifter to unload it all because that is a task!


 I am posted one last pic, well of it looking nice, of the garden.  The herbs are beautiful and things have really turned out nice.  I hope to expand these next year as they are such a pleasure to have around the office!  I will tell the employees this afternoon to harvest away as these will be no more after Friday's blizzard! (Yes they are predicting some snow here, Global Warming???, Oh yes it is Global Cooling now) BURRRRRRR!



Monday, November 30, 2009

Need a Job?

Greenhouse Manager
We are searching for a new greenhouse manager as ours will be moving away soon. This position is available ASAP! Come join us in the piney woods of Magnolia, Texas to work for a progressive young plant nursery

Duties include:
Managing a 10 person crew
Cordinating orders for shipping each week
Scouting for disease and insect problems
Maintaining crop health and size requirements for shipping
Communicating with sales to maintain proper inventory levels for orders
Filing monthly inventory reports
Maintaining strict greenhouse sanitation procedures

Requirements:
Must be bilingual
Must be willing to work outside the majority of each work day
Must have a background/experience in horticulture
Pay dependent on experience
401 K plus benefits provided
If you are interested please contact April at 281-705-7724 or April@MGNLiners.com

Spring is Here!!!!

Well that would be in the lab, not outside, burrrrr it is getting cold..to me!  In the lab plants must go through stage 3 inside which can take 6-8 weeks then they are planted and must finish as a liner for 8-15 weeks.  So you can see why Spring is now in the lab, actually it started in November.  With the holiday getting plants ready becomes much more tricky so we usually try and work 10 hours days.  This year we have been on a 4 day work week since July but starting in December we are going back to 5.  Hopefully we can keep everyone at 5 days, this will depend on the orders, if they are slim we will go back to 4 days.

We are growing a ton of new products, I have started these in hopes of sparking new sales with new customers and old.  We would like to become the source of all quality liners but also new and unusual plants.  We are working with many people to make this happen but it will take time.  Also we will start a new 12 month ad campaign with NMPro to help us deliver this message and to let people know we are more than just Nandinas!  I am working on our new website www.mgnliners.com that will be released early December....must get to work now!  I think it will really help customers get to know us a little better and it will help eliminate confusion people have with our current site that lumps both of our nurseries together, liners and containers, customers get confused on location and product grown all of the time.  Anyway a sneak peak can be seen here, I must say it is very snazzy, of course i am being bias since I designed it, haha!  www.mgnliners.com/index2.html.

Below is a listing of new products we will have in 2010, this is just a start, more to come soon!  Keep an eye on us, we are more than just Nandinas!

Aeonium 'Kiwi'
Aeonium 'Pinwheel'
Agave 'Blue Flame' Blue Flame Agave
Aloe 'Pink Blush' PPAF Pink Blush Aloe
Anigozanthos falvidus x rufus' Bush Sunset' Kangaroo Paw
Anigozanthos humilus x flavidus 'Yellow Gem' Kangaroo Paw
Anigozanthos 'Tequila Sunrise' Kangaroo Paw
Bambusa pervariabilis Clumping Bamboo
Capsicum annuum Chile Pequin
Capsicum annuum 'Black Pearl' Ornamental Pepper
Capsicum annuum 'Calico'Ornamental Pepper
Capsicum annuum 'Chilly Chili'Ornamental Pepper
Capsicum annuum 'Medusa'Ornamental Pepper
Caryopteris x clandonensis 'First Choice' P.P. # 11,958 Blue Mist Spirea
Clerodendrum incisum 'Macrosiphon' Musical Notes
Crassula coccinea 'Campfire'
Crassula muscosa Watch Chain Plant
Crassula muscosa pseudolycopodiodes Princess Pine
Crassula ovata arborescens Baby Jade
Crassula ovata 'Variegata' Variegated Jade Plant
Crassula radicans large red Carpet Stonecrop
Crassula radicans Small red Carpet Stonecrop
Cuphea ignea 'David Verity' Cigar Plant
Dianella tasmanica 'Variegata' Variegated Flax Lily
Dianella tasmanica 'Yellow Stripe' Gold Stripe Flax Lily
Dyckia hybrida 'Burgundy Ice' PPAF
Euphorbia x martinii 'Ascot Rainbow' PPAF Variegated Euphorbia
Gaillardia x grandiflora 'Fanfare' P.P.#15892 Indian Blanket Flower
Geum x 'Totally Tangerine' PPAF
Hamelia patens Mexican Firebush
Kalanchoe pumila 'Silver Gray'
Lantana camara 'Robpatrai' P.P.#9,837 Patriot™ Petite™ Rainbow Lantana
Lysimachia puncata 'Golden Alexander' P.P.# 13,547 Variegated Loosestrife
Nandina domestica 'KAYDEE' Atomic fireball™ Nandina
Nandina domestica 'MURASAKI' PPAF Flirt™ Nandina This is a Southern Living Plant Collection Exclusive.
Nandina domestica 'SEIKA' PPAF Obsession™ Nandina This is a Southern Living Plant Collection Exclusive.
Pennisetum glaucum 'Jade Princess' Ornamental Millet
Pennisetum glaucum 'Purple Majesty' Ornamental Millet
Pennisetum purpureum 'Princess' P.P.#17,728 Ornamental Napier Grass
Philodendron 'Xanadu' Dwarf Philodendron
Rosmarinus officinalis 'Gold Dust' Variegated Rosemary
Salvia leucantha 'Santa Barbara' P.P. # 12949 Compact Mexican Bush Sage
Sedum lineare 'Variegatum' Variegated Stonecrop
Sedum kamtschaticum 'Variegatum'
Sedum rupestre 'Angelina'
Sedum rupestre 'Chocolate Ball'
Sedum spurium 'Red Carpet'
Sedum spurium 'Tricolor'

