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Friday, September 30, 2022
In the Kitchen: THE BIG PRETZEL & Chicago Dog - WPRI.com
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by: Bonnie Bryden
Posted: Jul 22, 2022 / 08:36 AM EDT
Updated: Jul 22, 2022 / 02:07 PM EDT
by: Bonnie Bryden
Posted: Jul 22, 2022 / 08:36 AM EDT
Updated: Jul 22, 2022 / 02:07 PM EDT
Today in the kitchen, we welcome Chef George Aronstein from Apex Entertainment making THE BIG PRETZEL and a Chicago Dog.
Rhode Show Content Disclaimer: The information, advice, and answers displayed in The Rhode Show section of WPRI.com are those of individual sponsors and guests and not WPRI-TV/Nexstar Media Group, Inc. WPRI.com presents this content on behalf of each participating Rhode Show sponsor. Sponsored content is copyrighted to its respective sponsor unless otherwise indicated.
Copyright 2022 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by: Bonnie Bryden
Posted: Jul 22, 2022 / 08:36 AM EDT
Updated: Jul 22, 2022 / 02:07 PM EDT
by: Bonnie Bryden
Posted: Jul 22, 2022 / 08:36 AM EDT
Updated: Jul 22, 2022 / 02:07 PM EDT
Today in the kitchen, we welcome Chef George Aronstein from Apex Entertainment making THE BIG PRETZEL and a Chicago Dog.
Rhode Show Content Disclaimer: The information, advice, and answers displayed in The Rhode Show section of WPRI.com are those of individual sponsors and guests and not WPRI-TV/Nexstar Media Group, Inc. WPRI.com presents this content on behalf of each participating Rhode Show sponsor. Sponsored content is copyrighted to its respective sponsor unless otherwise indicated.
Copyright 2022 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
source https://1home.streamstorecloud.com/in-the-kitchen-the-big-pretzel-chicago-dog-wpri-com/?feed_id=4550&_unique_id=633683bc8d452
Thursday, September 29, 2022
Joni Mitchell watched online videos to relearn guitar after brain aneurysm - Guitar World
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By Matt Owen published 26 July 22
The legendary songwriter picked up an electric guitar for her performance of Just Like This Train at this year's Newport Folk Festival, which marked her first full live set in 20 years
Last weekend, Joni Mitchell took part in a surprise “Joni Jam” at the Newport Folk Festival – a 13-song set that marked the legendary songwriter’s first public performance since she suffered a brain aneurysm in 2015, and her first full set since 2002.
Mitchell spent most of her time singing while seated, but took to her feet and picked up a super-lightweight Parker Fly electric guitar for a rendition of her 1974 track Just Like This Train. That was no small feat for Mitchell, whose aneurysm robbed her of the ability to play the instrument.
Speaking to CBS Mornings, Mitchell opened up about her journey to relearn the guitar, saying she watched videos online to “see where I put my fingers”.
When asked about how she taught herself to play again, Mitchell responded, “I’m learning. I’m looking at videos that are on the net to see where I put my fingers. It’s amazing what an aneurysm knocks out… how to get out of a chair, you don’t know how to get out of bed.
“You have to learn all these things again,” she continued. “I was into water ballet as a kid, and I forgot how to do the breaststroke. You’re going back to infancy almost, you have to relearn everything.”
It’s amazing what an aneurysm knocks out… You’re going back to infancy almost, you have to relearn everything
Mitchell’s return to the Newport Folk Festival – an event she first played as a 23-year-old in 1967 – was something that her close friend and fellow songwriter Brandi Carlile always knew would happen.
Joining Mitchell for the interview, Carlile said she had been dreaming of her friend’s return ever since her recovery. “The first time she opened her mouth and sang Summertime, I saw Herbie Hancock burst into tears and everybody in the room catch their breath – because she had decided to sing – I knew she’d do it at Newport.
“I can’t really say how I knew it,” she continued. “I just pictured her out there, I pictured the water and the boats.”
During the festival, while Mitchell got comfortable with her guitar, Carlile told the crowd, “Joni’s going to get situated for a second. She’s spent some time working on something just for you here at the Newport Folk Festival that she hasn’t done since her aneurysm. She’s doing something very, very brave right now for you guys.”
You can watch that performance in the video above.
