Monday, June 29, 2026

MHGC Awards presented in June 2026 for 2025 activities

 Chinook District Awards

Past Director Susan Nash Award – Community Service: 1st place and 3rd place

Past Director Ann Crain Award – Yearbook, 30-44 members: 1st place

Past Director Esther Banholzer – Yearbook Cover, 21-35 members: 1st place

Past Director Barbara Smith Award – Arbor Day Project: 1st place

Past Director Linda Haas Award – Certified Wildlife Habitat: 1st place

Past Director Marion Nancarrow Award – Best Craft: 1st place to Debbie Angel

Past Director Dianne Green Award – Best Horticulture: 2nd place to Debbie Angel

Grow Green, Plant Trees Award: 2nd place for club, 3rd place to Dorothy Hitchcock for individual

Smokey Bear Poster, 5th grade: Jude Snyder

Smokey Bear Poster, 4th grade: Leila Snyder

 

Washington State Federation of Garden Clubs (WSFGC) Awards

Arbor Day: 2nd place

Community Service: 1st place, 2nd place, and 3rd place

Growing Project: 2nd place

Horticulture Essay: 1st place to Radhika Kumar

Social Media/Website: 2nd place

Garden Therapy, Passive: 1st place

Yearbook: Honorable Mention

Youth Involvement: 1st place

Civic Achievement: 1st place

District Newsletter: 1st place (Debbie Angel, editor)

Community Garden: 1st place

Berta Deming Award for most blue ribbons: Debbie Angel

 

Pacific Region Awards

Native Flora Education Award: 2nd place

Civic Achievement Award: 2nd place

Newsletter: 3rd place (Chinook District Newsletter, Debbie Angel)

Published Article Award: 2nd place to Radhika Kumar

 

National Garden Clubs (NGC)

Certificate of Appreciation

Monday, June 15, 2026

Radhika's Essay about Peonies and Garden Club Friendships

 A Bomb Paeonia Roots Friendships


“From the earth we came; to the earth we return. In between we garden.” (Alfred Austin, English Poet Laureate (1835-1913). Luckily, because I belong to a garden club, I never garden alone. Whenever I fall in love with a plant, I reach out to my gardening friends to ask if they grow it and if they would share a start? One such plant was the Paeonia ‘Red Charm’ that I first saw in a Denver garden. I love peonies. They are low maintenance, deer and slug-resistant, survive benign neglect, don’t need constant division, and can live for decades in the one spot. Botrytis blight is controlled with pruning. I grow peonies—the pink, delicately fragrant ‘Sarah Bernhardt’, the nun-like white ‘Duchess de Nemours’— but I had never seen a merlot-red peony so huge it made my eyes pop. Its seductive color left me drunk with craving. I coveted its sturdy stem, its lush foliage, the perfect 9-inch roundness of its flowers. I wanted its explosion of ruffled, petaloid petals surrounded by a ring of larger guard petals, so tightly packed it was no wonder it was classified as a “bomb peony.” The flower’s elusive scent of cloves instantly wafted me back to India, my birth country. I had to have it.

This peony, I learned, was a hybrid created by crossing a Paeonia lactiflora and a Paeonia officinalis. Introduced in 1944 by Illinois grower Lyman Glasscock, it won the American Peony Society’s gold medal award in 1956. I asked my gardening friends: Could they help me find a start as I’d had no success at the nurseries? My British-born friend Audrey Plummer, a lover of fuchsias, stepped up. She spread the word. Dutch-born friend Carolina Wagemans, who grew dahlias and even had one named in her honor, brought in a start for me. Following instructions, I planted the tuber in full sun, in well-draining soil, avoided planting it too deep to encourage it to flower, and gave its promise of huge flowers some structural support.

After a couple of years of impatient waiting, I saw the first buds, with ants slurping their sweet sap. When the flowers opened, way earlier than the other peonies in my garden, I called Audrey and Carolina, thanked them and sent them photos of the first bloom. I took one flower to my house-bound neighbor. It almost toppled over her bud vase! I took another to the assisted living center which my garden club supports. I was immediately surrounded by residents, who said, like I had, that they had never seen a peony so red and so full.

Sadly, both friends have since passed away, becoming one with the earth they loved so well. I mourn them still, but I also remember how three first-generation immigrants obliterated national borders by sharing a bomb peony hybridized in America. The wine-red flowers are a toast to our shared love of gardening. The plant they gifted me is thriving, so I know that friendship and memories, like peonies, endure.



Sunday, April 12, 2026

Book Donations for Olympic View K-8

 Here are some photos of the books the club donated. Thanks for your generous donations to go along with the books purchased from club funds.






Wednesday, March 25, 2026

April 21 Meeting at 4:00 p.m. at Kent East Hill Nursery

 Reminder that our April meeting will be at 4:00 p.m. at Kent East Hill Nursery. We will begin with a program by Jason Billingsley about pollinator-friendly plants. 

April is also the month that we collect dues for the coming year. So please bring $12 for your annual dues.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

April 27 Arbor Day Tree Planting

 Mark your calendars for the Cherry tree planting at Hylebos Blueberry Farm Park. Tentative time is 10:00 a.m.

March 14 Blueberry Pruning


 

Visit the Hylebos Blueberry Farm on Saturday, March 14, for a Blueberry Pruning Seminar from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.

Participants will receive instruction and hands-on practice with one-on-one guidance.

For those who just want to volunteer at the farm, everyone is welcome! Bring your favorite tools. Extra tools & snacks will be provided 

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Books for Olympic View School

 March 17 Meeting: Remember to bring any books you would like to donate to Olympic View school for K-8. We hope to exceed last year's donation of 210 books.