Monday, November 23, 2009

IPPS Video Presentation with narration

Well I finally got around to narrating my video presentation that I gave to the IPPS Southern Region In Biloxi this year.  It is not the best as I cannot find my mic for the life of me, funny how things "disappear" around the office, hmmmmm?  Also I only did one take, probably could have used 2-3, haha!  Anyway I digress, the video is in 3 parts because YouTube will only allow 10 minutes of video, boo hoo!  This will give a great in-depth look to what we do here and it goes into a little of what we have had to do as of late do to the bad economy.  WARNING:  There is some harm done to plants in part 3, don't cry, it was painless and they are in a better place called mulch :)














The presentation went well considering all of the potential technically difficulties that could have transpired!  I nearly had a stress meltdown before leaving town as it seemed nothing I did would make the video presentation I did to be easier, work in the first place!  Well it worked, it was just blurry and I was imagining a giant theater sized screen for some reason and it turned out to be a small pop up screen.  I thought I figured it out but saving the raw data version then popped in a DVD to burned and realized it was way to big to burn on a DVD even!  The version that I exported to iDVD looked blurry when I played it on my computer, a Mac so I was sure the hotel would have an inferior PC, making it look that much worse!  Oh what to do!  Here is what I did, come in to play my personal MacBook and the Apple store at the mall.  I have a Mac at home, of course, but it is a little older and only has a 10 GB harddrive, not enough for this powerhouse movie!  I went to the Mac store and picked up an external harddrive, that connect via a Firewire, yes faster file transfer!  Went to work the next day got everything transferred and Voila, it worked!  The Firewire allowed me to play the movie from the external harddrive smoothly.  Oh but wait, there is more!  I suddenly realized the connection on my baby Mac was not the giant honky-sized connection that most projectors have, oh dear, I though I had everything figured out.  Google to the rescue!  I figured out the Apple store sells adapters, yes back there the night before our departure as I am darn sure there are no Apple Stores in Biloxi, MS!  After all of this stress everything worked, I did bring backups just in case as well as my DVD Player, as it seemed the burned version from iDVD looked way better played on a DVD than the computer.  Through my Googling very scientific research I found out the movie quality depends on the player installed on the computer, problem is I never found a very good one to handle my Mastapiece!  All in all a stressful experience, but these are usually the ones where we learn the most, ahh yes I know just a hair more about video production than I did before, look out Hollywood!

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Welcome to the Club


 Nandina domestica 'Kaydee'
Atomic FireballTM Nandina


We are please to introduce Nandina domestica 'Kaydee'.  This fall we are releasing a limited amount of this new Nandina that we have been fiddling with for several years now.  We are going to call this one Atomic FireballTM Nandina, because it looks like a little ball of fire!  This is a sport of Nandina 'Firepower' that was found by Kay Herring, also known as the "Mother of Nandinas" since she has managed the lab for nearly 20 years now!  While walking in the 1 gallon crop of Nandina 'Firepower' in 2004, Kay noticed a smaller, different looking plant.  She took it to the greenhouse and the process of propagation was started.  This Nandina is now in production in a limited supply, numbers will be increased if the demand is high.  The pictures seen here are of a 3 year old plant, this is a slow grower and you will not have to worry about it getting out of hand, topping out at around 18" tall.  Also like 'Firepower' no flowers or berries have been seen to date so issues with invasiveness is a non-issue.   Why do we call it Atomic FireballTM , well it has the same fantastic bright red winter color as it's Momma, but the growth habit is very compact, almost ball-like.  I guess you could call it a dwarf, dwarf, since 'Firepower' is already a dwarf.  We also like to kid around the nursery and call it "Kay's Grandbaby" since her 4 kids have yet to produce her a real one, haha!  We think this would be a great addition for small landcapes and for gardeners that don't want to trim.  Also we like using this lil' one for a foundation plant in mixed containers, also works well as a stand alone in a container as you can see from the picture.  Hope you all enjoy this one!  If you want to try it out, jump now, we only have a few liners available for 2009!
Firepower vs. FireballTM Nandina

Thursday, October 22, 2009

IPPS Southern Region Paper

Below is the paper I am submitting for the IPPS Southern Region Meeting.  Just a background of sorts of the nursery here.  I am just happy it is finished before we start driving, driving and typing don't go together!!!