Mitchell's appearance wasn't the only surprise at this year's Newport Folk Festival. Elsewhere at the Rhode Island event, Paul Simon came out of retirement to take part in a surprise set, performing some of his biggest hits, including The Boxer, Sound of Silence and Graceland.
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Matt is a Staff Writer, writing for Guitar World, Guitarist and Total Guitar. He has a Masters in the guitar, a degree in history, and has spent the last 16 years playing everything from blues and jazz to indie and pop. When he’s not combining his passion for writing and music during his day job, Matt records for a number of UK-based bands and songwriters as a session musician.
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Guitar World is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site (opens in new tab).
© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.
source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/joni-mitchell-watched-online-videos-to-relearn-guitar-after-brain-aneurysm-guitar-world/?feed_id=4510&_unique_id=6336192856dcf
By Matt Owen published 26 July 22
The legendary songwriter picked up an electric guitar for her performance of Just Like This Train at this year's Newport Folk Festival, which marked her first full live set in 20 years
Last weekend, Joni Mitchell took part in a surprise “Joni Jam” at the Newport Folk Festival – a 13-song set that marked the legendary songwriter’s first public performance since she suffered a brain aneurysm in 2015, and her first full set since 2002.
Mitchell spent most of her time singing while seated, but took to her feet and picked up a super-lightweight Parker Fly electric guitar for a rendition of her 1974 track Just Like This Train. That was no small feat for Mitchell, whose aneurysm robbed her of the ability to play the instrument.
Speaking to CBS Mornings, Mitchell opened up about her journey to relearn the guitar, saying she watched videos online to “see where I put my fingers”.
When asked about how she taught herself to play again, Mitchell responded, “I’m learning. I’m looking at videos that are on the net to see where I put my fingers. It’s amazing what an aneurysm knocks out… how to get out of a chair, you don’t know how to get out of bed.
“You have to learn all these things again,” she continued. “I was into water ballet as a kid, and I forgot how to do the breaststroke. You’re going back to infancy almost, you have to relearn everything.”
It’s amazing what an aneurysm knocks out… You’re going back to infancy almost, you have to relearn everything
Mitchell’s return to the Newport Folk Festival – an event she first played as a 23-year-old in 1967 – was something that her close friend and fellow songwriter Brandi Carlile always knew would happen.
Joining Mitchell for the interview, Carlile said she had been dreaming of her friend’s return ever since her recovery. “The first time she opened her mouth and sang Summertime, I saw Herbie Hancock burst into tears and everybody in the room catch their breath – because she had decided to sing – I knew she’d do it at Newport.
“I can’t really say how I knew it,” she continued. “I just pictured her out there, I pictured the water and the boats.”
During the festival, while Mitchell got comfortable with her guitar, Carlile told the crowd, “Joni’s going to get situated for a second. She’s spent some time working on something just for you here at the Newport Folk Festival that she hasn’t done since her aneurysm. She’s doing something very, very brave right now for you guys.”
You can watch that performance in the video above.
Mitchell's appearance wasn't the only surprise at this year's Newport Folk Festival. Elsewhere at the Rhode Island event, Paul Simon came out of retirement to take part in a surprise set, performing some of his biggest hits, including The Boxer, Sound of Silence and Graceland.
Thank you for reading 5 articles this month*
Join now for unlimited access
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UK pricing £2.99 per month or £29.00 per year
Europe pricing €3.49 per month or €34.00 per year
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Join now for unlimited access
Prices from £2.99/$3.99/€3.49
Matt is a Staff Writer, writing for Guitar World, Guitarist and Total Guitar. He has a Masters in the guitar, a degree in history, and has spent the last 16 years playing everything from blues and jazz to indie and pop. When he’s not combining his passion for writing and music during his day job, Matt records for a number of UK-based bands and songwriters as a session musician.
We’d love to stay in touch, sign up for The Pick team to contact you with great news, content and offers.
Thank you for signing up to The Pick. You will receive a verification email shortly.
There was a problem. Please refresh the page and try again.
Guitar World is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site (opens in new tab).
© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.
source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/joni-mitchell-watched-online-videos-to-relearn-guitar-after-brain-aneurysm-guitar-world/?feed_id=4510&_unique_id=6336192856dcf
One meal or more, no questions asked: Manna Community Kitchen feeds the Pioneer Valley, stigma free - MassLive.com
The Manna Community Kitchen in Northampton, where volunteers prepared ham grinders to serve to anyone who arrives in need of a meal, Aug. 29, 2022. The kitchen serves 1,200 meals weekly. Pictured is Kaitlyn Ferrari, the organization's development director. (Will Katcher/MassLive).
