Sunday, December 29, 2013

Interested in learning how to apply natural or "organic" techniques to control a variety of pests of edible and ornamental plants, including diseases, insects, rodents, deer, and weeds. Find out which methods do and don't work in the home orchard, and ornamental and vegetable gardens. Feel free to bring sample pests and lots of questions. Leave the workshop with information on how to protect your landscape from unwanted herbivores, using the most environmentally sensitive and effective products available. This hands-on workshop will take place at Jim's home/office where he has many edible and ornamental plants to evaluate. Portfolio


For more information visit the New England Wildflower Society website.

Natural Pest Control
Saturday, July 12,
11:00 am-1:00 pm Chesterfield, MA
Course Code: HOR3404
Leader: Jim McSweeney,
Arborist and Horticulturalist Fee: $26 (Member)
/ $32 (Nonmember)
Limit: 20

Sunday, December 15, 2013

http://hilltownfamilies.wordpress.com/category/jim-mcsweeney/

If you are interested in learning how to naturally perserve the food you grow or glean then check out my latest article. I have over 2 decades of experience in natural food presevation. I share with readers the 3 EASIEST ways to perserve food, with virtually no extra work.


see above link

Monday, November 18, 2013

http://hilltownfamilies.wordpress.com/category/jim-mcsweeney/

Want to know how to make your landscape look great in the fall/winter? I have just written an article on the top 5 fall/winter interest plants for the landscape from my own gardens. Think about seed heads, bark, berries, textures, wildlife benefits, etc... Anyone can make a garden look good in the spring. But we live in your houses for 12 months a year. Why not landscape with that in mind? Enjoy.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Sustainable plant choices for the landscape

http://hilltownfamilies.wordpress.com/2013/10/09/3-sustainable-plant-choices-for-the-family-garden/#more-35231

I have just written an article on the best plant choices for the landscape. If you are looking for plants with the following characteristics edibility, beauty, good for insects. Enjoy.
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Friday, September 13, 2013

http://hilltownfamilies.wordpress.com/category/jim-mcsweeney/

While the garden season is almost over there is still a lot to do. See link above for some timely tips.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

I just published an article on 2 pests (one disease & one insect) that are causing real problems to the home gardeners and local farmers. One is a recent introduction to the U.S. (2008) and the other has been around for a long time. This is the same disease that killed all the potatoes and subsequently the people of Ireland in the mid-1800's. See link for more info.

http://hilltownfamilies.wordpress.com/category/jim-mcsweeney/

Friday, June 7, 2013

Environmentally sound garden practices for the family garden

One of the major keys to a successful garden is the incorporation of organic matter into the soil every year


I remember taking a soil class at Umass 15 or so years back and hearing my professor say,
"the answer to almost any question I ask this semester will likely be add organic matter to the soil. If the problem is nutrition, drainage, pH, disease & insect problems, etc… the solution often can be solved with the addition of organic matter."
Soil needs organic matter for the following reason: moisture retention, aeration, microbial life, slow release fertilizer, etc….
So now you know it, how do you do it? Most people know about composting (see my composting blog for more details http://hilltowntreeandgarden.blogspot.com/2011/03/dirt-on-dir.html) but as a busy parent this can be too much work for too little return. Here is what I often do (you will not read this stuff in a book but it really works):

1) When you and the kids pull weeds just lay them back down on their side on top of the soil. They will die, become mulch and slowly return the nutrient they have taken from the soil.
2) Have the children rake up piles of your grass clippings and put them down as mulch. Providing you do not wait until the grass is 2' tall it will have few weed seeds. By the fall it will be semi-decomposted and ready to be worked into the soil.
3) Add some leaves (ground if possible) to the beds. If it's a perennial bed add them to the top as mulch & if it's a veg bed use as a mulch then work it in in the late fall.
4) Keep all plant matter in the bed. Why take the peony stalks away only to bring in bark mulch later? Why not just chop your bean stalks back into the soil or save them for a springtime mulch?
5) Cover crop (for veg gardens only). A cover crop is a seed of an annual plant that you broadcast onto the soil. It grows very quickly & then you turn it back into the soil. My favorite is buckwheat which i just pickup at Hadley Garden Center.


Part of the reason these kinds of tips will not be in Martha Stewarts next book is because it can look a bit dishelved. So if you are aspiring to be on the front page of Better Homes and Garden the above tips are not for you. But if you are a laid back Hilltowner and a busy parent who is trying to grow some stuff it will look fine to you. And have noticed that your 8 year old pile of vegetable scraps has amounted to only one and a half wheelbarrows of soil during this time (this was me)? If so then try the above 5 tips to increase the organic matter of your soil.


Jim McSweeney M.C.A, M.C.H.
President
Hilltown Tree & Garden LLC
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Cell (413) 559-1905
www.HilltownTreeandGarden.com
https://www.facebook.com/HilltownTreeAndGarden