2011 Holiday Gift Ideas

Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts

Friday, November 11, 2011

International Green Week: Berlin - Jan 20-29, 2012


The International Green Week (IGW) is a one-of-a-kind international exhibition for the food, agricultural, and horticultural industries. Established in 1926 it will take place for the 77th time in 2012. Producers from all over the world use the IGW to test-market food and luxury items and establish a brand image. Exhibitors often organize around national, regional, or product themes. Presentations feature fresh produce, fish, meats, and dairy products. These combine with a vast selection of international wine, beer, and spirits specialties, to satisfy every culinary palate. Right in line with consumer trends, the IGW also includes direct agricultural sales and the BIO MARKT organic products section.

The IGW also features commercial and non-commercial agricultural, forestry, and landscaping exhibits. Changing annual themes typically include such topics as renewable resources or scientific livestock breeding and production. These trade show elements are of particular interest to those involved in the developing markets of central and eastern Europe.

Website: http://www.gruenewoche.de/en/

Flyer: http://www.gruenewoche.de/media/igw/igw_media/igw_pdf/Image_flyer_IGW_en.pdf


Dates & Facts

2012 January 20 - 29
2013 January 18 - 27
2014 January 17 - 26

Opening Hours

From 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Extended hours on
Saturday 21, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Friday 27, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Saturday 28, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Place of Event

Exhibition ground Messe Berlin
Berlin-Charlottenburg


Germany's Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection - Horticulture Publications

A few horticulture related publications from Germany's Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection (BMELV).

Link to publication site: http://www.bmelv.de/EN/Services/Publications/publications_node.html

Horticulture in Germany (Flyer)
Date:
15.12.10

Cover Flyer Horticulture in Germany
Facts and Figures: Production in gardening and fruit cultivation (Economic data, structure), Horticultural Services (Garden construction and landscaping)

Nurseries in Germany
Date:
15.11.10

Cover of the flyer Nurseries
A high-performing industry with great export potential.


Friday, July 31, 2009

BOTANY BUILDINGS Grow Buildings From Trees!


By Bridgette Meinhold

We’ve seen trees molded to form fantastic living chairs before, and now a young group of German architects are bending trees to their will to form a new breed of living architecture. The team is calling their tree-shaping system “Botany Building,” and while it may not be the cure to climate change, it’s an incredibly interesting way to create living structures.




Read more>

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

German students look at British horticulture

5:36pm Monday 22nd June 2009

Twentythree students from State College of Agriculture, Furth, Germany have been in Cornwall as part of a Horticulture and Agriculture tour of the United Kingdom.

The students who all came from areas around Furth and Batvia are sons and daughters of farmers and growers much like the UK’s Young Farmers Club. They had a range of interests from glasshouse growing to vegetable production. The Students visited Cambridge before coming to Cornwall where they visited tourist’s attractions such as the Eden Project and then spent 2 days touring farms and visiting the College. The Students next stop will be Tresco before returning to Germany.

Bill Herring, curriculum manager for horticulture said: “Duchy College are very proud to host the German Young Farmers Club’s Cornish visit. It was great for us to share farming practises and build oversees relationships.”

Anyone interested in finding out about our Horticulture or Agriculture courses contact Duchy College on 01209 721321.

Giant Hogweed and Serious Health Issues

Learning from Hamburg's war against the invader
By Alexander Harmle

Giant hogweed, also known as giant cow parsnip, is not usually thought of as an environmental concern. Some see it simply as a beautiful plant with gorgeous blooms.

This perennial plant, however, is considered a noxious weed that has become a thorn in the side of German authorities in recent years. It has grown rapidly and has overrun many areas. It is also considered an invasive plant species in the United States.“Giant hogweed is a public health hazard that ranks even higher than poison ivy, poison oak, and poison sumac, in respect to its potential to harm humans,” the U.S. Department of Agriculture states on its Web site.The warning continues: “The sap from this plant can cause a severe skin reaction known as photodermatitis or photosensitivity. The reaction can occur up to 48 hours after contact. After coming into contact with the sap, the skin blisters when exposed to sunlight. Contact with the eyes can lead to temporary or even permanent blindness.”This plant is detrimental to the health of humans and animals, and is regarded from an ecological perspective as a serious problem. As of 2009, the weed has taken root all over Hamburg, Germany. The Hamburg government is waging a complex war against this transplanted intruder, which is not native to Europe.

