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The Dirt Doctor

How radio show host Howard Garrett pushed Dallas to the center of the organic gardening movement through passion, principle and molasses

The announcer is a little girl. In the clear airspace of Sunday morning radio, her voice is sweet, but the message is heavy. As if introducing story time for the kiddies, she tells listeners, "This is the show that exposes the chemical pushers, the environmental thugs and the certified organophobes."

Howard Garrett used chemicals with the best of them. Then in 1985 his daughter, Logan, was born. All of a sudden he didn't want anything toxic on his property.
Howard Garrett used chemicals with the best of them. Then in 1985 his daughter, Logan, was born. All of a sudden he didn't want anything toxic on his property.
Howard Garrett used chemicals with the best of them. Then in 1985 his daughter, Logan, was born. All of a sudden he didn’t want anything toxic on his property.
Brandon Thibodeaux
Howard Garrett used chemicals with the best of them. Then in 1985 his daughter, Logan, was born. All of a sudden he didn’t want anything toxic on his property.
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Quite a mouthful for a first-grader. The introduction to The Natural Way, Howard Garrett's organic gardening show on News Talk KSKY-660 AM radio in Dallas, was recorded almost two decades ago by his daughter, Logan, but it's still aired every Sunday morning in 94 markets around the nation.

In 1989 when Garrett launched his first garden show on WBAP-820 AM, the "chemical-pusher" language barely matched the level of invective hurled at him by detractors. This was one tough town for an organic gardener.

Texas A&M plant expert Dr. Steven W. George, an associate professor and horticulturist in A&M's revered Texas AgriLife extension service in Dallas, and famous Dallas radio garden show host Neil Sperry—mega-stars in the regional gardening firmament—believed devoutly in chemical-based horticulture and took Garrett's message of organic gardening as plant quackery.

But now some of Garrett's toughest critics—even Professor George—concede the latest science is confirming many of the core doctrines Garrett has preached over the years, especially his faith that dirt must be a living organism, not some inanimate grit soaked in a toxic chemical brew.

That change itself—science endorsing organic methods—is amazing enough. But from a strictly local point of view, an even more striking transformation appears to be taking place. Many people in local and regional garden and landscape businesses say the Dallas/Fort Worth market has moved significantly toward Garrett. They say we're a big center of organic gardening.

Think about it. Dallas, Texas, and organic gardening? What next? Huge new mega-churches on freeway service drives devoted to French existentialism?

Surely there must be something missing in this picture, something not told, some kind of information withheld. And there is. It's the story of Howard Garrett.

————

Garrett probably is the only person in the world who could have coaxed North Texas toward organic methods. Why? Because he's the least hippie-dippy organic gardening guy anybody ever met.

His radio talk show, The Natural Way, airs on Saturdays 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. and Sundays 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. Slung back a bit from the console, fielding listeners' calls in a state-of-the-art studio near the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport, Garrett is tanned and easy-going in a gray golf cap, red polo shirt and shorts.

When he first went on the air 19 years ago, the callers had accents ranging from Easternmost Mesquite to Northernmost Plano. Now because the show is nationally syndicated, the accents reach from Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, to Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Most of the questions are about gardening. Some are decidedly not. Doesn't matter. Garrett's answer is always organic.

Tom in Colorado Springs wants to know how to keep weeds from sprouting in his newly built gravel parking area. Should he use "Roundup," a popular weed and grass killer made by Scott's Miracle Gro?

According to the manufacturer's Web site, Roundup contains "2 percent glyphosate, 2 percent pelargonic and other related fatty acids."

Don't know what that means? Easy. Glyphosate is an herbicide derived from an aminophosphonic analog of the natural amino acid glycine; pelargonic is an herbicide containing a common nonanoic acid.

Still don't know what it means? Yeah, well, maybe that's the problem. In an easy-flowing, urbanized East Texas drawl, Garrett recommends his home remedy, which is easy to understand. "Just go to the grocery store," Garrett tells Tom in Colorado Springs, "or to the feed store and get some 8 to 10 percent pickling vinegar. You spray that full-strength. You don't dilute it with water.

"But you add to it a little orange oil, about an ounce per gallon of the vinegar, and you add a tablespoon of liquid molasses per gallon of vinegar, and you add a teaspoon of soap. OK? And you keep it shaken up, because it will settle out.

"You spray those weeds as they're coming up, and man, it works as well as Roundup, and it's not a toxic product like Roundup is."

No matter what they ask him, Garrett's on-the-air persona is always matter-of-fact and common as dirt. Off-the-air he's a little more than that. He tells a visitor that at 61 years of age, "I'm probably in better shape than any time since the Marine Corps."

He also says: "I think I have been involved in the creation of a new mainstream."

Modesty did not make Howard Garrett. And maybe at this point he has a right to be sure of himself: He is an author with 15 books in print and two in progress, his own syndicated radio show claiming 655,000 weekly listeners in 16 states from Massachusetts to California, a weekly newspaper column, a Web site that claims almost 10 million hits a month and more than 5,000 unique visitors per day, a newsletter with more than 30,000 subscribers and a small empire of organic products sold in more than 3,400 stores.

Lurking beneath Garrett's friendly old-shoe exterior is a folksy doctrine of horticulture—a philosophy of life, really—explosively at odds with American culture since World War II. The post-war years saw the enormous bloom of science and technology as tools of agriculture and horticulture.

