Pearl River County Extension Office

Pearl River County Extension Office The Pearl River County Extension Office provides practical education you can trust.

Come visit the Pearl River County Extension Office and The Crosby Arboretum booths at the WRJW Radio Station Senior Fair...
06/06/2026

Come visit the Pearl River County Extension Office and The Crosby Arboretum booths at the WRJW Radio Station Senior Fair today in Picayune, MS from 8:00 AM until 12 noon.

06/05/2026

Note: The deadline is approaching for this.
The Pearl River County Fair Committee is in need of your help. We need a design for this year’s fair book. The design will need to include “81st Annual Pearl River County Fair & Livestock Show”, “September 14-19, 2026”, “Pearl River County Fairgrounds, Poplarville, MS” and needs to represent the Pearl River County Fair. Entries are due by Friday, June 12, 2026, in the Pearl River County Extension Service Office at 835 Highway 26 West in Poplarville. The winning design will be featured on the front cover, and the designer will received a $50 prize. The second place design will be on the back cover, and the designer will receive $25. The contest is open to Pearl River County youth ages 8-18. For more information call the Pearl River County Extension Service Office at 601-403-2280.

06/03/2026

Tomato info.

06/03/2026

Show stoppers in the landscape!!

Plant sale!!
06/03/2026

Plant sale!!

It's finally here! Come out this Saturday and get your hands on these beauties! Rain is in the forecast so bring your umbrellas and rainboots. We can't wait to see you this Saturday!

Great plant for the landscape!
06/01/2026

Great plant for the landscape!

If you are looking for a plant that thrives in Southern heat, blooms for months and lights up the garden with cheerful color, Uptick Gold & Bronze tickseed deserves a spot in your landscape.

What makes Uptick Gold & Bronze especially eye-catching is the dramatic contrast in its blooms. Each flower features bright golden-yellow petals surrounding a rich bronze-red center. This warm, sunset-like color combination is perfectly suited for Southern gardens.

The blooms cover the plant heavily, creating a blanket of color that brightens flower beds, borders, containers and pollinator gardens.

Uptick Gold & Bronze tickseed is part of the Coreopsis family, a group of plants known for their long bloom season and easy-care nature. Across the South, these perform beautifully through the heat and humidity of summer while flowering well into fall.

Their dependable performance is one reason gardeners fall in love with Coreopsis year after year.

Another feature I appreciate is the plant’s compact, tidy growth habit. Unlike some older varieties that can become floppy during the summer, Uptick Gold & Bronze stays neat and full. It typically grows 12 to 14 inches tall and spreads nicely without becoming overwhelming. It is an excellent choice for the front of flower beds or mixed containers.

Like many Coreopsis varieties, Uptick Gold & Bronze thrives in full sun. The more sunshine it receives, the heavier the bloom production tends to be.

Once established, it is quite drought tolerant, making it a reliable performer during long stretches of hot weather. Plant it in well-drained soil because tickseed does not like to stay overly wet.

One of the biggest benefits of growing tickseed is the pollinator activity it attracts. Bees and butterflies are frequent visitors, adding life and movement to the garden. They drift from bloom to bloom during warm summer afternoons.

Deadheading spent blooms can encourage even more flowers, although this variety naturally blooms heavily for an extended season. A light trimming in midsummer helps refresh the plant and encourages another strong flush of color heading into late summer and fall.

Uptick Gold & Bronze tickseed pairs beautifully with purple salvias, blue plumbago, ornamental grasses and even white-flowering plants. Whether planted in mass or tucked into a mixed border, it delivers reliable color and effortless charm.

Coreopsis has long been a Southern garden favorite because it combines beauty with durability. Uptick Gold & Bronze tickseed is hard to beat as it keeps the garden looking bright and cheerful all season long.

Hay season.
06/01/2026

Hay season.

Hay season has started! The value of hay as a supplemental feed largely depends on different factors:

1. Applying the recommended fertilizer per cut of hay. One application of potash or nitrogen at the beginning of the season will not last the whole summer.