Take one meal, take two, take four, but rest assured — no one at the Manna Community Kitchen will question or judge you.
Six days a week at a Northampton church, volunteers spend the morning preparing a restaurant-quality dining option for anyone who could use it. Lunch approaches and a crowd queues, and the meals are there for the taking, whether a person has a roof to sleep under or not, whether they have a job or not, whether they came for a meal yesterday or the day before or never before.
The food is offered free of charge and free of shame. This is not a soup kitchen, Manna treasurer and cook Lee Anderson said. The organization dropped that designation years ago, preferring to ditch the connotation it brought of Oliver Twist and gruel dropped in buckets.
“I have friends who are single parents. They would just say, ‘I don’t want to take from somebody who needs it more,’” Anderson said. “But it’s for all of us. We’ve got plenty. We’re in a valley full of abundance.”
Food insecurity has a way of hiding in plain sight. When their child wants to play in the local basketball league this season or needs school supplies, parents may feel inclined to cut from the food budget for a few nights.
“You don’t have to do that,” Anderson said. Come here, free up that money and go to the movies with your kid. Food is the first thing that gets pushed off the table when your finances get compressed.”
Manna Community Kitchen
From Monday through Thursday, Manna serves meals out of St. John’s Episcopal Church on Elm Street. On Fridays and Saturdays, they relocate to Edwards Church on Main Street. Doors open at 11:30 a.m., except for Wednesday’s 6 p.m. meal.
Manna has been running 35 years strong, said Kaitlyn Ferrari, the organization’s development director. Today, they average about 1,200 meals a week, serving dozens of guests in person each day and dozens more by delivery — all with however much food they need.
“We’re no questions asked,” Ferrari said. “If someone asks for four meals, we’ll give them four meals.”
About a quarter of the meals are for delivery to people who are homebound or simply unable to be at the church in person to pick up food.
Finding volunteers to deliver can be challenging, and the cost of transportation does not help, even as more people than ever are asking for food deliveries.
The Manna Community Kitchen in Northampton, where volunteers prepared ham grinders to serve to anyone who arrives in need of a meal, Aug. 29, 2022. The kitchen serves 1,200 meals weekly. (Will Katcher/MassLive).
In recent weeks, an unlikely corporate hand stepped in to help.
DoorDash — the company that allows drivers to sign up to deliver from restaurants to customers’ doorsteps — began partnering in 2018 with government and nonprofit organizations to facilitate deliveries that had a social impact. Since linking with Manna in August, DoorDash has paid their drivers $5 a bag to deliver meals for the community kitchen.
About 60 people asked for deliveries as of a month ago. When DoorDash began delivering, that number jumped by 10 in the span of two weeks.
Manna proudly is known for its varied and nutritious meals, Ferrari said.
On a recent Monday, the midday meal that Anderson whipped up at St. John’s could just as easily be found at a sandwich shop downtown — a ham grinder, sweet potato fries, a banana, salad, chocolate cake.
“Everyone gets a salad. Everything is locally sourced. Lettuce, tomatoes, beets if they’re in season,” she said. “We really do try to put a lot of thought into the food we make. We’ll find out one of our guests, their mom used to make something, so we’ll make that next week.”
“Once you eat our food and you meet the people that hang around here, you realize that you know it is no different than a restaurant in town,” Anderson said.
Alongside the physical nourishment, Manna hopes the people arriving for a meal get the social nourishment a community can offer.
“Everyone is a human being and deserves not just food but someone to talk to,” Ferrari said.
In the kitchen at St. John’s Church, as the staff prepared scores of meals for the Monday crowd, Alison Ryan of Sunderland and Jeannine Clark of Florence stood at their prep stations, filling cups of aioli and wrapping corn on the cob.
Ryan, the community engagement liaison for Trulieve, a North King Street cannabis dispensary, was working in a kitchen for the first time. She had previously volunteered through her job with Habitat for Humanity and the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts.
“I think there’s definitely a need for [the community kitchen] in Northampton,” she said.
