Garlic: a virtually work-free crop

Back in the 1980s the Dartmouth Film Department showed a film by Les Blank called Garlic Is as Good as Ten Mothers. It was shown in “Smell-o-Rama.” Cooking garlic smells were mysteriously introduced to the air system, filling the 900-seat auditorium with the delicious odor of roasted garlic. I attended, and loved it all. Just for the record, my one mother was better than garlic — but I love garlic, too, and plant plenty of it.
One of my favorite fall appetizers is to take whole heads of garlic and roast them in oven-safe ramekins or small dishes at 375 degrees for 45 minutes or so. I peel off the outer layers of the head of garlic, cut off the tips of the head and drizzle it with olive oil. When done the cloves of garlic are soft and easily squeezed out of their skins after cooling. I like to serve this on crackers or a baguette spread with goat cheese.
In order to have enough garlic for treats like the one described above I plant a lot of garlic each October. Usually I plant about 50 cloves, but I have planted up to 100 — always enough to eat daily and some to share. It really is a virtually work-free, pest-free crop. All you need is “seed” garlic sold for planting, or failing that, some organic garlic purchased at your local farmers market or food coop. Grocery store garlic is often treated with chemicals so it won’t sprout.
In addition to seed garlic you need a sunny place with decent soil, or even crummy soil you can improve with compost. To plant 50 cloves of garlic the space you need is minimal: a spot perhaps 4 feet long and about 3 feet wide. You could even find the space in a flower bed for a few, or on the front lawn around the light pole.
I plant garlic in a wide raised bed. I loosen the soil with a garden fork or my CobraHead weeder down to a depth of 6 inches. Then I add some good-quality compost, either homemade or purchased, and stir it in. I make furrows 8 inches apart and add some organic fertilizer like Pro-Gro into the furrow. I work it in with my single-tined CobraHead weeder. Or you can sneak cloves into a flower bed individually using a hand trowel.
Each clove needs to be planted the way it grew — the fat part down, the pointy end up. I plant cloves about 3 inches deep and a hand’s width apart in the row. After pushing the clove into the loose soil I pat it down and when all are planted I cover the bed with about a foot of loose hay or straw. This will keep the garlic warm longer in the fall, allowing it to establish a good root system before the ground freezes.
Next spring the shoots will push right through the hay, but most weeds will not. If we have a warm fall, you might even see green shoots pushing through the hay now. Don’t worry. That won’t be a problem, come spring.
There are two kinds of garlic; hard-neck and soft-neck. Here in New England we do best growing hard-neck garlic. It has a stiff stem in the middle of each head where the scape grew last summer, while soft neck garlic does not.
Just as there are sweet onions and pungent onions that make you cry when you chop them, not all garlic tastes the same. If you are ordering garlic from a seed company, read the descriptions carefully. Be sure you are ordering hard-neck garlic. They should tell you about the flavor of each, and I recommend getting three different kinds for your first trial. Since seed garlic is relatively expensive, you will want to save some garlic each year for planting the next year.
If you use a lot of garlic in your recipes, pay attention to how many cloves are in each head. It is less work to peel one big clove than three small ones. I grow mainly large heads, and I often have to cut one clove into two or three pieces to fit it into my garlic press. The product description should tell you not only the size of the bulb but also the number of cloves per head.
You can store garlic best in a cool, dry place. Ideally 50 degrees with moderate humidity. You can freeze it in a zipper bag or jar for a year or more. Don’t store garlic at room temperature in oil, as it can produce deadly botulism.
Garlic plants are handsome, especially in July, when they send up tall flower scapes that twist and turn in great shapes. Think creatively and you can find a space to plant some. I often cut the scapes and use them in flower arrangements, and they are also good sliced and sautéed in a stir-fry.
In a recent article about putting the garden to bed, I failed to mention that it is a good plan to leave some flowers standing. Why? Because some beneficial insects lay eggs in or on the stalks to overwinter. Birds will also eat the seeds of things like black-eyed susans and coneflowers. So you have an excuse now not to clean up the gardens completely. You can finish in the spring.

