NNLA Member Spotlight
NNLA would like to highlight our members via the NNLA Facebook page and this newsletter.
Submit articles or social media posts of interest to the NNLA office for repost/reprint. This
may include, but not limited to, awards, news articles, social media recognition, or special
promotions/events your company would like to share.
SUBMIT AN ARTICLE ABOUT YOUR COMPANY
Tell us a little of your company’s background and history. How did the company start
and where is it today? What differentiates your company from others? What is your
company known for? How does being a member of the Nebraska Nursery and Landscape
Association benefit your company?
2021 Nursery Stock Distributor License Renewals
It is time to renew nursery licenses for 2021. Renewal postcards will be mailed out to all current Nursery Stock Distributor licensees at the end of
November 2020, which will provide information for renewing online; no additional renewal information will be mailed out. If you do not receive your
renewal postcard by December 10, or if you have questions/problems with the online renewal process, please contact NDA at agr.plant@nebraksa.
gov.
There will be a fee change for 2021 licenses, with the fees reduced to $83 for any location
up to one acre, and $3.61 for each additional acre.
Greener Towns Efforts Statewide in 2020
The Nebraska Statewide Arboretum awarded 19 landscape grants in 2020 through the Greener Towns program. The projects resulted in the planting
of 6,000+ native flowers and grasses by more than 300 volunteers in community landscapes across the state.
The plants were selected, delivered and laid out to match the light, moisture and soil characteristics specific to each site. Each of the plantings contains
a variety of spring-to-fall blooms and dense coverage to minimize weeds. Plant grant recipients include:
Election of NNLA Board of Directors
The NNLA Board of Directors has accepted nominations for two open Director positions and the position of Vice President for the term of January 2021
to 2023. Brett Schroer has been nominated for the position of Vice President and Dawn Dawes and Sheila Schrader have been nominated for Director
positions. Electronic ballots will be emailed to the membership beginning December 1, with the election closing on December 15. The two Director
and Vice President positions will then be ratified at the Annual Meeting to be held virtually on December 17 in conjunction with the NNLA Winter
Conference. Jason Kuehl will succeed to President at the closing of the Annual Meeting and Brian Munk will move to Past President.
Nebraska Nursery and Landscape Association 2020 Virtual Winter Conference and Annual Meeting
December 16 - 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. & December 18 - 2:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
The Nebraska Nursery and Landscape Association conference committee is excited to bring in a great lineup of speakers with a wide variety of topics.
Attendees can earn up to 3.5 NCN continuing education credits.
The full event brochure is available at the end of this newsletter. You can also go online to view the information and register. Visit http://members.nnla.
org/nnla-events. You can choose to be invoiced or pay online.
Sponsorship opportunities are available! As a Silver Sponsor, your logo will be placed on event materials and you will be able to provide a PowerPoint
slide that will be shown several times during the event. As a Gold Sponsor, your logo will placed on event materials and you will be able to provide a
PowerPoint slide or a 15 second video that will be shown several times during the event. Register for your sponsorship online and the NNLA office will
be in contact for your logo, slide or video.
NNLA continues to provide a $1,000 scholarship to a full-time horticulture student attending a Nebraska college. Help us continue to invest in students
pursuing degrees in horticulture. Consider donating to the Scholarship Fund when you register for the conference.
NNLA Scholarships
The Nebraska Nursery and Landscape Association is pleased to announce they will be providing a scholarship again this year to full-time horticulture
students in Nebraska colleges. The NNLA believes in investing in students pursuing degrees in horticulture.
We encourage you to promote this scholarship to area students and urge them to complete the application packet available on the NNLA website.
Applications are due by December 10.
The applicants will be notified by the Nebraska Nursery and Landscape Association the first week in January.
NNLA also has a student membership available. There is no cost to Nebraska horticulture students to participate in NNLA. Student membership forms
are available on the NNLA website if you have students who would be interested.
Closer to Home
“One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.” William Shakespeare
It is clear that the world is a crazy place right now, and it often feels like every day brings
another level of folly beyond our control. Although keeping up with the news is important,
it’s also important to give ourselves time to step away to find things more within our
control, things that calm our frayed nerves and bring us perspective, joy and gratitude. My
suggestion? Step outside.
Outside we can find nature reliably going about its business, whether in the deep
wilderness or our own backyards. It doesn’t give a darn about the news, but instead just
keeps moving forward in its wonderfully complex way, always offering us beauty, wonder
and peace
Plant Native: bitternut hickory
Bitternut hickory is native to eastern Nebraska and commonly
found in oak woodland bluffs along the Missouri River,
extending west to Lancaster County and north to Thurston, CO.
