Wildf lower Boost Travel Pleasures BY C. BRUCE WILLIAMS Extension Area Turf Specialist Ihc roadsides in North Carolina arc spectacular this spring. Wild flowers of all sizes and colors make travel ing an adventure. splashes of red Corn Poppy (Pup aver rhoeas), Ox-Eye Daisy ( Chry santhemum leucanihemum ) and m California Poppy (Eschschohia californica) on the roadsides. Judging from the letters and WILLIAMS questions I have been receiving, quite a few other folks have also been noting the beautiful roadside plantings. Contrary to popular opinion, wildflowers must be carefully cultivated. Most wildlflowers arc not really so wild. Wild flowers require proper soil preparation, fertilization and cultivation. Some wildflower seed arc expensive and will have poor germination or seedling vigor. Most gar deners who try wildflowers will usually give up in frus tration after a few attempts at establishment. Harold Ritter is the staff horliculluralist at the North Carolina Department of Transportation. He has commit ted a significant portion of his time to finding out which wildflowers grow best on North Carolina roadsides. He has done his job well. I have traveled in no other south eastern slate with such beautiful displays of roadside wildflowers. I do a great deal of driving in my line of work and will often stop by the side of the road to identify a wildflower or grass. On a recent trip across the stale, I spotted large THE PLANT DOCTOR The N.C. Department of Transportation's Roadside Environmental Unit has recently reprinted its well-doc umented informational booklet with beautiful color plates of wildflowers used on North Carolina roadsides. This booklet details wildflowcr cultural practices, fertil ization and biology in an easy-to-rvad format. The book is organized by flower color so you can quickly use the color pictures to locate a wildflowcr. If you would like to have one of these booklets, they can be obtained free from N.C. DOT by request ing, Wildflowers on North Carolina Roadsides. Send your request to Harold Ritter, NCDOT-Roadsidc Envir onmental Unit, P.O. Box 25201, Raleigh, N.C. 27611. * ? ? All of the turfgrasses used on North Carolina lawns, golf courses and roadsides have been introduced from other parts of the world. Research on native grass spccies selection, estab lishment and maintenance in eastern North Carolina is sparse. Some of the native grasses will make beautiful prairie-like open spaces that arc wonderful for wildlife. However, problems with cultivation, maintenance and spccics succession abound and intentional estab lishment of native eastern grasslands is unusual at best. 1 hope to evaluate native grass spccics this summer for wildlife or vegetation efforts. 1 will keep you in formed on the progress. (Send your gardening questions to The Plant Doctor, P.O. Box 109, Bolivia, N.C. 28422.) Yard Takes Honors Billie Yount (far right) likes puttering about her yard at 45 Live Oak Drive, Sea Trails. An extra bonus for her efforts: the May Yard of the Month award from the Sunset Sands Garden Club. Presenting the award above are Mildred Bernard and Marie Summerlin. Since retiring here from Greensboro 2 7/2 years ago Ms. Yount has transformed a landscape of pine trees and sand into a garden sampler that in cludes lanuina, dusty miller, annual and creeping phlox, Gerber daisies, mums, candytuft, hostas, se dum, cocoa palms and varied shrubs. Pig Pickin' Benefits Infant A pig pickin' this weekend will benefit a local infant scheduled for open heart surgery next month at Duke Medical Center in Durham. Proceeds will be used to pay medical bills of Casey Marce Allen, the three-month-old daughter of Candy Allen of Shallottc and the granddaughter of Cathy Winfrce of Shallottc. Dinner will be served Saturday, May 25, from 4 p.m. until 7 p.m. at CASEY ALLEN Can't believe you're 81! Always loving, always fun... Happy Birthday, Grandma We love you, Your Entire Family Ocean Aire Restaurant on U.S. 17 near Grissettown. Plates will be sold for S3.25, with pork available for $4.50 per pound. Mrs. Winfree said Casey has been in and out of the hospital since she was bom Jan. 30. She has two holes in her heart and only one valve at the top of her heart instead of two. The child suffered a stroke about 1 1/2 months ago shortly after un dergoing a cardiac catheterization, a procedure designed to find out what was wrong with her heart. Mrs. Winfree said the family moved to Brunswick County from Shelby last summer. Donations are being accepted at the main branch of United Carolina Bank in Shallot te in the child's name. Vienna The Art Of Fine Cabinetry Si\ led in the I urojv.m tradition. Vienna bnn?