Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... ·...

20
Home HudsonValley Home, Lawn & Garden MAY 18, 2017 ULSTER PUBLISHING WWW.HUDSONVALLEYONE.COM Lawns, flowers, veggies, Lawns, flowers, veggies, repairs, rentals and projects repairs, rentals and projects for the coming months for the coming months How does your garden grow?

Transcript of Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... ·...

Page 1: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

Home Hudson ValleyHome, Lawn & GardenMAY 18, 2017 • ULSTER PUBLISHING • WWW.HUDSONVALLEYONE.COM

Lawns, fl owers, veggies, Lawns, fl owers, veggies, repairs, rentals and projects repairs, rentals and projects for the coming monthsfor the coming months

How does your garden grow?

Page 2: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

2 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

40 ARLINGTON AVENUEPOUGHKEEPSIE, NY 12603

MONDAY – FRIDAY: 7:30AM – 5PMP (845) 471-1130 F (845) 471-2034

www.dutchessoverheaddoors.com

SALES • SERVICE • INSTALLATIONS

Never Look Back AgainControl your garage door opener from your smartphone. UPGRADE TODAY!

— June & July Summer Special —10% OFF SERVICE CALLS & ELECTRIC OPERATORS

Coupon Expires July 31, 2017. No Prior Orders.

From the Most Delicate Pruning to the Heaviest Removal, We Do it All With Care and Precision

• Pruning • Feeding• Spraying NYS LICENSE

• Trunk & Soil Injection• Appraising, Consulting • Storm Damage Repair

• Stump Grinding• Cabling & Bracing• Climbing & Bucket

• Fully Insured

845-255-8741Dwight Meyer Bayne CERTIFIED ARBORIST mountaintreecare.net

Preserving the beauty of Ulster County’s trees since 1974Preserving the beauty of Ulster County’s trees since 19747

Mountain Tree CareAstor Galleries presents an

Antique Appraisal DaySat., June 17th, 201710:00 AM - 4:00 PM

at The Unitarian Universalist Congregation,320 Sawkill Road, Kingston, NY

Astor Galleries will be bringing a team of recognized expert appraisers to Kingston

for another Antiques & Collectibles Appraisal Day.

SPECIAL GUEST APPRAISERS

The experts will appraise all types of Antiques, Collectibles and

Vintage Items including but not limited to the following:

• Fine Art: Paintings, Watercolors, Etchings, Lithographs, Sculpture, etc.

• Gold and Silver Coins• Fine Jewelry: gold, platinum,

silver, diamonds, etc.• Photography & Cameras• Silver; Flatware, bowls, trays,

tea sets, etc.• Toys and dolls• Hunting items: firearms, duck

decoys, etc.• Watches and clocks• Military, Guns & Weapons,

Uniforms, etc.• Musical Instruments• Clothing, Accessories and

Costume Jewelry• Scientific Instruments• Textiles: Oriental rugs,

tapestries, quilts, etc.• Books; 1st ed., signed, etc.• Country items: weather vanes,

crock pots, etc.• Historical documents• Chinese and Japanese Antiques

Fee: $10:00 per item or $25 for 3 items appraised. No Limits! No appointments needed.

A LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE AVAILABLE TO MAKE HOUSE

CALLS BY APPOINTMENT.

For more information email [email protected]

or Call (800) 784-7876

You can also submit photos through our website www.astorgalleries.com

via the $10 appraisal tab

For more information email [email protected]

or Call (800) 784-7876

STEPHEN CARDILELong time

appraiser andfounder of

Astor Galleries

MARA DEAN

Fine art appraiserat Astor Galleries

ALEX SALAZAR

Fine art consultant at

Astor GalleriesSe Habla Español

Page 3: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

3May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley |Ulster Publishing Co.

Meeting gardens halfway

Paul Smart fi nds inspiration and envy in all that’s outside

Gardens order the mind and

change the way we look at the worlds we inhabit. Here in the Hudson Valley and surrounding mountain ranges, we’re blessed with an intense growing season

that’s allowed some to mimic European gardening ideals. Others go for something a bit more Orien-tal, or attuned to the region’s natural wildness.

The eyes of early landscape painters made the region a symbol for both American wilderness and its taming. Later artists who channeled what they saw and felt into Tonalism, Modernism, and the less representational arts movements.

I look at what’s outside the way I approach the inside of my home. I seek a sense of order to help me prioritize and then accomplish the mix of as-signments and deadlines, edits and re-edits that make up my work week. Our family displays a similar push for order, and perhaps even calm.

We seek to maintain the lawn that flanks our bluestone front path and sidewalk. Various flow-erbeds and hanging pots splash color above the shrubs that adorn our porch and its pleasant, if underutilized, swing from which we watch cars pass. Out back, we augment a stunning view of mountains and some town with a raised-bed vegetable garden, several lines of shrubbery, and flowers that set a pattern for the tick-tock of the warmer seasons.

What’s around our home conjures other vistas, better gardens. Sometimes my wife or I can look out a window, or sit and contemplate a slice of view, and see remembered images from our pasts in the Midwest, Northeast, South or even Pacific Northwest. We’ve overnighted in other places where we wished to have stayed longer in parts of the world both urban and rural.

We replenish this idealized and internalized element of our home’s gardens each summer with trips to some of the great gardens within an easy drive from our home. We visit Innisfree, the grounds of the Institute for Ecosystem Studies near Millbrook, Stonecrop, and Russel Wright’s Manitoga near Cold Spring and Garrison. We love the great landscaped campuses at Vassar and Bard colleges, and Mohonk Mountain House (whose lushness is visible on this issue’s cover).

Much has been written about the Hudson Val-ley as the birthplace for American landscape ar-chitecture, with its grand mansions overlooking the river and the naturalistic creations of the great nineteenth-century landscape designers. Al-though many of the greatest gardens have faltered as those estates have become tourist draws, there’s still plenty to ogle at Clermont and Locust Grove, the Mills, Vanderbilt and Boscobel mansions, FDR’s Springwood, nearby Bellefield with its Bea-trix Farrand Garden, Wethersfeld or Wilderstein, Olana and Cedar Grove. And there’s nothing quite like the grand sculpture-festooned landscapes at Art Omi in Columbia County or Storm King in Orange County.

The best local gardens, however, remain the stuff of private invitations, enjoyed as the light grows magical in or just outside Rhinebeck and Wood-

stock, Hudson and New Paltz, or up in the Esopus, Rondout or other closed-in valleys. One’s sense of awe there can be nicely balanced by woeful tales about the many hard hours gone into creating and maintaining such beauty. Our feebler attempts at garden glory around our own home, livable in scale, are awarded their proper perspective.

What we like best about gardens is not how they add up against other gardens, but how they com-ment on and structure the ways in which we see what’s natural around us. We like being able to imagine order in wildness, but also a bit of wild-ness ordered into what’s right around us. That’s kindling for inspiration.

Gardening, from religion to reality, has meta-phoric attributes. It’s about making better what is. But it’s also about searching out what one wants

to inhabit, the same impulse inherent in looking at new homes with envy. Gardening is spring, and summer and autumn. Good gardens are us, espe-cially here in the Hudson Valley.

COURTESY OF WWW.BEATRIXFARRANDGARDENHYDEPARK.ORG

Legendary garden designer Beatrix Ferrand’s arrays at the historic Bellefi eld estate, located on the grounds of the FDR home in Hyde Park.

JEFF COLLINS STONE SUPPLYYOUR #1 SUPPLIER FOR NATURAL STONE

For Walls Walkways and Patios

Treads, Hearths and Veneers

Bluestone • Fieldstone • Waterfall

Belgum Block

• NOW SELLING WOOD PELLETS

• PICK UP OR DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Great Prices... Great Quality

29 Riseley Rd, Mt Tremper, NY

845-688-7423jeffcollinsstonesupply.com

• Garden Soils• Mulches• Crushed Stone & More

Sean Fox, Master StonemasonEstablished 1988

(845) 340-4289authenticstoneworks.com

QUALITY STONEWORK Archways Walls Capstones Fireplaces Stonetreads Stone Sculptures Curbstones Water Features Wallstone Walkways & Patios

Special Orders

AND SUPPLY 1968 Rte. 32, Modena NY • 845-234-5320

We deliver • Open to the public Open Monday to Friday 8-5, Saturday 8-2:30,

Sunday appointment only

NOW FILLING 20 lb BBQ tanks $16.99— Plus tax

Page 4: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

4 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

COURTESY OF WWW.MOHONK.ORG

Long pants are the best for those who wish to keep away ticks, but shorts are still the preferred uniform of professional gardeners, as seen worn by members of Mohonk Mountain House’s gardening team.

Back yards are the safest places to beLissa Harris contemplates a tick-free summer

Ah, summer

in the Cat-skills, those precious few months when we remember

why we choose to live here. The season of swimming holes and long, sun-span-gled afternoons is nearly upon us. I am stone-cold terrified.

You know what I’m talking about: Ticks. Unless you’ve been living at the bottom of the ocean without Inter-net for the past few months, you’re probably aware that the Northeast is gearing up for one of the worst tick seasons in memory. Accord-ing to the good folks at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, whose job it is to break bad news about oncoming plagues to an ecologically illiterate society, we can blame the current tick invasion on our oak trees.

Apparently 2015 was a good year for the oaks, which made a bumper crop of acorns, which led to an explosion in the population of mice, which were de-signed by a vengeful God to be perfect little mobile incubators for tick larvae. And so here we are in the summer of 2017, under siege from an enemy we cannot see, who carries a sword of pestilence and loves to hide in armpits.

In related news, 2017 may be the year I finally make good on my resolution to quit the cesspool

of social media. I’ve developed a thick skin about other people’s obnoxious politics — there’s no avoiding it these days, online or off — but I can’t handle the armchair entomologists. My Facebook friends keep posting pictures of ticks clinging to their pets, their children, their tender flesh, their screen doors, for God’s sake. One friend recently posted a photo of a tick she found on her coffee pot, for which I might not soon forgive her.

I may as well face facts, though. If this is going to be the kind of summer in which I have to square off against malevolent little babesiosis vectors just to get my morning caffeine, I am going to need to be prepared.

The first line of defense, of course, is pants. That I can handle. I’m a fan of pants from way back. I might draw the line at tucking them into my socks, for the sake of fashion, but it will probably take just one close encounter of the anklebiting

kind to get me on board with this hot retro-nerd look. Anyway, Kanye does it.

