My husband I are new gardeners attempting to transform the gardens of our first home. We live in a log cabin on +10 acres of woods. With the help of my husband's parents aka Garden Maven we have been able to lay out trails and choose plants. Everyone needs a little help now and then so this blog has been created as a personal reference for gardening in South West New Hampshire.

Friday, November 23, 2007















Aaron cut down the top of one of our trees for our Christmas tree.

We put it in our living room on a table to make it more manageable -- to decorate, water, etc.

We moved our hammock and outdoor furniture indoors so that they won't get snowed on. Aaron looks good as a woods man!

Naps in the hammock are wonderful!

Monday, November 19, 2007

First Snow!


First Snow of the season... we had +2 inches that stayed for a few days then melted and/or was washed away by rain. This picture is of the backyard where Aaron had been working on a large, fallen tree that is now firewood. The logs in the picture is an older log, once in tact, is now being prepped for either lining our trail or more firewood.

Aaron has cut down some smaller trees that will sit and dry out for a season so that we can use them next year for firewood. There is a space we want to eventually clear away so he is slowly taking the trees down for firewood because oil to heat our furnace is now +$3/gallon and bit too pricey to use as the sole means of heat for the entire winter.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Fall Harvest


We planted red potatoes and white but the red ones were the best. Next year I am going to plant more!

Monday, October 29, 2007

Fall Cleanup


















We've been chopping wood for the coming winter while watching the World Series. Go Sox! It's much easier when you have a working chain saw. The man of the house is showing off his working chain saw while celebrating in his sawing accomplishments of the weekend.

In the meantime, we are preparing for winter. The Old Farmer's Almanac predicts snow in November/December and it's just around the corner. There are so many outdoor projects to be completed before we proceed with indoor projects. First and foremost, wood for heating.

When I woke up this morning I realized I had taken pictures of blooming wildflowers just in time. Last night's temperatures were below freezing! The extra large water dish, full of water, froze solid and has stayed that way all day.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Fall is here!

Fall is in full swing! Our temperatures have fluctuated from record highs for this time of the year back down to the normal lows in the 40's and highs in the 50's/60's. Aaron was able to chop and haul out most of the remnants of the tree that had fallen earlier this year. It's yielded at least a cord of wood or so. He is working his way through the pile, splitting and stacking for winter. Snow is predicted for November/December with the lowest temperatures in January -- just in time for our bundle of joy to arrive! Eeek!

Friday, September 7, 2007

Wildflowers


Goldenrod is all over our property.
We're not sure if we're allergic to it but we've decided selectively let it grow. It is really pretty in the wildflower garden with the Asters and other flowers that haven't bloomed but hopefully will soon.





Lot of these flowers have come up and some have bloomed. We spread wildflower seeds but I haven't specifically identified this one yet. They are all coming up pink/purple. It's beautiful against the green and goldenrod.






This isn't a wildflower but a mint type of plant that has grown and rapidly spread on the east side of our front stair case. It receives full sun and well drained soil. The blooms are clusters of purple. We think this might be Catmint. I remember planting some and know that none of our mint survived to become seedlings so that we could transplant them. It think we bought a few of these plants at a nursery because our original mint did not survive. I'm not 100% sure on the identification of this plant.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Moose on the Loose

Moose on the Loose


We live in a swampy area of New Hampshire. Every time Aaron and I drive by the swamps we keep an eye out for Moose. It was sort of a joke between us because we hear all these stories of people hitting Moose with their cars but we didn't actually think we would see any. Many of our blossoms and veggetation has either dissapeared or has been slept on my a large creature. We thought... big deer... black bear... porcupine... racoons... etc. but not in our wildest dreams did we think that Moose were on the loose in our yard. On Sunday, Aaron was doing the dishes and making dinner when he was shocked to see a female Moose standing just outside our kitchen window. He yelled for me to get my camera and I was able to capture this picture just as she began to walk towards our driveway. We were told and suspected that our property was a popular through way from the open spaces behind our property to the open spaces across the street. We've seen all the other wildlife but this was way cool!

Check out the video!
Moose on the Loose

Sunday, August 26, 2007

New Flowers

Our previously eaten Black Eyed Susan's are back! This pictures if from a week ago and we have three times the blossoms today. They are a wonderful contrast to the little field of green.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Lettuce & Fresh Eggs

We managed to have some servings of lettuce but our lettuce was so good that something came and ate most of it! Fortunately, we had planted more so we expect to still get lettuce. Our wildlife neighbors are certainly loving our garden.

