View from the Bedroom Window – August 2014

  • Post published:09/10/2014
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A cool cool August. That means the grass grows really fast, even though there hasn't been any rain to speak of. This has got to be one of  the coolest Augusts ever. Nighttime temperatures in the 50s - and often taking a long while to warm up. The one rainfall came all at once. Torrents amounting to 2-1/2 inches on August 13. The Lawn Beds don't change very much, at least from this angle, but the field beyond…

Franklin County Fair – Int’l Year of Family Farm

  • Post published:09/08/2014
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The Franklin County Fair is always a celebration of family farms and gardeners. This view from the balcony gives only a hint of the perfect produce, creativity and business acumen of local farmers and gardeners. Red Fire Farm is just one of the area's most successful small farm, a testament to farmer Ryan Voilland's farming skills, but also his people management and business skills. The dairy farm is not yet dead in Western Massachusetts and these young people…

You Could Be a Master Gardener

  • Post published:09/06/2014
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Over 200 Master Gardeners are volunteering their knowledge and energy up and down the PioneerValley. You might have called upon them to test your soil at local Farmer’s Markets, or found them answering questions at the Big E in Springfield and the Little E in Greenfield, or working at Wisteriahurst in Holyoke, the Bridge of Flowers in ShelburneFalls, or various community gardens as well as at other locations. I am personally grateful for the three Spring Symposia they…

Five Things to Love About Blueberries

  • Post published:09/03/2014
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There are more than five things to love about blueberries, but these are my top five things to love. First blueberries are hardy and really easy to grow, especially in Heath where the soil is suitably acid. Blueberries require a pH between 4 and 5.5. I never tested the soil in the berry patch, but my highbush blueberries are  healthy, big and productive. And have been for 30 years. This year I am getting a bumper crop. Blueberries…

What’s Blooming on September 1 at the End of the Road

  • Post published:09/01/2014
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What's blooming on September 1? As we acknowledge that even though it isn't officially autumn, we notice the days are shorter, and a maple or sumac branch here and there has begun waving scarlet in the sunlight, the bloom goes on.  Thomas Affleck is the only rose, as usual, that has much to show at this time of the year, although there is a stray blossom here and there on the Rose Walk. The ruogosa hips are ripening.…

Weeds in My Garden

  Weeds. The weeds are thriving in my garden. In the middle of August when we are getting ready for the Heath Fair there is no longer even a pretense that I am keeping up with the weeds. This week I am resolved to begin a major weeding. One friend I met at the Fair said she had given up weeding for the season and would worry about it next spring. I understand the feeling, but there is…

Bridge of Flowers in August

  • Post published:08/29/2014
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I was walking across the Bridge of Flowers this morning and it is clear this is high Dahlia season. I don't know the names of these varieties, but I am going to look through the  Swan Island Dahlia catalog and see if I can get names for some of these. Some dahlias have a more tender hue. China Doll is a dahlia that everyone loves. Dahlias come in so many forms and sizes. Do you think 'Shaggy' is…

Waterways – Many Ways

  • Post published:08/27/2014
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Our family enjoys water many ways. Exciting ways on the Deerfield River and paddling peacefully on Lake Champlain. For more Wordlessness this Wednesday click here.

August on Lake Champlain, Vermont

  • Post published:08/25/2014
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Late last week we drove up to Charlotte on Lake Champlain in Vermont. In 1939 my grandfather and Uncle Wally bought a 300 acre farm. Since then four generations have been attached to this piece of land, even though The Farm itself no longer exists. This is the view from Aunt Doris and Uncle Mike's house. It was a rainy and foggy day when we arrived so you can't quite see Lake Champlain, but you are looking down…

Heath Fair 2014 on Wordless Wednesday

  • Post published:08/20/2014
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What is the why of the Heath Fair?  It is a celebration of the bounty of the earth - and the knowledge and energy to make it fruitful. It is a celebration of our farms and farmers. It is about sharing the natural world with our children. Those are miniature mama goats. The Heath Fair is about competition, and music, and Blue Ribbons. For more (almost) Wordlessness this Wednesday click here.