Parks and Recreation Division
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BROWARD COUNTY COMMISSION
NEWS RELEASE
Parks and Recreation Division ▪ 950 N.W. 38th St., Oakland Park, FL 33309
Phone: 954-357-8100 ▪ Fax: 954-561-5359 ▪ www.broward.org/parks

For Immediate Release

Date:    July 23, 2009                                             Phone:  954-357-8115

From:   Michael Mills                                             E-mail:  mmills@broward.org

Going Native
- Secret Woods Nature Center hosts popular Native Plant Sale -

WHAT:   Let’s say you’re ready to landscape around your new home. Using a variety of resources – books, friends, nurseries, the Internet – you develop what seems like a suitably varied list: palms (areca, Chinese fan), vines (wandering Jew, pothos/devil’s ivy), a shrub (lantana), trees (schefflera/umbrella tree, weeping fig, orchid tree, mimosa), flowering plants (four o’clock, ground orchid), and fruit trees (mango, guava, sapodilla). Sounds great, right?

Wrong! All these plants (classified variously as non-native, invasive, or exotic) have been accidentally or purposely introduced into the South Florida landscape and have since gone wild in our yards, parks, and natural areas and on our roadsides and canal banks. The vast majority pose no threat, but some grow out of control, competing with native vegetation and gradually displacing it, forever altering ecosystems that have developed over millions of years.

The most notorious invasive plants – Australian pine, melaleuca, and Brazilian pepper – have long been targeted by intensive campaigns to curb their spread. But you can also do your part simply by paying closer attention to what you grow in your own yard. Don’t trust older editions of landscaping guides, which may contain outdated information, and don’t buy plants just because they’re pretty or your friends or neighbors recommend them. And by all means don’t put indiscriminate faith in the Internet, which is rife with misinformation. Finally, don’t toss out houseplants that might take root and spread until they run amok.

The key is educating yourself on what you put into the ground, and for help with that you can turn to Broward County parks. On Saturday, August 8, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Secret Woods Nature Center in Dania Beach will host its Native Plant Sale, where you can stock up on plants to help you design beautiful, environmentally friendly landscapes that will save time and money, protect our natural resources, and provide wildlife habitat. Native-plant nurseries and vendors will display and sell plants native to South Florida, including plants suited to butterfly and wildlife gardening. There will also be gardening information, displays, and children’s arts and crafts.
  
WHERE:  Secret Woods Nature Center
2701 W. State Rd. 84, Dania Beach
954-791-1030
   
WHEN:  Saturday, August 8
9 a.m.-1 p.m.
  
WHO:   For all ages.
 
For further information, call the nature center at 954-791-1030. The nature center is accessible via Broward County Transit Route #6.

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Individuals with disabilities requiring accommodations in order to participate in County programs, services, and activities must contact the Special Populations Section at 954-357-8170 or TTY 954-537-2844 at least ten (10) business days prior to the scheduled meeting or event to request an accommodation.

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