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If you're like me , this time of the year the gardening bug is biting. I don't have a Green Thumb but that didn't stop me from attempting to have the "perfect"  garden.

I had all of the catalogs. I especially like the ones that send live plants. I had a great Flower Garden book and carefully designed my garden to have flowers of different heights, co-ordinating colors and 3 season blooming. It was actually quite lovely!

That was 20 years ago.....

 

This is my garden today!  my garden

The point of my tale being..go Native! Don't be lured by the fancy photos and promises. The best choices for a sustainable care free garden are native plants. They are used to our local conditions and don't need constant pampering. They can even tolerate a New England Winter without special care!

Some of the common ones here in New Hampshire are~ Coneflowers coneflower

Cardinal Flower cardinal flower Bee Balm bee balm   NE Asters asters

If you especially enjoy having cut flowers in your home some hardy but lovely choices would be:

Delphinium delphinium Daisies Daisies Tall Phlox Tall Phlox

 and Statice  statice

If you would like to take the "leap".... but don't know where to start.... the UNH Cooperative Extension along with the Department of Fish and Gamehave published a book about Native Plants and Landscaping called: Integrated Landscaping: Following Natures Lead

To purchase contact

  • UNH Cooperative Extension Publication Center 
  • Nesmith Hall
  •  131 Main Street
  •  Durham, NH 03824                              
  • ~
  •  NH Fish and Game
  •  Wares From The Wild
  •  11 Hazen Drive
  •  Concord, NH 03301

 

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Concord NH Realtor Area Information

 

 

 

 

 

 

NH's Four Seasons 

                                                                
Joan Mirantz - Joni is a Realtor® with Homequest Real Estate, a locally owned, Customer Service oriented Firm.
Joan Publishes a monthly Newsletter "Food For Thought" under the pen name Realtor Sherpa.
(Joan also answers to Miz Maven and Miss Joni.)

Joan works in Buyer and Seller Representation with concentrations in the Merrimack Valley Area and towns surrounding Concord NH - the Capital City.
"I love what I do, and it shows in how I do it"

Having crossed over to the "other side of Middle Age" herself....Joan is an ongoing source of information about local programs, facilities and issues specific to her peers! 

 
Livin' the Life...and Ridin' the Wave

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20 Comments on New England Native~The Way To Go

JUL
25
2008
2 Featured Posts

Great photos Joan! From the looks of your pictures your state has must be in the same zone, or close to what we have in Michigan. I recognize many of them from my yard...but yours looks like it has many less weeds! I think weeds are native to my yard!

Great advice you have given! Planting native plants will also conserve water as they thrive in the natural conditions!

9:46pm • #1
680,542 Points 18 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Joan --this is great advice -- just one thing -- can you get rid of all that pollen -- my allergies have been horrible.  (lol).  Very nice pictures, and seriously, native is the way to go.

9:50pm • #2
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Mary...I really woud love to have a beautiful garden...that picture was the best spot!

9:58pm • #3
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Joan..this has been a terrible year for pollen. It's all over everything! Hardy bulbs do OK too!

10:00pm • #4
JUL
26
2008
830,093 Points 156 Featured Posts Outside Blog Hit Router Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Hi Joan, This is a very interesting post and has a real sense of authenticity to it. A natural garden can be very exciting and fulfills a need most of share for nature. Going natural is certainly a valid choice. Well done !

2:00am • #5
352,326 Points 27 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Joan,
You sound a lot like me. I used to pour over the seed and plant catalogues all winter long many moons ago. I was always so excited when seeds or plants would arrive at my farm and my garden was a site to behold.

I agree with you about going native....there are so many beautiful choices. Coneflowers are gorgeous. Do you have the purple coneflowers (Echinacea) growing wild there too? Fall is always one of my favourite times of the year and a big part of it is all of the New England Asters in bloom everywhere.

Beautiful photos!!

Jo

5:27am • #6
220,398 Points

Very good post since I do like gardening but I have another question - what do you consider the New England states??? My friend and I were just discussing this subject -help!

6:30am • #7
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

William...at least the wild or Native flowers stay alive! I love a garden but can't keep it alive!

1:59pm • #8
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Yes Jo....we do have the wild conflowers. I actually have some asters in my garden that are still alive...they just aren't out yet! They're a pretty fuschia.

2:02pm • #9
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Hi Norma....when looking at difficulty in things growing I'm thinking mainly NH, ME and VT. I think they are pretty much in the same zone. The other States seem to have several zones so the growing is varied.

2:05pm • #10
875,202 Points 35 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Joan, I just LOVE daisies, they have always been one of my favorite flowers....one year they just kept growing and growing and were taking over my garden!  Now I buy them, they last a week and look so pretty.

8:09pm • #11
211,928 Points 4 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Joan - I did the exact same thing many years ago.  Went crazy with all the catalogs and "dream gardens" that they promoted.  And I spent a fortune doing it.  Only to have all of the flowering plants die - never to return.

I since learned that by planting native perennials I am reducing the time I have to spend pampering them, and certainly saving money!  And both of those things work for me!  LOL

9:42pm • #12
JUL
27
2008
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Hi Carole...Daisys do have a way of being very prolific! But they are so dependable!

6:47pm • #13
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Carol...I think everyone gets sucked in at least once....they look so pretty in the catalogues

Nice to know I'm not the only one!

6:52pm • #14
JUL
28
2008
892,140 Points 20 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Joan - Your garden looks lovely.  Yes it is a good idea to stick with the native plants.  By the way I think you have a green thumb.

10:53pm • #15
708,952 Points 63 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Hi Joan... GREAT photos of some good looking flowers!  I can attest from first-hand observation that you live in one of the most beautiful parts of the country.  The terrain, along with the lush flora and fauna are simply breathtaking!

11:30pm • #16
JUL
29
2008
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Jennifer....don't I wish! You are being kind!

2:32pm • #17
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Steve...actually this year is especially lush because we have had so much rain! usually by now things are starting to look a bit dried out and brown! But, even in their less than perfect state...it's still beautiful!

2:34pm • #18
JUL
31
2008
141,514 Points 1 Featured Post Outside Blog

Coneflowers are awesome and come in such a wide array of colors; and they grow almost anywhere. When I lived in south Florida, I often consulted the state website because the climate, tropical, was new and foreign to me. Natives, or plants from a very similar climate is definitely the way to go! Great post!

10:43pm • #19
AUG
01
2008
217,536 Points 12 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Rich....I knew the gardener in you would appreciate it! Thanks!

11:12am • #20

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Joan Mirantz GRI CBR SRES- Concord New Hampshire Realtor

Concord, NH

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Homequest Real Estate

Address: Concord, NH, 03303

Office Phone: (800) 713-2057 x 8

Cell Phone: (603) 568-1485

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