Repellent is going to be a factor in any of our off-road expeditions this year: either the DEET kind, which I’ve come to grudgingly regard as a necessary evil, or oil of lemon eucalyptus. Not all “natural” insect repellents actually work, but a quick search on PubMed turns up scientific evi-dence that this one does.

After several years of lax homeownership, I am determined to finally get serious about the yard — and if it takes a pest plague to get me to tackle the rampaging forsythia, so be it. Untrimmed grass and straggly bushes are havens for ticks. I have one of those environmentally friendly reel mowers — I love the quiet, old-fashioned snicking sound it makes, and also the smugness I feel — and so I’ve recently invested in a sharpening kit to keep it in top form.

PURE VITA RED BARN SOLID GOLD TASTE OF THE WILD TUSCAN ULTIMATES UNDER THE SUN THE HONEST KITCHEN WHOLESOMES ZIGNATURE

ACANA BLUE BUFFULO CANIDEA CALIFORNIA NATURAL CHICKEN SOUP DAVE DOGSWELL EAGLE EARTHBORN EVENGERS / FROMM

HOLISTIC SELECT NATURAL BALANCE NATURAL CHOICE NATURAL PLANET ORG. NV INSTINCT NV PRAIRIE NUTRO MAX NUTRO SOURCE ORIJEN PREMIUM EDGE

Lawn & Garden

EE VITA E VITA

Supplies

Now Offering

845-372-5650www.captainspotless.com

Window Cleaning • Power WashingGutter Cleaning • Soft Roof Wash

Residential Cleaning Services

m

DEVINE INSURANCECommercial & Personal

First in service... Best in price

DevineInsurance.com(845) 255-7806 (800) 805-0438

Page 5: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

5May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley |Ulster Publishing Co.

COURTESY NYC PUBLIC LIBRARY COLLECTIONS

Gone are the days when a rural cabin could exist on its own amidst nature, without accoutrements, as seen in this early 19th-century print of an Hudson Valley scene. Now, it seems, yard work is demanded of us all.

Editorial

WRITERS: Jennifer Brizzi, Lissa Harris,

Elisabeth Henry, Cally Mansfi eld,

Chris Rowley, Paul Smart, Lynn Woods

EDITOR: Paul Smart

COVER: Mohonk Mountain House’s renowned gardens

as summer peaks, supplied by www.mohonk.com

LAYOUT BY Joe Morgan

Ulster Publishing

PUBLISHER: Geddy Sveikauskas

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR: Genia Wickwire

DISPLAY ADS: Lynn Coraza, Pam Courselle,

Pamela Geskie, Elizabeth Jackson,

Ralph Longendyke, Sue Rogers,

Linda Saccoman

PRODUCTION MANAGER: Joe Morgan

PRODUCTION: Diane Congello-Brandes,

Josh Gilligan, Rick Holland

CLASSIFIED ADS: Amy Murphy, Tobi Watson

CIRCULATION: Dominic Labate

Home, Lawn & Garden is one of three Home Hudson

Valley supplements Ulster Publishing puts out each

year. It is distributed in the company’s four weekly

newspapers and separately at select locations,

reaching an estimated readership of over 50,000.

Its website is www.hudsonvalleyone.com. For more

info on upcoming special sections, including how to

place an ad, call 845-334-8200, fax 845-334-8202

or email: [email protected].

Home, Lawn & GardenMay 2017

An Ulster Publishing publication

I can’t bring myself to use conventional pesti-cides in the yard, no matter how dire the situation. Fortunately, there are other options. A big bag of diatomaceous earth, which kills ticks and insects by dehydration, is safe for humans and pets to eat, and can be had for a few dollars a pound at a local hardware store (to keep it from harming bees and other beneficial pollinators, don’t dust it directly on or around flowers). Those with less draconian local laws than mine — the Village of Margaret-ville outlaws all livestock — might also consider keeping backyard guinea hens. They’re noisy, but they’re also devastatingly efficient tick predators.

I love hiking, but in light of what the shrubbery holds I’m rethinking my outdoor recreation hab-its. This may be the year I get around to applying to the NYC DEP for a free permit to boat on the Pepacton, so I can sit in a kayak in the middle of 140 billion gallons of water, serene in the knowl-edge that I am about as far from the nearest Ixo-des scapularis as it is possible to be in Delaware County.

Last but not least, there’s acceptance. I plan to spend many hours this summer basking on

the porch with a copy of Thomas Merton’s “The Wisdom of the Desert,” a favorite antidote to the cruelty of the world. And if that fails to get me suf-ficiently zen, there’s always a cocktail I invented with some visiting friends at a Fourth of July shin-dig a couple of years ago. We’ve dubbed it Any Port In A Storm, and it goes like this:

Muddle sliced raw ginger in bottom of glass. Add ice and dark rum (Gosling’s or Kraken is

good).Top with a sploosh of Goya passionfruit cocktail.Finish it off with a generous wedge of lime.Contemplate the benevolence of the universe.

• Swimming Pool Wiring• Backyard Lighting• Ceiling Fans• Service Upgrades• Standby Generators

Stoneridge Electrical Service, Inc.Your Full Service Electrical Contractors

www.stoneridgeelectric.com

331-42275-year warranty — best in the industry!

0% Interest for 24 monthsif qualified

Tillson Bird Watchers Country Store

IT’S TIME TO PUT YOUR HUMMINGBIRD FEEDERS OUT!Bird Seed • Feeders • Houses • Baffles Bat

Houses • Shepherds Hooks Puzzles • Games • Notecards

844 Rte. 32 Tillson, NY • 845.332.9525OPEN: Thurs – Sat 10-6 / Sun 11-4

Advanced Aluminum RailingsInstallation & sales of Aluminum, Wrought Iron, Glass, Wood and Cable Railings(845) 901-9246Rhinebeck, NY • [email protected]

Visit us on

Page 6: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

6 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

Cultivating vegetables and community

Lynn Woods explores Kingston’s new urban farms

Across the street from the gray

and brick industrial buildings of the Binnewater Ice Company, the South Pine Street City Farm is bringing a touch of the country to the hard-scrabble Midtown section of King-

ston. Farmers Joel Zenie and Trish Hawkins tend the rows of seedlings, a combination of greens, vegetables such as peppers, peas, beans and gar-lic, and herbs like parsley, dill and a few others planted in hay-strewn beds filling their quarter-acre plot. In a few weeks, they’ll be open for busi-ness, selling their lettuce and other early-season crops from a farmstand out front.

Approximately half a mile away, KayCee Wim-bish is tending her third of an acre at the Kingston YMCA Farm Project, located behind the YMCA parking lot. Three Kingston High School seniors, interns getting credit toward their diploma, are helping her. Wimbish, a former teacher who left New York City to work on a farm in Tivoli, ended up with her own farm. She moved to Kingston with her partner and child in hopes of combining her teaching experience with farming — “to use farming and food as a community-builder,” as she puts it.

Following a season at the South Pine Street City Farm, leased by the Kingston Land Trust from its owner, Binnewater, Wimbish broke ground and raised funds for the new urban farm at the Y in 2013. Besides the old standbys, she is planting hot peppers, tomatillos and herbs reflecting the cul-ture and tastes of Midtown’s Hispanic population. She’ll sell the produce in the Y lobby starting June 1 as well as from a trailer attached to a bicycle she rides around town. She’ll set up at the library, hos-pital, and two senior-citizen residences, Yosman Towers and the Governor Clinton Apartments.

Kingston community gardens have also sprout-ed up next to the Clinton Avenue Methodist Church, the Rondout Gardens public housing project, and two elementary schools. This sum-mer, even Broadway itself will be turned into a fresh-food producer. Under the guidance of Bry-ant Drew Andrews, executive director of Creative Center of Education, which hosts dance, fitness and music classes and activities, the kids at CCE will nurture hydroponically grown fruits and veg-etables from eight buckets placed along a stretch of the main drag, creating what Andrews calls “an edible sidewalk.” He will also be assisting at the community garden at the Everette Hodge Center, which provides after-school activities for children and teens.

Back in the 1940s and 1950s, many King-

stonians grew vegetables and tended chickens in their back yards. My neighbor Gene Lowe, who grew up in my house on

Hone Street, tells me that the soil in my sloping back yard was well fertilized by the decades of chicken manure deposited there. Some residents are once again tending vegetable gardens, but now apartment dwellers can also get their hands dirty by adopting a bed in one of the community gardens. Everyone in the city benefits, by being able to purchase produce in the summer and fall that’s about as fresh and local as you can get.

Kingston even has its own CSA farm (it’s actu-ally just over the border in Ulster). A couple of hundred acres of Esopus Creek floodplain, re-cently bought up by Northeast Farm Access, LLC, funded by a dozen investors, are being leased to four farmers, one of whom is Creek Iversen.

Iversen’s 30-acre organic and pesticide-free Seed Song Farm is selling shares for $17 a week. He’s growing traditional U-pick crops and several kinds of berries and Jerusalem artichokes. He’s planted a Native American-style garden featuring the Three Sisters (corn, squash and beans). In the spirit of community that’s taken the city by storm, he is encouraging beekeepers to locate along the edges of his “agro-ecological farm.”

Jon’s Bread, for whom Iversen is growing grains, is building a pizza oven on the premises. There’ll be meals, music jams, blackberry-jam making, forest foraging, Native American ceremonies and other events at the farm, which is open to all.

Back in Midtown, Zenie and Hawkins

also are strong on community. They wel-come volunteers who can help weed and

man the farmstand on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays (starting May 31, they’ll be open from 3 to 7 p.m.). Starting in June, a yoga class will be offered on Wednesday from 6 to 7 p.m. Kids from the Boys and Girls Club will visit once a week to work on the farm. Two Adirondack-style chairs placed in the garden encourage meditative sitting. Picnic tables and chairs shaded by a massive ma-ple tree behind the farm will be used for Kingston Land Trust events.

The couple’s main focus, however, is producing

organic, pesticide-free produce, which this year will include raspberries, blackberries and goose-berries. They source most of their organic seeds from Johnny’s Selected Seeds in Maine, supple-mented by seeds from the Hudson Valley Seed Bank. They grow most of the seedlings under lights at their home in Uptown Kingston. Much of their effort has gone into nurturing the soil, which was brought in from elsewhere.

Along with compost, coffee grounds and leaves ground up in their leaf blower, they’ve added soy-bean meal to the beds. After soil tests revealed a slight deficit in potassium, they added powdered kelp, which Zenie said helps strengthen the plants’ roots and protects against disease. They cover the beds in straw to preserve the nutrients, which oth-erwise might be leached out by the air and pound-ing rain. They’ve cut the vines that had grown over the fence to help keep out the critters.