It is commonly found in low, wet areas, but can also grow in
dry upland sites. It is a durable, long-lived shade tree, with an
oval to rounded crown. The compound
Plant Native: calico aster
This showy aster blooms in a cloud of thousands of tiny, star-shaped, pale pink flowers, concentrated
mainly on one side of the spreading branches. With a profusion of nectar-rich flowers, this aster is king
as a top notch native for pollinating insects. Each little flower has a ring of pale pink petals, surrounding
a central cluster of tiny tubular flowers. It gets its common name from these multi-colored, rosy-red
central disks. T
Plant Native: blackhaw viburnum
This viburnum native to the Midwest has large, flat-topped white flower clusters in spring; dark berry-like fruits
that can persist into winter; and the leaves turn a beautiful red or purple in fall. The berries can be eaten fresh
or made into jams and attract birds and wildlife as well. It’s very adaptable to different soils, can take full sun or
quite a bit of shade and can create a dense shrubby thicket or be pruned into a small tree. Viburnums are one
of the best shrubs for hardiness and full-year interest, both for humans and the wild creatures that rely on our
landscapes for food and shelter.
President’s Message by Brian Munk
Hello everyone, it sure seems like this summer has flown by.
This has certainly been a year for changes and adjustments,
yet despite everything, it seems to have been a great year
in the nursery and landscape industry. As we move into
the holiday season, I certainly hope we can begin making
positive changes and adjustments for all of our industry,
small businesses and citizens across the state and country.
2020 NNLA Virtual field day a success!
The Nebraska Nursery and Landscape Association
held the 2020 Fall Field Day virtually this year in
mid-October.
The week of October 5th, NNLA shared three
videos providing virtual tours of behind the scenes
operations of Vala’s Pumpkin Patch and Apple
Orchard.
NDA Announces New EAB Finds, Rescinds State EAB Quarantine
The Nebraska Department of Agriculture (NDA) recently confirmed that emerald ash borer
(EAB) had been found infesting ash trees in Hall County, Nebraska. EAB was first found in
Nebraska in June 2016, in Douglas county, and most recently was discovered in Buffalo and
Washington counties.
Due to the confirmations of EAB i
Japanese Beetle Update
Nebraska has numerous counties infested with Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica). As
this pest becomes more common across the state, the prevalence of Japanese beetle has
implications for nurseries that ship out of state.
NDA continues to monitor for the presence of Japanese beetle in our state. Based on
trapping surveys, nearly half of Nebraska counties are considered infested as of 2020.
NCN Continuing Education Hours Update for 2021 Renewal
The NNLA Board of Directors approved at their last meeting to allow online courses attended by Nebraska Certified Nurseryman (NCNs) in 2020 to
count towards the 5.0 CE hour requirement for maintaining certification. Online courses, outside of those hosted by NNLA, will need to be reviewed
by the NCN Committee or NNLA Board of Directors.
NNLA Policy on Certification, Maintaining Certification
It’s Bulb-planting Time
Bulbs are a balm to the frozen soul after a long Nebraska winter. Those first snowdrops and crocus peeking
through last year’s old leaves—or through the snow—can’t help but put a smile on your face and allow an
exhalation of breath: we made it. Cool, fleshy, green-growing leaves coming out of the drab March soil…
bulbs would be wonderful even if they didn’t bloom. And what a variety. There’s a wide array of colors,
shapes, sizes, forms and bloom times—from a dainty, early squill (Scilla bifolia) to a bold red ‘Kingsblood’
Late Flowering Tulip. Bulbs can range in height from 2-30 inches and give you bloom from February to late
May. You can plant straight species or any of the hundreds of named cultivars.
The Pleasures of Gardening
It’s fall. Some of us are tired of weeding, watering, managing. The growth we impatiently
waited for in spring has by now gone rampant. As one gardener put it, “the autumn garden
is a machete garden.”
National Green Industry Survey
The Southern Association of Agricultural Experiment Station Directors is pleased to announce the release of a New Southern Region Cooperative
Series bulletin, SCSB#421: “National Green Industry Survey - Summary Report.”
This electronic bulletin is available as a link through the list of Southern Cooperative Series Bulletins on the SAAESD homepage (https://saaesd.
org/bulletins/), or directly at the following URL: https://saaesd.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2020/08/National-Green-Industry-Survey-SummaryReport-2019-final-08.30.2020-1.pdf
This report summarizes information on production and marketing practices and trade flows for U.S. ornamental plant grower and dealer firms, based
on a national mail and Internet survey.
Marti Neely Design and Associates wins Silver at the APLD Landscape Awards Competition
The opportunity to reimagine a large homesite does not come along very often. When it does and
with it a long-term relationship built upon trust it really is an opportunity to treasure.
Morgan Ridge is located on the crest of a hill, centered in the property, almost eleven acres in size.
With significant slopes on both the front and back it was afforded lovely views of the sunrise and
sunset, but not as much usable space as you would think. With a tightly fenced pool landscaped
with river rock, fewer plants than would be pleasing and an awkwardly designed patio space, it
was not anything my clients wanted to keep. When in this entertaining area one had no idea of the
wonderful expanse of nature outside the fenced boundary as those views were blocked.
Spotted Lanternfly
Fall is the perfect time to scout for Spotted Lanternfly (SLF). This exotic invasive insect has not been
found in Nebraska. But the Nebraska Department of Agriculture (NDA) encourages everyone to keep
an eye out for this pest.
In the fall, adults will aggregate on tree-of-heaven (Ailanthus altissima). So an easy way to scout for
this pest is to check the trunks of tree-of-heaven for these large, colorful insects.