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 Our 8th Annual Big Plant and Seedling Sale is this Weekend!!
We will be open this weekend (Mother's Day Weekend) and Memorial Day Weekend for our 8th Annual Big Plant and Seedling Sale! The plants and seedlings this year are looking really great!
8th Annual Big Plant and Seedling Sale!
Saturday and Sunday May 10th and 11th May 24th and 25th 9 am to 12 noon
We are offering our usual huge assortment of certified organic plants and seedlings - heirloom vegetables, 300 varieties of herbs, artisanal greens, flowers, natives, plants that cater to beneficial insects, perennials, companions, fun and unusual stuff and more! The plants and seedlings this year are looking really great!  Our herb selection is comprehensive - both culinary and medicinal and even a lot of Traditional Chinese Medicine herbs are being offered this year! Everything from Agrimony to Zaatar Oregano!! Most of our vegetables and herbs are sold in 3.25 to 4 inch square pots and are priced at $4.50 per pot. Our perennials, some fancier herbs, and small scrubs and berries are sold in 4 inch to 1 gallon sized pots and are priced between $6 and $19 per pot. For the ultimate gardening experience this summer, consider our Beyond Sustainable: Organic Gardening Course, which was inspired by requests! We can take registrations at the Plant Sale this weekend or thru Paypal, here on our webpage. And we can also answer any questions you may have at the Plant Sale this weekend. Our plant variety listings can be downloaded from here -
I broke the list down into are 7 categories:
You can also download the pdfs from our Current Plant Offerings webpage. (NOTE: I am currently updating and adding all new content to the webpage so please excuse its 'under construction' appearance! Can't wait to share the new site with everyone soon!) We will have warm weather vegetables like tomatoes and peppers and basils for sale this weekend, but as I do every year, I must send out a warning about planting these warmth-loving seedlings too early. It is tempting to try to get everything planted nice and early, but you lose production in the long run if you plant tomatoes, cucumbers, squash, melons, peppers, eggplants, and basil too early and they get chilled by temperatures under 45 degrees F at nighttime. I plan on planting all of these warm weather plants on Memorial Day Weekend this year. The plants we'll be selling this weekend will be perfectly fine in their pots until Memorial Day.
Below find info on our new Organic Gardening Course and our May-June 2014 Schedule is posted as well. Happy Mother's Day!!
Best and thanks, Mark and Barbara Midsummer Farm
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New Stuff This Year!
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Gogi Berries - we're selling Gogi Berry Seedlings for $6. Gogi Berries are amazing super foods - full of antioxidants and all sorts of wonderful health-giving and energy-giving properties. And you can grow them here!! This past winter was a really good test-winter for hardiness! These little scrubs will grow fast, plan for about a 4 square foot space. They will also need a well-drained sunny location. I planted my first ones among my blueberries and bilberries, and they did very well. I recommend that if your Gogi Berry seedling gets some berry-producing flowers this first year that you pluck them off and let the bush really focus on establishing its roots.

Hardy Kiwi Vines These are fabulous hardy perennial vines that produce fur-less mini kiwi fruits! Hardy Kiwi 'Ananasnaja' is one of the best producers of bite-sized kiwi's. This variety has tremendous cold hardiness and is easy to grow. You will need a male and a female for pollination. These do well in full sun or part sun and require a trellis or arbor to climb on. Vines have pink stems and leaves, especially of the males, can sometimes have pink variegation and speckling.
Iris are one of my favorite flowers - they are easy to grow and prolific and striking in blooms and colors. Every year I try to get some new ones. This year we've added an amazing yellow-green Louisiana Iris to our iris offerings, called Wow Factor Lousiana Iris. These have alluring orchid-like blooms. I have a bunch of mini rhizomes for sale at $4.50 each! They do well in pots or in the ground or in pond environments. Full/Part sun. These love moisture.
Elephant Ears - Alocasia 'Calidora' Ok, this is totally frivolous! Maybe it was because the winter was so long, but the thought of being surrounded by these gigantic tropical leaves this summer is just crazy-appealing to me this year! This is the classic, upright, bright green Alocasia. Looks amazing in containers or just grown as annuals around the patio or pond. They are not hardy in this area, but grow super fast and so can be grown as annuals. Full Sun or Part Sun.

