The next few posts will be articles I wrote for the North Star Monthly, a Danville, Vermont journal first published starting in 1807 and reestablished in 1989. I love the paper and you will too. info@northstarmonthly.com.
Fall
Garden Thoughts
2019
gardening is drawing to a close. Gail, Alex and I are all tired but know we’ll
miss driving to the farm every morning, opening the gate, meeting new people
and seeing new things maturing. It’s been a strange but wonderful year to say
the least. It started out in April with snow that kept falling followed by water
that flooded the fields and kept the Winooski River too high for me to safely
install the water lines and pump. Mother Nature put some things on hold but
then the sun came out and energized everything.
Since
those April days, many things have happened. We had the best season in over
thirty years and that meant customer and visitor counts and gross sales
increased. There were many, many new customers and more tourists from around
the world walking the gardens. Sadly, there were regular customers who we know
moved out of Vermont, could no longer garden physically, downsized their homes
and lost their gardens, or even passed on to another world. We are sorry for
the losses no matter what the reason because gardening friendships are tight
bonds you never forget.
So
now it’s fall and the leaves have fallen except for a few birches and poplars
and the needles of the tamaracks, the conifer that loses its needles each fall
after they turn bright yellow. Fall clean up has become somewhat of a
controversy and my philosophy falls somewhere in the middle of current trends.
Like it or not, leaf raking became a tradition in the days when people had to
have a lawn with green grass and no weeds. Raking the lawn including cutting
down the gardens and raking all sorts of vegetation including the leaves and
putting everything on a compost pile or bagging it for a trash pick up. The
trend has changed somewhat. If you have a lawn and have tree leaves, you cannot
allow the leaves on the lawn for long or they will kill the grass. I have a
lawn vacuum that shreds up all the leaves and pushes them into a bag. It works
great for me because I use the shredded leaves between the rows of plants in
our propagation fields or on display gardens between the plants. That has
positives and negatives too. Moving leaves into the garden, shredded or not,
puts weed seeds, insects and fungal issues there too. My most despised insect
is the stinkbug, especially the Brown Mamorated Stink Bug which is a slightly
larger version of the green one that has always been with us. When they are
touched let alone moved through a shredder-vac, they let you know they are
there with a very noxious odor. I think the benefit of the shredded leaves
outweighs the negatives. I prefer maple leaves because they come from a native
tree with deep, deep roots that stores many inert minerals in the
leaves—minerals from deeper in the earth and beneficial things we probably
don’t think much about. Leaves that should be avoided are leaves from trees
with tannin such as oaks, butternuts and walnuts. Those leaves contain a
chemical that deters seed germination and indirectly might impact any flower or
vegetable seeds you plant directly into the soil.
As
for our flower gardens, I leave them to themselves until spring. Our gardens
are planted with a mix of plants that have birds and other pollinators in mind.
By leaving the last of the flowers, the birds have plenty of food for the first
part of late fall into winter before the snow gets deep. In their own way, spent
flower stems with snow as a backdrop provides a picture of where we have been
during the previous season.
Fall
and early winter is a time to prune trees and shrubs. Pruning is a strange
affair. It is ever so easy to do and
pruning is the way to go but surprisingly many people are afraid to prune
because they think they will kill their favorite tree or shrub. That’s far from
true. There are many great books and YouTube videos out there on pruning but if
you just can’t make yourself prune, you can hire people like my friends Nancy
or Kate who have created businesses out of pruning. If you think you want to
give it a try, ask me and I’ll offer the confidence you might need to get
started.
Before
you leave your gardens for the winter, take a few photos to serve as a reminder
to what you have and what plants you might want to add, delete or better care
for come spring. And remember our tag line here at the flower farm: “We’re always here to help you grow your
green thumb!” 802-426-3505 or 3506 in season. vermontflowerfarm@outlook.com.
http://vermontflowerfarm.com
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