By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Help is just a phone call away for Coast gardeners
with questions. A pilot
program is wrapping up at the end of October that offered
toll-free telephone answers to gardening questions. Master
Gardeners, gardening experts trained by Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, manned the phones six
hours a day, serving residents of Jackson, Harrison,
Hancock, Pearl River and Stone counties. "There
is an overwhelming need for home horticulture information on
the Gulf Coast," McDavid said. "There's
about half a million people living in these five
counties." McDavid
arranged for a toll-free number, a computer with Internet
access, stacks of reference books and materials, and a
volunteer staff to answer the calls. After hours or when a
client is on the line, a voice mail system takes the calls
so that no one is missed. "We've
been getting about 50 calls a week during our pilot
program," McDavid said. "Our Master Gardeners
can answer about 60 percent of the questions off the top of
their heads, and we have resources available so they can
look up the rest and respond back to the person." Volunteers
follow up on each call received, and send out publications
when appropriate to offer further information on a
topic. "The
clients so far have been very, very responsive,"
McDavid said. "Callers just want good, accurate
information in a timely fashion. If that means a Master
Gardener has to return a call later that day or the next,
they don't mind." Bob
Stalnaker, a Master Gardener from Gulfport, has been
answering phoned-in gardening questions at the Harrison
County Extension office since before the toll-free line was
established. "It's
very enjoyable," Stalnaker said. "It's a
volunteer activity that you can get a lot of personal
satisfaction out of." Stalnaker
said September was rather slow, but he attributed the few
number of questions to it being a slow gardening time of
year. Most calls last month dealt with lawn problems, but he
said there is currently interest in
transplanting. The
pilot program began Sept. 1 and will end Oct. 31. Each
county assumes responsibility for one day each week, and
sends two people to the Gulfport headquarters to answer
questions. McDavid said typically one person answers the
phone and the other researches the question. After
going over early results and the success of the program,
McDavid said he plans to offer the telephone gardening help
permanently beginning March 1 to gardeners in the
five-county area. Released:
Oct. 16, 2000
Home
lawns & gardens news:
Phone Line
Offers Gardening Help
Chance
McDavid, Harrison County Extension agent, patterned the new
program after an existing, highly successful program in
Alabama.
Contact:Chance McDavid, (228) 865-4227
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:34
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