Be kind to clovers

How to have a better lawn

Let’s face it: Most of us do not have a lawn that looks like the grass on a major-league infield. And I, for one, don’t want one that does. Most professional ballfields are doctored weekly with chemicals: fungicides, herbicides, fertilizers, insecticides. They are cut very short, and look “perfect.” I want a lawn that is green but also full of diversity — clover, different kinds of grass, and (I can see some of you shuddering) even a few dandelions.
The turf grass industry decided long ago that clover is a weed. Why is that? Because the herbicides they promote to control weeds like dandelions and plantain also kill clover — but not grasses. But clover is not a weed. It is a nitrogen-fixing legume that actually adds nitrogen to the soil. It is a friend to your lawn — and your children, who delight in finding good luck with a rare four-leafed clover. Add Weed-n-Feed and the clover is gone.
So what can you do to have a better lawn when the heat of summer arrives? I talked to Paul Sachs of North Country Organics, an organic fertilizer company in Bradford, Vermont. Paul has written books about lawn care and soil biology, and really is a very knowledgeable lawn guy. He mentioned several things you can do. First among them: adjust your mower blades up high.
Sachs explained that cutting the lawn at 3 to 4 inches will help to shade the crown of the grass and keep it cooler, which is good. Hot weather stresses most grasses. Taller grass will also develop a deeper root system because the longer blades will produce more food to nurture the roots.
I don’t recommend that you bag the clippings when you mow the lawn. If you are tending your lawn organically (avoiding all chemicals), the clippings will break down, creating a thin layer of compost. Earthworms will turn that organic matter into the soil, too, like little rototillers. The chopped grass will serve to shade the soil a little, helping to reduce heat stress. The only time I collect the grass clippings is when we get a week or more of hot, rainy weather and I can’t or don’t mow. When there are big lumps of grass, it can smother the grass and turn it yellow, eventually killing it. Fresh grass clippings, added to a compost pile, will add lots of nitrogen and heat up the compost quickly, and help it to break down the carbon-based brown matter.
If you have bare spots in the lawn, now is the time to plant some grass seed. Do that as soon as you can, as the hot weather ahead will make it harder for a new lawn to establish itself. You want to get new grass established before annual crabgrass takes over. The best choice for that is a perennial rye grass, according to Paul Sachs. It germinates quickly, in five to seven days.
Start by loosening the soil in the bare spots with a short-tine garden rake. Scratch it back and forth to loosen the soil and to remove any rocks. Scatter a layer of seed, then use a lawn rake to work it into the loose soil. I turn the lawn rake upside down, so I can drag the back of the tines across the seed. This will cover most of the seed.
You can help your new planting by shaking out some straw over the area, providing a thin layer to shade the soil. It is important that the seed not dry out once it has begun to grow. So if the weather is hot and dry, check the soil every day, and water as needed.
Paul Sachs told me that if you have an irrigation system for your lawn, you can help your lawn by giving it a tenth of an inch of water every day at the heat of the day. That light watering evaporates, cooling the soil and your grass. It’s similar to what we do when we sweat to cool down. Then once a week, he said, give your lawn an inch of water for a deep watering — if we have not gotten that moisture from the sky.
Another way you can help your lawn to grow better and avoid heat stress is to add mycorrhizal fungi to your soil. These fungi work with plant roots in a symbiotic relationship — one in which both organisms benefit. According to Paul Sachs, these are best added at planting time when preparing the soil.
The mycorrhizal fungi coat plant roots and benefit from sugars produced and exuded by the roots. In turn the mycorrhizal fungi breakdown soil minerals and provide needed nutrients to the green plants in a form they can use. Not only grasses benefit from mycorrhizal fungi; most green plants do. Learn more at mycorrhizae.com. A number of commercial products are available to provide these beneficial organisms, and many are present without treatment.
One last thought: If we could purchase daffodils that would grow in the lawn and rebloom after mowing, we would pay big bucks for them, right? Especially if they would send out seeds and show up even where we have not planted them. But call them dandelions, and some people declare war. Me? I love those bright harbingers of spring and summer and don’t mind them in my lawn. A diverse lawn is a healthy lawn. I like to say, if it’s green and I can mow it, it’s a lawn!

The Art Roundup 6/11/2020

Virtual author events: Gibson’s Bookstore has two virtual author events coming up. On Thursday, June 11, at 6 p.m., Juliet Grames, author of The Seven or Eight Deaths of Stella Fortuna, will join Erika Swyler, author of Light from Other Stars and The Book of Speculation. On Friday, June 12, authors Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton and Jodi Meadows will present their new book My Calamity Jane. In this historical reimagining of 1876 America, characters from Wild Bill’s Traveling Show, including Calamity Jane, Annie Oakley and Frank “the Pistol Prince” Butler, hunt werewolves. The events are free and will be streamed live via Zoom. Registration is required on the events’ respective pages at gibsonsbookstore.com.

