The Weekly Vista

Garden Club adapting to pandemic

- LYNN ATKINS latkins@nwadg.com

Like many organizati­ons statewide, the Bella Vista Garden Club suspended regular meetings due to the possibilit­y of spreading covid-19 but, even without meetings, it has remained busy.

“Gardens are beautiful this year. Our members and our neighbors have been very busy,” president Judy Jeffery said.

Two of the group’s major fundraiser­s were canceled. The card party had been scheduled for March 20 and the Garden Extravagan­za was scheduled for June 6. But members managed to find a way to hold their annual spring plant sale, even while taking social distancing very seriously.

Rather than gathering member volunteers and customers together on a single Saturday in May, the plant sale was divided into two events which were held partly online.

Many annuals, flowers and some vegetables, had been planted as seeds in early February. When they were ready to move to outdoor gardens in April, the club used Facebook Marketplac­e to set up a virtual plant sale. It sold out of tomatoes, zinnias and coleus.

Meanwhile, members were collecting perennials from gardens around Bella Vista and re-potting them for sale. The pots are kept in sand beds to conserve water. Previous customers know that plants from the Garden Club will grow well in Bella Vista because they are from Bella Vista.

The Garden Club works closely with the wastewater treatment plant, which provides space, including some greenhouse space, for projects like the plant sales. Sale chairwoman Joal Miller said other clubs in the region can’t duplicate Bella Vista’s events because they simply don’t have space.

The perennial sale begins Thursday, June 11, and runs through June 13. Customers will make appointmen­ts to control the number of people gathering at the sale site. Everyone will be

wearing masks, and cash customers must have exact change. For more informatio­n go to www.bellavista­gardenclub.com/Home/ perennial-plant-sale-2020. To make your appointmen­t, email bvgcplants­ale@gmail.com

For the first time in years, the club won’t be giving out scholarshi­ps to college students studying horticultu­re this year and the spring field trip to Wonders Of Wildlife National Museum & Aquarium in Springfiel­d was canceled.

Donations to other nonprofits will also be curtailed.

“It’s like a roller-coaster effect for the whole community,” Jeffery said. “You worry about having to reduce donations when you know that they are dependent on those donations.”

The spring luncheon was postponed until August.

The club doesn’t hold regular meetings in the summer when members are busy in their gardens, but the fall meeting schedule is already set up, Jeffery said, including all the guest speakers.

Both the club’s Facebook

page and website are current. Although the Facebook page is a closed group, people with a genuine interest in gardening are usually accepted whether or not they are members, Jeffery said. Portions of the web page are open to everyone. Between those resources, almost anyone can find the informatio­n they need to be successful, she promised. The website includes links that can address almost any gardening problem, plus a monthly “What to do in your garden” feature.

Members are wearing masks and taking care of several public gardens in

Bella Vista, including the entrance to the cemetery and the Veterans Wall of Honor. The Yard of the Month is still awarded.

Balancing volunteers’ safety with a busy club schedule keeps the members of the Garden Club looking for innovative solutions.

 ?? Lynn Atkins/The Weekly Vista ?? Tony Licausi is still planting flowers although the garden tour that would have featured his yard has been postponed. Licausi’s garden features hardscape in the form of terraces, paths and statues, as well as a raised-bed vegetable garden and many unusual plants.
Lynn Atkins/The Weekly Vista Tony Licausi is still planting flowers although the garden tour that would have featured his yard has been postponed. Licausi’s garden features hardscape in the form of terraces, paths and statues, as well as a raised-bed vegetable garden and many unusual plants.
 ?? Lynn Atkins/The Weekly Vista ?? Perennials, dug from Bella Vista gardens, wait in the sand beds at the wastewater treatment plant for the annual Bella Vista Garden Club plant sale.
Lynn Atkins/The Weekly Vista Perennials, dug from Bella Vista gardens, wait in the sand beds at the wastewater treatment plant for the annual Bella Vista Garden Club plant sale.

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