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  • Cynthia Alexander 12/15/2008 2:41:00 PM

    I've have a cut flower farm north of Dallas, using sustainable methods of growing and following Howard's organic recommendations. First thing people (children) do is to poke their noses into the flowers for a sniff, so it seems to me that I have an obligation to present them with a chemical-free scent. I have always sensed that when I can smell the pungent smell of a pesticide or herbicide, it must be getting into my lungs, and that can't be good. The results of feeding the soil are beautiful to behold. Cynthia at the Quarry Flower Farm, Celina, TX

  • Phil Bishop 09/05/2008 10:37:00 PM

    Hello, my friend stepped on a Mesquite thorn. It's pretty nasty and the Doctors at Hoag Hospital are scratching their collective educated heads. CAN YOU HELP? Please email a remedy to the addres shown Phil

  • Phil Bishop 09/05/2008 10:36:00 PM

    Hello, my friend stepped on a Mesquite thorn. It's pretty nasty and the Doctors at Hoag Hospital are scratching their collective educated heads. CAN YOU HELP? Please email a remedy tot he addres shown Phil

  • Biffula 07/25/2008 8:01:00 PM

    I'm sorry, I want my yard looking better than it can without herbicides, the one thorn in the organic methods as it is. While his methods are great for fertilzer and insects, he doesnt have a real solution for weeds. I use herbicides to get a great look and I dont have any problems. I still have beneficial insects, lizards ,rabbits, birds, earthworms and other living creatures in my yard. So dont get too wrapped up in the 'it must be 100%' organic hoopla. Plus, we would have polluted ourselves out of existence years ago if all chemicals were bad. Most are designed to break down after a certain time frame. They would never have to sell them again if they didnt. They want you to come back and buy their product again.

  • sterling 07/23/2008 8:12:00 PM

    Great article. My neighbor's been preaching this stuff to us since the 1st day we met him.

  • judy v 07/23/2008 3:16:00 AM

    thank you for your newsletter. Mostly thank you for providing us with all the information to make our immediate surroundings safer. when we first moved here and I mentioned organics for lawn care, i was looked at like a martin from outer space. There is still only one place that i can get some of the products. I am telling every one I know about your web site. I wish you we on the radio here. We have one of the best lawns in the neighboorhood following your suggestions. But, is there any thing you can reccommend to keep alligators away? Too many here in south carolina. Thank you, keep up the good work, reaching one family at a time. Judy Volkman

  • maria alicia 07/22/2008 12:33:00 AM

    great reading ya'll, Let me say the squirrel is the new cockroach and to repell these from your new plantings, seedlings or bulbs you can use cumin or cayenne pepper to repeal these vermin. Found this out livin in Seattle talking to farmers at Pike Place Market. The next item on the TEXAS "to do list" is "START RECYCLING ALREADY. What good is organic gardening if all we are growing are stinky landfills.

  • Tony Manasseri 07/21/2008 6:15:00 PM

    I have been a friend and supporter of Howard for more years than I can remember. My wife's mother and my father were organic gardeners and fed their families from their nutritious gardens. My wife and I currently have an organic farm where we have grown most every kind of vegetable, dozens of different fruits from apples to kiwi, pecans, dairy goats, chickens, turkeys, dogs and cats. All organically. Yes, there is no LAW against using chemicals which are dispensed liberally at the big box stores. But I have one question you should ask yourself. Just because we can, should we? Roland Farm

  • Gene Louis 07/20/2008 8:25:00 PM

    Nice article. Informative and well-written. It's too bad that the truth, even with clear evidence, has to be politically popular before it is accepted.

  • Carol Peck 07/18/2008 10:46:00 PM

    Having been an avid follower of Mr. Garrett's organic gardening advice for at least a decade, I recently left the DFW area for the small town life in Tennessee. When you mention organics here, they tell you that "round-up" is organic enough for them. Quite an eye opener for me. I am managing to find most of my organic ingredients, but sometimes it is difficult. I wish Mr. Garrett continued success in converting the world to organics, one step at a time.

  • Sharon Keag Lee 07/18/2008 3:25:00 PM

    Howard (married to my sister, Judy) has been "converting" folks to organics for years - even our dad, a chemical engineer, believed in Howard's advocacy enough to change. In Victoria, Earthworks (and even HEB grocery) carry Howard's books and organic products. Now our growing family studies his ideas to help keep the grandkids (and the rest of us)safe. We even have friends in Cleveland that are excited about his information and are trying his ideas. Thank you Howard!

  • wendel H 07/18/2008 2:39:00 AM

    Good article. Also congratulations to Sam Merten new staff writer. Who did he replace?

  • L A Krulc 07/17/2008 11:51:00 PM

    Tremendous and very thorough article. Congratulations to the author for taking the time to tell the whole story! It made for enjoyable and instructive reading while crediting authorities on both sides of the argument. My hat is off to Mr. Garret.

  • Sandi Schwedler 07/17/2008 7:24:00 PM

    I've been a "follower" of Howard's and his message of organics for 16 years now. We've not sprayed or used chemicals inside or out in that time. The diveristy of beneficial insects and reptiles in our yard is amazing and we know that the herbs and vegetables we grow are as good and good for you as they can be. The article didn't mention Redenta's nursery on Oram, which is 100% organic and has a great, knowledgeable staff.

 

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