Eimsbuettel, a Hamburg suburb, has implemented a new strategy in its fight against giant hogweed. Instead of cutting down the weed before it blooms, such as is practiced in other suburbs and in an area in Hamburg proper, Eimsbuettel has initiated a pilot project. This suburb’s local government has sent out crews to dig up the weed. It will continue to do so over the next seven years, or cover the plant with a weed blocker. Since the seeds of this plant can survive for up to seven years, the blocker has to remain in place for that long.“Digging up the giant hogweed is without a doubt the most effective tool against this plant. It blocks the plant from further propagation,” commented Helge Masch, head of the Special Botanical Garden of Wandsbek. Cutting the weeds down is not effective, and he is very critical of such an approach, which would require that the plants to be cut down every year for up to four years, and several times during the year, as the plant grows a penury bloom once cut down.Sabine Meindl, the representative for the giant hogweed action group in Eimsbuettel, explained that local governments contact the owners of gardens in the area where the weed has been spotted. The plant is actively pursued on public domain. However, when found on private property, owners can only be advised to eradicate the weed. They cannot be forced to do so.“The problem we encounter is that we proactively fight the plant on public property and once we turn around, it stares back at us from private properties. This plant is blooming, sending its seeds onto public grounds the minute the wind picks up. This undermines our efforts of fighting the plant on public domain,” Meindl said.

“The plant should be destroyed on private ground as well, and we have to notify the owners about this matter. But unfortunately, there is no a law that forces the owners to remove the plant in Germany.”She concluded: “There is a law in Scandinavia, but here in Germany, I can only inform and recommend, in hopes that the owners will cooperate.”

Notes About the Plant
Giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum) was originally found in Central Asia’s Caucasus region. It was brought to Europe as a botanical curiosity in the 19th century, and to the U.S. in the early 1900s. Unfortunately, it has spread rapidly and widely. It can grow to a height of 15 to 20 feet.The blooms appear in the form of a white, umbrella-like cluster, usually appearing between July and September. The plant belongs to the Apiaceae family, and is related to the carrot and parsley family. It resembles common hogweed.In Hamburg, the plant can be found as an ornamental plant in gardens, or growing wild along train tracks or near small brooks or rivers.

In the United States it can be found in a many states.It can take up to seven years to eradicate this plant—being quite prolific, large colonies of plants have grown from one single plant.This plant is included in the “Federal Noxious Weed List.” It is illegal to transport it across state lines. Those who do so are subject to stiff fines.Anyone finding the plant in the United States should contact the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In Michigan, please contact the Giant Hogweed Hotline at 800-292-3939 and staff from the Department of Agriculture will assist in eradicating this pest.


Heide Malhotra contributed to the article.
Last UpdatedJun 22, 2009

Thursday, June 18, 2009

11th Arborists' Trade Fair: Exhibitors display latest kit for dealing with green waste

Horticulture Week

17 June 2009


Organisers of this year's Arborists' Trade Fair say it will have more of a focus on "green-waste solutions".


Arboricultural Association director Nick Eden said: "People are not just looking for woodchippers. They also want log splitters and mobile saw mills. There's an awareness that too much material is simply being wasted."


Perry Plant Hire is promoting BGU machinery from Germany. This machinery can be used for producing kindling wood as well as shredding and bundling wood. Hardmet is also showing ranges of towable chipping and shredding machines, while GreenMech is also featuring a range of tracked chippers and shredders.



Because of high fuel costs, there is obviously more interest in using arboricultural arisings for fuel. Boomeco Biomass will be promoting its services, selling green waste to the biomass and amenity markets. The firm claims that it can boost the profits of arborists by paying money for their waste products.