Lobelia cardinalis 'Fried Green Tomatoes' Cardinal Flower I can't recommend Cardinal Flowers enough. They are wonderful native hardy perennials that attract butterflies and hummingbirds in droves. These plants quickly grow into large plants with tall stems of bright red flowers, which bloom for more than 10 weeks straight in midsummer. No known pests or diseases. Quick to establish, prefers full sun and performs quite well in average to wet soil moisture. Great when used in mass plantings, along the middle of the border, pond edges, and rain gardens. Height is 3 feet or more. I'm selling them as small perennials so people can afford to plan out large mass plantings if desired. Even though they are in 4" pots these will grow just as fast as any larger potted version and start naturalizing this season.
 Lobelia siphilitica Great Blue Lobelia The spikes of brilliant true blue flowers on this wetland native attract butterflies and hummingbirds to your garden! Lobelia siphilitica provides outstanding color for the border, wet meadow, rain garden, or pond edge. Naturalizes easily in moist soils, but tolerates periods of drought. Great Blue Lobelia is the blue counterpart of the Cardinal Flower, but is stockier and bushier in appearance. It loves open, moist places and blooms at the same time as the red Cardinal Flower.
Lady's Mantle Is an ancient herb and has a long history of herbal usage. It has fallen out of popularity with current herbalists, but it has a definite and important spot in my herb garden.
This particular variety of Lady's Mantle is called 'Thriller' as it becomes covered in showy chartreuse spring flowers that make excellent fresh cut or dried flowers. Extraordinarily showy when planted en masse, it provides excellent contrast to other brightly colored plants. I just planted a group of them around the base of my fritillarias and alliums to provide a nice cushion of green mounds for the bulbs to come out of next spring.
Lady's Mantle makes a great ground cover, or edging planting, and they are deer resistant. Part sun is best.
The leaves are my favorite part - they are large, nearly round, and pleated, soft and velvety to the touch. Water droplets sit upon the leaves like lotus leaves.
 Phlomis cashmeriana or Cashmere Sage Stately herb with large, textured foliage and whorls of showy flowers. Cool, lavender-pink flowers can be cut for fresh or dry arrangements. Upright architectural form and whorled seed heads are highly ornamental every season of the year. Hardy Perennial, grows to about 36-60 inches high and about 24 inches wide. Does well in most soil types, but needs drainage. Full sun to shade. Phlomis are one of my all time favorite perennials - I'm working on propagating more varieties for upcoming plant sales...
Dwarf Mulberry Seedlings I have been in love with mulberries since I was child. The first mulberry tree I knew was a white fruiting one. A big mulberry tree planted itself in our yard a couple years ago and it has now grown over 15 feet tall, and every year it is full of fabulous dark purple mulberries. Mulberries are sweet and refreshing and very juicy. Our chickens love the berries and the tree produces such an abundance that we can count on that tree to help feed the chickens! Like all berries, mulberries have tons of health benefits, strengthening the immune system, promoting good eyesight, and providing antioxidants.
The only issue is the sheer size of the tree and now so many of the berries are so high up that only the wild birds can reach them. Well good for them, but we need more mulberries down here!
The Mulberries I have for sale this year are dwarf seedlings - Morus nigra 'Dwarf Everbearing.' This is a fabulous permaculture scrub - producing in abundance with little work. There will be plenty of mulberries for all to eat! Morus nigra gets a medium size black mulberry with a sweet tasty flavor. It can be grown in pots too - and with minor pruning can be maintained easily at a short height of 3-6 feet tall.
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NEW! Beyond Sustainable: Organic Gardening Course A 5-Session Hands-On Experience in growing your own nutrient-dense food, organically, abundantly, intensively, and beyond sustainably.
