Bringing Beauty to a Vegetable Garden

During the Master Gardener Volunteer training course, each participant completes a Community Action Project, their first act of service in their new role. This post is Michele’s project, and hopefully the first of many Fruition posts from her and her cohort!

Gardening has always been a part of my life in one way or another. As a child I was fascinated by my grandfather’s terraced garden on the hill behind his house in Pennsylvania. It was bursting with vegetables and some flowers and to me it was magical. 

Fast forward to my first garden as an adult. Vegetables were planted in straight rows, on their own, each vegetable in a designated area. Flowers and shrubs in a separate area. I recalled my dad telling me about a friend who had a tiny veggie garden at their campsite, where there were always some flowers planted with the veggies “to keep his vegetables happy.” Flowers certainly make me happy and growing my own veggies gives me joy also, so I began to research companion planting.

That was like opening a can of worms – so many complicated lists and dos and don’ts and conflicting views, so I decided to try my own version of “companion” planting. I began with putting in a small cottage style garden full of self seeding flowers, hollyhocks, poppies, rudbeckia, bachelor buttons.

Cottage garden with flowers including hollyhocks

Then my husband built raised beds for me to help make my gardening more manageable. I try to put at least one herb, one type of flower and one or more veggies in each raised bed. I always surround my tomatoes with two or more varieties of basil; they look so pretty together and they are delicious! Now tomatoes are my favorite thing to grow in the summer vegetable garden.

A lush garden with basil, tomatoes, and flowers Read more Bringing Beauty to a Vegetable Garden

The Truth About No Mow May

As spring arrives, there are again conversations about the meme No Mow May. This is a movement to restrict lawn mowing in May to encourage flowering plants that provide nectar for pollinators. In this post I’ll share the history of the movement with suggestions for pollinator support that is more applicable to northern New York.

The original concept of leaving grass long in the spring came in 2019 from Plantlife, a British organization. Their climate, however, is very different from that in the North Country so their results have limited applicability here. In 2020 a team in Appleton Wisconsin liked the No Mow May idea so much that researchers there tried it and published a paper which showed benefits to using this concept. It turned out the data was flawed, however, and the paper was soon retracted. In 2024 Appleton removed No Mow May from the city’s municipal code and reinstated an eight inch restriction on grass and weeds.

The Cornell Turf Team from CCE of Westchester wondered about this meme too, and did research in 2024 to test the concept. What the Turf Team and others (such as CCE Eric County , Lakeland Today, Cornell Turf Grass,  and CCE Putnam County) observed indicates that No Mow May did not significantly increase the nectar sugar available to pollinators by June nor was it helpful in the long run. It did not increase the pollinator populations. Read more The Truth About No Mow May