Organic neem oil, from a plant grown in India, is sprayed on the plants to prevent the leaves from insect damage. Water is provided from a spigot at-tached to one of the Binnewater buildings.

Zenie, who grew up in Westchester County, took courses at Hawthorne Valley Farm and then volunteered at an organic farm near Ellenville in 2013. “I got used to hard work,” he said. One of the biggest challenges is the variability in timing of various crops, which don’t always grow on sched-ule. And the weeding on a pesticide-free farm is constant, he added.

Hawkins was a member of Circle Repertory, a theater company in New York City (resident play-wright Lanford Wilson won multiple awards). She continues to work as an actor, theater director and writer. Witnessing Zenie “finding meaning in his work” inspired her to get involved in farming. “We kept looking at pieces of land around town .… Af-ter walking by this place one fall … we got in touch with the Kingston Land Trust and asked if we could take it over,” she said. (The farm, launched by the KLT in 2010, was farmed by a succession of people until Zenie and Hawkins took over in 2014.)

Besides selling from its stand, South Pine Street supplies several Uptown restaurants (Outdated, Sissy’s and Duo Bistro) with produce. Though they have yet to make a profit, Hawkins is hopeful they might make a small one this year.

PHOTOS BY LYNN WOODS

Kingston’s new ag scene is similar to what’s been transpiring in recent years in major metropolises around the nation, including Detroit, New York City and even our state capital in Albany.

T.J.’s Excavation

Commercial • Residential • ExcavationBulldozing • Backhoe • Trucking

Screened Top Soil • MulchSawmill Lumber Available • Firewood

845-626-3119Delivery Available

J “We Dig Our Work!”

Page 7: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

7May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley |Ulster Publishing Co.

Prices are reasonable. While seniors can use vouchers from the Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program to pay for the produce, few do (Hawkins speculates the somewhat cumbersome process of applying for a voucher, which amounts to only $25 a summer, may be the reason). Low-income customers can use SNAP vouchers, the fresh-food equivalent of food stamps.

Few of the immediate neighbors shop at the stand, which Hawkins attributes to the high level of poverty in the area and a lack of knowledge of fresh food and how to cook it. To entice more peo-ple to the stand, this year she plans to set up her gas-powered burner and offer samples of sautéed greens, kale salad and other dishes. The couple also plans to distribute more brochures and flyers, in addition to maintaining their Facebook page.

Last year, Ted Griese, who resides in a

second-story apartment in Uptown with his girlfriend, Gabriel Grigoli, got involved in

South Pine, planting flowers in an area overgrown with strawberries. He sold his cut flowers and edible flowers at the stand. He also supplied the Lunchbox with nasturtiums and borage.

He did so well he’s expanding his plantings this year. “Because a lot of flowers [sold commercially] aren’t local, there’s definitely a place for local flow-ers,” Griese said. He’s just planted a four-foot row of sunflowers along the border of the farm with the Binnewater parking lot. It’s a way to beautify the space.

Griese, who graduated from SUNY New Paltz in 2013 and spent a summer in Michigan work-ing on his father’s farm, works full-time at home. (Grigoli works full-time as a production manager at a wholesale food distributor at Tech City). He tended a bed at a community garden in New Paltz before tiring of the commute and looked for urban garden opportunities in Kingston.

Griese also tends two beds of flowers at the Rondout Gardens Community Garden and grows veggies on two private properties in Kingston, with the right to sell whatever he grows.

“I love being able to pick what I want, which lasts much longer than stuff you get anywhere else,” he explains. “It’s really satisfying personally to watch a seed you planted grow and produce.”

He also finds weeding meditative. “I put on headphones.” He hopes to grow his urban farming into a business and is considering also selling his flowers this year from a mobile stand.

Wimbish, who spent the summer of

2013 breaking ground and fundraising at the YMCA farm, is in her second season

this year. Once her current helpers have graduated from high school, she’ll have a summer crew of up to eight workers, paid by the county-run summer youth employment program, followed by a fall crew. Elementary-school students, mainly from George Washington School, take field trips to the farm and cooked with Wimbish over the winter.

She is helping Chambers Elementary School get its school garden back up and running.

“Younger kids are so excited. Everything’s very magical and wonderful and they’re willing to try new things,” she explained. With teens, the chal-lenge is “finding the hook to try to make it excit-ing and relevant.” She’s taking them on field trips to Hudson Valley Harvest, a local food processor and distributor at Tech City, as part of an effort “to grow a local food movement and introduce young people to different opportunities in that move-ment.”

Her farmstand will be open in the Y lobby starting June 1 on Thursday from 3:30 to 6 p.m. Tuesday at the same time she’ll be at one of the HealthAlliance hospitals (she’ll alternate cam-puses each week starting June 13 at the Broadway campus) and the Kingston Library. On Wednes-day her schedule will take her to Yosman Towers and the Governor Clinton Apartments. The idea behind the mobile stand is “to go where people al-ready are,” she said, especially seniors, who may not be that mobile and might be restricted in their access to fresh produce.

Like South Pine, the Y farm also is organic and uses no pesticides. Because she is a paid employee of the Y, she said, “I have the luxury of being able to make choices and not spray anything. My costs are low, and if I lose a crop it’s not the end of the world.”

Wimbush encourages people to visit the farm for the sheer beauty and serenity. The verdant garden located in the middle of town is part of a little-known greenbelt that extends to the Wilt-wyck Cemetery.

As steward of the Rondout and Clinton

Avenue Methodist Church community gar-dens, Karen Miller is reaching out to low-

income residents. It’s been a challenge so far. She distributed flyers to each of the 131 apartments at the public housing project advertising the avail-ability of a free bed at the Rondout Gardens com-munity garden. Only three residents got involved, along with another three people in the commu-nity. (Each recipient signs an agreement that they will keep the garden weeded, will plant it by July, and otherwise maintain it)

A total of 15 beds out of 20 will be planted this year. Miller volunteers her services, and the city’s parks and recreation department does mowing and other maintenance work.

“I have a passion to see that people have suc-cess,” she said. “My hope is that people from the apartments will see how the gardens take off, and word will spread.” The YMCA is donating some seedlings to get started, and residents can use their SNAP vouchers for low-priced plants.

At the Clinton Avenue garden, Miller started helping out a couple of years ago by doing the composting. That garden has a dozen beds, of which ten are adopted. The charge is $5 to the church for a season.

One of the gardeners “created hothouses out of old windows that were being thrown out,” Miller said proudly. “It’s amazing what he’s doing there. His wife is ill, and he says it’s therapy for him.”

The ARC will help her with raking and cleaning up, and the Dig Kids are volunteering as well. “I’ve made a decision to keep the gate open,” she said. “People are enjoying this garden. They take care of it, and it really is for the neighborhood to enjoy.”

Julia Farr, executive director at the Kingston Land Trust (KLT), said the trust hopes to build on the South Pine Street City Farm model by match-ing up more farmers with private landowners. Three individual landowners have approached the KLT about allowing someone else to cultivate their land. “There’s an influx of young people who want to be connected with the land and commu-nity,” said Farr, who joined the KLT four months ago as its first full-time paid director.

Farr moved to Kingston from Brooklyn, which abounds with urban farms and community gar-dens and also benefits from the resources of New York City’s parks department, which employs nine landscape architects. Kingston lacks those resources. KLT is helping fill the gap by working closely with the city to help promote and activate urban green spaces.

“Right now we’re small, but we can help to con-nect the dots,” Farr said. “I plan to grow the orga-nization and identify the needs and resources that can be better utilized by the public.”

Urban gardening is best handled, Kingstonites have found, utilizing raised beds to maximize space.

GET READY FOR FALL CLEANUP!Rent the Tools the PROS Use• Lawn Aerator • Sod Cutter • Lawn Dethatcher • Garden Tillers • Stump Grinders

CALL to find out what we carry

Why Buy... When you can RENT?!SALES & SERVICE OPEN: MON. - FRI. 8AM TO 5PM SAT. 8AM TO NOON

NOWRenting Dumpsters! Construction, Remodeling & Spring Cleaning!

Page 8: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

8 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

Siren song of the seasons Elisabeth Henry goes to nature, as did John Burroughs, to be soothed and healed

“I will never live in Manhattan

again. I have to have my hands in dirt.” This statement was made by a woman at a film shoot I visited. She had come to this area decades ago to sell property bequeathed to her by elderly relatives.

And then she stayed. She had made a very nice liv-ing as a working actress/vocalist when she lived in Manhattan. She was often booked and flown first-class to LA.

Lately this area has attracted lots of filmmakers. So that’s how she found herself once again in front of the camera. What makes a girl give up the glitz and the glamour of life on the set for toiling in the fields?

“I dunno,” she shrugged in answer to that very question. “But I will tell you this. I am very wor-ried about this year’s apple crop. Last year was terrible. Have you checked the forecast? Snow on Tuesday. There go the blossoms.”

She glowered at her reflection in the mirror. That’s when the make-up lady shooed me from the room.

To live here, in the valley of this great river, on the high peaks of these ancient mounds, is to live very directly with the forces of the natural world. The winters are beautiful, but brutal. One cannot ignore the cold.

When spring comes at last, the relief of sunshine and warmth lures everybody outside. The starved senses revel in daffodil yellow, tender new grass-green, the scent of lilacs and lilies of the valley.

You wanna make more, so you order catalogues. I know. Just take a peek in to my powder room.

Fedco, David Austen Roses, and Harris Seeds are just a few of the companies that correspond with me regularly. I love thumbing through them, especially those like Fedco, which are loaded with cool drawings and tips for gardeners.

The downside to browsing through catalogues is that one can become gobsmacked, and go tilting off into a spending spree on stuff you don’t need. Like that rotating composter that sits in my hus-band’s big barn. Think: church raffle. The thing is supposed to turn on a spindle, like the raffle barrels do, but there’s a hitch. Raffle tickets don’t freeze. Composting leftovers from Thanksgiving dinner do.

And then the rotating composter becomes just another plastic object in the back yard, frozen in place and impossible to open. It becomes covered with snow. Because you can’t use it, you forget it’s there. Your husband tries to shovel a path and breaks his snow shovel on your useless composter, giving him one more reason he never thought the Equal Rights Amendment was a good idea.