The Manna Community Kitchen in Northampton, where volunteers prepared ham grinders to serve to anyone who arrives in need of a meal, Aug. 29, 2022. The kitchen serves 1,200 meals weekly. Pictured is Alison Ryan, the community engagement liaison for the Northampton cannabis dispensary Trulieve, who is volunteering as part of her work community. (Will Katcher/MassLive).
Clark retired six years ago from a job in the University of Massachusetts Amherst Office of Environmental Health and Safety.
She came to Manna a little less than three years ago, hoping to give back to her community.
“I always imagined it could have been me out there,” she said, “if I made the wrong decision in my life.”
With the doors open and the meals flowing, one Ludlow man took his grinder outside, where about a dozen people sat under a tent enjoying their lunch.
He first came to the community kitchen about a month ago and was surprised at the quality of the food he received. He does not often buy vegetables, but sometimes finds crates of them tossed away in a dumpster behind a restaurant or grocery store.
He gestured to his chocolate cake, salad with fresh vegetables, fruit, sweet potatoes and the remaining half of his sandwich.
“I couldn’t pay $40 bucks to get this in a restaurant,” he said.
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Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement, Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement, and Your California Privacy Rights (User Agreement updated 1/1/21. Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement updated 7/1/2022).
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© 2022 Advance Local Media LLC. All rights reserved (About Us).
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source https://1home.streamstorecloud.com/one-meal-or-more-no-questions-asked-manna-community-kitchen-feeds-the-pioneer-valley-stigma-free-masslive-com/?feed_id=4431&_unique_id=63352f70b2d03
Take one meal, take two, take four, but rest assured — no one at the Manna Community Kitchen will question or judge you.
Six days a week at a Northampton church, volunteers spend the morning preparing a restaurant-quality dining option for anyone who could use it. Lunch approaches and a crowd queues, and the meals are there for the taking, whether a person has a roof to sleep under or not, whether they have a job or not, whether they came for a meal yesterday or the day before or never before.
The food is offered free of charge and free of shame. This is not a soup kitchen, Manna treasurer and cook Lee Anderson said. The organization dropped that designation years ago, preferring to ditch the connotation it brought of Oliver Twist and gruel dropped in buckets.
“I have friends who are single parents. They would just say, ‘I don’t want to take from somebody who needs it more,’” Anderson said. “But it’s for all of us. We’ve got plenty. We’re in a valley full of abundance.”
Food insecurity has a way of hiding in plain sight. When their child wants to play in the local basketball league this season or needs school supplies, parents may feel inclined to cut from the food budget for a few nights.
“You don’t have to do that,” Anderson said. Come here, free up that money and go to the movies with your kid. Food is the first thing that gets pushed off the table when your finances get compressed.”
Manna Community Kitchen
From Monday through Thursday, Manna serves meals out of St. John’s Episcopal Church on Elm Street. On Fridays and Saturdays, they relocate to Edwards Church on Main Street. Doors open at 11:30 a.m., except for Wednesday’s 6 p.m. meal.
Manna has been running 35 years strong, said Kaitlyn Ferrari, the organization’s development director. Today, they average about 1,200 meals a week, serving dozens of guests in person each day and dozens more by delivery — all with however much food they need.
“We’re no questions asked,” Ferrari said. “If someone asks for four meals, we’ll give them four meals.”
About a quarter of the meals are for delivery to people who are homebound or simply unable to be at the church in person to pick up food.
Finding volunteers to deliver can be challenging, and the cost of transportation does not help, even as more people than ever are asking for food deliveries.
The Manna Community Kitchen in Northampton, where volunteers prepared ham grinders to serve to anyone who arrives in need of a meal, Aug. 29, 2022. The kitchen serves 1,200 meals weekly. (Will Katcher/MassLive).
In recent weeks, an unlikely corporate hand stepped in to help.
DoorDash — the company that allows drivers to sign up to deliver from restaurants to customers’ doorsteps — began partnering in 2018 with government and nonprofit organizations to facilitate deliveries that had a social impact. Since linking with Manna in August, DoorDash has paid their drivers $5 a bag to deliver meals for the community kitchen.
About 60 people asked for deliveries as of a month ago. When DoorDash began delivering, that number jumped by 10 in the span of two weeks.
Manna proudly is known for its varied and nutritious meals, Ferrari said.
