Friends of the Forbes Library Garden Tour – June 8, 2019

  • Post published:06/07/2019
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The Friends of the Forbes Library Garden Tour ushers in the garden tour season in our part of the world. The seven gardens on this year’s tour (I’m counting four neighboring community garden plots as one garden) offer many different styles and features that make each garden unique. I cannot say that I was surprised by the number of gardens that are filled with plants that will support our pollinators, from the bees and bats to butterflies and…

Book Reviews – “Earth has no sorrow that earth cannot heal”

  • Post published:06/01/2019
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"Earth has no sorrow that earth cannot heal," said John Muir known as the father of national parks. The three books I've written about this week surely prove the truth of his words.Three book reviews follow. Attracting Birds, Butterflies and other Backyard Wildlife Every day, in the newspaper or on the evening TV news, there seems to be a story about the continuing extinction of one million creatures and plants. The United Nations just released a report about…

How Seeds of Solidarity Began and Three Forms of No-Till Farming

  • Post published:05/24/2019
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In 1996 Ricky Baruch and Deb Habib got the biggest Christmas present they might ever receive. On December 28 they officially became the owners of a piece of rocky land in Orange. They were about to plant their own farm. I first met Baruch and Habib in early May of 2009 when I visited Seeds of Solidarity farm. Even though they had been farming for 13 years the land still looked rough and rocky. However, they had built…

Greenfield Garden Club – Lots to Love and Work For

  • Post published:05/17/2019
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When asked what they loved about the Greenfield Garden Club, the gardeners who attended the Annual Meeting at the John Zon Community Center last month had a lot of answers. They called out that they loved meeting other gardeners, learning from other gardeners, sharing plants, socializing and going on trips together. Club members liked learning more about the environment and how our gardens benefit the environment. They also loved giving gardening grants to local schools, and making the…

Bridge of Flowers – 90th Anniversary and Plant Sale

  • Post published:05/10/2019
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In 1908 a new trolley bridge started bringing milk, cotton products and passengers from Colrain to Shelburne Falls. In 1929 the trolley was no longer needed and the bridge became the Bridge of Flowers. The transformation began when Antoinette Burnham looked at the neglected bridge and thought that surely a bridge that could grow so many weeds, could grow flowers instead. That was the beginning of the conversion from industry to garden. Julius Blassberg bought the bridge and…

Invasive Plants – Beauty and Destruction

  • Post published:05/04/2019
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Invasive plants can be beautiful but they are also destructive. Gardeners are becoming more aware of the dangers of invasive plants, as well as the benefits of pollinator plants. We are now realizing there is more to designing our gardens than aesthetics. We have to consider our environment, how plants and wildlife interact. One of the most common and often used invasive shrubs is Burning bush, Euonymus alatas. It is popular for its beautiful red foliage in the…

Earth Day 2019 – Pollinator Pathways & PV Squared

  • Post published:04/26/2019
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Forty-nine years ago Wisconsin senator Gaylord Nelson, looked at the disastrous 1969 oil spill in Santa Barbara, and thought that more attention needed to be paid to environmental problems. Thus he planned an Earth Day ‘national teach-in on the environment. He chose Pete McCloskey, a Republican Congressman, and Denis Hayes from Harvard to work with him creating this event. To make use of the energy of the young the date of April 22, during college vacations, was chosen.…

Rebirth of a Community Garden – John Zon Community Garden

  • Post published:04/20/2019
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In 1997 Eveline Macdougall visited the Great Falls Community Garden in Turners Falls. She looked at that garden, and thought of all the gardens her family had grown. She thought about her own frustrations trying to ‘squeeze plants into tiny outdoor spaces while longing for a real garden.’ Then inspired by the Great Falls garden she turned to her friend Suzette Snow-Cobb who helped start the Great Falls garden for advice. Macdougall then began creating a community garden…

Thomas Jefferson – Lover of Liberty and Monticello

  • Post published:04/12/2019
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Thomas Jefferson (April 13, 1743-July 4, 1826) was a man of many parts. We all know he had a plantation, but I never knew he inherited it from his father along with a lot of debts. He graduated from the College of William and Mary, but I didn’t know he practiced law. Briefly. He represented his county in the Virginia House of Burgesses, but I didn’t know he served as the second Governor of Virginia from 1779-1781. I…

Flowering Shrubs All Season Long

  • Post published:04/06/2019
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Many of us gardeners eventually come to embrace shrubs because we need a low maintenance garden. I believe that in my new town garden, I have gotten a shrub garden that requires less work, and works with the limitations of my soil and space. I have concentrated on water loving shrubs like button bush, elderberry, and willow, but the shrub list is long. The earliest shrub to bloom in our neighborhood is Hammamelis or witch hazel. My neighbor’s…