The composter will be featured in My

Yard Sale, coming to you sometime soon. It will be an epic event, I promise you. My en-

tire attic is stuffed with the trivia needed in com-munity theater productions and child-rearing in the 1990s. Included are a megaphone the size of a stepladder left over from my high-school cheer-leading days, photographs from my grandmother’s first love affair (he died in WWI), countless tubes of wrapping paper, old suitcases, the Remington manual typewriter upon which I learned to ply my trade, an authentic wall telephone (made of oak) that could possibly still work, the little dresses my first-born wore to kindergarten in Manhattan, lit-tle shoes, Easter hats, and luggage from the 1930s.

Unfortunately, I threw out all my club clothes when I became pregnant the first time. So sorry. No tube tops. However, if tube tops are your pas-sion, I’m sure it’ll be only a matter of time before you find trunkfuls of them at yard sales or thrift stores. We are rich in them.

One of my friends, who moved here for a little while to recover from a bad love affair or from al-coholism (I’m not sure which was the more devas-tating), haunted yard sales. She had learned that Todd Rundgren had once lived nearby, and she was sure that if she found out exactly where, she was certain to find his lavish collection of platform shoes. Sadly, I don’t believe she succeeded. Oh, she got over whatever was ailing her, but without the platforms.

Just today I visited my town’s church thrift store. There I found a United States flag used to drape a coffin. (Not rated to hang off a flagpole. Too heavy. One stiff wind and the pole snaps. Lawsuit to fol-low.) A corset. Brand-new in-the-box teeth whit-ening kits. A salt and pepper mill, rather soiled but completely full of Himalayan salt and black pepper corns. Authentic Uggs. Rather large sti-lettos that just might find their way to some drag queen’s heart. (These hills are alive with savory secrets.) An electric coffee pot that the lady who bought it swears was in last night’s dream.

I left my wallet at home, knowing the tempta-

tions. I went to visit with the ladies, who are the gentlest of souls and the most generous of human beings. Like wildflowers, the shop opens in spring and summer, but only then. It is such a guilty plea-sure. One is sure to find just the thing one didn’t know one needed. Like a special tool for putting in flower bulbs, because every sun-filled day is rare and fleeting, and we want to make the most of it, and we all want to get back to the garden.

Every county in New York State has a

Cornell Cooperative Extension office, which holds a treasure trove of possibilities for the

gardener. Sometimes they sell plants and trees there. Ulster County even has a special facility dedicated to the study and propagation of fruit trees.

Look for nurseries and garden centers that spe-cialize in plants that thrive here. Give yourself and your garden a fighting chance.

There are monks that live on a desolate island in the North Sea. They are able to grow much of their own food by listening to the earth. They say the plants tell them where they should be planted. The monks are obviously vibrating to an entirely different turning fork than the rest of us, but the principle of working with nature does reap the most rewards.

We planted 250 apple trees twelve years ago. If

WIKICOMMONS

What’s more inviting than a summer yard sale? Perhaps storage units in which to stash all one’s bought over the years?

PUBLIC DOMAIN PHOTO

Apple trees are said to have been the base upon which American civilization was built. But you have to plant them in the right places, our author found.

Page 9: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

9May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley |Ulster Publishing Co.

How Do You See Your

See Your Possibilities:

Apply Today! mhvfcu.com/equity

Home Equity LoanHome Equity Line of Credit

%APR

* %APR

*1.99FOR FIRST 12 MONTHS FOR FIRST 12 MONTHS

*See Branch For Details

Unilock PaversWeber Grills

Benjamin MoorePaint & Décor

Scotts ProductsLawn Furniture

for coupon savings visit Herzogs.com

Power Equipment& Service

Lavender LadyLilac Nursery

Unique private nursery that specializes in lilacs; over 75 varieties to choose from, in all 7 color classes!

Weekends or by appt. New Paltz 845-464-2948

www. LavenderLadyLilacNursery.com

Page 10: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

10 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

845845--255255--4900 4900 WWW.WWW.CC22GG.US.US Call or Visit us online for a FREE Price Quote! E Price Quote!

CC22G offers Custom Oil Tank Packages G offers Custom Oil Tank Packages Available with up to 30 Year Warranties!Available with up to 30 Year Warranties!

IS IT TIME TO REPLACE IS IT TIME TO REPLACE YOUR OIL TANK?YOUR OIL TANK?

“50% of bare steel tanks will develop leaks within 15 years.”

-The American Petroleum Institute. Pricing starts as low asPricing starts as low as

$2,325.00$2,325.00

CCall or

PrPrPr

*some restrictions may apply.

GO SOLAR ASK ABOUT INCENTIVES FOR HOME

OWNERS

On Central Air Systems and

Ductless Units

FREE NYSERDA / BPI ENERGY AUDITSVisit www.kooltemp.com

888-811-326524 HOUR SERVICE

INTERIOR DESIGNby MARIA R. MENDOZA

New York State CertifiedInterior Designer

Full-service Interior Design

Complimentary Consultation

Furniture, Lighting, Home Decor, Tabletop, Accessories

Custom Window Treatments, Curtains, Reupholstery

Window Shades & Blinds

Wallpaper, Designer Fabrics, Area Rugs

Skincare, Bath & Body Products, Fragrances, Gifts

Woodstock845-679-2040

Rhinebeck845-516-4443

Kingston845-338-0800

[email protected] | www.marigold-home.com

BOICE’SFarm & Garden Stand

600 Kings Highway 0 Saugerties NY 12477(845) 246-1160 • [email protected]

Large Selection of Hanging Baskets,

Perennials, Annuals, Herbs

Great Novelty Gifts Open 7 Days 9-6 pm

The Healthiest Plants at the Best Prices

Let our expertise pave the way for you!Great Job...Done Right!

Paving • Sealcoating • Crack Sealing • Line StripingCommercial & Residential

Paul Pinkerous, owner612 Oak Ridge RoadEllenville, NY 12428

phone (845) 701-6013fax (845) 853-1660

only we had paid closer attention to the features in the greater landscape. There are very few apple trees where I live, and those that thrive are wild apples. Most of our trees have died.

Our property is densely covered in wild berry plants, and the blueberry bushes we planted have lived and grown and produced like crazy. Berries love it here.

Despite the disappointments, my apple orchard

has taught me a lot. Apple trees blossom in ear-ly-to-mid- May. Traditionally, a jet stream flows out of Canada during that time. The old farmers called this The Blackberry Winter. If that cold air coincides with the blossoms — this needs only a day or two to manifest — the apple crop will be stunted. This year, this May, the grey, cold weath-er has been prolonged. But every year we have at least three days like this. Watch and see next year.

I have photos of white snow encircling my jade-green pond in early May, when my second daugh-ter was born.

The Farmer’s Almanac, which arrives in every Christmas stocking in my house, has a feature called

Planting by the Moon. I follow it. No scientific explanation accompanies the recommendations, but I’ve learned to heed the advice of farmer friends. They live within nature, they know it by sight, by smell, by feel, by sound.

One friend, a lady farmer, can tell you when it will rain, days ahead of the precipitation. She can interpret the clouds, the rays of the sun, and the sounds of the insects.

I love the simple logic that says you’ll never be bothered by too many caterpillars if you plant flowers that butterflies like to eat, because they do not use those plants for breeding. However, you should offer them stinging nettles (They are weeds, they’ll find you.) because butterflies like to lay eggs in stinging nettles. Make a little patch for them.

Bees prefer the color blue, so plant borage. Add-ed bonus? Borage plants near your tomato plants will confuse the bugs that plague tomato plants, and anecdotally borage plants improve the vigor and taste of your tomatoes. After the full moon in May, plant beets, potatoes, turnips, carrots and onions.

The feminine sign of Taurus dominates until the 21st. After that, it’s the time to destroy unwanted plant life and weeds all during the sign of Gemi-ni, until the return of the eternal feminine in late June.

We who live in this part of the world have inher-ited a great and tender love of the outdoors. “I go to nature to be soothed and healed, and to have my senses put in order,” wrote John Burroughs, the first of the great American nature writers and a local guy.

Age steers our passions. The death of my beau-tiful three-year-old filly a year ago was very hard for me. I accept that death and decay are a part of life, only more grudgingly now. I loved that horse. I bred that horse, born on Mother’s Day.

While I fuss over the little seedlings in my gar-den, I happily cut my roses and daylilies and lav-ender for my favorite vases. I will greedily harvest my peppers and pumpkins and tomatoes with my mouth watering. The latter actually volunteered to grow in the compost heap of the horse manure!

As Maxine Kumin announced gaily in “An In-sider’s View of the Garden,” I too want to warn my edible feats, “For all of you, whether eaten or ex-tirpated/ I plan to spend the rest of my life on my knees.”

Page 11: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

11May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley |Ulster Publishing Co.

ChoresIt eats

Breakfast.for

$33000% 72Financing* Months Cash Back* (T-L-B )

UP TO

doddododododo iiiiittttt... WiWiWiWiWiWiththththtth ffffffeaeaeaeaeaeatututututurererereres s sss gagagagagalololololorererererere aaaaandndndndndnd aaaaa ccccclilililililimamamamamatetetetete cccccononononontrtrtrtrtrtrololololllollelelelelel d d d d d enenenenenvivivivivirororororoonmnmnmnmnmn enenenenent,t,t,t,t, ccccchohohohohoh rererereresssssdododododon’n’n’n’n’t t t tt stststststanananananddddd aaaaa chchchchchananananancecececece..... FoFoFoFoFor r r r r a a a a a lililililimimimimimiteteteteted d d dd tititititimememememe,,,, gegegegegettttt 0%0%0%0%0%% FFFFFinininininananananancicicicicingngngngngg uuuuuup p p p p totototototo 777772 2 22 2 momomomomontntntntntthshshshshs****

ororororor ccccchohohohohoososososose e eee upupupupup ttttto o o oo $3$3$3$3$3303030303000000 cacacacacashshshshsh bbbbbacacacackkkkk****. . ToToToToTop p p p p ititititit oooooffffffffff wwwwwititititith h hhh KIKIKIKIKIOTOTOTOTOTI’I’I’I’I’ss s s s 6 6 6 6 6 yeyeyeyeyeararararar uuuunlnlnlnlnlimimimimimitititititededededed hohohohoh ururururur**** iiiiindndndndndususususustrtrtrtrtryy y y y leleleleleadadadadadinininining g g g g wawawawawarrrrrrrrrrananananantytytytyty aaaaandndndndnd yyyyyououououou ccccanananann’t’t’t’t bbbbbeaeaeaeat t t t t ititititit. . . . LeLeLeLeLearararararnnnnn momomomomorerererere aaaaabobobobobob ututututut ththththhe e ee CKCKCKCKCK1010101010SESESESESE SSSSSerererererieieieieies s s ss ananananandddd thththththisisisisis oooooffffffffffererererer aaaaat t t t t yoyoyoyoyoururururur aaaaaautututututhohohohohoh riririririr zezezezezeddddd KIKIKIKIKIOTOTOTOTOTIIIII TrTrTrTrTracacacacactototototor r rr r DeDeDeDeDealalalalalererererer.....