On a recent Monday, the midday meal that Anderson whipped up at St. John’s could just as easily be found at a sandwich shop downtown — a ham grinder, sweet potato fries, a banana, salad, chocolate cake.
“Everyone gets a salad. Everything is locally sourced. Lettuce, tomatoes, beets if they’re in season,” she said. “We really do try to put a lot of thought into the food we make. We’ll find out one of our guests, their mom used to make something, so we’ll make that next week.”
“Once you eat our food and you meet the people that hang around here, you realize that you know it is no different than a restaurant in town,” Anderson said.
Alongside the physical nourishment, Manna hopes the people arriving for a meal get the social nourishment a community can offer.
“Everyone is a human being and deserves not just food but someone to talk to,” Ferrari said.
In the kitchen at St. John’s Church, as the staff prepared scores of meals for the Monday crowd, Alison Ryan of Sunderland and Jeannine Clark of Florence stood at their prep stations, filling cups of aioli and wrapping corn on the cob.
Ryan, the community engagement liaison for Trulieve, a North King Street cannabis dispensary, was working in a kitchen for the first time. She had previously volunteered through her job with Habitat for Humanity and the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts.
“I think there’s definitely a need for [the community kitchen] in Northampton,” she said.
The Manna Community Kitchen in Northampton, where volunteers prepared ham grinders to serve to anyone who arrives in need of a meal, Aug. 29, 2022. The kitchen serves 1,200 meals weekly. Pictured is Alison Ryan, the community engagement liaison for the Northampton cannabis dispensary Trulieve, who is volunteering as part of her work community. (Will Katcher/MassLive).
Clark retired six years ago from a job in the University of Massachusetts Amherst Office of Environmental Health and Safety.
She came to Manna a little less than three years ago, hoping to give back to her community.
“I always imagined it could have been me out there,” she said, “if I made the wrong decision in my life.”
With the doors open and the meals flowing, one Ludlow man took his grinder outside, where about a dozen people sat under a tent enjoying their lunch.
He first came to the community kitchen about a month ago and was surprised at the quality of the food he received. He does not often buy vegetables, but sometimes finds crates of them tossed away in a dumpster behind a restaurant or grocery store.
He gestured to his chocolate cake, salad with fresh vegetables, fruit, sweet potatoes and the remaining half of his sandwich.
“I couldn’t pay $40 bucks to get this in a restaurant,” he said.
Related Content:
Note to readers: if you purchase something through one of our affiliate links we may earn a commission.
Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement, Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement, and Your California Privacy Rights (User Agreement updated 1/1/21. Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement updated 7/1/2022).
Cookie Settings
© 2022 Advance Local Media LLC. All rights reserved (About Us).
The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Advance Local.
Community Rules apply to all content you upload or otherwise submit to this site.
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Wednesday, September 28, 2022
Fall lawn and garden maintenance: What you need to know - RochesterFirst
RochesterFirst
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by: Liam Healy
Posted: Sep 7, 2022 / 04:16 PM EDT
Updated: Sep 7, 2022 / 04:47 PM EDT
by: Liam Healy
Posted: Sep 7, 2022 / 04:16 PM EDT
Updated: Sep 7, 2022 / 04:47 PM EDT
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WROC) — With the average first freeze for our area a little over a month away, it’s time to start thinking of prepping your lawns and gardens for the end of the season.
But before you break out the bags, Jessica Demasio, the general manager at Broccolo Tree and Lawn Care has some advice: “Leave the leaves.”
Specifically, you want to leave them in your garden. The decomposing leaves can provide nutrients to the garden, as well as act like insulation during the winter months for root systems in the garden. Demasio also recommends leaving what’s already in your garden alone as you shut it down for the winter.
“There could be critters overwintering in the debris and in hiding in the foliage in the stems and things like that,” said Demasio on why less can be more when it comes to your garden cleanup.
The leftover flowers and foliage can also serve as a source of food for non-migratory birds that spend the winter in the area. Your lawn on the other hand, around this time of year, can use a little more attention, such as getting ready to aerate and re-seed in preparation for next year.
“On that last mow of your lawn of the season you want to take it down as short as you can go really,” added Demasio on some of the final preparations you should be doing for your lawn heading into Fall.
While that is still a few weeks away, there other things you want to be on the lookout for, like areas damaged by the hot and dry summer. These can be hideaways for grubs that can damage your lawn in the long run, checking for them is simpler than you think too.