We bought fresh eggs on Saturday from our neighbor, across the street. They are fantastic! We hope to continue to enjoy fresh and local eggs.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Deer & Flowers


These were our Soy Bean plants before they grew another foot and begun to flower. Not only have the deer eaten all of the flowers from the Black Eyed Susan we planted (not the native ones), the Coneflower, the squash, and some flower we have not yet identified but they also ate the tops off of all of our Soy Bean plants! I'm hoping some will come back. Oh well, better luck next year.

The Sugar Snap Peas in this picture are from a month ago. They now stand 3 ft. tall. The peas are sweet and delicious!

I'll post some updated pictures of the garden next week. Our Sweet Corn is over 3 ft. tall but the ornamental is still less than 2 feet. The bugs have gotten to our Basil but I was able to pick some for our spaghetti sauce. We have lots of spices now. Our Tarragon is over 3 feet tall and I don't even know what to use if for.

This year we are going to dry some herbs and make herb flavored butters and oils.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Pictures


Please post a picture of how your garden grows July 2007!

Monday, July 9, 2007

Rain, rain, rain!

The torrential rain has returned. A few weeks back when the lightening hit the tree it had also hit a van driving on the same road with a mother and teen girls. They were pretty frightened but ok. They ran into their house as soon as they got home but their poor van still has electrical kinks. That same kind of storm has been in and out all day today. The thunder is deafening but the lightening is not nearly as dangerous as before. This is the first time I've seen Sammy come crawling over to me shaking uncontrollably. Poor Gracey has been seen for most of the day.

The mix of the heat and rain has inspired growth in all of our vegetables. We've already been able to eat fresh picked lettuce and lots of herbs. The beans have begun to flower. Our hillside garden had cucumber seeds that have now sprouted but the rain had washed some of the seeds so that we have cucumber sprouting all over the place! I love going out everyday to look at the new growth.

The flowers are doing very well but I think one of the deer didn't realize they were supposed to leave the coneflower alone. It never had a chance to bloom! They ate the top off many of the other flowers. Oh well, better luck next time. All of the plants in the front of the house are doing very well. Goldenrod and Mullein have also bloomed.

Monday, July 2, 2007

Friday, June 29, 2007

Day Lillies

How to Grow Daylilies
I read this article on line on Garden Supply site and thought it would give you some tips for growing the day lillies.
How to Grow Daylilies



Planting Care
Daylilies flower best when planted in full sun (6 hours/day), on moist, yet well-drained soil. In hot climates, dark-colored cultivars should receive some afternoon shade to help them retain their flower color. When planted in the correct location, daylilies will flower for years with little care. They do not require fertilization other than a yearly addition of compost.
If buying daylilies by mail, plant them within a few days of receiving them. In the South, plant in spring or fall while temperatures are still cool. In the North, daylilies should be planted in spring so they have plenty of time to get established before winter. However, daylilies are such tough plants, that in the North, most can be planted anytime from spring through fall.
Amend the soil with compost before planting. Space plants 12 to 18 inches apart and plant so the crown is about 1 inch below the soil surface. Water well and mulch with bark or straw to conserve moisture and prevent weeds from growing. Although resilient once established, young transplants should be kept free from weeds and well watered the first year.
Daylilies have few pests. However, a new daylily disease--a type of rust--has been spreading throughout the county, attacking many plants. To control this disease, keep the area around daylilies open and airy, remove diseased foliage, and water plants when rainfall is insufficient.
Dividing Daylilies
One of the few routine maintenance chores needed when growing daylilies is dividing them. Depending on their growth, your daylily clump will usually become crowded after four to five years and flowering will diminish. In most areas, late summer is the best time to divide daylilies. In the North, early spring is an alternate option, especially if the weather typically turns cold quickly in fall.
Dig up individual clumps and put them on a tarp. Use a sharp knife or spade to separate healthy young plants (fans) with strong root systems. Cut back the foliage and replant immediately in compost-amended soil or plant in containers for holding. You'll have many extra plants from each clump to give away to friends and neighbors. Discard any small or diseased plants.
Winter Care
In northern areas, newly planted daylilies can be mulched in late fall. This is important for young plants which otherwise may be heaved out of the ground the first winter. Dead foliage can be removed in spring, unless it was diseased. In that case it is best to remove it in fall.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Here is our house in the late fall before the snow and before we put in the garden. June 2006

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Animals Vegetables and Miracles

I am trying to post this book recommendation to your blog.
 I am bringing this great book, Animals, Vegetables and Miracles, by Barbara Kingslover,  with me.  This story details a year in the life of a family in Virginia who become locavores, eating only what is grown 100 miles from their home.  You two will love this book.  Great tips and great recipes besides a life altering story!
See you in two days!  LOVE Daisydew
 




See what's free at AOL.com.