© 2017©2017© 2017© 2017 KIOTIKIOTIKIOTIKIOTI TractTractTractTractTractor Comor Comor Comor Comor Company apany apany apany apany a DivisDivisDivisDiDivisDivision ofon ofion ofion ofion ofion ofion of DaedoDaedoDaedoDaedoDaedoD ng-USAng-USAng-USAng-USAng-USAUSA, Inc., Inc.Inc, Inc., Inc.

*Offer*Offer*Offer*Offer*Offer availavailavailavaii able Aable Aable Aable Al Apppril 1pril 1pril 1, 2017, 2017,, 2017 – Jun– Jun– June 30, e 30, e 30, e 303 2017. 2017. 2017. 2017 CannotCannotannotannotCannot be cobe cobe cobe cobe combinedmbinedmbinedmbinedmbined with with with withwith tany otany otany otany other ofer ofher ofher ofher offer. Ofer. Ofer. Ofer. Ofer ffer bffer bffer bffer bffer based oased oased oased oased n then then then thehe purchapurchapurchapurchapurchase of se of se of se ose of eligibeligibeligibeligibeligiblllle equie equie equie equie equie pment pment pmentpmentpment definedefinedefinedefinedefined in pd in pd in pd in pd in promotiromotiromotiromotiromotional ponal ponal ponal ponal programrogramrogramrogramrogramg . Addi. Addi. Addi. Addi. Additionaltionaltionaltionaltiona fees fees fees fees may apmay apmay apmay apayy ply.ply.ply.ply.plyPricinPricinPricinPricinPricinnPric g, payg payg pg payg, payg, payg, p ments ments ments ments mme and moand moand moand momand models mdels mdels mdels mdels may varay varay varay varayay vary by dy by dy by dy by dy by dealer.ealer.ealer.ealer.ealer. CustCustCustCustCustomers omers omeomers omers er must tmust tmust tust tmust ttake deake deake deake deake deliveryliveryliveryliveryeery priorpriorpriorpriorprior to thto thto thto thto the end e end e end e end e end f thof theof theof theof the progrprogrprogrrprogram peram peram peam period. Siod. Siod. Siod. Sod. Some cuome cuome cuome cuome customerstomerstomerstomerstomers wills wis wills wills will not qnot qnot qnot qot qualifyualifyualifyualifyualify. Some. Some. Some. Some. Some restrrestrrestrrestrres ictionictionictionictions appls appls appls appls apply. Finy. Finy. Finy. Finy Financingancingancingancingancing subjesubjesubjesubjesubjectct ct ct ctto creto creto creto creto credit apdit apdit apdit apdit approvalprovalprovalprovalprova . Off. Offe. Offe. OffeOffer avar avair avair avair available lable lablelable lable on newon newon newon newon new equipequipequipequipequipment oment oment oment oment only. Pnly. Pnly. Pnly. Pnly Prior prior prior prior prior urchasurchasurchasurchasurchases arees arees arees arees are not enot enot enot enot eligiblligibligiblligiblligible. 6e. 6e. 6e. 6e. 6 Year WYear WYear WYear WYear Warrantarrantarrantarrantarranty for y for y for y foror Non-CoNon-CoNon-CoNon-Commercimmercimmercimmercimmercial, real, real, real, real, residentsidentsidensidentsi ial usial usial usl usial use onlye onlye onlye onlyonly. 6 Ye. 6 Ye. 6 Ye. 6 Ye. 6 Year Warar Warar Warar WarWarranty ranty ranty ranty applieapplieapplieapplies to Cs to Cs to Cs to CS, CK1S, CK1S, CK1S, CK 0, DK10, DK10, DK1K110 and0 and0 and0 and0 andNX modNX modNX modNX moNX model KIOel KIOel KIOK TI traTI traTI traI tractors ctors ctors orctors and muand muand muand muand m st best be st be st be be purchapurchapurchapurchapurchased ansed ansed aned ansed and regid regid regid regid registeredsteredsteredsteredstered betwebetwebetwebetwebetween Sepen Sepen Sepen Sepen Septembertembertembertembertember 1, 201, 201, 201, 201 16 - 16 - 16 - 16 - 1 June 3June 3June 3ne 3June 30, 2010, 2010, 2010, 2010, 20 7. Off7. Off7. Off7. Off. Offer valer valer valer valer id onlid onlid onlid only at py at py at py at pparticiarticiarticiarticiarticipatingpatingpatingpatingpating DealeDealeDealeDealeDe rs. Ofrs. Ofrs. Ofrs. Ofr fer sufer sufer sufer sue bject bject bject bjectbject to chato chato chato chato chao change winge winge winge winge win thout thout thout thout thout noticenoticenoticenoticenoticen . See. See. See. SeeSee youryour your your dealerdealerdealerdealerealerdealer for dfor dfor dfor dfor detailsetailsetailsetailsetails. Pric. Pric. Pric. Pric. Pricing ining ining ining ining in USDUSDUSDUSD.USD.

Kioti.com

CK10 Series

2786 CHURCH ST., RT. 199, PO BOX 344, Pine Plains, NY 12567TEL: 518-398-7107 FAX: 518-398-1669

EMAIL: [email protected]

BUSINESS HOURS:MONDAY - FRIDAY 8:00 - 5:00 • SATURDAY 8:00 - 12:00

GENERATORSULTRA CLEAN H E AT I N G O I LPROPANE GAS AIR CONDITIONING

Main-Care Energy

100% Employee Owned.

1.800.542.5552

[email protected]

www.MainCareEnergy.com

You will never know how good we are until you need us!

Open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year for all your home comfort needs.

Since 1930, a proven history of prompt reliable service.

Comprehensive equipment service plans.

Why wait? Let us show you how we can help.

WE ARE

ALWAYS

AROUND

Page 12: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

12 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

CLOSED TUESDAYSRT 9W ULSTER PARK

339-7229

www.theapplebinfarmmarket.com

Homegrown seasonal fruits and veggies, pies, gift items, local products...

breakfast sandwiches, Thumanns deli, cider donuts, coffee, gluten free items...And more!

A Higher Orderof Plant Life

SERVING THE HUDSON VALLEY FOR OVER 45 YEARS1402 ROUTE 300 NEWBURGH, NY • 845-564-6710

MONDAY – FRIDAY 8:30AM-5PM | SATURDAY 9AM-2PM | CLOSED SUNDAYS

845-564-6710SHERWOODTILEANDGRANITE.COM

See us for all your flooring needsFURNITURE

FABULOUSSteve Heller’s

cutting edgeautos

live edge furniture

space ageartifacts

3930 ROUTE 28 BOICEVILLE NY 12412

[email protected] • 845.750.3035

Come see what the hullabaloo has always been about!

10 minutes from Woodstock!

OPEN WED thru SUN 9am-6pm

GALLERY + SCULPTURE PARK

fabulousfurnitureon28.com

Fresh Fruits & Vegetables • Bakery

THE GARDENER’S PLACE TO BE!• Flowering Annuals• Huge Selection of Perennials• Vegetable Plants and Herbs• Trees, Shrubs & Rose Bushes• Gifts and Supplies for Gardening• Bulk Mulch, Compost & Top Soil

Open 7 Days 9 - 6:30Rte. 299W, New Paltz • 255-8050

Earn Loot thru 6/13. Redeem 6/14 to 6/27

Garden Rewards Club: Members Earn & Redeem Loot Points Automatically! Join Today!

W a r d ’ s N u r s e r y & G a r d e n C e n t e r 600 S Main St . - Great Barr ington, Mass.4 1 3 - 5 2 8 - 0 1 6 6 - w a r d s n u r s e r y . c o m

////1111444 tttoo 6666////222777

Anniversary Sale May 20-21~ More Info Online

We are also offering Asphalt Seal Coatingfor Driveways and Parking Lots.

Page 13: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

13May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley |Ulster Publishing Co.

Does your garden talk?

Cally Mansfi eld provides brief translations for the language of fl owers

I have loved flowers ever since I

was little. I especially love the smells. I’m amused, however, when I walk the aisles of the chain drug store huffing cheap scent purveyors. In my view, these “perfumeries” have failed

to capture “summer night bouquet” and “angel tears.”

One scent was actually titled “Japa-nese Garden.” Is that what gardens in Japan smell like? Interesting.

I also love the way flowers look. My mom’s garden is never as aesthetically satisfactory as I had hoped it would be. She plants mostly vegetables and herbs, which are like totally boring and yet do-mestically practical.

The garden in my mind is as stylish as it is impossible for Zone 5. My garden would focus more on personal expres-sion. Yeah, that’s right, my garden would be a poem, each flower a stanza. If I give you a bouquet, it’s really going to say something.

My mom told me that all flowers had symbolic meaning. These meanings go way back, probably predating the hoe (that’s what she said). So I did a search for “the language of flowers” and conve-niently came across langugageofflowers.com. I here present for your delectation an alphabetical compilation of the con-notations implied when you give some-one certain flowers, with additional in-terpretations by your truly. When you give flowers, you should know when you are sending a positive message, or just being mean.

A • Ambrosia: Your love is reciprocat-ed. I think this might be a nice message to have out front in my garden, just be-cause I want people to know that if they love my garden my garden loves them back.

Anemone: This flower means forsak-en. I don’t want people coming into my garden thinking they will be abandoned.

B • Bachelor button: Single blessedness. I know some single gardens out there looking for some blessedness.

Bouquet of dead flowers: In case this wasn’t al-ready clear, this symbolizes rejected love. I hope I don’t receive this because my bachelor buttons will wilt.

C • Carnation: The six colors of this flower all have different meanings. Red says, “My heart aches for you” or “I admire you.” I’m not sure this one will be in my garden. Pink says, “I’ll never for-get you,” which is kind of a wistful message but beautiful nonetheless. White is supposed to rep-resent innocence, and is a “ladies good-luck gift.” I’m not sure how innocence relates to good luck. A purple carnation stands for capriciousness. I want this in my garden. Wait, no, I don’t. May-be? A striped carnation says, “I can’t be with you.” I’m pretty sure this will come in handy someday. Finally, a yellow carnation says, “You have disap-pointed me.” My cat keeps leaving these for me.