*? the v n-p line ol a hitl-mcHa\ d?*?vr ami i ??iu caled hnt$> t'other wuh a siitii while finish toenhame am cJcmh \\ helhet ymr M\ K is liaditional i>r lontem poiarv \ow can add a tcclmgof riihncv* .md ele^ime 10 ViHii kill hen with the inastertul i ratisinan^hip and superb qua1it\ ?>l V lenna ijhimit t ome in inda\ aiul my ilu- stale ol-ihe an in Vnstokrali kilt hen uihmetrv Sea Coast Trading 754-6330 ? 120 Blake St., Shallotte '-/"Nl Aristokrcrft -J STAFF PHOTO BY SUSAN USHER \VIIJ)FIX)\VERS like Ox-Eye daisies, coreopsis and nodding catchfly blend with more domesticated species to add eye-pleasing color to the state rest area on U.S. 17 at Bolivia. Wild/lower beds planted hy the N.C. DOT Roadside Environmental Unit in the Winnabow and Iceland areas of Brunswick County are a hit with motorists. Brunswick Adult Day Care Secures Site In Shallotte BY SUSAN USHER Brunswick Adull Day Care Inc. will open a Shallotte site this sum mer, approximately one year after its first facility opened in Southport, board members announced last Friday. Applications arc being acccptcd in advance of the targeted opening Adult Day Care Plans Yard Sale Appliances, books, toys, fur niture and home and office sup plies arc among the items being accepted for the second annual yard sale to benefit Brunswick Adull Day Care, Inc. Everything except clothing is being collected for the June 1 yard sale at Trinity United Meth odist Church in Southport. Proceeds from the sale will help meet operating expenses at the Southport center and start-up costs of a new center to be locat ed in Shallotte. For more information on the sale, or to donate items, call Ruth Law at 457-4945 or Drusilla Smittlc at 278-9738. date of July 1. However, the actual opening date will be determined mainly by how quickly the site can be readied for and inspected by both county and state agencies for licensure, said Dave Gibson, acting chairperson. An ad hoc group from Camp United Methodist Church has com mitted to doing the work necessary to make the site accessible to the handicapped. The center will be housed in a building at 106 A1 Street that is be ing leased from Mr. and Mrs. Alton Millikcn of Shallotte. "There were several places we looked at and for whatever reason, didn't go through," said Jean Marshall, program director. "Just as it was in Southport, it has been a struggle to find just the right place in a centralized location." However, she said board mem bers arc very pleased with the site, which is located on a quiet, dead end street with easy acccss to and from Main Street in Shallotte. Initially the program will be able to serve up to eight persons each day, said Ms. Marshall, but that doesn't mean only eight people can apply for service. The center provides day care on an as-nccded basis for adults age 60 or older who arc mobile or scmi mobile. Adults who have completed applications and arc registered as clients can call ahead to spend an occasional day at the center to pro vide a time of relief for their regular care providers, or they may partici pate daily, freeing family members for employment opportunities. The center may provide an alternative to nursing home placement in some situations. Day care center clients partici pate in a variety of activities, but Ms. Marshall said that community service has been the key to the suc cess of the Southport site. "They make tray favors for the local hospital and work with schools, churches or other organiza tions that need similar items on oc casion," she said. "They look for ward to that. They come ft asking, 'What are we going to do? Who are we going to help today?"* Information on the center and on how to apply or to refer a client is available from Ms. Marshall by writing Brunswick Adult Day Care, P.O. Box 310, Supply, N.C. 28462. Interested persons may also call Percy Bray, 579-3447. or Jean Marshall, 457-0400. INTERIORS * All Our Rattan is Leather Wrapped * We Build our own Sofas * We Custom Finish Our Wicker and Rattan * Over 100 Stock Fabrics to Select From * The Largest Selection in the Area * Over Twenty Years of Service and Dependability WE GUARANTEE OUR PRODUCTS AND OUR PRICE 90 DAY GUARANTEE-MONEY BACK PLUS 20% IF YOU BUY SAME WICKER AND RATTAN FOR LESS ELSEWHERE g 3 WAYSIDE INTERIORS 1-800-845-0819 ? 449-3346 OPEN 9-5:30 MON. THRU SAT. HWY 17 N IN THE HEART OF RESTAURANT ROW NEXT TO SLUGS RIB