The Sunnyvale Garden Club


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Janet Nevil Featured in Neighbors Go Article

Did you see the Neighbors Go article that featured long-time Sunnyvale Garden Club member Janet Nevil? If not, see below.

 

Best Neighborhoods: Close to city but with country feel

ROSE BACA/neighborsgo staff photographer

Janet Nevil greets one of her parrots at her home on North Collins Road in Sunnyvale. The city was rated the best area for wealthy buyers in the Garland and Mesquite area.Photo by ROSE BACA/neighborsgo staff photographer

By DANIEL HOUSTON

dhouston@neighborsgo.com

Published: 09 May 2013 09:48 AM

Updated: 10 May 2013 07:27 AM

Janet Nevil and her husband, Holly Nevil Jr., couldn’t find a Sunnyvale house to buy in 1995, so they settled down in an unconventional spot.

“We built our house here in a horse pasture,” she said. “My son was getting ready to start kindergarten, and we wanted to go to a place that had a good school. I was raised on a farm in the Ozarks, and I wanted to raise my son on a farm.”

Sunnyvale’s prime location — about 20 minutes east of downtown Dallas — and wide expanses of undeveloped land make it an increasingly popular destination for affluent homebuyers and contributed to its ranking as the best neighborhood for this demographic in the Garland-Mesquite area, according to an intensive data analysis by The Dallas Morning News.

“I think if you look at the history of Dallas, the momentum has been to go north,” said Dan Savage, Sunnyvale’s interim town manager. “Sunnyvale is to the east, and I just think people haven’t looked in this direction very hard. I think the ones that have are delighted with Sunnyvale. It’s basically a well kept secret.”

The News’ rankings were based on factors like safety, neighborhood maintenance and ease of commute, weighted according to the surveyed preferences of individuals making $85,000 per year or more in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

To qualify for this category, only neighborhoods with a median home value of $250,000 or more were considered. Price-sensitive factors like affordability, home-value appreciation, and quality of public schools did not factor into The News’ analysis.

The Nevils own Miller Brace Co., which specializes in making and fitting body braces. The commute between their office, located near Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas, and home is only 20 minutes, another reason they targeted Sunnyvale, Janet Nevil said.

Savage, whose interim term as town manager will soon expire, lives in Plano and commutes to Sunnyvale.

“If you work in downtown Dallas and you want more of a country lifestyle, we have larger-lot homes in Sunnyvale,” Savage said. “This is probably a place that would be as close to the downtown market as any [developing area] in the metroplex.”

Lance and Uma Youts recently moved to the area from Far North Dallas. While searching for a new home in which to raise their 7-year-old triplets, they had three things in mind: proximity to downtown Dallas, high-performing schools and a quality plot of land on which they could build their ideal home.

But because most of the developing areas near their old home would push them farther from Lance’s downtown office, where he works as a certified public accountant, the couple decided to build their new house in Sunnyvale.

“We wanted to have our own floor plan and gear it toward our own lifestyle,” Uma Youts said. “I just like the floor plan. When you have a bunch of kids running around, it’s very open and roomy.”

Residents like Kim Ingram, a member of the Sunnyvale ISD board of trustees, are quick to point out that the community is full of people of various income groups and is built around the school system.

Ingram, her husband Blake and their two children, now 21 and 18, moved to Sunnyvale in 1999, and found they could purchase an expansive 10-acre piece of land for a relatively affordable price. The Ingrams built their home around the land as much as their lifestyle.

“We were able to take advantage of the views and know exactly where the pond was and where the sun was going to hit the house and really plan for that,” she said. “I can sit in the breakfast nook and look out over the neighbor’s fishing pond and watch the sunrise and the sunset, and watch the changing seasons.”

For her, that country comfort is hard to beat.

“It’s really just a peaceful view.”

Neighborsgo reporter Daniel Houston can be reached at 214-977-8024. Data analysis by staff writer Daniel Lathrop.


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SGC Membership Reminder

membership 1

If you haven’t renewed your SGC membership, please complete the 2013-2014 SGC Membership Form and return it with $35 annual dues.  Respond by June 30, 2013,  and you will  definitely have your name & information included in the 2013-2014 yearbook. All others will be added to the membership list for next year’s renewal and yearbook.  Returning your completed form is the only way to assure accuracy in your membership information, as well as notification for all garden club events.

Make your check payable to the Sunnyvale Garden Club and submit to:

  • Mary Baughman
  • Sunnyvale Garden Club Membership Chair
  • 494 N Collins Rd
  • Sunnyvale, TX 75182-4605

Don’t miss the opportunity to participate in another exciting year of garden club programs and activities!  Renew now!

Submitted by:  Martha Billman – Communications Committee


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SGC Summer Symposium – 6/11/13

summer fun1Our first Summer Symposium will be held Tuesday, June 11 starting with a pot luck dinner at 6pm, at Janet Nevil’s house, 582 N. Collins Rd. 972-203-1552. Our mayor will be present to inform us of the newest water restrictions and is available to chat during the dinner. Invite your friends and neighbors to come have some fun with us!