Livestreamed classical music: The Manchester Community Music School’s Live Stream Concert series presents its final concert, “Sounds of the Oboe,” on Friday, June 12, at 7 p.m. The series features free online concerts performed by MCMS faculty members. “Sounds of the Oboe” will include oboe music performed by Kyoko Hida-Battaglia. Visit mcmusicschool.org.

Celebrate Juneteeth online: Humanities to Go Online presents “Juneteenth: A Historical Celebration of Black Liberation,” on Friday, June 12, at 5 p.m. The free live Zoom event will explore how Juneteenth has been celebrated in New Hampshire and why it is important now, more than ever, to continue to acknowledge and honor the holiday. Executive director of the Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire JerriAnne Boggis will lead the program. Visit nhhumanities.org.

Players’ opening night online: In April, the Peterborough Players announced the cancellation of their 2020 summer season. On Wednesday, June 17 (what would have been the opening night of their 87th season) the Players will post “The Players Backstage (from Home) Party,” a pre-recorded cocktail party and talkback during which Players actors, designers and others will gather on Zoom and answer pre-submitted questions from the public. The video will be posted at and accessible any time after 7:30 p.m. on the Players’ Facebook page and YouTube channel. Visit peterboroughplayers.org.

Block by block

Young artist awarded for virtual replica of Kimball Jenkins Estate

Eighteen-year-old Clark Todd was recently named the winner of the very first Dartmouth-Hitchcock Health Artrepeneur Award, given by the New Hampshire Business Committee for the Arts. The award was created to recognize artists who use technology to expand their creative practice and collaborate with other artists and organizations. Todd built a replica of the Kimball Jenkins Estate, a historic building in Concord featuring high Victorian gothic architecture from 1882, on the popular building video game Minecraft. The replica has been used as a promotional piece to raise awareness of the Estate’s fundraising campaign for a $400,000 restoration of the original slate roof of the building. See a video of the replica at vimeo.com/417753858.

What is your connection to Kimball Jenkins?

My mother has been working there for a few years. During that time I took some art classes and went to the summer camp for a year. I’ve also done volunteer work there, including role-playing Amos P. Cutting, the original architect of the house, during historic tours.

Why did you decide to do this project?

I’d said to my mother that the house might be good to build in Minecraft, and she suggested that it might be an interesting showpiece. We never thought in the beginning that it would be as useful as it is now. So, I built it for my own entertainment and as a sort of tribute to the house itself.

What inspires you about Kimball Jenkins’ architecture?

The craftsmanship, the attention to detail in the design, the floorplan, and the build quality are all incredibly good. It feels wonderful just to be in there.

Describe the process of building the replica.

My brother Glen set up the ‘realm’ that the replica is built in, and our friend Nathan got it all ready for exhibition. I did most of the actual building and all the design work. I had copies of the original floor plans, so I recreated them on the ground in-game by placing blocks. Then I dug out the foundation, copied the basement floor plan into it and built up the walls. Next I did the same thing for the first, second and attic floors. At this point I had all the interior walls, window holes and doorways, so I sort of wrapped the whole thing in brick blocks and did some detailing. Then I built the roof, which was at least as hard as working out the floor plans. I built the porches, detailed the interior and exterior and, with a bunch of small alterations, it was done. I don’t know how many hours I put into it, but I ended up working on and off for about four months.

How can people interact with the replica?

You can watch a video of a walkthrough of the build. The realm is currently private, but we’re working on making it possible for people to log in and tour it. Minecraft is three-dimensional, and you can control your in-game character from a first- or third-person perspective. You can move freely, either on the ground or through the air, and can view the exterior of the house or go through the rooms inside.

What would you like people to understand about video games and architecture?

This is difficult to answer. It is true that adults, including people connected to Kimball Jenkins who have seen the video of the replica, showed great interest and maybe gained appreciation for the game. It’s also true that kids who toured the replica during events may have had something familiar to compare the real house to when they went through it. But at the end of the day, Minecraft is just a game. The real structure is infinitely more important. I feel like that’s true with many things. It’s my opinion that the world needs less games and entertainment and more good work and tangible things.

How did it feel to be the recipient of the first Artrepeneur Award?

I was surprised and felt honored. I’ve never been given an award like this before. I’m pleased that my creation was so appreciated.

How long have you been playing Minecraft? What do you enjoy about it?

I’ve been playing about six to eight years, on and off. I mostly enjoy building houses of my own design in the game.

What other kinds of video games do you enjoy?

I’m not into many other video games. I play Minecraft mostly because I’m interested in houses. My real-life interests are greater than my interests in any game. I’m interested in vehicles, tools and machines. I like creating things. Lately I’ve been making masks to donate.

