The Perennial Gardeners of the South Shore

The Perennial Gardeners of the South Shore We meet from September to June on the first Monday of the month.

The Perennial Gardeners of the South Shore is an educational social organization that encourages learning and provides inspiration and fellowship to perennial gardening enthusiasts.

Our next monthly meeting is March 2nd. Guests are welcome!
02/25/2026

Our next monthly meeting is March 2nd. Guests are welcome!

Fun fact about worms..https://www.facebook.com/share/1GU4KLDBcG/?mibextid=wwXIfr
02/21/2026

Fun fact about worms..

https://www.facebook.com/share/1GU4KLDBcG/?mibextid=wwXIfr

IT ISN’T FLEEING A FLOOD. IT’S IN THE MIDDLE OF A SPRINT.
You step outside in late February after a heavy overnight rain. The sidewalk is dotted with earthworms stretching and retracting across the wet concrete.
You might think they were washed out of the soil by mistake, or that they are desperately trying to escape a flooded burrow.
It is neither. That worm is seizing a rare meteorological opportunity to travel at high speed.
But the clock is ticking. As soon as the clouds break, that watery highway will become a fatal trap.

The Myth of the "Emergency Evacuation"
When we see dozens of earthworms stranded on the pavement after a downpour, the logical assumption is that they came up to avoid drowning.
The Biological Reality: This is a complete misunderstanding of their anatomy.
Earthworms, such as the common nightcrawler (Lumbricus terrestris), do not have lungs. They rely entirely on cutaneous respiration—they breathe through their skin. As long as the rainwater is oxygenated, an earthworm can survive completely submerged for days, or even weeks. They are not running away from the water. They are exploiting it.

The Scientific Reality: The UV Trap
An earthworm is a deep-dwelling (anecic) species, but it relies on the surface for food and movement.

The Frictionless Highway: Crawling across dry ground is a physical impossibility for a worm. The friction would tear its delicate epidermis and instantly drain its internal moisture. Rain creates a temporary, zero-friction film on the surface of the earth. This allows the worm to glide across the ground, covering distances in a few hours that would take days to tunnel through heavy, compacted clay.

The Solar Paralysis: The true danger of the sidewalk isn't the puddle; it is the sun. Earthworms possess light-sensitive cells along their bodies (negative phototaxis). If the rain stops and ultraviolet (UV) rays pierce the clouds, the light acts as a neurotoxin. The worm is literally paralyzed by the UV exposure before it can reach the safety of the grass. It is a traveler struck down by the light, doomed to desiccate on the concrete.

What is Happening Right Now (February)
Why take this massive risk in the late winter?
In many parts of the United States, February brings the first significant thaws and heavy, saturating rains.

The Energy Equation: When the soil hits maximum saturation capacity, the oxygen pressure underground drops slightly. It becomes physiologically and energetically much cheaper for the worm to travel above ground than to push through dense, cold mud.

The Mating Window: Earthworms are hermaphrodites, but they must physically meet to exchange genetic material. The mild, wet nights of late February offer the perfect, low-predator window to leave their vertical burrows, cross the wet leaf litter, and find a mate before the dry spring winds harden the topsoil.

Why This Matters Ecologically
The earthworm is the chief engineer of the terrestrial ecosystem.
They do not merely aerate the soil. They create the drilosphere—the millimeter-thick lining of their burrows that is exponentially richer in nitrogen and beneficial bacteria than the surrounding dirt.
Right now, their deep, vertical burrows act as a vital civil defense system. These tunnels (macropores) are an emergency drainage network, allowing heavy late-winter rains to infiltrate rapidly into the water table. This invisible infrastructure is what prevents surface runoff, stops severe soil erosion, and mitigates localized flooding.

Practical Action: The "Rescue Without Rubbing" Protocol

Move Them: They are physically incapable of digging through asphalt. Gently pick the stranded worm up (they have no teeth and cannot bite) and place it on the nearest lawn, garden bed, or under wet leaves.

Never Wipe Them Dry: The viscous mucus covering their body is quite literally their lung. If that slime is wiped off, oxygen can no longer dissolve into their tissue, and they will suffocate.

The Flashlight Check: Take a flashlight out on a drizzly February night. You will see them stretched out of their burrows, their tails firmly anchored in the hole, grabbing dead leaves to drag down into the depths. It is the ultimate recycling crew at work.

The Verdict
The worm on the sidewalk isn't a drowning victim. It is a sprinter caught between stations because the highway evaporated too quickly.
The rain was its boarding pass; the sun is its executioner.
By moving it two feet to the grass, you don't just save a life—you put the planet's most indispensable worker back on the job.