Our project this month is to create garden wind chimes! If you have any large beads or large washers (with the hole in the middle) or sea shells, we will be using them to create the windchimes. The garden club will be supplying all that is needed, but if you want to get a bit creative, these items could be beneficial.

Hope to see you there!
Janet

Submitted by Martha Billman – Communiations Committee


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Lavendar Lemonade

lavender-tea coldSummertime is here!  I discovered this little recipe last year that helped make the long,  hot days in Texas more bearable. When you sip it,  you may feel as though you’ve traveled back to a time of front porch swings, bare feet,  and lightning bugs (of which I’ve only seen one in my yard this year).

If you don’t have access to lavender from your garden, you may purchase organic lavender blossoms at any good health food store in the bulk spice section. You can also order online if you think you’ll be needing a large quantity to get through the season.

Lavender Simple Syrup

  • 1 cup water
  • 1 cup evaporated cane juice (or regular white sugar)
  • 1 cup loosely packed fresh lavender flower (don’t bother to remove the blossoms from the stem, just trim the stem)  Use 3 rounded Tablespoons dried lavender if you do not have fresh.

In a small saucepan combine sugar and water. Bring to a boil on medium-high heat, stirring often. Turn the heat down to medium and continue boiling for a minute or two, stirring often. Add the lavender, stir, turn off the heat and cover the pot with a lid. Steep the lavender in the simple syrup for 15 minutes then strain. Store in the refrigerator, it will thicken a bit as it cools. You do not need to wait until it cools to make the lemonade.

Lavender Lemonade

  • 4 cups cold water
  • 1 lemon juiced, strain out the seeds.
  • 2/3 cup lavender simple syrup
  • plenty of ice

Combine the water, lemon juice, and syrup in a glass pitcher and stir well. Serve over plenty of ice!

Happy Summering!

Submitted by:  Martha Billman – Communications Committee


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Summer Craft Night – Learn How to Make a Frilly Scarf

ruffledscarfWant to learn how to make this beautiful frilly, scarf? Rachel is offering to set up an evening class in June for anyone who is interested in learning this technique.  It is a very easy “no crochet” method using the Sashay yarn by Red Hart. All you need to bring is a skein of yarn (Michael’s has a good variety of colors on sale now), a crochet hook (size J or 10mm), and the willingness to learn. If you are interested in attending, please email Rachel at rachel.doyle@att.net.  The scarves would make great Christmas gifts for your friends and family.  Besides, it is  always fun and exciting to learn something new!

Check out the YouTube video for more information:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOhDl9gxD5I

Submitted by:  Martha Billman – Communications Committee


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SGC Summer Symposium – August 13th

At our Summer Symposium on August 13th, we will make “Earth Buckets” and you will go home with a tomato plant ready for your fall garden.  To minimize our costs, and to keep Deborah Stafford pleased with us,   we need your recycling help.  We need you to find and save 5 gallon plastic buckets.

You are asking, what the heck is an Earth Bucket?  It is a  water-wise or self-watering system for growing vegetables or flowers in a bucket (or actually, two buckets). Here are a few photos of my earth buckets:

earthbuckets1 earthbuckets2 earthbuckets3 earthbuckets4

 

 

 

I purchased my buckets from Lowes and Home Depot, but at nearly $3 each, that could be costly for the Garden Club to provide 2 buckets for each member at the Symposium. (We will provide all the other supplies and tools.)  Besides…. We need to learn to recycle.  I am positive that there are lots of buckets out there – just waiting to be “repurposed.”  Please help these buckets find a useful life!

So — for the next two months, your assignment is to find 5 gallon buckets.  These could be from a bakery or restaurant (I understand pickles and cake icing come in 5 gallon buckets) or from a pool supply company (just be sure to wash out the chemicals very well and then expose the buckets to sunlight).  The buckets that Tidy Cat litter comes in work well.  So, if you have a cat – save those buckets.  If your neighbors have cats, ask for their buckets.  The buckets that work best will have about  a 3” ‘lip’ at the top.  (In other words, when one bucket is put inside the other,  there can be a 3” water reservoir in the bottom bucket.)

So – scour up some buckets before August.  If you find a source for lots of buckets, please let me or Janet know.

Thanks,

Rachel


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Thank You!

Wanted to thank everyone for the time, energy and commitment that was given to our school and community last Saturday. I am blessed to work among such caring people and I hope that we can all be a part of the growth of the Garden and more importantly of our children. A special thank you to Sally Ann and her commitment last fall to making this happen. You really motivated me to continue this process throughout the year! And thank you to Georgeann, Deborah, Andrea and Mary Ann and the entire Sunnyvale Garden Club for giving your time, resources and expertise to this project so freely! And certainly a big thank you to Todd and Kara Ranta, Greg and Kim Kilgore, Scott Blazek, the Powell Family, Cayle and Wendy Beard, Michelle Roquemore, Nancy Griffin, Mayor Phaup, and my sweet wife and kids for the sweat and labor given to this project!!!

