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Companion planting for healthy plants

Today I put more than half of my seedlings into my garden, plus sowed seeds into the spaces between them. I made a list of everything I had, then cosulted some companion planting guides to see what and what not to put together.
The benefits of companion planting is for natural pest control, soil health, root space, and shade. Certain plants can attract a particular pest that can be detrimental to that plant. Some plants can give off an odor, that repels those plats, so you want to plant them together.
Others plants do well with shade from tall plants above them, while some plants don't require much root space, so placing ones that do, make good use of soil space. Also, some plants put back a lot of say, nitrogen into the soil, so putting a plant that reqires nitrogen next to is beneficial to both.
In one row I planted all my cuke varieties along with spinach and sugar pumpkin. In another row, kales tomatoes, onions and strawberries

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Planting natives attracts Native pollinators

Vanessa virginiences, or American Lady on Liatrus Spicata, or Button Snakewort.
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Field trip to Pickity Place

Very old building, beautiful gardens, lovely luncheon

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Live Chat
November 29, 2020
The Little Book of Answers part 4(animals)

There are a lot of expressions that we hear now and then; most we think we know the origin of, some we don't. For the most part we just don't ponder the origin of commonplace expressions because they are... common. The first thing I discovered when beginning to read this little gem of a book, was not only hadn't I considered where many common sayings come from, but my preconceived idea of their origin was actually wrong! Kinda embarrassing, but guessing I may not be alone in this. I thought it would be of value then to share some tidbits from this book. Audio format is nice, as you can multitask while listening to this. This is my first attempt at recording reading a book, so any constructive criticism is welcome!

The Little Book of Answers part 4(animals)
Live Chat
November 16, 2020
The Little book of Answers part 3(holidays)

There are a lot of expressions that we hear now and then; most we think we know the origin of, some we don't. For the most part we just don't ponder the origin of commonplace expressions because they are... common. The first thing I discovered when beginning to read this little gem of a book, was not only hadn't I considered where many common sayings come from, but my preconceived idea of their origin was actually wrong! Kinda embarrassing, but guessing I may not be alone in this. I thought it would be of value then to share some tidbits from this book. Audio format is nice, as you can multitask while listening to this. This is my first attempt at recording reading a book, so any constructive criticism is welcome!

The Little book of Answers part 3(holidays)
Live Chat
November 09, 2020
The Little Book of Answers part 2

There are a lot of expressions that we hear now and then; most we think we know the origin of, some we don't. For the most part we just don't ponder the origin of commonplace expressions because they are... common. The first thing I discovered when beginning to read this little gem of a book, was not only hadn't I considered where many common sayings come from, but my preconceived idea of their origin was actually wrong! Kinda embarrassing, but guessing I may not be alone in this. I thought it would be of value then to share some tidbits from this book. Audio format is nice, as you can multitask while listening to this. This is my first attempt at recording reading a book, so any constructive criticism is welcome!

The Little Book of Answers part 2
Aphid galls on sumac

Cool! I've never noticed galls on staghorn sumac. Location: SE NH.
Melaphis rhois on Rhus typhina
https://bygl.osu.edu/node/1112

Lots of big zucchini this year

Happy garden with all the heat, humidity, and occasional rain.
I made a yummy zucchini chocolate bread for my sister's visit. Going to air fry some of what I just picked.

Nature's eye candy

Some nice shots from the Library garden that I volunteer to take care of.

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