CMGA General Info

Apple blossoms. Photo by Cynthia Murray.

Welcome to the Coconino County Master Gardeners Association

The Coconino Master Gardener Association began in 2009 to create a corps of well-informed volunteers, and to deliver quality horticultural education programs adapted to our regional high elevation environment. The association provides support for Master Gardener graduates and volunteers as well as continuing education and opportunities to participate in community programs that increase the visibility and participation in the Master Gardener Program.
Monthly meetings are held on the 2nd Thursday from 6:00 pm - 8:30 pm at the Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church at 1601 N. San Francisco St. in Flagstaff, Arizona.

On this page you will find:
-How to become a member
-How to report volunteer and education hours
-Upcoming events calendar
-Gardening columns and articles
-Links to other useful websites and resources
-Recipes
-Book Reviews
-Master Gardener Association documents and forms
-Contact information for Board or Committee Members

Reporting Master Gardener Hours

All master gardener trainees and certified master gardeners need to report their hours. Click here to report your hours
To maintain their certification, master gardeners need to complete and report 6 Education hours and 12 Volunteer hours each year. There are many ways to fulfill your hours. Just remember for volunteering it needs to be a non-profit endeavor or an approved for profit site. If you have any problems with the reporting system, please email bhsmith1956@gmail.com if your last name starts with A to M or susan.madden@asu.edu if your last name starts with N to Z.

Ideas for hours:
-Attend monthly meetings on the 2nd Thursday of each month at 6 pm
-Work on an association committee
-Work at an informational booth
-Speak about gardening topics at a variety of venues
-Host a garden tour
-Work at a fundraising event such as the annual Plant Sale or Garden Tour.
-Tend a garden site (Olivia White Hospice, the Arboretum, Riordan Mansion, or school gardens).
-Work in the Extension office
-Write a Gardening Etcetera column for the newspaper
-Volunteer with the Seed Library
-Be creative!

Change in Contact Information

Make sure you are receiving the regular emails from Master Gardeners, which are filled with reminders about upcoming events and useful gardening information.Click here to update your contact information!

Event Calendar

Thursday, March 21, 2024

Talk on the Columnar Cacti

 From Susan Holiday at the Native Plant Society:

Allow me to introduce myself -- I’m the Communication Coordinator for the Natural History Institute, a non-profit in Prescott that hosts a wide variety of natural history talks, field experiences, a 9,000 specimen herbarium, and a nature art gallery. We are also the meeting place for the Prescott Native Plant Society and the Prescott Audubon Society.


All of our talks are live-streamed to our Youtube channel, so they can be attended remotely as well as in-person in Prescott. We have an upcoming talk that I think will be of interest to AZ Native Plant Society members, and I was wondering if you could share it with members of your chapter.


***


"On Growth and Form: Ecology and Evolution of Columnar Cacti" 

A free talk with Dr. Alberto Búrquez

Thursday, March 28th at 7pm

Natural History Institute


Registration for in-person attendance

Livestream link


There are over 100 species of columnar cacti found throughout Central and South America, the largest and greatest variety of which are found in Mexico. Just three species grow natively as far north as Arizona – organ pipe cacti, senitas, and of course, the beloved saguaros. In this presentation, columnar cactus ecologist Dr. Alberto Burquez will detail his research on the evolutionary history and ecology of these massive charismatic plants, with special focus on the saguaros. He will explain their adaptations to life in the Sonoran Desert, their taxonomic relationships, how their range has changed over time, and the effects climate change will have on them.


Alberto Búrquez, Ph.D., is a researcher at the Instituto de Ecología at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. He is a co-author (with David Yetman) of The Saguaro Cactus: A Natural History and Mexico’s Valleys of Cuicatlán and Tehuacán: From Deserts to Clouds. His scientific papers on ecology, evolutionary biology, and ethnoecology have been cited over 8,000 times. His current work focuses on population ecology and genetics of columnar cacti, plant-animal relationships, biogeography, ecology of invasion by plants, and land-use change in the Sonoran Desert and the tropical deciduous forests of the Pacific coast of Mexico.


***


Feel free to reach out to me if you ever have events or initiatives you’d like to promote to the Natural History Institute network -- the majority of our members are in Yavapai County, but we have connections to naturalists and academics all throughout the state.


Thank you,

Carly

--
Carly Taylor (she/her)
Communication Coordinator

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