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The Rural Voice, 1979-05, Page 48Gardening As the sun warms the land thoughts turn to gardening as well as larger scale planting operations. This month Rural Voice starts a gardening column which we hope will be a regular feature. Readers with gardening problems, or successes, are invited to write to Rural Voice. Out gardening expert will attempt to help solve readers' problems and we'll share readers' successes with all Rural Voice readers. Send your gardening column contribution to Rural Voice, Box 10, Blyth, today. Cold frames give you a gardening head start Home gardeners who want a head start on the garden can capture the warm spring sunshine, and put it to work in cold frames. These large boxes, 45 to 60 cm high, are set on top of the garden soil, and covered with sheets of glass or plastic. The cold frame acts as a greenhouse for the seedlings planted inside, says Burke McNeill, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food extension horticulturist. If the cold frame is used before the danger of severe frost is past, some source of heating is necessary, he says. A small portable heater provides sufficient heat, but for permanent cold frames, electrical soil heating cables are more practical. For cold frames located in areas without access to power, manure can be used to warm the soil. Start by digging a pit 30 to 38 cm deep, and add 15 to 20 cm of fresh manure. Cover the manure with 20 cm or more topsoil. "Make sure there is sufficient topsoil so that the plant roots won't penetrate into the manure." says Mr. McNeill. The actual cold frame can be constructed from old boards or cement blocks. The sides are low and sloped slightly. so the glass top will shed water. For best results, Mr. McNeill recommends a slope of about 10 cm facing south. "Storm windows make ideal tops for cold frames," says Mr. McNeill. "On warm, bright spring days, the top can be opened slightly to let some cool air inside the frame." Vegetables, such as tomatoes, peppers and cabbages, can be seeded directly into the topsoil of the cold frame, and later transplanted to the garden. Help for the tree buyer If you're planning to buy trees this spring to landscape your home or provide shade, Agriculture Canada has some publications you might find useful. The department's specialists have pre- pared a checklist of ornamental trees for Canada. And to go along with this list there is a map of plant hardiness zones. Many of the listed trees are widely grown in Canada, while others are useful in only some parts of the country because of their hardiness or other special adaptive features. In selecting trees for any particular area, hardiness is the most important factor to consider. New trees or those unknown to a gardener are a problem if their survival is uncertain. Many factors affect the hardiness of a tree in a given area. The minimum temperature in winter is the most import- ant element in tree survival. Other factors are the length of the frost -free period, summer rainfall, soil type, moisture and wind. Soils, especially on the prairies, also often critically influence tree survival. Soil components can be amended to overcome a difficulty with shrubs, but the quantity of additives needed for trees is often too large to be practical. Low rainfall too, can be overcome by irrigation, but this is often time consuming or impossible for large trees. Very little can be done to change the climate for tree growth. Agriculture Canada's tree list includes 57 varieties of maple, 50 types of crab apple, 28 of cherry, 23 pines, 20 hawthorns 18 magnolias, 19 elms, 17 oaks and 14 willows. The checklist is available in publication 1343, A Checklist of Ornamental Trees for Canada, and the accompanying map is publication 5063, Map of Plant Hardiness Zones in Canada. Two other useful publications are publication 994, Culture of THE RURAL VOICE/MAY 1979 PG. 47