A garlic bed ready for planting. Photo by Henry Homeyer.

Kiddie Pool 22/10/13

Family fun for the weekend

Festivals and expos

• Gather up the troop and head over to Bedford for the Girl Scout expo on Sunday, Oct. 16, at 10 a.m. at the New Hampshire Sportsplex (68 Technology Drive). Registration for the event closes on Oct. 13. The expo will have events including giveaways for the girls, live performances, hands-on exhibits and more. The program is appropriate for girls in kindergarten through grade 12 and adults, and they do not need to be members of the Girl Scouts to participate. Tickets for everyone cost $5 and can be purchased at mygs.girlscouts.org.

• The fourth annual Hudson Harvest Festival is happening on Saturday, Oct. 15, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Dr. H.O. Smith Elementary School (33 School St., Hudson). In addition to a costume parade for all ages with prizes to be awarded, the festival will feature games, music, vendors, craft tables and a pumpkin carving contest. See “New England Vendor Events” on Facebook for details.

• The Town of Windham is planning a harvest fest at Griffin Park (111 Range Road, Windham) on Saturday, Oct. 15, from noon to 4 p.m., featuring food trucks, family-friendly activities and more. At 3 p.m., kids can go trick-or-treating around the park. Visit windhamnh.gov for more information.

• One Church Manchester (1308 Wellington Road) will hold a fall festival on Saturday, Oct. 15, from 3 to 6 p.m., with food, games and pumpkin decorating. Volunteers can come and decorate the outpost on Friday, Oct. 14, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. The event is free to attend. Visit church.one/events/fallfestivalmanch for more information.

• The Londonderry Fall Fest is going to be on Saturday, Oct. 15, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the Londonderry Town Common (Mammoth Road). There will be more than 50 local vendors on hand to showcase their products, as well as various options from food trucks offering different tasty treats. Admission is free. See the Eventbrite page for more details.

Museum fun

• “My Year of Toys: An Art Journal,” theart exhibit at the Children’sMuseum of New Hampshire’s Gallery 6 (6 Washington St. in Dover), will run through Sunday, Oct. 16. The exhibit displays works by author and illustrator Sandy Steen Bartholomew, who created a drawing of one toy from her large toy collection every day for a year. Gallery 6 is free; paid museum admission (which is $12.50 per person age 1 and up; $10.50 for seniors) is not required for entrance to the gallery only. Museum hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m., and Sunday from 9 a.m. to noon. See childrens-museum.org.

Outdoor activities

• A brand new all persons trail is opening at the NH Audubon McClane Center in Concord (84 Silk Farm Road, 224-9909) on Saturday, Oct. 15. The grand opening ceremony will start at 9 a.m. and will be followed by a “birding for all” session. The trail, designed to help people with mobility challenges, was completed in September; it follows the nature trail and goes through the pollinator meadow. For more information on the trail, or to reserve a spot for the grand opening and birding outing, visit nhaudubon.org/event/all-persons-trail-grand-opening-october-15.

• The Nashua Duck Derby is going to take over Renaissance Park (23 Water St.) on Saturday, Oct. 15. In addition to the 10,000 duck drop goal, there will be a beer tent, food trucks, a scavenger hunt, games and kids’ activities. Live music by the Joe Mack Band will start at 11:30 a.m. and the duck drop will be at 2 p.m. Admission is free; to participate in the duck drop event, one duck costs $5, six cost $25, a dozen is $50, and 25 is $100. The first, second and third place ducks will win cash prizes of up to $2,500. Visit duckrace.com/Nashua for more information and to purchase ducks.

Putting the garden to bed

Don’t let the bed bugs bite

Frost has already lightly brushed my garden, and hard frost is not far behind. Even in warmer spots it is good to start getting ready for winter. Let’s look at some of the key activities for all of us.

First, remember to visit and support your local garden center. They want to unload as many plants now as they can — perennials, shrubs and trees. So they are discounting plants, often 25 percent or more. I recently got some big burr oaks at a 50 percent discount, a considerable saving. And it is not too late to plant.

