Garden Blogger’s Bloom Day – A Failure in January- a Cold Month

  • Post published:01/16/2021
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I don't expect much Bloom Day color in January when I take a photo from the window, but this time my plans were a total failure. You an see the dried hydrangea blossoms in back  of the roses which have amazingly kept a lot of dried foliage, but this does not count and blooms. Obviously, you'll say. You don't expect blossoms in the snow! Last fall I started pulling these green strands up, thinking they were weeds. Not…

Beverly Duncan and Her Books – And Her Plants

  • Post published:01/10/2021
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“Ever since I officially retired from Mohawk Regional High School, I’ve just exploded with new ideas,” Beverly Duncan said as she gave me a tour of her studio in Ashfield. One wall was covered with framed botanical paintings that she had done in the past. Other paintings-in-progress were pinned to a bulletin board; other smaller paintings of flower blossoms were pinned to a different bulletin board. Surrounded by these works, finished and unfinished, she told me about recent…

While Taking a Walk on Allen Street We Admire Rhododendrons

  • Post published:01/06/2021
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On these pandemic days we have been trying to take walks around the neighborhood and have noticed a lot of rhododendrons in front gardens. I also have a small rhododendron in from of my house, a part of the low growing conifers that make up the grass-less front yard. We also have two rhodies growing on the Hugel in the back yard. They are not doing well because the hugel, which is made of piles of logs as …

2021 – A New Year With New Opportunities and Favorite Seed Companies

  • Post published:01/02/2021
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The new year has begun with new opportunities, new hopes, new ideas, and new projects for our gardens.  The vegetable garden we planned during the pandemic is very tiny. Very very tiny. I planted beans, peas, lettuce, radishes, zucchini, beets and chard. Too many varieties. This was a mistake. I have to rethink the best way to get a usable harvest in a tiny garden. The beans and the peas worked well, but I did learn that putting…

Is There Any Point to Making New Year’s Resolutions During a Pandemic?

  • Post published:12/30/2020
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New Year's Resolutions have been around for a long time. Four thousand years ago the Babylonians made this day a time to pay off all debts. The ancient Romans celebrated their god Janus, who looked both back and forward, the past and the future. He was charge of doors and the transitions between the stages of life and the shifts of eras. When I was young I tried to make new year's resolutions, but I had children, and…

As the Year Draws to a Close – Snow and Flood

  • Post published:12/28/2020
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We rejoiced when the weather man promised us a white Christmas. We had at least 16 fluffy beautiful inches of snow. We thrilled to the winter beauty. But wait! On Christmas morning we woke to torrential rains. The windows are frozen shut. I couldn't get my window open. It was still raining in the morning of Boxing Day. Never have my planting beds been so deluged. Guess what?  More rain is predicted!  I'm counting on a prediction error.…

A City Christmas as told by Betsy Reilley and Pat Leuchtman

  • Post published:12/25/2020
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A City Christmas was written 43 years ago when my husband, 5 children and and I were living in  the ancestral apartment in Manhattan. A CITY CHRISTMAS It was Christmas Eve in the City. Shoppers filled Herald Square and hurried along Fifth Avenue as it grew late.  The streets emptied. Shop windows glowed like rich jewels and the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree sparkled in silent and solitary splendor. At home parents wrapped the last of the Christmas presents…

The Man Who Invented Christmas with A Christmas Carol

  • Post published:12/23/2020
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Even Charles Dickens, who wrote many books , 20 to be precise, can have periods  when he cannot think of a plot and when his recent books are not getting the attention he got after writing The Pickwick Papers in serial form. Nowadays Dicken's book A Christmas Carol is everywhere, as it was after its immediate publication shortly before Christmas in 1843. But it was rough,  going.  The Man Who Invented Christmas, "based on the inspiring true story."…

Dreaming of a White Christmas – Mission Accomplished

  • Post published:12/19/2020
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A white Christmas is a sure thing. When we woke up on December  18, one week before Christmas, we received 16 inches of  lovely snow - not too heavy. It took a good part of the day to clear streets and sidewalks. I think we were all glad to return to  our houses where we could sit near our brilliant Christmas trees and enjoy a hot toddy - or a cup of hot cocoa. We watched the old…

University of Massachusetts Famous Garden Calendar – 2021

  • Post published:12/16/2020
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The Annual Garden Calendar means you don't need to have been a University of Massachusetts student to benefit on their studies which is shared generously with all of us. This is just the beginning of information about vegetables and flowers - and weeds. The gardening year is very long - happily for us who love working in the garden - and strolling through our garden to admire our  work, and  the work of Mother Nature. The Garden Calendar…