A Behind The Scenes Tour of Young Plant Production in Magnolia, Texas at Magnolia Gardens Nursery.

April Herring
Magnolia Gardens Nursery Liner Division, 18810 Turtle Creek Lane, Magnolia, Texas 77355
Email:  April@MGNLiners.com

Magnolia Gardens Nursery is a medium sized nursery with 3 locations in Texas including, Magnolia, Waller and Plantersville.  The nursery has two divisions; one that grows finished containerized stock and the other that grows lining out stock.  The focus of this paper will be the liner division at the Magnolia, Texas location that specializes in young plant production through the use of micropropagation, in particular that of Nandina domestica.  To many the process of micropropagation can seem mythical.  This is mainly due to the fact that not every nursery deals in this method of propagation as they would with conventional means such as cuttings, grafting and seeds.  So it is the purpose of this paper to show that micropropagation is not mythical, just unfamiliar.  This will be done by going through some of the daily activities at the liner division of Magnolia Gardens Nursery.
INTRODUCTION
Magnolia Gardens Nursery has a product line that is constantly evolving to keep up with market demands, the major products that are produced at this time include Agapanthus, Iris, Loropetalum, Nandina and Yucca as well as a variety of ornamental grasses and perennials.  Nandina domestica is at the top of the list when it come to production and sales numbers at about 3 million units sold per year, with Nandina ‘Firepower’ selling at around 1.4 million units alone.  The owner of Magnolia Gardens Nursery, Tommy Marek, started the liner division back in 1983 in an upstairs bedroom of his home.  The container nursery had already got its start in 1978 and tissue culture was just a hobby of sorts as the process was still rather new and was just starting to become popular as a means of commercial propagation.  It didn’t take long for the hobby to outgrow the bedroom so the lab was moved to a few rental houses near the nursery.  This is where the lab experienced troubled times and was nearly shut down because it was generating no profit.  It took the smarts of a new lab manager to turn the lab around by making processes more efficient and concentrating on products that would generate profit, this made it the place it is today.  Once the orders starting coming in, the rental houses started feeling cramped and plans for an actual building where made.  A formal lab structure was built in 1994; the building totals 6240 ft2, 2288 ft2 being growing space.  This original structure has the capability to hold 1.9 million plantlets at any given time.  In 2004 the lab was expanded to make room for new crops the lab was pursuing.  The expansion brought in an additional 3900 ft2 of growing space.  At capacity the new space can house around 3.4 million plantlets, total lab capacity coming to 5.3 million plantlets.  Currently there are 15 hoods with 2 spaces each or room for 30 technicians.  Outside there are 4 greenhouse structures and the total growing space is around 3 Acres.  There is room to wean 360,000 plants at any given time and at full capacity room to finish 2.5 million plants for sales. 
GETTING THINGS STARTED
The right product mix  The first step to a successful lab is to grow the right product, one that the operation can grow with success, one that has high demand yet little supply in the market and one that cannot be easily propagated conventionally.  For Magnolia Gardens Nursery this product has been Nandina domestica but with market conditions continually changing this may not be the case in the future.  So to remain successful, the hunt is always on for new potential products.  Micropropagation is not a process for impatient people.  There is a notion that tissue culture is magical, producing thousands of plants very quickly, it can be depending on the definition of “quickly”.  To put it into perspective, i.e. put a plant into the lab today it will not be ready for sales a year later.  Although there are plants that multiply rapidly in tissue culture, these are generally not the type of plants Magnolia Gardens Nursery produces, as many of the products grown are hard to propagate woody plants.  With crop times of 6 to 10 weeks and multiplication rate of 1.5 to 3 the benefit of putting a plant in tissue culture is not seen quickly as many think it should be.  To see the magic of tissue culture one must look at the overall effect, as an example the propagation of the plant Nandina ‘AKA’ will be reviewed.  In November of 2004 this plant was discovered in a crop of Nandina ‘Firepower’, there were 2 plants at the time, the first step was to grow them to a larger size for the initiation process.  The plants were initiated in 2005; by the year-end we had 200 plants.  So already over a year into the process we only had 200 plants, this is were many people get frustrated, thinking they should have 1000’s by now.  By the end of 2006 we had 2,700 plants, 2007 we had 4,700 plants but 16,000 were taken out for rooting.  After this it was decided to bulk the crop up so less rooting was taken and by the end of 2008 we had 48,000 plants and had rooted 14,000.  Once larger numbers are reached the gains are exponential and one can easily see that in 3 years conventional propagation would have not have produced the yields that the process of micropropagation did.   So you can see the cumulative effects of using micropropagation can be magical, it just might not be as quick as many think it should be.  