Weeds & Bugs

From the Garden Maven:

Keep the weeds and bugs out of your garden, by pulling and picking them off by hand. Good gloves help in this activity. the task is easier if the days are cool in the spring than if you wait until the hot days of summer when the weeds have a strong root base and have zapped strength from your garden. Encourage swallows and bats to join your garden and they can keep down the bugs and flying insects. Lady bugs are beneficial as they eat aphids, which often gather in colonies on vegetables like broccoli and brussels sprouts and flowers like roses and pansies.


I hate pulling weeds but we've got them and they are huge! Guess what we'll be doing this week?

Veggies Grow!


Here is a picture of our first growth! I think these are peas. We are trying to get them to grow up the lines. I had thought that we should have used plastic garden fencing. Either one sounded goofy but the string/stakes option seemed to make the most sense.

This year we've decided to grow peas, beans, edemame, and potato in addition to the tomato, squash, and corn routine. We've also added marigolds that have decided not to show themselves yet. So, we may need to buy small plants. The tomato plants are slow coming. Next year we will likely start our plants indoors with a lamp as opposed to no lamp. It stays colder longer up here causing our growing season to be short. We need all the help we can get. At least we have the rain.

Friday, June 1, 2007



Here is the front of the house from the real estate listing.

Next is the house just after the St. Patrick's Day snowstorm in 2007.

Friday, April 27, 2007

The Bees

We purchased a Dwarf Granny Smith tree for our first fruit tree and we were in need of figuring out whether or not we could help it live, how to help it fruit, etc.

There is a small section on the weather page of the paper called “weather extremes.” In the paper today: National extremes in the 48 contiguous states,

High: 103 Death Valley California,
Low: 18 Berlin, New Hampshire.

I hope this in no where near you! Don't worry, we are few hours South of there.
This week’s tip is pollination, which won’t happen if it is 18o. In your vegetable and fruit garden bees and insects are important. The blossoms won’t set and fruit and vegetables won’t develop, if they h aven’t been pollinated. Some plants like apples and other fruit need a different variety of apple pollen to fertilize the blossom. This can be tricky because not all apple trees bloom at the same time. I don’t know about your granny smith, but I have listed some web sites and more technical articles below for you to search out what will work. Even if a neighbor has an apple tree that blooms at the same time and you have a good supply of bees, your single tree may b e fine, but you should check it out.

Also keep in mind that some trees are just male or just female. The nut trees like the Hazel nut must be planted in pairs. I am trying to develop more native plants around the fence line. A few weeks ago I set aside some cuttings from the Hazel trunk sprouts when I remembered we have two Haze ls planted next to each
other because they need each other for pollen and fertilization. We had to carefully make stacks of cuttings from each tree and as I planted them, I hope that I planted the sprout cuttings close enough in pairs for fertilization.

Some fruit and vegetables like squash or tomatoes are self pollinating. Pollen on a single plant from male parts of blossoms to female parts of blossoms will create fertilization, but ther e is better and greater chance for fertilization if you have more than one plant or tree. I have played bee or pollinator. When I have grown tomatoes or squash in small spaces like our roof top, where I had only one plant and not many bees, I have picked the male blossoms and stuck them on female blossoms in order to get the necessary fertilization for fruit . You shouldn’t have to do that in your garden because you will have plenty of room for more than one plant of each variety you grow.

One year I planted differ ent varieties of squash and pumpkin too close together. I got zucchini pumpkins! They were greenish orange oblong vegetables suitable for the compost bin ! Those bees just collect and fail to discriminate by variety. Pollenization is probably the way growers are developing the weird color to pumpkins, ghost pumpkins? If you really want to know more about genetics and fertilization read ab out the
monk Mendel and his peas. I read “Mendel’s Dwarf” by Simon Mawer; it is a good read, but save it f or winter when you have time. I'm not sure if we have bees. I honestly haven't see on since we moved in last year.

