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Say You Saw it in The Monadnock Shopper News, August 15 – August 21, 2018 14 swanzeyoil.com DUE TO DEMAND SPECIAL PRICING EXTENDED until the end of SEPTEMBER ANNUAL CLEANING Regularly $ 150 00 With Coupon $ 130 00 SAVE $ 20 00 Expires September 30, 2018 Peter Forcier Ray Thibeault Kevin White Summer Plant Blow Out Sale Continues! ANNUALS & PERENNIALS 25-75% OFF *excludes all new fall annuals & perennials 108 Hinsdale Road • Northfield, MA Open Daily 8:30 am-5:00 pm 413-498-2208 www.fafgrowers.com • Visit us on Facebook FIVE ACRE FARM INVENTORY BLOWOUT SALE! 50% OFF TREES & SHRUBS ORIGINAL PRICES 50% OFF Statuary Pottery Fairy Garden Supplies Gazing Globes Bagged Soil Products Windchimes Bird Baths Garden Flags STORE CLOSING SUNDAY, AUGUST 26TH 1046 Rt. 12, Westmoreland, NH • 603-399-8454 Mon.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-1 • www.treehuggerfarms.com Treehugger Farms, Inc. Fuel Assistance Welcome Wood, Gas & Pellet Stoves by FULL MEASURE • FAST, FRIENDLY DELIVERY DEBARKED SEMI SEASONED USDA INSECT FREE KILN DRIED ALWAYS AVAILABLE SEASON YOUR OWN AND SAVE! BARK MULCH • STUMP GRINDING • BRUSH MOWING DANA’S CONTAINER SERVICE 603-352-5981 danasrolloffdumpsters.com Variety of rolloff dumpster sizes Clean-out services Fully Insured STONE WALLS Rebuild • Repair • New Retaining & Free Standing • Single-Faced & Double-Faced Building Foundations • Building Facades Munichiello Masonry Al Munichiello 603-204-1701 [email protected] 24 Hr. Service Fully Insured Cell: 603-355-0208 Home: 603-352-1205 www.chrislaneenterprises.com Tree Work • Crane Work • Chipping Storm Damage Cleanup • Pruning Stump Grinding • Cabling 603-357-4347•www.cheshireshedandgazebo.com Ask about our RENT TO OWN Program A DreamSpace for Your Place! ROUTE 12 • SWANZEY Across from Toyota Volvo FINANCING AVAILABLE FURNITURE, TOO! Chimney Sweeping • Construction • Relining Repairs • Installations • Inspections • Waterproofing Serving the Monadnock Region for over 37 Years (603) 357-4159 •www.chimneynh.com •[email protected] THE CHIMNEY SPECIALISTS, INC. Cheshire Grounds Preservation Driveways - Hard Pack & Gravel Lawn Maintenance One time or every time Grounds Maintenance Field Mowing, Brush Hog Loader, Back Hoe Work Snowplowing CGP 603-585-3040 Serving Cheshire & Western Hillsborough Counties Located at 1835 Rt. 12, Westmoreland, NH Open Tuesday - Sunday 10AM-5PM Call 603-399-4470 or visit our website: www.millbrookfarm.com We started the shed, gazebo and horse barn business over twenty years ago. Our standard construction in every single shed includes solid plywood on roofs and floors - no particle board; 2x4 construction 16”OC; gable end vents; a 30 year Architectural shingle and come completely painted. No time to come to Westmoreland? Let US come to YOU! We’ll help you choose the perfect shed and location for your property. Call anytime to set up a visit!! DEB’S QUALITY LAWN CARE 603-313-2601 Cell Insured/References • FREE Estimates Lawns Mowed & Trimmed Flowerbeds Refurbished Spring & Fall Cleanups Local Hauling & Delivery Read the MSN online: www.shoppernews.com August represents the waning days of summer. Daylight hours have begun to decrease as production increases in the gardens. Trees, shrubs, flowers, and grasses are producing as many fruits, seeds, and offspring as possible before the growing season ends. The landscape is as busy as we are trying to manage it! My healthy and happy white ash trees produced a heavy crop of seeds this year. The seeds are consumed by a variety of