Initiation  There are many factors that come into play when deciding what steps to take in getting a plant clean.  Plant type, plant age, growing environment the plants were in, time of year, etc.  We have a general sterilization procedure for woody plants and for herbaceous plants that is changed up depending on the factors discussed above. At Magnolia Gardens Nursery we use a combination trimming techniques along with differing concentrations of Sodium Hypochlorite, Ethanol, along with sterile distilled water and Tween.
KEEPING THINGS GOING
Media  Media is made in house in 36 Liter batches about 4 times per day.  Stock solutions are made up in 5-gallon batches to keep pace with the amount of media needed per day.  We use 4 media formulations for the bulk of our crops, which helps keep processes efficient. The media is dispensed using a mixer to keep all solids such as sugar and gelling agent suspended while an automatic dispensing machine dispenses the proper amount of media into test tubes, baby jars or magenta containers.  After everything is dispensed the containers with media are sterilized in an autoclave that heats to 250ºF and pressurizes to 20 PSI.  Once the containers are sterilized they are only opened under the laminar flow hood to maintain sterility.
Working the Crops Average crop cycle is about 6 weeks but many plants can go longer than this and actually do better if they are left longer.  For the most part woody plants have longer crop cycles than herbaceous.  Herbaceous plants will start to go downhill much quicker than a woody.  Woody plants also do better when cycles are longer; when the cycles are too short the plants start to perform poorly.  All plants are screened for contaminates as well as uniformity by supervisors before the technicians cut them for either multiplication or rooting.  The supervisors are in charge of getting plants to and from the growth room so that there is little traffic in the growth room keeping it clean and organized.  When crops are worked a certain portion will go for stage 3 or rooting while the remainder will stay in stage 2 as mother stock.  This percentage will fluctuate depending on season and market conditions.  Crops are kept healthy and clean through the screening process, only the best will remain as mother stock.
FINAL STEPS
Acclimatization  The plants become accustomed to living in a perfect environment now they must be able to survive the great outdoors which is higher in light intensity, less humid and for most of the year it is warmer.  We help plantlets as best we can with the transition by using a variety of shade and cooling systems.  All soil is mixed onsite to ensure quality.  In 2009 we started using mychorrhizae in our soil mix to help produce a stronger root system that will be a great benefit to growers once the liners are potted up. Most plants take an average of 10 weeks to finish depending on season with Agapanthus taking the longest time to finish at 15 weeks.
THE BIG GOODBYE
In the liner division there is one sales person that handles all orders from start to finish.  Including answering the phone, taking the orders, printing invoices, organizing shipping and more.  To date this has worked very well for us.  Products are shipped the most efficient means possible including by truck, air, FedEx, and UPS.  Most of the product grown is shipped within the U.S. but we also ship internationally, with the bulk of that material going to Canada.  The product grown and numbers produced are dependent on communication with customers too see how they are doing and what product they will need for the upcoming season using a prebooking system. Even with communication it can be hard to tell when things are going to come to a stand still and when things will start moving again in a bad economy.  With the downturn of the economy as of late, the prebooking system has not been as effective of a tool as in years past, as many growers are very cautious placing orders until they see an economic upturn.  The goal now is too keep product in the pipeline at all the various stages, to maintain the quality of product that customers expect and to predict what products will sell in the near future.  What this means is that product must be discarded once it is past its prime, through planning we try to keep the discards to a minimum.
THE FUTURE
Even though the present looks a little bleak we are excited about the future.  We are taking this time to start new product lines such as perennials and succulents.  Also we have a new line of Nandina that will be featured in The Southern Living® Program.  We are learning a lot during these slow times, how to use labor, chemicals, fertilizer and supplies more efficiently.  As the motto says “That that does not kill us only makes us stronger.”  We look to be a stronger, more efficient young plant nursery once we make it through this.
CONCLUSION
The liner division at Magnolia Gardens Nursery started over 26 years ago.  From our humble beginnings we have slowly grown to what we are now by using careful planning and not making rash decisions.  Our success can be attributed to two things; the first is our employees, 7 of which have worked for the division 20 years or more.  The second is our product line, which will continually be monitored and changed according to market conditions.