“What you want to do is cut out like a square foot of turf from your lawn and just kind of cut out a little square and pull it back and if you’re seeing less than 10 grubs in that square foot you really should not have to take any action,” said Demasio.
But if you do, there are grub treatments available that you can spray on the affected areas but remember when it comes to your clean-up and your use of chemicals in and around your yard these days Demasio pushes once again that, less is more.
The average first freeze for our region occurs between October 1 and 11, for more information on the differences between a frost and a freeze you can read this helpful piece from NWS Buffalo.
Copyright 2022 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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source https://1home.streamstorecloud.com/fall-lawn-and-garden-maintenance-what-you-need-to-know-rochesterfirst/?feed_id=4313&_unique_id=6333d7483109e
Please enter a search term.
Please enter a search term.
by: Liam Healy
Posted: Sep 7, 2022 / 04:16 PM EDT
Updated: Sep 7, 2022 / 04:47 PM EDT
by: Liam Healy
Posted: Sep 7, 2022 / 04:16 PM EDT
Updated: Sep 7, 2022 / 04:47 PM EDT
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WROC) — With the average first freeze for our area a little over a month away, it’s time to start thinking of prepping your lawns and gardens for the end of the season.
But before you break out the bags, Jessica Demasio, the general manager at Broccolo Tree and Lawn Care has some advice: “Leave the leaves.”
Specifically, you want to leave them in your garden. The decomposing leaves can provide nutrients to the garden, as well as act like insulation during the winter months for root systems in the garden. Demasio also recommends leaving what’s already in your garden alone as you shut it down for the winter.
“There could be critters overwintering in the debris and in hiding in the foliage in the stems and things like that,” said Demasio on why less can be more when it comes to your garden cleanup.
The leftover flowers and foliage can also serve as a source of food for non-migratory birds that spend the winter in the area. Your lawn on the other hand, around this time of year, can use a little more attention, such as getting ready to aerate and re-seed in preparation for next year.
“On that last mow of your lawn of the season you want to take it down as short as you can go really,” added Demasio on some of the final preparations you should be doing for your lawn heading into Fall.
While that is still a few weeks away, there other things you want to be on the lookout for, like areas damaged by the hot and dry summer. These can be hideaways for grubs that can damage your lawn in the long run, checking for them is simpler than you think too.
“What you want to do is cut out like a square foot of turf from your lawn and just kind of cut out a little square and pull it back and if you’re seeing less than 10 grubs in that square foot you really should not have to take any action,” said Demasio.
But if you do, there are grub treatments available that you can spray on the affected areas but remember when it comes to your clean-up and your use of chemicals in and around your yard these days Demasio pushes once again that, less is more.
The average first freeze for our region occurs between October 1 and 11, for more information on the differences between a frost and a freeze you can read this helpful piece from NWS Buffalo.
Copyright 2022 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Subscribe Now
source https://1home.streamstorecloud.com/fall-lawn-and-garden-maintenance-what-you-need-to-know-rochesterfirst/?feed_id=4313&_unique_id=6333d7483109e
Tuesday, September 27, 2022
How to use fall leaves to improve your lawn and garden - Farm and Dairy
Get 4 Weeks of Farm and Dairy Home Delivered
The weather has been changing quickly, and the rainy weekend certainly felt a little more like fall than summer. Even so, I was surprised to find entire sections of the bike trail blanketed with leaves on Saturday.
Living in the woods I’m still surrounded by a mostly green dome. However, I know this will change in the coming weeks and I can’t let this opportunity go to waste.
Fall leaves are an underutilized natural resource, one of the most readily-available forms of organic matter and the cheapest fertilizer on the market.
During the spring and summer, trees pull nutrients and minerals up from the soil and convert them into new leaves and branches. Nutrients and minerals are returned to the soil when the leaves fall off the trees and decompose on the ground. Pound for pound, the leaves of most trees contain twice as many nutrients as manure.
Changing your fall cleanup routine can improve the soil in your backyard before spring. When leaves are left on the ground they are transformed into a rich humus by worms, bacteria and other microorganisms. A healthy earthworm population can drag a 1-inch layer of organic matter into their underground burrows in a few months, both aerating and fertilizing your soil, unseen.
The addition of this organic matter coats finer particles providing more air space in clay soils, and binds sandy soils allowing for better water retention.