songbirds, including the grosbeak, purple finch, and red-winged blackbird. My unhappy ash trees are in a state of decline, which started several years ago during a drought. They will soon be used for firewood. A decline caused by ash yellows, drought, or disease can take several years to kill the tree, while an infestation of emerald ash borer can kill an ash tree in less than five years. The latest information on emerald ash borer, including its identification and known locations in New Hampshire, is at https:// nhbugs.org/emerald-ash- borer. My shrubs are grow- ing broader and taller this season, thanks to the early spring moisture. The red-osier dogwoods have spread to over ten feet wide and seven feet tall. Their white berries are eaten by songbirds as soon as they ripen. Robins love these berries, as do the catbirds. The catbirds eat many berries, including those from invasive species. They introduced the glossy buckthorn and multi-flora rose to my property and helped spread the Oriental bittersweet vine. One happy bittersweet vine growing through and on top of a highbush blueberry needs to be extracted without spreading the bittersweet berries. Each berry could potentially become another quick-growing vine. Information on Oriental bittersweet is at https://www.agriculture.nh.gov/publications-forms/documents/oriental- bittersweet.pdf. Many of the invasive shrubs and vines are highly adaptable to impoverished soils, dry soils, and disturbed areas, making them a troublesome addition to the naturalized landscape. The waning days of summer are represented in the flower garden as well. The colorful red and orange blossoms of July are being replaced by the yellows and whites of August. Black-eyed Susans, goldenrods, yarrow, and Queen Anne’s lace fill the naturalized garden, abandoned fields, and roadsides. Coreopsis, the prairie coneflower, and compass plant fill the drought-tolerant garden with bright lemon-yellows, and Jerusalem artichokes offer color to the edible garden. The ornamental grasses have grown tall and will soon offer miniature flowers and decorative seed heads from late-August through the fall. Meanwhile, at the garden’s surface, miniature perennials have started from seed. The soil is littered with columbines, lupines, Japanese painted ferns, and hostas. Transplant season is almost here! The great debate is whether to move the little plants now, while the soil is dry and easy to dig, or when precipitation is typically more predictable, such as in early fall. If I’m transplanting lupines, milkweed, or other plants with long, delicate taproots, I may opt to move them into their permanent space in August while the soil is loose, providing I am able to water them until their roots adapt to the new soil. If I don’t have time to water, I’ll wait until late September or early October, the official transplant season, when Mother Nature can water them for me. I’m happy to see that many new perennials have successfully started from seed during this year August’s Waning Days of Summer with below-average precipitation. It’s unfortunate, however, that the declining number of early-season pollinators in the gardens have resulted in less seeds for next year’s gardens. Summer may begin to wind down in August, but the gardens are still colorful, fruitful, and alive with flowers, insects, butterflies, and birds. Photos are at Facebook.com/wildandwoodsy. Janine Marr is an advanced master gardener and forester apprentice in Cheshire County. She is available for consults at [email protected]. Woods and Gardens with Janine Marr