D • Dandelion: This flower symbolizes faith-fulness. They are so faithful they will never leave your yard. So. Faithful.

Dead leaves: Once again, in case this wasn’t al-ready obvious, these symbolize sadness. These are often in autumn arrangements. Maybe don’t get married in October?

E • Echinacea: This wasn’t on languageofflow-ers.com, so I’m winging it. I think it stands for that

feeling you have when you can’t find your pants.

F • Fern: This one is a natural growing symbol of magic! Huzzah, calling all wizards.

Flax: This is a domestic symbol. Meh.

G • Garlic: Not sure how many garlic arrange-ments I’ve seen, but the flower symbolizes strength and courage. It has a very strong smell that might take some courage to get used to, but either way it sends a pungent message in my garden.

Grass: This plant symbolizes submission. Just in case your garden doesn’t work out, you can plant grass as a kind of white, sorry, green flag of surrender.

H • Heather: This means protection, or your wishes will come true. I’m wishing that my garden will be protected.

Hydrangea: I don’t recommend planting hy-drangea if you want to give off a friendly, yeah-I’m-nice vibe, because this flower connotes heart-lessness.

I • Iris: Bonjour! The iris is a symbol of France. It also symbolizes that a friendship is important to you. This plant is perfect for your French friend that you got in a fight with.

Ivy: This one means fidelity in marriage. Con-gratulations, keepers of the ivy.

J • Jonquil: This flower symbolizes affection re-turned, and that can’t hurt anybody.

L • Lily: Overall, these flowers symbolize beauty, but there are few wild meanings in some variet-

ies. The daylily is the Chinese emblem of mothers, very sweet for Mother’s Day. Oddly enough, moss symbolizes motherly love as well. I’m not so amused by the eucharis lily, which symbolizes maiden charms. I’m not sure what maiden charms are, but the feminist race says “no.” A yel-low lily says, “I’m walking on air or false.” I actually have no idea how to incorporate this mean-ing into my pretend garden. An orange lily is a symbol of hatred, putting giving orange daylilies for Mother’s Day in question.

M • Magnolias: These flowers symbolize nobility. Give them to your knight in shining armor.

Monkshood: This one means beware! A deadly foe is near! I wonder about the success rate of this warning signal.

Marigold: Such a happy flow-er to mean cruelty, grief or jeal-ousy.

N • Nasturtium: Conquest, victory in battle. And isn’t it odd that you can eat these flowers?

Nuts: These means stupid-ity. If you give someone nuts in a bouquet (I really hope you don’t) or grow them in your gar-den (they won’t be in my garden because I’m allergic), then you might just be stupid.

O • Orchids: They stand for love and beauty. For me, they stand for a plant that will most probably be decimated by your cat and kept up with hair clips.

P • Primrose: They are a sym-bol that you cannot live without someone. Maybe I’ll give my parents one.

Petunia: This means resent-ment, anger or “your presence soothes me.” That’s one wishy-

washy flower.

R • Rose: The classic single rose means “I love you.” A white rose stands for innocence or secrecy, which don’t really go hand in hand. A bouquet in full bloom means gratitude, a really nice message to any friend.

S • Spider flower: This one means “elope with me.” This is for those real underground secret messages you need to send without parents know-ing. Now, if I can only figure out what a spider flower is.

Snapdragon: Once again, another confusing flower. It symbolizes deception or “a gracious lady.” Take your pick.

T • Tulip: A bunch with different colors means someone thinks you have beautiful eyes. Red tu-lips mean, “Believe me.” What is this flower hiding that it needs me to believe it?

V • Viscaria: These flowers say, “Will you dance with me?” I think it is very practical for high schoolers. People in my school seem to be to afraid to ask that question, so maybe they need a flower’s help.

Z • Zinnia: These flowers mean consistency or lasting affection. If you want to send me zinnia, I prefer magenta.

This is the time of year for proms, and I do hope your corsages will be meaningful! As your plan your gardens, make sure you know the stories they tell.

WIKICOMMONS

The Victorian Age was fi lled with fl oral alphabets and species identifi cation. The great artist-philosopher Ernst Haeckel, whose Muscinae is seen here, was one of the fi rst to see beyond specifi cs.

Page 14: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

14 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

Creepy thingsChris Rowley looks into the pests, both miniscule and huge, that come with the season

Flowers, hiking, gardening, even a

barbecue on the deck again.All great stuff, but we need to re-

member that lots of other critters are awake and active, and some of them can be very pesky, even dangerous.

Dealing with them often presents quandaries. A dash of common sense and a modest amount of effort can usually get you through the worst.

At some point during the next weeks, you may find yourself sneezing uncontrollably while you try to get the lawnmower working just as tree pol-len blows past you in thick green clouds. Then you notice a tiny tick has started to attach itself above your ankle.

Pulling the tick off, you hear a buzzing behind you. Uh oh, hornets are building a nest in the rho-

dodendron. What to do? Do you want to discourage them?

What should your strategy be? If they do build a successful nest, everyone will have to stay away from the area of the plant for the rest of the sea-son. If you attempt to kill them and fail, you had best be ready to run for cover. Afterwards they will be hypervigilant and aggressive. The bald-head-ed hornet (biggish wasps with white heads and stripe) carries a formidable sting.

Other wasps, like the brown paper wasps that build small nests here and there, or the invasive yellow jackets, are easier to deal with. You can just rip paper wasp nests down, and the creatures will go somewhere else. Yellow jackets can be sprayed if you get close enough to do the job. 

Meanwhile, your wife and kids are concerned about the invasion of the kitchen by two different kinds of ants, tiny ones and big, fast ones. Ants are very hard to discourage. Do you want to put out poison to kill them? When you read what’s inside the blue can of spray you get a chilling sensation in your spine as you mumble your way through methyl this and dicarbonyl that. Maybe putting up with little ants is better than absorbing the

contents of the blue can.And then there’s the bear. Since he or she got

some garbage foolishly left out a few nights back, she or he has been around every night. A bear’s universe consists of starry points where food was obtained and a large empty space where it wasn’t. Bears will return to those starry points many times in hope of finding food again. You have to be really attentive. Someone forgot half a hamburger that fell on the deck? Oh, that’s why the umbrella stand is knocked over and the table is on its side.

 

Let’s review the Pesk-o-Meter. Keep it

simple to start and go with the threat level. What are the most dangerous pests?

No question about that one, Ticks. In particular the deer tick, Ixodes Scapularis. Black legs, black heads and upper parts of body, with pink-orange lower body. The nymphs are black, sometimes a little reddish after they feed. Nymphs can be the size of a period. Adults are about three millime-ters long.

They are not particular about what they bite for a blood meal and often feed on mice. They pick up diseases from mice that they can pass on to us.

PUBLIC DOMAIN & WIKICOMMONS PHOTOS

Top, Japanese knotweed is one of those plants innocently introduced into our local landscape only to run rampant; above left, It’s fun to read about bears in other people’s yards, but less fun to meet one trying to enter one’s own domain; above right, Ticks. For many, they were bigger years ago, but not as dangerous in terms of the diseases they carried. Now they’re a reason for many to stay indoors come summer. Just dress carefully, and check each other out after coming back indoors.

Page 15: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

15May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley |Ulster Publishing Co.

These include Lyme disease, which everyone has heard of, but also Babesia, an infection by a rela-tive of the malaria parasite, and thankfully very rarely Powassan fever. 

Tick awareness is very important. Wear white socks, and check them whenever you’re working in the yard or hiking. Most tick attachments begin on the feet and ankles. Pull ticks off and dispose of them. To kill a tick, crush between thumbnails. If a tick has embedded itself in your skin, take twee-zers, grip its body carefully right behind the head, and pull backwards as smoothly as possible. Try not to crush the tick and squeeze its contents into you. It isn’t easy.

After removing the tick, apply hydrogen perox-ide generously to the wound and keep an eye on it. If it develops a bull’s-eye rash, hurry to the doctor. If it doesn’t but about a week later you start to feel deathly ill, hurry to the doctor. Lyme disease is no joke, nor is Babesia. Powassan fever, well, fortu-nately the Ixodes tick that carries that, bites squir-rels and is more picky about its host than Ixodes Scapularis, the deer tick that conveys Lyme. 

To be pro-active, help the mice. Buy some card-board tubing. Cut into short sections and stuff with cotton wool soaked in a little pyrethrin in-secticide. Mice use cotton wool for their nests. Place little tubes wherever there may be mice, and yeah, they can be anywhere, but do your best. See if the mice take the cotton. If they don’t, move it to another location. Ticks will be killed en masse in mouse burrows.

Next on the list in terms of danger

would be rabid animals, usually raccoons and skunks, sometimes foxes and coy-

otes.  This is a very rare event, only included be-cause of the danger involved. If you see any of these animals in daylight, if they appear in the yard or on the drive and do not seem afraid of you, get you and yours indoors and stay there. If you have a shotgun you may use it to dispatch the poor creature. You’re doing it a favor. If not, just wait until it wanders away, confused, feverish and very, very sick. It will die shortly after.

Remember, a fed bear is a dead bear. Never, never feed a bear. Bears survive and prosper by remembering every single place they found some-thing to eat. Feed them and they’ll be back. Take down your bird feeder if you’re situated in bear country. Or at least take it down every evening.

The list of garden pests is long, chang-

ing with what you’re trying to grow. Every vegetable will bring something pesky to

dine. Aphids are to be expected, and you may have to spray for them. Japanese beetles can also be ex-pected.

Set pheromone traps as far from the house as you can.  Alternatively, plant a decoy crop, like sunflowers, again as far from your real target crop as you can manage. You will still need to pick the little buggers off your plants from time to time.

Gypsy moths are an invasive, well-established pest with cyclical booms in their populations. You can control them in your own neighborhood by setting out pheromone traps every season.

The brown marmorated stink bug is a new-ish invasive pest that is becoming a more serious threat to crops in the Hudson Valley. In a warm summer this bug may boom in numbers. They favor anything juicy: tomato plants, apple trees, any fruit. They just want a little sip, but they leave a brown spot of decay behind. Serious efforts are under way to control this critter.

Even newer threats are on the horizon, such as invasives from Asia, like the lantern bug. 

Fleas are another pest to be aware of if you have pets that go outside. Apply a topical flea and tick control to all pets, and add collars, too. Flea infes-tations are unbearable.

Then there are the things that are very hard to do much about, mosquitoes and biting flies. For-get bug zappers. They do not attract mosquitoes, only moths and bees. There are techniques for trying to control mosquitoes, but the best one is to use screens and wear light-colored clothing. Horse flies are another story, but they zero in on dark stuff. Wear light-colored clothing.