Sustainable Horticulture from the University of new Hampshire
http://horticulture.unh.edu/links.html

Successful pollination
In order to have successful pollination, it is necessary to have two different varieties of apple trees. Aha! We need another apple tree. How about a Gala? Most apple varieties are self-unfruitful, which means their blossoms must be fertilized with the pollen of a separate variety in order to achieve good fruit set. A few varieties, including 'Rome Beauty' and 'Ne wtown', are considered self-fruitful, meaning their blossoms can be fertilized with their own pollen, but even these a pples produce more fruit if they are cross-pollinated by another variety. It's important to choose varieties that have compatible pollen and bloom times. The Raintree Nursery catalog and Web site have a very helpful pollination chart that details which apple varietie s are compatible.

Apples also need pollinators—certain wasps these we have, lots!, flies, and bees—to transfer pollen from one variety to the other. The apple trees must be planted within 100 feet of each other in order to help ens ure that the pollinators visit both trees. If you have only one apple tree in your yard or incompatible varieties, all is not lost. Crabapple pollen fertilizes apple blossoms. So if you have a crabapple in the vicinity that blooms concurr ently with your apple tree, you're in business. Grafting a branch of a compatible variety onto your existing tree is ano ther option, though I recommend you hire an arborist to perform this job. You can also use an old, very effective or chardist trick, says Matthew Rogoyski, Ph.D., a horticulturist at Colorado State University. "Put a bouquet of crabapple branches in bloom in a 5-gallon bucket of water and place it inside the canopy of the tree," says Dr. Rogoyski. "Then bees can visit the crabapple blossoms and transfer the pollen to the apple blossoms." Hmmm intersting...

A couple of caveats, before leaving the issue of pollination:
The pollen of some apple varieties is sterile, so don't rely on these as your pollinizers. Examples are Jonagold, Mutsu, Stayman and Winesap. The transfer of pollen from one apple blossom to another is largely the work of those busy little garden friends, the bees. So be careful not to apply insecticides during the blooming period -- or you'll lose your best means of pollination.

We're definitely not planning on using insecticides but we will definitely need to employ deer deterrent... dog fur, people hair, shiny objects?

Tips, tips, tips

Tips the Garden Maven picked out from About.com: Gardening:

Gardening Tip of the Week
Keep you garden tools clean and rust free by keeping a bucket of sand handy. Brush off excess soil, then plunge your tool into the sand. The sand alone will scrub your tool clean. You can add a bottle of oil to your bucket of sand to lubricate and protect your tool. Many people use old motor oil. I like to use a coo king oil, but this isn't practical if you're bucket is accessible to wildlife.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Excerpts from the Garden Maven:

"If you are gardening, I guess the best thing for you in the garden is to work in the sun and put all your plantings in the
sun and cover them at night. If you wait just a week or two more to plant, maybe the night temperatures will rise to the 40's or more and you will not have to cover new starts. Ask around for t he last possible date for frost. Just remember these days next summer, when you will pray for a cool night.

So you want to garden this weekend, keep pulling weeds and trimming. You might plant your forsythia. Forsythia can take the cold. It would be really big and bloom profusely, if the deer would stop eating it!

Bare root plants like roses or trees can be planted if the ground is not too soggy. Bare root plants are cheaper because they are small, dug and wrapped with only a beginning root system. They need lots of water over the heat of the summer, but if you plant them early enough in the spring they can get a good root start while the weather is cool. Dig a hole twice as big as the root ball of the bare root plants and will with a mix of new, enriched soil and native soil from the original hole.

Hardening off your seeds can occur by placing your seed starts on the deck in the sun but continue to keep them in at night. Hardening off prevents the seeds from being in shock when you transplant them to your garden later."

Monday, January 15, 2007

Winter Ice Storm





During the week of 1/15/07 we experienced an ice storm that covered everything in a thick layer of ice. The ice was so heavy it caused trees to bow to the ground. On a drive to Keene the light would shine through the glassy trees creating a kaleidescope effect. I truly was a frightening but fascinating winter wonderland.

Our neighbor's tree fell on the power line. We lost power, heat, and water for several days during the below freezing temperatures. Sammy, Gracey, and I cuddled on the couch to keep each other warm. Aaron was out of town. Lucky him!