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 This course covers all the major aspects of growing food organically that have successfully been working for us, here at Midsummer Farm. When taking this course, you'll experience a comprehensive and hands on learning opportunity in how to grow organic food. We have been certified organic since 2005 and we follow all the National Organic Program rules. However we also go way above and beyond the standard organic standards, producing an abundance of food on a small footprint of land and designing our growing program using nature as a guide and inspiration. We used to say we garden sustainably, but now we find ourselves feeling compelled and even encouraged by the natural balance we've achieved to go beyond sustainable, and we garden to enhance vitality so we can address the toxic environment that we find ourselves in as a culture. The garden becomes a sanctuary, an expression of art, a healing force for the earth, and more... A garden should not be about the work you put into it or the harvest, but rather about the process itself. This workshop is taught by Barbara Taylor-Laino, who has been growing food organically since the 1970's. She has extensively studied and researched in Biodynamic, Bio-intensive gardening, Permaculture-styled food production systems, etc., but she has also actively experimented and implemented this information in real-world environments. She has been gardening for and consulting on various levels and sizes of food production enterprises for over 10 years and running her own CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) Farm since 2006. This Course takes place at her farm, Midsummer Farm, in Warwick, NY, about 1 hour from New York City. Midsummer Farm is a CSA farm, a plant and seedling nursery, and a teaching and demonstration farm. The main gardening practices or styles are unique to this farm, but are applicable from a raised 8x10' bed in a suburban backyard, to a community garden endeavor, to a rooftop garden in a city, to a micro-farm, to any multi-acred production farm... they are a combination of great food production techniques that work together to restore fertility, revitalize the land, and that create abundance. This course is a great accompaniment to a PDC or (Permaculture Design Certificate) Course. Cost of the 5-Session Program is $385.00 To register please visit our website by clicking here and use the PayPal button.
We're offering two different sessions of this course for your convenience - one on weekdays and one on weekends: Weekday Session Dates: Friday, May 30th Friday, June 6th Friday, June 27th Friday, July 25th Friday, August 8th
Weekend Session Dates: Saturday, June 28th Saturday, July 5th Saturday, July 26th Saturday, August 9th Saturday, August 23rd
Classes run from 10 am to 3 pm
General Outline of the Five Sessions Session One: - Designing with Nature
- Plotting and Planning the Garden Layout
- Choosing What to Grow
- Restoring and Enhancing the Fertility
- Timing of Planting, Timing of Harvesting
- Garden Soil Structures: Raised Beds, Double Digging, No-Till, Containers
- Soil Building - Gardening for the Soil - Creating Tilth
- Vermiculture Gardening for Worms
- Green Manures - Spring, Summer, Autumn
 Session Two:
- Seed Starting
- Transplanting and Setting out
- Crop Rotation
- Grafting Soft-Stems (tomatoes)
- Cool vs Warm-Weather Vegetables
- Succession Planting
- Growing Insectaries - Gardening for Bugs
- Companion planting
- Growing for Nutrient Density/Mind and Body Wellness
- Mulching
- Herbs and Teas and Foliar Sprays for the Garden
Session Three:
- Inter-cropping
- Green Manures
- Staking and Trellising - Making use of Vertical Space
- Weeding and Hoeing - Weeds are Useful
- Direct Sowing
- Using Water Well
- Rhythms of Nature - Timing
- Biodynamic Preps
- Pest Control and Prevention through Balance
Session Four: - Fungus - Good and Bad
- Micro-climates
- Composting - Various Types of Piles
- Animals and Manures and Vedic or "Veganic" Growing
- Forest and Shade Gardening
- Perennial Vegetables and Sustainable Food Crops
- Berries
- Staple Crops - Growing Calories - Gardening for Resiliency
- Dooryard Gardening
Session Five: - Second Spring - July Planting for Fall Harvests
- Autumn Varieties vs Spring Varieties of Vegetables
- Season Extending Practices - Row Cover, Cold Frames, High Tunnels, Greenhouses
- Seed Saving
- 'Curing' your Harvests
- Processing and Storage
- Cover Cropping - Throughout Growing Season and as Winter Green Manures
- Producing money as well as food? Micro-farming, Market Gardening, Maraīcher Farming, CSA Programs, etc.
