Avoiding Brain Mush Over The Summer
Transcription
Avoiding Brain Mush Over The Summer
18 Say You Saw it in The Monadnock Shopper News, September 28 – October 4, 2016 dnock Appliance Repair Monadnock Appliance Repair ce Repair ullock ional service 9999 REFRIGERATORS—FREEZERS DISHWASHERS—STOVES—COOKTOPS WASHING MACHINES—DRYERS ASK ABOUT OUR LINT CLEANING SERVICE TO KEEP YOUR DRYER AND VENT SAFE AND EFFICIENT! I don’t sell appliances, I fix them! 603-899-9999 I DON’T SELL APPLIANCES—I FIX THEM! monadnockappliance@gmail.com Dan Bullock monadnockappliance@gmail.com deBarked, seMi-seasoned 2 & 3 Cord speCials Clean • guaranteed Full Measure Brush Mowing • stuMp grinding Wood & Pellet Stoves by USDA Certified Kiln Dried Always Available! 300 $ Federal Tax Credit 10% Off all fire pits & outdoor fireplaces plus first fire free with purchase Liberty Treehugger Farms, Inc. 1046 Rt. 12, Westmoreland, NH • 603-399-8454 Mon.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-1 • www.treehuggerfarms.com Fuel Assistance Welcome Cse septiC & exCavating Sitework SpecialiStS Commercial residential • Septic System Installation • Concrete Foundation Work • Land Clearing • Driveways • Drainage • Leachfields • Demolition & Clean-up ed Csenge & son LLC (603) 847-9150 cseseptic@gmail.com serving the MonadnoCk region for over 30 years Ahh, the sounds and smells of autumn, the changing light levels, the garden still madly going until the hard freeze. Yes, autumn. But why is it autumn and not fall? Or is it fall and not autumn? In Australia they always referred to it as autumn; here we know it as fall. Is it because all the leaves fall off the trees? The acorns and beech nuts are dropping like crazy. I have no idea, but I am glad the season has finally arrived. I am ready for a break. Despite the garden’s dryness, I have been able to harvest pounds of broccoli and a good number of tomatoes. Underneath all the weeds I am finding vegetables. The onions were the best crop I have ever had; the potatoes, meh; the garlic was good; the beans produced really well until they got lost under the weeds, and now I just have a bunch of beans for the soup pot. The peppers were also well hidden until I caught sight of red orbs amongst the weeds. I haven’t dug the sweet potatoes yet – next week is the plan for that – but it was certainly hot enough for them this summer. I managed to get enough flowers for a bouquet each week from the flowers I planted in the vegetable garden, but the rest of the garden is a disaster. When I got home last night, I noticed a bunch of the guinea hens hanging out under the bee hive. The bloody birds were picking off the bees as they were flying back to the hive. I found some extra electric fencing we had hanging around, and we wrapped the electric fence that is protecting the hive from the bear with the netting to protect the hive from the birds. Talk about opportunists. Walking through the nuttery on the way back from our early morning dog walk, I noticed hazelnuts on a few of the bushes. Yay! I think I noticed them because of the light. They are really well camouflaged and it was pure luck that I found them. I harvested three whole nuts. Yup, three. My first ever. Hopefully this will be the beginning of harvestable age. It’s a good things that I’m a patient gardener. (Sure you are, Ker- 108 Hinsdale Road • Northfield, MA Open Daily 8:30 am-5 pm • 413-498-2208 www.fafgrowers.com • Visit us on Facebook Come Grow With Us! PUMPKINS! Houseplants win). Despite the dryness, the nut trees are looking pretty good. I’m finding it encouraging. I still haven’t ordered my spring bulbs and I really have no idea why. The catalogs are dog eared and well marked, I just haven’t gotten around to placing the order yet. It isn’t that I am ordering any special bulbs, or limited supply bulbs, which is good, since they would most likely be sold out by now. Maybe now that the weather is turning cooler and fall is here, I will get my act together and place the orders. Then, of course, they will all have to be planted, but that can happen far later in the fall then we think it can. I have planted them Thanksgiving weekend with without any problems. Maybe I have been just lucky all these years. Woods and Gardens with Allison Kerwin Not much else on the gardening front. Tomatoes on the stove are becoming sauce; I can never have enough sauce. Buckwheat and winter rye are planted in the empty beds. I have a hose to repair (go figure, fixing a hose now in the season), but stuff is dry and the darn hose that goes our to the vegetable garden was punctured by a nail. Argh. Basil is being harvested and made into basil balls for the freezer so I have basil for pizzas all winter long. Broccoli is being frozen. You know, just stuff happening, but nothing earth shattering. Well, onwards in the garden. Allison Kerwin is the owner of The Enchanted Garden, a garden design and maintenance company. The Enchanted Garden is based in Hancock. “Duty’s Faithful Child: A Visit With Louisa May Alcott” September 30th in Walpole The Walpole Historical Society will present “Duty’s Faithful Child: A Visit With Louisa May Alcott” – a monodrama written by Peter Nadolny and performed by Jeanne Austin at 7 p.m. on Friday, September 30th at the Walpole Town Hall. Louisa May Alcott, best known for her classic novel, Little Women, was raised in the intellectual and philosophical center of Concord, MA, home of Emerson, Thoreau, and her father, Amos Bronson Alcott, the leader of the transcendental movement. Shaped by early experimental education and an untraditional family life, Alcott became a staunch supporter of abolition, women’s suffrage, and better education and employment for women. Austin, a member of Actors’ Equity Association, has played in regional, stock, and dinner theaters in roles ranging from Rosalind in As You Like It to Deb’s QUALITY LAwn CAre FIVE ACRE FARM Sugar & Carving Gourds Mini Pumpkins Cornstalks Early Autumn Garden Musings Lawns Mowed & Trimmed Flowerbeds refurbished spring & Fall Cleanups Local Hauling & Delivery Insured/References • FREE Estimates 603-313-2601 Cell Amanda in The Glass Menagerie. For more details, visit www.walpolehistory.com. Event Benefits Cultural Exchanges Between New Hampshire And Germany The City of Keene Partner City Committee and Fireworks Restaurant on Main Street in Keene will be hosting a German-themed dinner/fundraising event on Tuesday, October 4th from 5:30 to 8:30 pm. Community members are invited to enjoy food; learn about the decades-long partnership with the partner city, Einbeck, Germany; and meet the visiting German guests and Partner City committee members. The Keene Partner City Committee is an official committee of the City of Keene and serves as a mayoral-appointed advisory group promoting the educational, cultural, athletic, business, and intergovernmental relationships between Keene and Einbeck, Germany. Mayors from both cities, at their own expense, have visited one another’s cities, and since 2000 there have been exchanges with youth soccer teams, vocational high school students, choral groups, medical professionals, committee delegates, law enforcement, firefighters, and public works personnel. There will be an opportunity to win raffle prizes at this event; reservations are recommended. Fireworks will donate all profits from the evening to the city to support future cultural exchanges. For more details or reservations, call 603-903-1410. 15% OFF Fairy Garden Supplies HARDY MUMS Town & Country Live Fully. And Thrive. 15% OFF 8" Fiber Pots 6.99 3 $ for 20 $ The Best of Living. GREAT CLEARANCE SPECIALS To learn more about this unique Lifecare senior living community, call 1-877-450-4727 or go to www.HillsideVillageKeene.org SAVE 15-75% You can also visit the Hillside Village Information Center 149 Emerald St. | Suite A1 | Keene, NH 03431 THROUGHOUT THE STORE Sale dates 9/28 - 10/4 HVK100021 Ad [5.82 x 4] mech.indd 1 2/26/16 3:01 PM