Organic matter also increases microbial activity including beneficial bacteria, fungi and other microorganisms that aid in plant growth.
Mulching, shredding or chopping fall leaves helps them break down faster and prevents them from matting together and suffocating the soil or vegetation.
You can mulch leaves that have fallen into your yard by simply running the lawn mower over them. This process can chop leaves to one-tenth their original size.
The best time to mulch fallen leaves is when they are dry and less than one inch deep.
Mulching leaves
When you’re finished you may have some brown mulched leaf patches, however, they should settle into the soil and you should see grass growing through them within a few days. If the grass isn’t emerging after a few days, run the mower over them again.
Mulching leaves into your lawn returns nutrients to the soil and reduces weed germination. Using leaves as mulch in your flower and vegetable gardens can impact the ecosystems within them, similarly.
Leaves can be applied as mulch either whole or chopped in flower beds, vegetable gardens and around trees and shrubs. This layer of natural mulch can protect microorganisms in the soil, provide a place for pollinators to overwinter, smother weeds, protect plants growing under the soil and provide a source of organic matter in the spring.
Trees and shrubs. Many insects and pollinators rely on fallen leaves to feed in the fall and complete their life cycle by overwintering in the leaf litter until spring. Removing this habitat in the fall reduces the number of emerging moths, butterflies, fireflies, bees and more. Disrupting these life cycles causes food chain disruptions to birds and other wildlife in the spring and can impact pollinator numbers. Leaving a 2-4 inch layer of whole leaf mulch under trees and shrubs can help maintain these vital habitats without giving up your entire lawn. Be careful to keep the mulch layer away from the trunk and root crown.
Flower beds. A 2-3 inch layer of chopped or shredded leaves applied to your flower beds will help maintain a uniform soil temperature throughout the winter, which will protect tender root systems and microorganisms and prevent frost upheaval from damaging bulbs, tuberous flowers and less hardy perennials. The mulch layer will also recycle nutrients and feed your plants, conserve soil moisture during dry spells and prevent the emergence of weeds. Mulch should be applied after the first hard freeze.
Vegetable garden. A 2-inch layer of whole or chopped leaves applied to the top of your vegetable garden can provide an overwintering area for pollinators, smother winter weeds and add organic matter to the soil when it is tilled in in the spring.
Composting leaves is pretty simple and inexpensive. A recommended ratio is 25-30 parts brown material, such as dried leaves, to one part green material, such as grass clippings. When you’re mulching leaves with your mower you’re basically creating compost for your lawn.
However, you can also compost leaves in the fall to spread on your garden or flower beds in the spring.
Realistically, if you had enough leaves and green material you could cover your vegetable garden and till the entire compost pile into it in the spring.
If you have way more brown material than you need for your compost pile this fall, you can store them in garbage bags with small holes that allow leaves to break down naturally. Wetting the bags of leaves or leaving the holes in direct contact with the ground will speed up decomposition, creating leaf mold. You can then add the leaf mold to your compost pile in the spring and summer when brown materials are not as readily available.
Cleaning up leaves and repurposing them on your property keeps them out of storm drains and local waterways, which improves water quality. When leaves make it into local water sources they release nutrients as they break down and can encourage algae growth.
Keeping your yard waste in your yard has endless conservation benefits. Not only does repurposing it feed back into the vibrant ecosystem that exists there, it can also prevent the accidental transportation of invasive plant and animal species and it cuts down on the resources used to transport and dispose of it.
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The weather has been changing quickly, and the rainy weekend certainly felt a little more like fall than summer. Even so, I was surprised to find entire sections of the bike trail blanketed with leaves on Saturday.
Living in the woods I’m still surrounded by a mostly green dome. However, I know this will change in the coming weeks and I can’t let this opportunity go to waste.
Fall leaves are an underutilized natural resource, one of the most readily-available forms of organic matter and the cheapest fertilizer on the market.
During the spring and summer, trees pull nutrients and minerals up from the soil and convert them into new leaves and branches. Nutrients and minerals are returned to the soil when the leaves fall off the trees and decompose on the ground. Pound for pound, the leaves of most trees contain twice as many nutrients as manure.
Changing your fall cleanup routine can improve the soil in your backyard before spring. When leaves are left on the ground they are transformed into a rich humus by worms, bacteria and other microorganisms. A healthy earthworm population can drag a 1-inch layer of organic matter into their underground burrows in a few months, both aerating and fertilizing your soil, unseen.