There are other pests and critters to be aware of and be careful around. The northern timber rattlesnake is not an aggressive snake. Leave it alone, and it will leave you alone. When it’s upset and dangerous, the buzzing of the rattle will give you fair warning.  These snakes are rare, and if you follow the rules they won’t harm you. Ticks are far, far more dangerous. 

potting soilmulch flower pots

fertilizersflowers

shrubsherbs

annualsproven winners

918 Route 32, Rosendale, NY • 845-658-8331Hours: Monday - Friday 7:00am - 5:00pm; Saturday 8:00am - 12:00pm

www.bldr.com

Conventional shingles perform well against wind, rain and average tempertures. But, if you live where conditions such as extreme cold, hail, high winds and severe storms prevail, you and your home may need the ultimate weather protection of Cambridge AR shingles! Cambridge AR shingles are perfect for any style of home in many colors to choose from.

Come in to our Builders First Sourcelocation and our sales personnel can help you

BOOM TRUCK

DELIVERY

AVAILABLE!

EMERGENCY SERVICE AVAILABLE• Well Pump Service

• Plumbing Repairs & Installation

• Water Filtration Systems

• Radiant Heat Flooring

• Oil & Gas Heating Systems - Installation & service

• Septic & Drain Installation/Sump Pump Installation

Page 16: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

16 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

Tethered to the green

Paul Smart looks at how to responsibly replace with lawnmower

Spring’s strange hiccup this year

made a mess of my lawn. Here we all were in March, oohing and ahhing as the first daffodils awoke in some of the warmer spots around. And then it snowed. After which things settled

into an old style season of chilly nights and some-what warm days. Plus lots of rain.

The grass out there on the other side of my home’s windows grew crazy-fast in some spots while other areas seemed to mimic an arctic tun-dra. I remembered how sluggish my electric long-cord lawnmower had become by the end of last summer...Maybe the fact that I’d skipped my last mowing was part of the problem this springtime? It was time to get prepped for the new mowing year.

“Dead,” was the sole word I remembered from the mechanic’s prognosis spiel about overworked elements of my Black & Decker’s engine. I noted how they’d simply replaced the whole machine half-way through the eight years I’ve had the thing. The man said that wasn’t happening this time. I’d have to buy something new.

Not ready to do so then and there, I retreated home to Google my next move. But first I needed to head out to my porch swing and stare down the lawn at the center of my consumer quandary.

I first got a corded mower as a means of en-gaging and personally answering the “peak oil”

concerns of the late Bush years. It was what also brought us to a 40 mph Scion instead of a hybrid; my wife and I were trying to weigh all energy costs, including battery replacements and recy-cling. Plus, I admit, I never did like mixing en-gine oil into gasoline, or the mess of engine sludge

running your usual gas mower. I didn’t feel right becoming one of the many ride mower jockeys in our town. Or the scary whirring of self-powered cylinder hand mowers, which also didn’t seem up to the bigger lawns facing us in our new home.

I remembered trying to spread my wealth by

first hiring the neighborhood mower dude, Kevin, and later the Little League pitcher next

door when the earlier solution proved more ex-pensive than we’d hoped. Unfortunately, the kid wasn’t reliable, and was expensive in other ways

WIKICOMMONS

The fi ght to control one’s lawn, from early hand- and then steam-powered contraptions to today’s corded and cordless electric mowers and even newer robo-mowers, feels endless.

Peter Shultis

STONEYARD

All your bluestone needs and services

Over 30 years experience

16 Van Wagner Road,Willow, NY 12495 (845) 679-6943

Fax: (845) 679-7081

Over 30 Years of ExperienceCertifi ed Water Well Drilling

Licensed and Registered in New York State

Try our Constant Pressure Variable Speed Pumps. You won’t believe the difference!

Complete Pump Systems • Service Repairs

Tap the Earth’s Natural Energy GEOTHERMAL Heating & Cooling Systems

CUT YOUR ENERGY COST BY 2/3 The best renewable energy source for upstate New York QUIET • EFFICIENT • NON-COMBUSTIBLE

Walter & Kristen WyckoffGilboa, NY

800-853-5453607-588-9413

www.WaterWellsAndPumps.com

LLC

Geo-thermalHeating and Cooling

QUALITY FOR THE BEST PRICE

www.WaterWellsAndPumps.com

Water Services, Inc.

— Serving —THE HUDSON VALLEYFOR OVER 60 YEARS

~ Expert Roofing ~

331-2049Shingles • Standing Seam • Metal

Copper • Slate • WoodFlat Roofs & more

Free Estimates • Fully Insured

325 South Wall Street Kingston, NY 12401

www.colonialroofingny.com

Hudson ValleySeptic Service

24/7 SERVICE(845) 687-0724 ANYTIME!

(845) 389-3872 CELL

HUDSON VALLEY SEPTIC SERVICE

State-of-the-ArtVacuum Trucks

TANKS CLEANEDSYSTEMS INSTALLEDPORTA-POTTY RENTALS

Page 17: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

17May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley |Ulster Publishing Co.

(mown over flower beds among them).It was fun, after several mowed-over electri-

cal cords, figuring out how to maneuver my lawn within the restrictions of a 100 foot tether. It was even more exhilarating listening to people’s taunts about my attempts to be green as I mowed, and eventually some real questions about the effec-tiveness of my mower. Hey, it never needed fixing and always started right up, I’d note. And when it didn’t the company replaced the entire thing.

Until they didn’t.Finally I was ready to look at what was available.

I ruled out the new robo-mowers, worried about the many balls and gloves, driveway rocks and kitties that could become hazards as Hal buzzed around the back yard. As well as what might hap-pen if a robo-mower chased down someone walk-ing on the sidewalk that bisects my front lawn.

As usual with such searches, I got side-

tracked into Wikipedia. The first lawn mower, I discovered, had been invented in

an English town called Thrupp by Edwin Budding in 1830 and led to the codification of many sports after being bought for London’s Regent Park, and clipping the greens at Oxford. The first power mower was an 1893 gas-fueled steam contrap-tion that took six hours to heat up (it wasn’t until the 1930s that modern-style gas mowers became common; their popularity was post-World War II).

“In the United States, over 12,000 people per year are hospitalized as a result of lawn mower ac-cidents. The vast majority of these injuries can be prevented by wearing protective footwear when mowing,” I read. “Persons using a mower should wear heavy footwear, eye protection, and hearing protection in the case of engine-powered mowers.”

Oh, I thought, deciding I may have had enough of my research, especially after further learn-ing that it would be unwise for me to allow my son mowing privileges until the age of 16. It was enough to be reacquainted with the knowledge that, despite Environmental Protection Agency

promises to make lawnmowers more green, “A 2001 study showed that some mowers produce the same amount of pollution (emissions other than carbon dioxide) in one hour as driving a 1992 model vehicle for 650 miles (1,050 km),” and furthermore, “Another estimate puts the amount of pollution from a lawn mower at four times the amount from a car, per hour,” although this report is no longer available.

Availability wasn’t necessary, for me, as I read a Consumers Report listing of best electric mowers, and gauged it against local supplies...including several where I’d accrued credits over the years from various writing or editing jobs (don’t ask).

I ended up simply driving over to the local

box store one day while my dad was in town and bought what was on sale, checking its star-rating

on my phone before swiping the credit card. With a 19 inch cutting width, similar to what Budding invented 114 years earlier, it would serve me well.

And started up and ran better than what I had had, and been happy with.

Now I wait for the rains to stop to mow all I have (leaving the bottom hill unreachable by my 100 foot tether to twice a year hired ride mowers) in one swath. Because I’m still waiting to get the lawn(s) back to something less messy than what they’ve become. At least by Labor Day.

4747 RTE 209ACCORD,NY845.626.0061

SALE

WWW.BAREFURNITURENY.COM

BARE FURNITUREWWW.BAREFURNITURENY.COM

Saugerties Carpet & Linoleum, Inc.Serving Ulster, Greene & Dutchess Counties

FOR OVER 35 YEARS!Prompt, Professional ServiceResidential • Commercial • Free Estimates!We handle carpet, sheet vinyl, Luxury Vinyl Tile/Plank, laminate, hardwood, and many other flooring products

0% Financing Available

2905-1 Route 9W • Saugerties, NY(845) 246-3636www.saugertiescarpet.com

IN-STOCKSPECIALS!

State Farm Home Coverage 1.3 Mil - Premium $4,611 vs. $1.8 Mil - Ours $2,090Encompass Home & Rental Property Premium $3,273 vs Ours $1,995Farmers- Home – Coverage $443,000 Premium $2,835 vs. Ours $1,083Travelers Home – Coverage $581,000 Premium $2182 vs. $676,000 - Ours $1383Nationwide Home - $190,000 Premium $599.00 vs . $200,000 - Ours $420.00Allstate Home - Coverage $301,000 Premium $1,154 vs. Ours $784

HO

LSAPPLE

LAWN & HOME CARE

Spring Cleanups • Mowing • Planting Fertilization • Trash Collection • Fall CleanupsWe also provide winter watch for your homes during those

cold months, to check your heat, plants, roof and water.

845-679-7282 • Box 122, Bearsville, NY 12409

If you own a wooden garage door, you have your hands full!!!

Replace it with a Maintenance-Free Steel Prefinished Door

Free Estimates ❖ Professional Installation

KINGSTONOVERHEAD DOOR

87 Boices Lane, Kingston(845) 336-6363

From Walls to Floors,Ceilings to Doors,

Decks, Siding & More.

Reliable, Dependable& Insured

Call for an estimate

845-688-7951Cell 845-591-8812www.tedsinteriors.com

Page 18: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

18 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

Growing

good stuff

for fi ne

feastingJennifer Brizzi looks at an outdoors larder

Between the time the first tiny

chive of the season pops up to when tomato season finally comes upon us, there is a period of time when gar-deners exult in the appearance of all those late-spring and early summer

things. They come along to infuse our eats and drinks with the excitement of things we haven’t had in a year: the fresh green asparagus, the peas, the spinach, and the early fruits like strawberries.

After those little chives appear comes the return of other perennial herbs, and the cut-and-come-again salad greens, and then the early sweet peas (which you planted on St. Patrick’s Day as per custom, right?) After a winter of hearty braises, long-keeping roots and tubers, dried legumes and frozen foods, the emergence of green-ness out of carefully enhanced special dirt is a true joy for the gardener.