I have read that woody plants store up food all summer when the sun is bright, and use some of it now to extend their roots out away from the main stem. So I like to plant trees in the fall especially since it is cooler and more rain is falling now than in mid-summer. If you plant a tree, be sure to spread 2 inches of mulch around the tree to keep the roots warm as late into the fall as possible.

You may have already done so, but let me remind you anyhow to bring in your houseplants that have summered outside. Do it now, not after frost even for plants like rosemary that can sustain a temperature down to 25 degrees or so.

Aphids are the biggest pest on houseplants. Outdoors they are eaten up by other insects or washed off by heavy rains, but indoors a plant that is already sulking is ripe for an infestation. Use your hose to wash not only the tops of leaves, but the underside as well. And wash the surface of soil in the pot — do this by laying the plant on its side. This will help you to get rid of eggs and adult aphids, though a few elude me every year. Watch for aphids or their sticky droppings on leaves. If you see some, spray with Safer Soap to dehydrate the aphids and knock them dead.

Your least favorite fall activity may be weeding and plant cleanup, though I kind of enjoy it. It is very important to remove rotten fruit, stems and leaves of tomatoes, potatoes, and vine crops as they often have mildew or fungus by now. Be sure to get them out of the garden ASAP. And if you have had bugs on any plants, put them in the household trash or on a burn pile. You don’t want them wintering over in the garden or the compost pile. You don’t have to wash tomato cages; their diseases won’t winter over on them.

Getting rid of weeds now is important, but so is covering the soil with leaves or mulch so those seeds blowing in the wind don’t land on bare earth and settle in, ready to grow in early spring even before you have thought about planting next year’s veggies.

Fallen leaves are the best mulch available, and free. You can compact them and make them easier to move to the garden by running them over with the lawnmower. They will settle in and not blow around if you do this just before a nice rain. But you can use grass clippings now, before leaves have all fallen. And if you use a mowing service, ask them to leave the leaves and grass clippings for you to use. But do that only if they do not use any chemicals on the lawn. You don’t want any chemicals in your garden.

Cutting back the flower gardens is hard work and time-consuming if you have extensive flower beds as I do. Many gardeners use their hand pruners and clip away, stem by stem. Not me. That is very hard on your paws. I like to use a curved serrated knife or small “harvest sickle” to do so. I grab a handful of stems with my left hand, then slice them off with my right. One motion, and no work for my fingers the way pruners would do.

You might also consider using a string trimmer to cut back big beds. I’ve done it, but don’t usually do so. It’s fast but less precise. And I like to leave some flower stalks standing, things with seed for winter birds like chickadees and finches. I leave black-eyed susans, purple coneflowers, sunflowers and anything else that looks tasty from a bird’s eye view.

The most radical way of cutting back flower beds is to use a lawnmower. In late fall I used to put the blade of my riding lawnmower up as high as possible and ride over it, mowing it all down. Now I no longer have a riding mower, and I doubt my battery mower would chomp through it. I will have to use the string trimmer, I guess. It’s about 75 feet by 10 feet, so a motorized tool helps.

If you have dahlias and other tropicals growing in the ground and want to save the tubers for next year, only dig them up after a frost or two. Bring them into the basement or barn after you have shaken off most of the soil.

I store my dahlia tubers in a cold basement that doesn’t freeze. I put them in a box or tub with some sphagnum moss that is lightly moistened, and spray some moisture on in February. You can also store them in a plastic bag with holes punched in it and some bedding sold for gerbils in it, lightly moistened.

I love winter, but I’m always sad the morning after the first hard frost. Most of my annuals will have fallen, like wounded soldiers. But I also know that at my age, a season of rest from the garden will be good, too.

Featured photo: A harvest sickle. Photo by Henry Homeyer.

See the Squash-bucklers

The Goffstown giant pumpkin weigh-off and regatta is back

By Katelyn Sahagian

ksahagian@hippopress.com

Giant pumpkins will take over the Piscataquog River in Goffstown on Sunday, Oct. 16. The day before, the pumpkins will be weighed, hollowed out and decorated for the race.