In an effort to provide the best learning experience, this schedule is subject to change depending on weather and other natural factors...) Please call or email us with any questions you may have - info@midsummerfarm.com | 845-986-9699 |
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Midsummer Farm May and June Schedule!
 8th Annual Big Plant and Seedling Sale Opening Weekend at Midsummer Farm! Saturday and Sunday, May 10th and 11th 2014 9am - 2pm
We'll have our full variety of certified organic plants and seedlings available. Over 200 different varieties of heirloom and hybrid vegetables, over 300 culinary and medicinal herbs, plus annual flowers, native and pollinator friendly flowers, unusual and collectible perennials!
Every year we grow more and more of each variety and we add over a hundred fun new varieties of herbs, veggies, annual flowers, natives, and perennials! All kinds of great things for your summer vegetable and herb gardens! We also have hard-to-find and really cool herbs and perennials for those of you with more eccentric tastes like Medicinal Yarrow, Gogi Berry, Skullcap, Hardy Kiwi Vines, Phlomis, and St. John's Wort...
Saturday, May 17th 2014 10am to 3pm
A Northeast traditional annual garden event! Trade Secrets begins on Saturday, May 17th at Lion Rock Farm in Sharon, CT with the antique and rare plant sale! For the past 12 years, Trade Secrets has brought garden-lovers from around the world to the Litchfield Hills of Connecticut to discover new plants, topiary, and antiques for their gardens. 2014 will be no exception with nearly 60 vendors and garden antiques dealers from around the northeast region. Shoppers can find rare plant specimens from specialized growers and from some of the nation's best known small nurseries, as well as furniture, antiques, cloches and garden statuary from the choicest purveyors of garden antiques, wrought-iron fencing, textiles from select antiques dealers, and so much more.
We'll be at the West Milford Community Garden Opening! Sunday, May 18th 2014 11am to 1pm
 8th Annual Big Plant and Seedling Sale Weekend #2 at Midsummer Farm! Saturday and Sunday, May 24th and 25th 2014 9am - 2pm
We'll have our full variety of certified organic plants and seedlings available. Over 100 different varieties of heirloom and hybrid vegetables, over 200 culinary and medicinal herbs, plus annual flowers, native and pollinator friendly flowers, unusual and collectible perennials!
Every year we grow more and more of each variety and we add over a hundred fun new varieties of herbs, veggies, annual flowers, natives, and perennials! All kinds of great things for your summer vegetable and herb gardens! We also have hard-to-find and really cool herbs and perennials for those of you with more eccentric tastes like Medicinal Yarrow, Gogi Berry, Skullcap, Hardy Kiwi Vines, Phlomis, and St. John's Wort...
First Day of our Weekday Sessions of our Beyond Sustainable: Organic Gardening Course! Friday, May 30th 10 am to 3 pm
 The Art of Soil Building Workshop: Growing Tilth, a Sustainable Nutrient Base for a Garden of Abundance Saturday, June 7th (Raindate Sunday, June 8th) 10 am to 3 pm This full-day intensive course will take participants through the building and growing of tilth or humus or really good growing soil. Going beyond the typical strategies of organic farming and gardening, students will take away a firm grasp of how to grow their own soil for a garden of ultimate production of any size. Workshop Outline:
~The Bare Bones Basics: NPK/trace minerals ~SOIL AMENDMENTS: Amendments are quick fixes ~Composting - a great way to build biomass as well as diversity within the soil's biomass. ~The Four Main Types of Compost Piles we construct yearly at Midsummer Farm: Deliberate Style Compost, Free Form Style Compost, Biodynamically Fortified Compost, and Hot, Killer Compost ~Manure Management, Deep Bedding Method of Animal Keeping, "90/120 day rule" ~Veganic or Vedic gardening ~Using Compost: Top-Dressing, as a Mulch, and as a Tea. ~Herbs in your Compost Pile and Garden ~Sifting and Screening ~Staggering nitrogen-fixers - annuals, shrubs, trees ~GROWING SOIL - 60% of your growing space for the soil and 40% for your eating. ~Some of my favorite biomass plants (cover crops, green manures) ~Interplanting or Underplanting ~Mulching and Green Top Dressings ~No Till methods ~Biodynamics - the 500 Preparation - or Horn Manure ~Feeding Your Aerobic Micro-herd with Nutritive Garden Teas (manure, comfrey, nettle, alfalfa, kelp) ~Mycorrhizal Fungi - The power of symbiosis ~Wine Cap or King Stropharia (Stropharia rugoso-annulata) Cost is $145.00 for the day. (Two people from the same household/farm can take $20 off the second person's tuition.) To register: http://www.midsummerfarm.com/Eventspage.htm