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Say You Saw it in The Monadnock Shopper News, August 15 – August 21, 201814

swanzeyoil.com

DUE TO DEMANDSPECIAL PRICING

EXTENDED until theend of SEPTEMBER

ANNUAL CLEANING Regularly $15000

With Coupon $13000

SAVE $2000Expires September 30, 2018

Peter Forcier Ray Thibeault Kevin White

Summer PlantBlow Out Sale Continues!ANNUALS & PERENNIALS

25-75% OFF*excludes all new fall annuals & perennials

108 Hinsdale Road • Northfield, MAOpen Daily 8:30 am-5:00 pm • 413-498-2208

www.fafgrowers.com • Visit us on Facebook

FIVE ACRE FARM

INVENTORY BLOWOUT SALE!

50% OFFTREES &SHRUBS

ORIGINAL PRICES50% OFF

StatuaryPottery

Fairy Garden SuppliesGazing Globes

Bagged Soil ProductsWindchimesBird Baths

Garden Flags

STORE CLOSINGSUNDAY, AUGUST 26TH 1046 Rt. 12, Westmoreland, NH • 603-399-8454

Mon.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-1 • www.treehuggerfarms.com

Treehugger Farms, Inc.Fuel

Assistance Welcome

Wood, Gas & Pellet

Stoves by

FULL MEASURE • FAST, FRIENDLY DELIVERY

DEBARKED SEMI SEASONED

USDA INSECT FREE KILN DRIED ALWAYS AVAILABLE

SEASONYOUR OWN AND SAVE!

BARK MULCH • STUMP GRINDING • BRUSH MOWING

DANA’SCONTAINERSERVICE

603-352-5981danasrolloffdumpsters.com

Variety of rolloff dumpster sizes

Clean-out servicesFully Insured

STONE WALLSRebuild • Repair • New

Retaining & Free Standing • Single-Faced & Double-FacedBuilding Foundations • Building Facades

Munichiello MasonryAl Munichiello 603-204-1701 [email protected]

24 Hr. Service • Fully Insured

Cell: 603-355-0208 Home: 603-352-1205

www.chrislaneenterprises.com

Tree Work • Crane Work • ChippingStorm Damage Cleanup • Pruning

Stump Grinding • Cabling

603-357-4347•www.cheshireshedandgazebo.com

Ask about our RENT TO OWN Program

A DreamSpace for Your

Place!

ROUTE 12 • SWANZEY Across from Toyota Volvo

FINANCINGAVAILABLE

FURNITURE, TOO!

Chimney Sweeping • Construction • ReliningRepairs • Installations • Inspections • WaterproofingServing the Monadnock Region for over 37 Years(603) 357-4159 • www.chimneynh.com • [email protected]

THE CHIMNEY SPECIALISTS, INC.

CheshireGroundsPreservation

Driveways - Hard Pack & GravelLawn Maintenance

One time or every timeGrounds Maintenance

Field Mowing, Brush HogLoader, Back Hoe Work

Snowplowing

CGP

603-585-3040Serving Cheshire & Western Hillsborough Counties

We started the shed, gazebo and horse barn business twenty years ago. Over that time we have evolved into an Amish destination location by offering fine interior furniture, exterior furniture, drying racks, canned goods, copper topped cupolas and weather vanes, brooms, chicken

coops and, new this year, greenhouses for your back yard!

Everything we have at our location is made by the Amish. We have over forty Amish families proudly represented in our shop and on our

grounds. People frequently come her to buy a shed but leave with a lot more!!

Located at 1835 Rt. 12, Westmoreland, NH

Open Tues. – Sunday 10AM - 5 PM Call (603) 399-4470 or visit our website:

www.millbrookfarm.com

We started the shed, gazebo and horse barn business twenty years ago. Over that time we have evolved into an Amish destination location by offering fine interior furniture, exterior furniture, drying racks, canned goods, copper topped cupolas and weather vanes, brooms, chicken

coops and, new this year, greenhouses for your back yard!

Everything we have at our location is made by the Amish. We have over forty Amish families proudly represented in our shop and on our

grounds. People frequently come her to buy a shed but leave with a lot more!!

Located at 1835 Rt. 12, Westmoreland, NH

Open Tues. – Sunday 10AM - 5 PM Call (603) 399-4470 or visit our website:

www.millbrookfarm.comLocated at 1835 Rt. 12, Westmoreland, NH

Open Tuesday - Sunday 10AM-5PMCall 603-399-4470 or visit our website: www.millbrookfarm.com

We started the shed, gazebo and horse barn business over twenty years ago.