The event, which started as a way for local giant pumpkin growers to see who had the best crops, has become a national — and international — phenomenon.

“We were contacted by a television company in Japan to see if they can get involved somehow,” said Tina Lawton, president of Goffstown Main Street Program. “It’s known far outside New Hampshire. People come from all over to come and see it.”

Back in 2000, when James Beauchemin started the pumpkin weigh-off, he said that there was nowhere in New Hampshire for giant pumpkin growers to show off the squashes they had spent weeks growing and caring for. He and a few of his friends created the New Hampshire Giant Pumpkin Growers Association and decided that they could hold their own showcase.

Beauchemin wanted something special to happen with the pumpkins after they had been weighed. He said he had heard of a group in Canada that did a pumpkin boat race, where growers hollowed out their giant pumpkins and used kayak paddles to see who could get to the finish the quickest.

“There was one giant pumpkin club in Nova Scotia that did pumpkin races. … They may even still do it,” Beauchemin said. “But I brought it to America.”

The biggest difference between the boat race in New Hampshire and the one in Canada is that Goffstown’s regatta has motors fitted to the boats, giving the pumpkin vessels a little more speed and the captains a greater chance for competition.

While the growers were the first to compete in the makeshift boats, the regatta has become less something for regular people to race in, and more something for public figures in Goffstown and southern New Hampshire in general, Lawton said.

In addition to a few popular teachers racing the boats, WMUR anchor Erin Fehlau will be captaining one of the boats. In the past, Hippo has even sponsored a boat.

While the regatta is the star of the show, Lawton said, there are other events that people can check out throughout the weekend.

Saturday will be the day that all the pumpkins are weighed and, when that’s ended, they’ll be moved closer to the river, Lawton said. The captains will begin the process of hollowing out and decorating their boats in line with this year’s theme, “There’s no place like home.”

“The theme for this year’s decoration is Wizard of Oz,” Beauchemin said. “I was told someone is going to build a tiny house on top of a pumpkin with legs of the Wicked Witch of the East sticking out.”

Sunday will start with a 10K race, and right before the regatta there will be the ever-popular pumpkin drop. Beauchemin said the pumpkin this year will be more than 2,000 pounds, and it’ll be dropped from approximately 75 feet.

In addition to the pumpkin-related events, there will be a slew of local vendors selling handmade crafts, different food options to choose from, a dog costume contest, an art show, a pie eating contest and live entertainment.

Every year, the event seems to grow in popularity, said Lawton.

“We get emails and calls from people all over the states asking when it’ll be,” Lawton said. “Lots of residents have families schedule their visits around this event.”

Goffstown Pumpkin Weigh-off and Regatta
Where: Main Street, Goffstown
When: Saturday, Oct. 15, starting at 9 a.m.; Sunday, Oct. 16, starting at 8 a.m., Regatta begins at 3 p.m.
Price: Free
Visit: goffstownmainstreet.org/regatta

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

Growing good apples without chemicals

It’s not too late to plant your orchard this year

I love the saying that something is “As American as apple pie.” I love apple pie and would have some for breakfast every day if I could. But oddly enough, apples are not native to the United States. They came from Kazakhstan, in central Asia east of the Caspian Sea.

I recently received a review copy of a great book about apples, Hardy Apples: Growing Apples in Cold Climates, by Bob Osborne with lots of fabulous photos by Beth Powning and published by Firefly Books (hardback, $35). It covers how to grow apples, and also has 140 pages of photos and descriptions of the best apples we can grow.

I spoke to Bob Osborne by phone at his home in New Brunswick, Canada. Bob has been planting apple trees in his orchard for over 40 years, mainly for scions (shoots) used for grafting by other orchardists. That required him to grow many, many different cultivars (varieties) of apples.

Bob is an organic grower and has paid attention to his soil as the key to healthy growth. In his book he gives a fine explanation of the soils that best support healthy apple trees. He recommends doing a soil test before planting apples.

A soil pH lower than 6.3, he notes, will not allow a tree to access the nutrients necessary for optimal growth and fruit quality. Calcium, magnesium and phosphorus can be bound up and unavailable even if present in the soil. He writes that in areas with naturally acidic soils, it is good to add lime every six years to keep the soil pH in the correct range.