We all at the school are very excited about the potential that our Garden brings to our children. Our hope is that we can help our kids see and understand the importance of food and the decisions that we make everyday for the health of our bodies. And that they will develop an understanding of what a sustainable lifestyle can look like and how it can benefit themselves and their community.

Thanks again for being a part of OUR Sunnyvale Community Garden!

Nate Christina – Sunnyvale Elementary School

Submitted by:  Martha Billman – Communications Committee


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REMINDER/UPDATE: SES Workday – 5/18/13

Things are really coming together!  We hope you can join us for some portion of the Sunnyvale Elementary School Community Garden Work Day this Saturday, May 18 from 8:00 a.m. to noon.

Below is a link to the sign up sheet, which is hosted in a Google Doc:   Volunteer Sign-Up: https://docs.google.com/a/sunnyvaleisd.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AsSQfE60vlZIdFY4R1g3a3dLbi0xelZNZHBKdGpBRUE#gid=0

Have questions? Talk to someone on “Team Ann” 🙂gardening1

  • Mary Ann Moreland, chair
  • Deborah Ann Stafford
  • Sallyann Nevins
  • Georgeann Moss
  • “Nate Ann” Chrastina

Here’s what’s been going on behind the scenes to get ready for the Work Day:

  • We’ve had multiple, highly productive planning meetings with “Nate Ann” Chrastina, the SES special education teacher and high school football coach who conceived and has spearheaded this project.
  • Deborah and Marilyn Fitzner picked up free compost from Mesquite. Deborah will drive it up to the back of the school on Saturday, so that it can be worked into the beds.
  • Deborah has already dug out one bed and has marked out a couple of more beds.
  • Deborah created a compost bin out of wooden palettes;  we’ll mix hay  with grass clippings  to create the compost. Bert Whitehead, Sunnyvale’s resident composting author and expert, said this combination will make excellent compost. The hay will be donated by Landers Mercantile; we still need donations of green grass clippings. Do you have any to donate? (We were going to get the kids to compost their leftover lunch food, but they got so excited about composting that they wouldn’t eat their food! That’s why we went to Plan B 🙂
  • Deborah has donated cucumbers, purple basil and tomatoes to plant.
  •   We are looking for families to “adopt a plot” over the summer so that the garden will be in good shape for the kids when school starts up again this fall. In exchange, the family will get all of the produce from the garden plot they adopt and/or they can donate all or a portion of it to a food bank or church.
  • There is a water spigot in general vicinity of the garden at the back of the school (Yeeaaaaahhh!) The school is using SGC’s monetary donation to purchase pavers, hoses, tools, etc.
  • We’ll be building a ready-to-assemble shed, wooden trellis and pave stone beds on Saturday. Many thanks to the Kilgores for donating the trellis materials and to Michelle Roquemore for donating the sign.

This is going to be fun!!!   And after all of your hard work, you’ll be hungry. So Mayor Phaup is providing pizza for lunch. 🙂

Hope to see you on Saturday!

Submitted by:  Martha Billman – Communications Committee


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Sunnyvale Garden Club Meeting – 05/14/13

“Fun and Friendship in the Garden”

Date/Time:  Tuesday, May 14, 2013 – 6:00 p.m.

Location:

  • Home of Janet Nevil
  • 582 N Collins Road
  • Sunnyvale, Texas 75182
  • 972-203-1552

Program:     “Friends Cuttin’ up with a Bonsai Garden.”

Program Speaker:

Sylvia Smith*, Bonsai Society of Dallas, Owner of Bonsai Smith’s Artistic Crafts

“Working with Bonsai plants lecture and demonstration.”

*authoritative Speaker

Hostesses:   Jan Strickland – Lead Hostess, Johnette Russell, Barbara Dybala, Janet Nevil, Madalyn Hernandez, Cindy Burkett, Tina Rollins, Marilyn Fitzner

Business:  Call to Order, President’s Welcome, Inspirational, Pledge of Allegiance, Officer and Committee Reports, Old and New Business, Announcements, Invocation.

Installation of Officers for 2013-2014 

Reminders:

  • Donations for Sharing Life Outreach – please bring any canned meat items.
  • 2013-2014 Membership Form/Dues– turn in your membership form and $35.00 membership dues to Mary Baughman to ensure that your name appears in the new year book.

Submitted by Martha Billman – SGC Communications Committee


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SGC Flower Show Invitation

Dear SGC Member,

The Sunnyvale Garden Club’s 2013 “Asian Spring” Flower Show is almost here!  We hope to see you this Saturday, May 4 at D’Ann Robinson’s house.

Please invite your friends, neighbors and family members to join us for the show!  Feel free to send them the lovely flyer that Rachel Doyle designed (see attached).

Don’t forget to enter your horticulture exhibits.

We still need a few volunteers.  If you can volunteer in the morning, contact Rachel Doyle.

Thanks so much!  See you Saturday!

Georgeann Moss – SGC Flower Show Chairman

Submitted by: Martha Billman – Communications Committee