2. Cutting at the right stage of maturity to balance yield and nutritive value.

3. Controlling your weeds. They can reduce your forage production and rob nutrients from your field.

4. Properly storing your hay to minimize hay losses. (Do you know that leaving your hay exposed to weather can result in 30-50% hay loses? That means that to make a ton of dry matter hay cost $100, you will be losing $30-50 per ton.)

5. Conducting a hay analysis in each cut of hay. This will allow to determine any necessary changes in your management practices but also will allow to match the nutritive value to specific livestock class.

Don't Guess, Hay Test! Follow Mississippi Forages for more content like this.

June Checklist.
06/01/2026

June Checklist.

Here's your June landscape checklist for Mississippi! Some tasks to consider are...

Plant daylilies and summer annuals.
Scout for pests and diseases.
Plant warm season grasses.
Fertilize ornamental shrubs and trees.
Remove faded flowers.
Plant crape myrtles while blooming.

Learn more about these tasks here: https://extension.msstate.edu/blog/june-garden-checklist

05/28/2026

Certain plants earn a permanent place in gardens not just for their beauty, but for the way they show up year after year without fuss.

Echinacea coneflowers fall squarely into that category for me. They bring a dependable splash of color, attract pollinators by the dozens and carry an easygoing charm that fits right in with a Southern landscape.

I’ve grown coneflowers for years, and they’ve never let me down. They stand tall and bloom with enthusiasm through heat, humidity and the occasional dry spell. Watching their blooms sway gently while pollinators move from flower to flower is a simple pleasure that never gets old.

Among the many varieties available today, one that has truly impressed me is the Cheyenne Spirit coneflower. If you’ve never grown it, you’re missing out on a real showstopper.

This variety produces a vibrant mix of colors ranging from rich reds, warm oranges, sunny yellows, soft pinks to creamy whites. Growing Cheyenne Spirit coneflower is like having an entire bouquet living out in the garden.

Take a closer look at those colors, and you’ll see just how much personality each bloom brings.

The deep reds are bold and velvety, often with dark, prominent cones at the center that seem to anchor the flower with a bit of drama. The oranges range from glowing tangerine to a deeper, burnt copper tone, catching the sunlight in a way that makes them appear to shimmer in the heat.

The yellows are bright and cheerful. Some have a clear golden hue while others are softened with hints of amber. Then there are the pinks, which can shift from a soft, blush to a richer rose color, sometimes with subtle gradients that fade toward the petal tips. These blooms feel delicate, adding a gentle contrast to the bolder shades.

The creamy whites offer a clean, refreshing look, often surrounding a golden or greenish cone that gives them a classic, daisy-like appeal.

When all these colors grow together, the effect is dynamic, with no two clusters looking the same.

Another thing I appreciate about Cheyenne Spirit is its toughness.

This coneflower handles our summers with ease and keeps right on blooming when other plants begin to fade. The flowers rise on sturdy stems, creating a natural, slightly wild look that feels right at home in both formal beds and more relaxed, cottage-style plantings.

Last year, I had the pleasure of watching a new generation of gardeners get their hands in the soil when the Pearl River County 4-H Junior Master Gardeners created a pollinator garden at my office. It was a special project full of enthusiasm and learning, and I was especially glad to see them include Cheyenne Spirit coneflowers in their design.

I’m happy to report that those coneflowers didn’t just survive, they thrived.

Right now, they’re putting on a beautiful display in the pollinator garden with bright, cheerful blooms that seem to glow in the sunlight. Even better, they’re doing exactly what they were meant to do -- draw in bees, butterflies and other pollinators that bring the whole garden to life.

Coneflowers like Cheyenne Spirit remind me why I garden in the first place.

They’re reliable, colorful and full of life, and when you see them thriving in a space created by young hands, it makes them even more special. If you’re looking to add something dependable and colorful to your landscape, this plant is well worth the space.

Address

835 Highway 26 West
Poplarville, MS
39470

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

+16014032280

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