Chemical fertilizer, he writes, provides nitrogen that when dissolved in water is highly acidic and can destroy much of the soil life that provides nitrogen naturally. Instead he recommends adding compost, blood meal, feather meal, fish meal or bone meal. He explains that you should not use fresh manures even though they are good sources of nitrogen. They can carry disease-carrying bacteria that can sicken you if you pick up dropped apples.

Potassium is important for good-quality fruit. Low potassium “may result in small fruit size, low sugar content and poor storability.” A soil test from your local state extension service or a commercial lab will tell you if you have adequate potassium, but if your fruit size is small, you may need to add some. Wood ash, he writes, is a good source of potassium, having about six percent potassium. I have read elsewhere that ash from charcoal grills should not be used in the garden.

Choosing a good site for your apple trees is important. For the home orchardist, apples will grow most anywhere, but full sun is best. Late spring frosts can damage blossoms and reduce fruit yields, so planting on a hillside is best. Cold air flows downhill and settles in low spots, which should be avoided. A hillside generally drains water better, which promotes healthy roots. Roots can rot in areas with year-round soggy soils.

Apple tree size is determined by the rootstock a scion is grafted to. There are four basic sizes: dwarf, semi-dwarf, semi-standard and standard. A few apples come on their own roots and tend to be full-sized trees. Bob recommends semi-dwarf or semi-standard for the home gardener. Dwarf trees, he told me, need support all their lives as the root systems are not adequate to hold them up in a storm.

I asked Bob for his recommendations for the best apples to grow in a home garden. The best, he said, is Liberty. It is resistant to many common diseases, tastes great and stores well. But he warned, you need to pick it when it is ready, not too early or too late. He picks his on Oct. 6, but farther south picking is earlier.

Next he recommended Novamac. It is resistant to scab, fireblight and cedar apple rust; it does not attract codling moths. It is tasty, it keeps well, and its form is open and easy to prune. It can be picked early if you like a tart apple. Other apples he likes include Sandow, Greensleeves and Pristine. See his book for more details on them and many others.

It’s not too late to plant an apple tree this year if you find one in a pot that you like. Or you can start planting next spring. In any case, having Bob Osborne’s book will guide you through the process.

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

Kiddie Pool 22/10/06

Family fun for the weekend

Arts and crafts

• The Bookery (844 Elm St. in Manchester) will hold a storytime and craft on Saturday, Oct. 8, beginning at 11:30 a.m. featuring the book A Spoonful of Frogs and a fun science experiment about frogs. The event is free, but registration is encouraged. Visit bookerymht.com to reserve tickets.

• Twiggs Gallery (254 King St. in Boscawen) is holding a free make and take craft session on Saturday, Oct. 8, from 1 to 3 p.m. Drop by and make a fall hedgehog out of autumn leaves, according to a press release. The gallery is providing everything needed to make this craft. Visit TwiggsGallery.WordPress.com.

Festival fun

• The annual Charmingfare Farm (774 High St. in Candia) Pumpkin Festival continues this Saturday, Oct. 8, through Monday, Oct. 10, with time slots starting at 10 a.m. Ride down to the pumpkin patch on either a tractor train or a horse-drawn wagon, or pick up the decorative squash at the market stand. In addition to the pumpkin picking, there will be pony rides, a cow milking contest, pumpkin art and animal visits. Ticket costs start at $22. Visit visitthefarm.com.

• The seventh annual scarecrow festival is back this year at the Concord Free Public Library (129 Main St.) starting on Tuesday, Oct. 11, and running through Halloween. There will be scarecrows made by a number of local organizations, including Appleton Design Group, Concord-Carlisle Community Chest, Concord Family Network, Concord Rec, Joy Street life + home and West Concord Green Thumbs. The festival runs all day long and there is no registration required. Visit concordlibrary.assabetinteractive.com for more details about the festival.