Scientific References & Evidence
Soil Ecology & Drainage: USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). "Earthworms." (Details the creation of the drilosphere, the formation of macropores, and their critical role in water infiltration and flood mitigation).

Behavior & Phototaxis: Edwards, C. A., & Bohlen, P. J. (1996). "Biology and Ecology of Earthworms." (The definitive text documenting the triggers for surface migration, cutaneous respiration limits, and the paralyzing effects of UV radiation).

Foundational Biology: Darwin, C. (1881). "The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms." (The landmark study proving the behavioral intelligence and massive geological impact of earthworms).

Cleanup tips for you garden..https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1AtjS6J3Uy/?mibextid=wwXIfr
11/19/2025

Cleanup tips for you garden..

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1AtjS6J3Uy/?mibextid=wwXIfr

💡Garden Tip: Fall cleanup has begun for some of our followers, so let's talk today about which kinds of plants are best to clean up in autumn.

Generally, much of the fall cleanup in your garden beds can wait until spring. It's important to leave some decaying plant material in beds to provide shelter and nesting spots for overwintering insects. However, leaving some kinds of plants standing in fall can lead to bigger issues next year.

Here's an overview of what CAN be safely cut or cleaned up from fall through early winter in your landscape.

1/ Plants that have diseased foliage, like powdery mildew, rust or leaf spot should be cut down to the ground in the fall. Dispose of the clippings rather than putting them on your compost pile. 📷: Cutting down tall garden phlox with powdery mildew in the fall.

2/ Perennials with heavy insect damage like slug-eaten hostas. Insects often lay their eggs in the spent foliage of their favorite plants, so by cleaning it out of the garden in fall, you are limiting pest issues and potential pesticide use the following year.

3/ Any plants you do not want to reseed in your garden. If you'd like to leave the plant standing for winter, just remove the seed heads.

4/ Some shrubs that bloom on new wood, meaning next year's branches, are safe to prune after they go dormant in late fall/early winter, but you can wait until early spring if you prefer.

🚩Take a look around your garden this evening and compare your plants to this list. Make it easy to remember by flagging the items to clean up this fall.

I always try to make use of my phones camera by taking pictures through the year to remember things. This is a chance to take some and add them to an album on your phone labeled "fall cleanup" so you'll remember what to cut back every year in autumn.

An article by Jana Milbocker describes the benefits of joining a plant society. Toward the end of the article is a list ...
11/02/2025

An article by Jana Milbocker describes the benefits of joining a plant society. Toward the end of the article is a list of plant societies. I’ve received seeds and plants at very low costs.

In an age when digital distractions dominate our days, connecting with nature and with others who share a passion for plants offers a refreshing and rewarding experience. Membership in a plant society—whether focused on horticulture in general or on specific interests such as roses, native plants,...

November meeting starts at 1 pm.Guests are welcome!Hingham Public Library in the Whiton room
10/29/2025

November meeting starts at 1 pm.
Guests are welcome!
Hingham Public Library in the Whiton room

https://gardenprofessors.com/fail-to-plan-or-plan-to-fail-planning-for-a-year-of-garden-success/?fbclid=IwZnRzaAMxO1BleH...
09/12/2025

https://gardenprofessors.com/fail-to-plan-or-plan-to-fail-planning-for-a-year-of-garden-success/?fbclid=IwZnRzaAMxO1BleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHkt7PIH3CjwwQ6O1oi_CJDWs2a3CXqFVdMqbOxR8YiYK_SvbrfH7lxtUvrBs_aem_b9q89RxGpmEjJ79nmqHrQA

It seems like we’re always adhering to one schedule or another these days. We have devices and planners to keep track of our appointments, our work schedules, kids schedules, and more. Heck, even the antique seed company clock in my office is telling me to order seeds.

https://www.facebook.com/share/1BHTAtp2SD/?mibextid=wwXIfrFYI
06/20/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/1BHTAtp2SD/?mibextid=wwXIfr

FYI

Ecologists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst collaborated with the Northeast Regional Invasive Species and Climate Change (NE RISCC) Management Network to launch both a Climate-Smart Gardening guide and an extensive dataset of easily obtainable native plants that will thrive in the coming decades.

As an example, UMass experts recommend seven plants for sunny, moderately moist garden beds of small to medium size in Massachusetts. These plants were selected because they are resilient, support pollinators across the seasons, and fit well into limited spaces without the need for large trees or vines.

🪴 7 Climate-Smart Species for a Sunny Mass Garden:

1. Red chokeberry
2. Golden Alexanders
3. Spotted beebalm
4. Butterfly milkweed
5. Black-eyed Susans
6. Summer sweet
7. New England aster

https://bit.ly/3Tqr4JT

College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University

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Hingham, MA

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