The addition of this organic matter coats finer particles providing more air space in clay soils, and binds sandy soils allowing for better water retention.
Organic matter also increases microbial activity including beneficial bacteria, fungi and other microorganisms that aid in plant growth.
Mulching, shredding or chopping fall leaves helps them break down faster and prevents them from matting together and suffocating the soil or vegetation.
You can mulch leaves that have fallen into your yard by simply running the lawn mower over them. This process can chop leaves to one-tenth their original size.
The best time to mulch fallen leaves is when they are dry and less than one inch deep.
Mulching leaves
When you’re finished you may have some brown mulched leaf patches, however, they should settle into the soil and you should see grass growing through them within a few days. If the grass isn’t emerging after a few days, run the mower over them again.
Mulching leaves into your lawn returns nutrients to the soil and reduces weed germination. Using leaves as mulch in your flower and vegetable gardens can impact the ecosystems within them, similarly.
Leaves can be applied as mulch either whole or chopped in flower beds, vegetable gardens and around trees and shrubs. This layer of natural mulch can protect microorganisms in the soil, provide a place for pollinators to overwinter, smother weeds, protect plants growing under the soil and provide a source of organic matter in the spring.
Trees and shrubs. Many insects and pollinators rely on fallen leaves to feed in the fall and complete their life cycle by overwintering in the leaf litter until spring. Removing this habitat in the fall reduces the number of emerging moths, butterflies, fireflies, bees and more. Disrupting these life cycles causes food chain disruptions to birds and other wildlife in the spring and can impact pollinator numbers. Leaving a 2-4 inch layer of whole leaf mulch under trees and shrubs can help maintain these vital habitats without giving up your entire lawn. Be careful to keep the mulch layer away from the trunk and root crown.
Flower beds. A 2-3 inch layer of chopped or shredded leaves applied to your flower beds will help maintain a uniform soil temperature throughout the winter, which will protect tender root systems and microorganisms and prevent frost upheaval from damaging bulbs, tuberous flowers and less hardy perennials. The mulch layer will also recycle nutrients and feed your plants, conserve soil moisture during dry spells and prevent the emergence of weeds. Mulch should be applied after the first hard freeze.
Vegetable garden. A 2-inch layer of whole or chopped leaves applied to the top of your vegetable garden can provide an overwintering area for pollinators, smother winter weeds and add organic matter to the soil when it is tilled in in the spring.
Composting leaves is pretty simple and inexpensive. A recommended ratio is 25-30 parts brown material, such as dried leaves, to one part green material, such as grass clippings. When you’re mulching leaves with your mower you’re basically creating compost for your lawn.
However, you can also compost leaves in the fall to spread on your garden or flower beds in the spring.
Realistically, if you had enough leaves and green material you could cover your vegetable garden and till the entire compost pile into it in the spring.
If you have way more brown material than you need for your compost pile this fall, you can store them in garbage bags with small holes that allow leaves to break down naturally. Wetting the bags of leaves or leaving the holes in direct contact with the ground will speed up decomposition, creating leaf mold. You can then add the leaf mold to your compost pile in the spring and summer when brown materials are not as readily available.
Cleaning up leaves and repurposing them on your property keeps them out of storm drains and local waterways, which improves water quality. When leaves make it into local water sources they release nutrients as they break down and can encourage algae growth.
Keeping your yard waste in your yard has endless conservation benefits. Not only does repurposing it feed back into the vibrant ecosystem that exists there, it can also prevent the accidental transportation of invasive plant and animal species and it cuts down on the resources used to transport and dispose of it.
Up-to-date agriculture news in your inbox!
We are glad you have chosen to leave a comment. Please keep in mind that comments are moderated according to our comment policy.
Toll-Free 800-837-3419
Local 330-337-3419
Farm and Agriculture News, Local Market Prices and Crop Reports, Columns and Commentary.
Hundreds of Auction Advertisements for Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
Featuring Specialty Antique Auctions, Stores and Shows
Hundreds of Classifieds, Autos & Real Estate Listings
source https://4awesome.streamstorecloud.com/how-to-use-fall-leaves-to-improve-your-lawn-and-garden-farm-and-dairy/?feed_id=4283&_unique_id=633374efdf25b
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