• The Pembroke Town Library (313 Pembroke St.) is holding a fall festival on Wednesday, Oct. 12, starting at 4 p.m. This is the inaugural fall festival for the library and activities include trick-or-treating around the library, apple cider and doughnuts, a screening of the movie Halloweentown (1998) and a pumpkin light up viewing. The event is free to attend and registration is not required. Visit pembroke-nh.com/pembroke-town-library for more information.

Showtime

The Palace Youth Theatre is putting on a production of Freaky Friday at the Palace Theatre (80 Hanover St. in Manchester; palacetheatre.org) on Tuesday, Oct. 11, and Wednesday, Oct. 12, at 7 p.m. The show is about what happens when an organized mother and a rebellious daughter switch bodies and spend a day in each other’s shoes. Ticket prices start at $12.

Save the date

• The Girl Scout expo will be held on Sunday, Oct. 16, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the NH Sportsplex in Bedford. Purchase tickets, which are $5, online in advance at bit.ly/GirlExpo2022 or at the door. The expo will have events including giveaways for the girls, live performances, hands-on exhibits and more. The program is appropriate for girls in grades kindergarten through grade 12 and adults, and they do not need to be members of the Girl Scouts to participate.

Pumpkin Fest time

The Milford Pumpkin Festival is back for the 33rd year

By Katelyn Sahagian

ksahagian@hippopress.com

The Milford Pumpkin Festival is back for the 33rd year of celebrating everything autumn.

Wade Campbell, the president of the festival committee, said he was thrilled to bring the festival back in its full glory.

“[The festival] brings people in and lets people know we’re Milford,” Campbell said. “To me, we have the best pumpkin festival.”

This year, there will be more than 200 vendors selling everything from handmade crafts to delicious foods (including one of Campbell’s favorites, a specialty soda truck that does nothing but different flavors of root beer.) The vendors are across the five locations that the fair takes over each year in the downtown area.

Booths will also be set up from local nonprofits, like fundraisers for the local schools and historical society.

The opening night ceremonies on Friday are extravagant, Campbell said, including the pumpkin runner, someone who will run a path through town to get to town hall and “light” it up for the festivities. Campbell said that it was the festival’s take on the Olympic runner, followed by the usual induction ceremony activities.

Each of the locations offers different activities, said Campbell. There is live music and entertainment at three of the locations; a beer, wine, and spirits tasting; the pumpkin weigh-off at the Community House Lawn; a rubber duck race (water levels permitting) at Middle Street and town hall, and the haunted trail at Emerson Park.

All of the locations are within walking distance of each other, and there will be free parking locations at several locations in town with buses shuttling people back and forth.

Campbell said it’s important to him and his organization to not forget about the town that they are in and the local businesses that are in the area. He said that, because they close every road besides Route 13, he encourages businesses to remain open and take advantage of the foot traffic.

While the festival has grown over the years, back when the fair was initially started, it was not much more than a small festival surrounding the pumpkin weigh-off, Campbell said. The festival was begun by a group trying to raise money for building a new town hall.

Campbell said he’d only attended one festival, in 1996, and had never been to another, until his team took over the fair

“We came in not knowing anything about it … honestly we didn’t have any idea what we were doing,” Campbell said. “We’ve taken it from what they had and accelerated it to the next level.”

Even with the size of the festival right now, Campbell said he would love to find a way to grow it even larger. His biggest issue is finding more space.

For right now, he’s just excited to be having another great festival.

“Honestly, watching how much fun people have, that’s my favorite part of the festival,” Campbell said. “The community spirit, people coming down to enjoy it and everyone that gets involved, there’s nothing like it.”

Milford Pumpkin Festival
Where: Downtown Milford, 1 Union Square, Milford
When: Friday, Oct. 7, from 5 to 9 p.m.; Saturday, Oct. 8, from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 9, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Price: Admission is free
Visit: milfordpumpkinfestival.org

Featured photo: Scarecrows from the Milford Pumpkin Festival. Courtesy photo.