Our standard construction in every single shed includes solid plywood on

roofs and floors - no particle board; 2x4 construction 16”OC; gable end

vents; a 30 year Architectural shingle and come completely painted.

No time to come to Westmoreland? Let US come to YOU! We’ll help you choose the perfect shed and location for

your property. Call anytime to set up a visit!!

Deb’s QUALITYLAwn CAre

603-313-2601 CellInsured/References • FREE Estimates

Lawns Mowed & Trimmed

Flowerbeds refurbished

spring & Fall CleanupsLocal Hauling & Delivery

Read the MSN online:www.shoppernews.com

August represents the waning days of summer. Daylight hours have begun to decrease as production increases in the gardens. Trees, shrubs, flowers, and grasses are producing as many fruits, seeds, and offspring as possible before the growing season ends. The landscape is as busy as we are trying to manage it!

My healthy and happy white ash trees produced a heavy crop of seeds this year. The seeds are consumed by a variety of songbirds, including the grosbeak, purple finch, and red-winged blackbird. My unhappy ash trees are in a state of decline, which started several years ago during a drought. They will soon be used for firewood. A decline caused by ash yellows, drought, or disease can take several years to kill the tree, while an infestation of emerald ash borer can kill an ash tree in less than five years. The latest information on emerald ash borer, including its identification and known locations in New Hampshire, is at https://nhbugs.org/emerald-ash-borer.

My shrubs are grow-ing broader and taller this season, thanks to the early spring moisture. The red-osier dogwoods have spread to over ten feet wide and seven feet tall. Their white berries are eaten by songbirds as soon as they ripen. Robins love these berries, as do the catbirds. The catbirds eat many berries, including those from invasive species. They introduced the glossy buckthorn and multi-flora rose to my property and helped spread the Oriental bittersweet vine. One happy bittersweet vine growing through and on top of a highbush blueberry needs to be extracted without spreading the bittersweet berries. Each berry could potentially become another quick-growing vine. Information on Oriental bittersweet is at https://www.agriculture.nh.gov/publications-forms/documents/oriental-bittersweet.pdf. Many of the invasive shrubs and vines are highly adaptable to impoverished soils, dry soils, and disturbed areas, making them a troublesome addition to the naturalized landscape.

The waning days of summer are represented in the flower garden as well. The colorful red and orange blossoms of July are being replaced by the yellows and whites of August. Black-eyed Susans, goldenrods, yarrow, and Queen Anne’s lace fill the naturalized garden, abandoned fields, and roadsides. Coreopsis, the prairie coneflower, and compass plant fill the drought-tolerant garden with bright lemon-yellows, and Jerusalem artichokes offer color to the edible garden. The ornamental grasses have grown tall and will soon offer miniature flowers and decorative seed heads from late-August through the fall.

Meanwhile, at the garden’s surface, miniature perennials have started from seed. The soil is littered with columbines, lupines, Japanese painted ferns, and hostas. Transplant season is almost here! The great debate is whether to move the little plants now, while the soil is dry and easy to dig, or when precipitation is typically more predictable, such as in early fall. If I’m transplanting lupines, milkweed, or other plants with long, delicate taproots, I may opt to move them into their permanent space in August while the soil is loose, providing I am able to water them until their roots adapt to the new soil. If I don’t have time to water, I’ll wait until late September or early October, the official transplant season, when Mother Nature can water them for me. I’m happy to see that many new perennials have successfully started from seed during this year

August’s Waning Days of Summer

with below-average precipitation. It’s unfortunate, however, that the declining number of early-season pollinators in the gardens have resulted in less seeds for next year’s gardens.

Summer may begin to wind down in August, but the gardens are still colorful, fruitful, and alive with flowers, insects, butterflies, and birds. Photos are at Facebook.com/wildandwoodsy.

Janine Marr is an advanced master gardener and forester apprentice in Cheshire County. She is available for consults at [email protected].

Woods andGardens

with Janine Marr