Backyard Organic Poultry Rearing Workshop Sunday, June 8th 2014 10 am to 12 noon For anyone who has dreamed of walking out to your own chicken coop and collecting fresh eggs for breakfast, this course will guide you through starting up your own flock and in organic and natural rearing methods. We will discuss all of our secrets to Organic chicken care that we have discovered over the years. Chickens are wonderful stewards of the earth; and kept in proper conditions, chickens are valuable assets to the garden, lawn, and compost pile. They also provide backyard joy. They are easy to take care of, are not noisy or smelly, and are an important part of the Organic garden. (Please be sure to check with your town to make sure that chickens are allowed where you live.) Cost is $36 | Registration closes 5/30/14.
Backyard Organic Poultry Rearing Workshop Friday, June 13th 2014 10 am to 12 noon For anyone who has dreamed of walking out to your own chicken coop and collecting fresh eggs for breakfast, this course will guide you through starting up your own flock and in organic and natural rearing methods. We will discuss all of our secrets to Organic chicken care that we have discovered over the years. Chickens are wonderful stewards of the earth; and kept in proper conditions, chickens are valuable assets to the garden, lawn, and compost pile. They also provide backyard joy. They are easy to take care of, are not noisy or smelly, and are an important part of the Organic garden. (Please be sure to check with your town to make sure that chickens are allowed where you live.) Cost is $36 | Registration closes 6/4/14.
 We'll be selling a collection of fabulous native perennials at the Tuxedo Park Garden Club Plant Sale!
Saturday, June 14th 2014
10 am - 12 noon
At the St. Mary's-in-Tuxedo Episcopal Church
First Day of our Weekday Sessions of our Building A Sustainable Herbal Apothecary Course! Organic Gardening Course! Friday, June 20th 10 am to 3 pm
First Day of our Weekend Sessions of our Beyond Sustainable: Organic Gardening Course! Saturday, June 28th 10 am to 3 pm
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Disclaimer
© Copyright 2014 Barbara Taylor-Laino, HHC / Barbara Taylor Health. All Rights Reserved. This content may be copied in full, with copyright, contact, creation and information intact, without specific permission, when used only in a not-for-profit format. If any other use is desired, permission in writing from Barbara Taylor Laino is required.
This information newsletter is designed as an educational tool for better health. Recipes and information are included as examples for you learn from; they are not diagnostic or prescriptive. Everyone's health needs are different. This newsletter is not to be used as a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment of any health condition or problem. Any questions regarding your own health should be addressed to your own physician or other healthcare provider. The entire contents of this newsletter and the websites of Barbara Taylor Laino and Midsummer Farm are based upon the opinions of Barbara Taylor Laino, unless otherwise noted. Individual articles are based upon the opinions of the respective author(s), who retains copyright as marked. The information on the www.midsummerfarm.com website is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional and is not intended as medical advice. It is intended as a sharing of knowledge and information from the research and experience of Barbara Taylor Laino. You are encouraged to make your own health care decisions based upon your research and in partnership with a qualified health care professional.
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Midsummer Farm Contact Info: Barbara and Mark Laino Midsummer Farm 156 East Ridge Road Warwick, NY 10990 845-986-9699 info@midsummerfarm.com
Holistic Health Counseling Contact Info: Barbara Taylor-Laino Barbara Taylor Health 156 East Ridge Road Warwick, NY 10990 845-986-9699 info@barbarataylorhealth.com
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