Regina Leader-Post

Gardening ideas at touch of a smartphone

- DEAN FOSDICK

Gardening apps are getting better all the time, supplantin­g manuals and textbooks as the way people dig for informatio­n. Many university extension services are developing the digital aids to extend outreach to clients.

“Extension apps provide reliable, research-based informatio­n,” said Christophe­r Enroth, an extension educator with the University of Illinois, who evaluates gardening apps for their relevancy, customizat­ion and ease of use. “I’ve examined a few apps developed by various companies that are simply another gateway to their products.

“Other various interest groups have apps that give ‘all-natural’ advice that is based more on opinion or beliefs. It always helps to have a critical eye.”

The apps that Enroth refer to are, of course, software designed for use on smartphone­s, tablets and other mobile devices.

Purdue University extension specialist­s, for example, have created a series of diagnostic apps for gardeners that provide solutions to dozens of problems for hundreds of plants. This low-cost Plant Doctor app suite focuses on perennial and annual flowers, tomatoes, turf grass and trees. (purdueplan­tdoctor.com)

“Every year, homeowners invest millions of dollars in their landscapin­g materials, and due to insect diseases and sometimes a lack of experience, problems come up,” said Janna Beckerman, a Purdue extension plant disease specialist and content specialist for the apps. “This is an affordable way to fix those problems. You just pull it (mobile device) out of your pocket and have answers right away.”

A new app from Toca Boca called Toca Lab: Plants aims to plant seeds of interest in gardening for children. It features a digital botanical laboratory that helps kids discover scores of plants with differing personalit­ies. It also enables them to create new species. (tocaboca.com/app/toca-lab-plants)

PlantSnap is a recent entry in the expanding field of apps intended to identify unknown plants and flowers. (See also Plantifier, NatureGate, Leafsnap, PlantNet, ID Weeds.)

It instantly identifies plants and weeds from a photo, and along the way is producing what its creators claim is the world’s largest plant database.

“It works well for gardeners and academics and anyone,” said Eric Ralls, chief executive of PlantSnap. (plantsnap.net )

Other gardening-related apps worth considerin­g (all those listed below are free):

For landscapin­g: iScape, Rain Harvest

For diagnosis: Garden Compass, My Garden Answers

For plant guides: GrowIt!

For naturalist­s: Audubon Bird Guide app

 ?? GROWIT! ?? The mobile app GrowIt! Gardening apps are improving and replacing manuals as the way people dig for gardening informatio­n.
GROWIT! The mobile app GrowIt! Gardening apps are improving and replacing manuals as the way people dig for gardening informatio­n.

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