Kiddie Pool 22/09/29

Family fun for the weekend

Festivals galore

• Charmingfare Farm (774 High St., Candia) is holding a multi-day pumpkin festival featuring pumpkin picking, tractor train rides, horse-drawn wagons, pumpkin art, live music and more. Visit their website to pick a date and time to attend. Available dates are Saturday, Oct. 1, and Sunday, Oct. 2, and Saturday, Oct. 8, through Monday, Oct. 10. Tickets are $22 per person and must be purchased in advance online (free for kids ages 23 months and under). Go to visitthefarm.com to purchase tickets and for more information.

• Join DeMerritt Hill Farm (20 Orchard Way, Lee) for Pumpkinfest on Saturday, Oct. 1, and Sunday, Oct. 2, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. There will be pumpkin rock painting and naming contests for the chance to win prizes, as well as face-painting and pre-picked pumpkins available for purchase. Visit demerritthillfarm.com for more details.

• There will be a harvest fest on the lawn of the Taylor Library (49 E. Derry Road, Derry) on Sunday, Oct. 2, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., featuring games, crafts, snacks, music, balloon twisters and a special visit from the Derry Fire Department. Visit taylorlibrary.org for more information.

• The educational farm at Joppa Hill (174 Joppa Hill Road, Bedford) is hosting a Fall Fest on Sunday, Oct. 2, from noon to 4 p.m. The fair will have tractor rides, a pumpkin patch, crafts, a petting farm, live music, tasty treats and more. No registration is needed. Visit theeducationalfarm.org

• The last days of Toddlerfest are this week, with the final day being Sunday, Oct. 2, at the Children’s Museum of New Hampshire (6 Washington St., Dover). The annual celebration offers guests up to age 5 experiences with music and movement, science, art and storytelling. The festival is included in the price for tickets for general admission. Visit childrens-museum.org to purchase tickets and for more information.

Explore science

• SEE Science Center (200 Bedford St., Manchester) is inviting kids and families to make their own Simon Says game on Saturday, Oct. 1, to celebrate the 100th birthday of Ralph Baer, the game’s creator. Participants will need to bring a laptop capable of downloading Arduino IDE software to be able to participate. The program runs from 1 to 3 p.m. and costs $5 plus regular admission. The project is recommended for kids ages 12 and older. Visit see-sciencecenter.org for more information.

Farm fun

• NOFA-NH and Brookford Farms are celebrating their respective 50- and 10-year anniversaries with a pizza party, live music, and farm tour at 250 West Road, Canterbury, on Saturday, Oct. 1, from 1 to 4 p.m. In addition to everything listed above, there will also be a hay maze, apple cider pressing, encounters with wildlife, and more. Visit nofanh.org.

Showtime

• The run of The Little Mermaidat the Palace Theatre (80 Hanover St., Manchester) is ending with its final performance on Sunday, Oct. 2, at 2 p.m. The show follows the adventures of the little mermaid, Ariel, who falls in love with a human she rescues. Tickets start at $25 and can be bought at palacetheatre.org.

Sports fans

Got kids who love sports? They might be keen to watch older kids play the sports they are just starting to enjoy. Hippo’s sports writer, Dave Long, suggests a few upcoming games your kids might want to check out:

Boys Soccer – Concord at Nashua South, today, Thursday. Sept. 29, at 4 p.m. These two are bunched at the top of the Division 1 standings with several others. So October will be wild as very good teams battle all month for who’ll be seeded where come tournament time. And kicking off the race will be the Crimson on the road vs. the Titans at Nashua’s Stellos Stadium (7 Stadium Drive).

Football – Campbell at Trinity, Friday, Sept. 30, at 7 p.m. An earlyseason battle of teams that come into tomorrow’s clash at Trinity High School (581 Bridge St. in Manchester). The winner takes the lead to be the top seed in the Division 3 tournament.

Girls Soccer – Derryfield at Trinity, Sunday, Oct. 2, at 4 p.m. A Manchester city battle at Trinity. With the Pioneers being relatively new to D-3, it’s not quite a rivalry game. But with them now meeting twice a year, it’s probably not far off. The next edition comes Oct. 21 on the synthetic at D-field that looks to be twice regulation size when you drive up to it on North River Road.