Although most of us love spring, and renewal, and softer, warmer temperatures, the gardener is truly happy. He or she likely got a head start in January sowing seeds indoors in tiny cells, and then finally cleaned up the garden beds, tilled and amended the soil, and sowed and planted the seeds or seedlings, and at long last gets to see and touch and eat the fruits of his or her labors.

The garden beginning to produce coincides with the season of eating and entertaining outdoors: picnics and parties, trail snacking, the wish to shorten and simplify our time in the kitchen so we can get outside and enjoy the fair weather. These early summer harvests bring a welcome cornuco-pia of lighter fare, fresher, more vibrant flavors. Moving away from meat-plus-three-meals, we

crave simple, healthier salads, soups and sweets based on the early harvest.

My salad formula makes for a salad that is not a side dish but rather the whole meal, whether lunch or dinner or trail food. It is based on whole grains like farro or wheat berries or black rice or quinoa, plus maybe a protein like beans or shred-ded poached chicken, salmon, grilled tofu or shrimp, plus an assortment of raw seasonal veg-etables, like young zucchini sliced thin, shredded carrots or beets, radishes, baby greens.

These salads are so simple and portable and super-nutritious. Just add minced garlic, onion green or red, your best oil and vinegar and/or lemon juice. Don’t forget the salt and pepper and a hint of heat if you like. There you have a simple formula for a dish you can take anywhere or keep in the fridge for a few days for noshing.

Those baby greens — whether lettuce, arugula, kale, spinach, mizuna — not only jazz up your whole meal but are lovely on their own as green salads, whether as a combination or as just one shining star, whatever your garden is offering up that day. Picked and eaten fresh and simply

dressed, the flavor is sublime. You can just plant your faves or look for mesclun mixes available in hearty to mild flavors to accommodate the tastes of every gardener. Or try going outside your com-fort zone with greens you may not have grown be-fore, from purple dandelion greens to perennial arugula to tat soi to ethnic greens with exotic fla-vors you may not have tasted.

(DROP CAP) Early harvestables promise ele-gant soups as well; before the weather gets too hot for soup. Make a simple puree of the first peas or spinach, subtly seasoned, and drizzled with cream or coconut milk is lovely. I like texture, but the unctuousness of a soup based on perfect produce can’t be beat.

Just sauté onion in butter or olive oil or a com-bination and add the sweet peas (I like Lincoln) or young spinach or other greens or a combo. After a few more moments of stirring, add some savory broth, homemade or store-bought. Fresh herbs don’t hurt, either. Think mint, parsley, dill. Puree with an immersion blender or blender and thin or drizzle with the creamy stuff of your choice. Make

High Falls ElectricINC.

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTINGLICENSED • INSURED

ROBERT HAMM24 MOHONK ROADHIGH FALLS, NY 12440845-687-7550

Mike’s

EARTHWORKSBuilding Site Excavation • Driveways

Demolition • Pool Excavation • PondsLawn Development & Maintenance

Fully Insured Residential & Commercial

845-687-9117845-416-2220 cell • www.visitvortex.com

COURTESY OF WWW.MOHONK.ORG

What’s more rewarding than cocktails on a verandah as the sun sets, a day of home improvement and gardening chores successfully completed?

WIKICOMMONS

Ramps, found in the wild and now ripe, have become a cause celebre of chefs in recent years, gaining their place on local menus. Check for them at local farmers’ markets.

Page 19: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

19May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley |Ulster Publishing Co.

336-8080

883-5566www.aquajetpools.com Family owned and operated for over 30 years

Pools, Spas & Patio Furniture

Now is the time to BUY!12 month NO interest on Pools ● Spas ● Furniture

Schedule

Your Pool

Opening

Today!

Lightning Protection!

www.alrci.com518-789-4603845-373-8309

Buzzanco’s GreenhousesCOME AND SEE THE GROWER! Angie Buzzanco

WE ARE OPEN FOR THE SEASONUnusual Plants that you don’t find at the Big Box Stores!

PROVEN WINNER PLANTSHybrid Vegetables, Peppers (sweet & hot), Tomato Plants, Eggplant

60 DIFFERENT TYPES OF HERBSBasil, Rosemary, Thyme, Mint, Exotic Cactus, Potted Plants, Geraniums, Annuals,

Perennials, Ferns, Petunias, House Plants, Rare Plants, Marigolds and much more...

2050 Sawkill-Ruby Road • Kingston1/2 mile North of Sawkill Rd. exit off Route 209 • Open Every Day 10AM - 5PM

www.BuzzancoGreenHouses.com

U

Hybrid V

sure it’s salted and peppered appropriately, and enjoy.

You may have heard that sweet corn’s sugars turn to starch quickly, as in the classic advice to start the pot to boiling before going in the field to harvest the corn. But this is true of some other vegetables, like asparagus and peas as well. Their sweetness turns to starch quickly, so cook them up as soon as you harvest them. This is the gardener’s privilege, to enjoy the fruits of their labors quickly and while at their sweetest best.

(DROP CAP) With early summer produce we can ring in and cheer the season with appropriate beverages, from a ramp martini — pickled ramps take only a few days and enhance and garnish bev-erages, (look online for recipes or see Edible Hud-son Valley’s spring issue). The herbaltini is anoth-er simple scrumptious beverage concept based on the herb garden’s offerings; recipes abound online.

The gardener who grows strawberries is lucky, able to enjoy a fruit that comes long before peach-es and plums, pears and apples, and other berries, and to quickly pick the fodder for delicious clas-sics strawberry rhubarb pie and strawberry short-cake. Or just enjoy them right from the strawberry patch, eaten plain or dipped in sugar.

Another fine use for the strawberry is the shrub. This new/old beverage — popular in Colonial America and trendy today — can be made with a variety of fruits, but is perfect with the in-season strawberry. Cut them in small pieces and macerate

with sugar, let it sit a few days and add apple cider vinegar or red wine vinegar (some recommend a splash of balsamic as well, but I haven’t tried this). A recommended ratio is 1:1:1 strawberries to sug-ar to vinegar. This makes the shrub syrup, which keeps well in the fridge and some say improves with age. When you’re ready to partake, dilute it with lots of seltzer and a bit of gin or vodka if you wish, and you have a delightful refreshing bever-age for early summer. To condense that process,

check out the local Hudson Standard’s acclaimed Strawberry Rhubarb Shrub.

If you are lacking that perfect spot for a garden plot, think containers like the city folk. Use win-dow boxes or patios, decks, stairways, driveways for pots of herbs, lettuce or strawberries, all of which are known for doing well in such a habitat. These early summer items are very decorative and will enhance any outdoor space, as well as provid-ing accessible and tasty produce for your kitchen.

Serving Kingston and surrounding areas. Call today for the best price!

Locally owned and operated for over 15 years.

P.O. Box 1207 • Kingston, NY(845) 338-9800 Ph • (845) 338-9700 Fax

www.afcofuel.com

• Wood Pellets • Off-Road Diesel• Home Heating Fuel & Kerosene

• Emergency Services • Flexible Payment Options• Excellent Customer Service

We’re Like

Family

PEAK HOME INSPECTION— THE BUILDING DETECTIVE —

BILL SLUTZKYLICENSE #16000078902

230 KINGS MALL COURT #217KINGSTON, NY 12401

845-853-3506

[email protected]

F U L L Y I N S U R E D, S E P T I C, R A D O N, W A T E R

Portable on-site sawmilling Custom tongue and groove flooring

Rough-cut lumber and beamsTree-cutting and backhoe work

INSURED AND SERVINGTHE HUDSON VALLEY SINCE 2005

CJ GREENEPHONE: 845-943-0058

ULSTERCOUNTYSAWING.COM

Page 20: Home Hudson Valley - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/381/... · 5/18/2017  · Ulster Publishing Co. Home Hudson Valley | Meeting gardens halfway

20 May 18, 2017Home Hudson Valley| Ulster Publishing Co.

GET GREAT RESULTS WITH EASY PLANTING TIPS

Cu.-Ft. Enriched Garden SoilGreat for flowers and vegetables. L 145 443 B60

Plants, shrubs and trees

add color or shade to your

garden. Container-grown perennials are a convenient way to landscape. Or, transplantsmall fruit or shade trees. For more helpful tips on planning and planting your garden, go to TrueValueProjects.com for the products, tools and instructions to complete your project.

3-Ft. x 25.-Ft. Landscape FabricGeneral-use fabric is easy to install around trees and shrubs. Prevents weeds while allowing water and air flow. 10-year warranty. L 184 801 B30

Welded Bow RakeFeatures 16 durable metal tines and a wood handle with 6-in. cushioned end grip. 10-year warranty. L 161 343 B6

499

799

1499

4 Mill Hill Rd 845-679-2115

www.hhoust.com

©2017 True Value® Company. All rights reserved.

MORTGAGESPRIORITYDecisions Made Locally

Michael KinschSr. Residential Loan Originator

NMLS #768988

Liz MoellerSr. Residential Loan Originator

NMLS #19253

845-331-0073RondoutBank.com

NMLS #684320

Mortgages That Help Support Our CommunityEach year we donate 10% of our earnings tohundreds of area non-profi t organizations. Wecall it our “Dividend to the Community Program”

We’re Making Your Mortgage

Our Top Priority!

BIG TOP DISPOSAL

BIG TOP DISPOSAL

(518) 622-3353

SPRING CLEAN-OUT SPECIAL!

ROLL-OFF CONTAINER RENTALS Available in all sizes to handle all of your residential

or commercial clean-out and renovation needs.RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL

DUMPSTER SERVICE Now available in Greene,

Columbia & Ulster Counties.CALL FOR SIZES & RATES

www.storysnursery.com

* N E W *Shipment of

Boxwood & Hydrangea

•Trees •Perennials•Early Blooming Shrubs

•Vegetable Plants •Annuals

Hours:Mon – Sat 8-4:30, Sun 9-4

4265 Rt. 67, Freehold(518) 634-7754

GAYLE BURBANK LANDSCAPESFINE GARDEN DESIGN

203 Cooper Lake Road | Bearsville, NY 12409 T/F 845-679-7822 | C 917-589-5951

www.GayleBurbank.com

Where Art & Horticulture Meet.

PONDS • WATERFALLS • AERATION • FILTRATIONAAGARDEN PONDS • KOI PONDS • SWIMMING PONDS • STREAMS

www koiponds com

PONDS • WATERFALLS • AERATION • FILTRATIONAAGARDEN PONDS • KOI PONDS • SWIMMING PONDS • STREAMS

www.koiponds.com

KEN SCHOEN Master Rating National Pond Society

845-339-8382www.koiponds.com [email protected]