Fair and square

The Deerfield Fair celebrates New Hampshire agriculture traditions

By Katelyn Sahagian

ksahagian@hippopress.com

For more than a century the Deerfield Fair has celebrated agriculture, handmade items, farm animals and families during the first few days of autumn.

“We came back last year stronger than ever and this year is looking just as good,” said Richard Pitman, the vice president of the Deerfield Fair.

Over the course of the last near century and a half, the fair has taken a break only during World War II and the Covid-19 pandemic, said Pitman.

The Deerfield Fair is back for the 145th year, starting Saturday, Sept. 29, with midway amusement rides, delicious fair food and dozens of different horse, cattle and pumpkin competitions before wrapping up on Sunday, Oct. 2.

The newest entertainment at the fair will be K-9 police unit demonstrations, where, as Pitman said, the dogs will “show off and get the bad guy.” There will also be a group of archers teaching people the proper ways to handle bows and how to shoot them at the 4-H building.

colorful ferris wheel seen from below
Courtesy photo.

“We’ve been bombarded with entries by exhibitors, everything from household goods to horse pulling, dairy and beef cows, even oxen pulling,” Pitman said.

He added that there will be an assortment of different fried fair foods, midway rides and games, and craftsmen’s displays including woodworking and blacksmithing.

There will be buildings with hand-woven and braided rugs, photography, art, and different produce grown by gardeners and farmers from across the state. A petting farm will be set up with sheep, alpacas, llamas and other farm animals.

Catch live music and performances (such as puppets, the Flying Wallendas, magic and more) on four stages throughout the weekend. The Miss Deerfield Fair pageant will take place on Friday, Sept. 30, at 7 p.m. The fair will feature strolling performers playing on all four days include Bryson Lang, I’m Not a Clown, Pirate Man Dan, Moose Mountain Jazz Band, Have a Cartoon You, Seacoast NH Ukulele and Mixtape A Cappella Group.

The highlights of the fair will be the giant pumpkin and gourd weigh-offs, the horse pulling competition, and the tractor pulling competition, according to Pitman. He said that the fair is a place for every aspect of agriculture and homemade lifestyle to be encouraged.

“We celebrate all aspects of the homegrown lifestyle,” Pitman said.

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

Harvest Moon gathering

Mount Kearsarge Indian Museum festival returns

By Katelyn Sahagian

ksahagian@hippopress.com

For close to 30 years, the Mt. Kearsarge Indian Museum has hosted an annual harvest festival for people to learn more about Native American tribes and what they do at harvest time.

Andy Bullock, the director of the museum, said that this event, happening this year on Sunday, Sept. 25, is a long-standing tradition for the museum.

“It’s going to be a really great day,” Bullock said.

Bullock said that animals are always a part of the festivities. This year, the museum will have different raptors, an arctic fox named Yuka, a bunny named Gus, and ponies that will be giving rides.

In addition to the animals, families can play traditional games and do different activities, and vendors and artisans will be selling handmade items like beadwork and dreamcatchers. The event will also feature demonstrations on woodworking and leather working, and a special presentation on how to make corn husk dolls.

Bullock said he is particularly excited for the food that will be served at the festival. Most of the food will be from Native recipes, including a stew made from bison that was farmed locally in Warner.

A kids’ activity will focus on the “Three Sisters,” or corn, beans and squash, said Bullock. There will be a corncob game as part of the activity.

The museum will be open during the hours of the festival, Bullock said, and tickets to the festival are included with admission to the museum.

The museum was recently recognized as one of the top 10 Native American museums in the United States, Bullock said. The museum exists to remind people that Native Americans didn’t vanish in New Hampshire.

“There are no federal reservations in New Hampshire, and the state doesn’t recognize local bands of Natives,” Bullock said. “It’s logical to assume for people to think that Natives have been gone for 200 years.”

Bullock said this festival helps keep Native American history alive, and it also encourages people to take time and enjoy the scenery around them.

“A lot of people don’t have the opportunity to just sit out on the hillside and enjoy the day,” Bullock said.

Featured photo: Crafts from last year’s Harvest Moon Festival. Courtesy photo.

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