What are you doing now? What are your future plans?

I home-school, and since kindergarten I’ve been pretty much self-taught. I have many interests, and I’m not sure yet what work I’m going to do in the future.

Quality of Life 20/6/11

Gala success

The Humane Society for Greater Nashua moved its annual fundraising gala online and surpassed its goal by raising more than $105,000 during the May 31 event, according to a press release. The livestream production featured an auction as well as entertainment, and more than 2,000 viewers tuned in. The Humane Society also delivered 82 Party Boxes that were ordered ahead of time to people in the Greater Nashua community. Those people got to enjoy a 1920s themed box with a meal from Mcnulty and Foley Catering and a bottle of wine from Incredibrew, plus treats for the humans and their pets.

Comment: “I thought this was the best event I have experienced in all of my years in nonprofit management,” President and CEO of the Humane Society for Greater Nashua Doug Barry said in the press release.

No city fireworks

Both Manchester and Nashua have canceled their fireworks this year due to concerns about large gatherings and social distancing, according to WMUR. Manchester’s fireworks, which are usually held July 3 at Arms Park, were canceled by the Manchester aldermen at a meeting June 2, with the initial vote tied 7-7 and Mayor Joyce Craig breaking the tie. Nashua voted June 4 to cancel its show, according to WMUR, and other towns like Andover and Portsmouth have canceled theirs as well.

Comment: There is still hope — as of June 9, Merrimack had canceled its Fourth of July parade but not its fireworks show, according to the town’s parks and recreation webpage, and no official announcement has been made to cancel Concord’s fireworks, or fireworks at Hampton Beach.

Know & Tell

The Granite State Children’s Alliance is getting support from local celebrity Seth Meyers, who appears in a new video for its Know & Tell program, which urges people to know the signs of abuse and tell authorities when they see it, according to a press release from the alliance. The video also features clips from local health care workers, Gov. Chris Sununu, Senators Maggie Hassan and Jeanne Shaheen, and kids of all ages urging adults to help keep kids safe by knowing that anyone over the age of 18 is required by law to report suspicions of abuse and neglect.

Comments: Find the Know & Tell video on YouTube at youtu.be/hcnJkiGX95o.

QOL score: 63 (the score is temporarily suspended, but QOL will still be keeping tabs on New Hampshire’s well-being each week)

What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire? Let us know at news@hippopress.com.

A bit of good news

After three long months sports fans got good news last week when the NHL and NBA ok’d plans to open camps in July and begin playing in early August. Meanwhile the league that should be closest to returning put its season at risk by doing what baseball usually does with tone-deaf bickering over money between the owners and players at a time when 40 million just lost their jobs. The NFL meanwhile remains on track for the usual September start, though college football is still mostly up in the air.

It won’t be business as usual, however, as normal league schedules will be way out of whack and the return will require concessions to playing with effects of Covid-19. Not the least of these will be playing games with no fans, at least until football season, where social distancing plans are underway to have about 25,000 paying customers on hand at least. There’s also the threat of infections rising for people playing in such close proximity as they sweat, regularly bang into each other and are laying on top of each other after almost every play in football.

And most amazingly, the pandemic is just one of three national calamities that will impact sports in 2020. Depending on how long it lasts, immediate economic difficulties and a possible deep recession likely will restrict spending power for tickets, sponsorships and merchandise. That in turn should affect 2021 free agency, a big thing for the Patriots, who have many players on expiring contracts and up to an expected $100 million to spend next spring. Then there’s the civil unrest following the death of George Floyd while in custody of the police in Minneapolis. The Black Lives Matter protests it sparked throughout the country will likely impact the NFL in a most divisive way that puts fans, players and the less than shy president in constant conflict.

Finally, it’ll be interesting to see if any pandemic-related changes become permanent. Like a new NBA calendar with an early December start to be closer to its real opening day when all those big games are played on Christmas Day with the playoffs ending in August. That would not be great news for baseball, which already has declining attendance and perhaps now a missed season. If you were the NBA who would you rather go head to head with MLB or the NFL?

That’s the big picture. Now here are some more thoughts on the restart and stories related to it:

Interested to see if teams like the Bruins and Bucks who were rolling to their league’s best records restart in similar fashion or will that momentum be gone and it be more like starting a new season.

I’m all in on the Bruins, but “ice” hockey games in the heat of summer doesn’t seem like a good fit.

If baseball does get its act together, will the growing rage gathering steam during spring training stay focused on the cheating Astros? Or, since that seems like 50 years ago and with no fans in the stands did they luck out? Here’s my suggestion: have a special soundtrack for the Astros when crowd noise is piped into their TV/radio broadcasts that has boos, catcalls and hisses mixed in.

Quickly apologizing was a good move by Drew Brees after starting a major hoo-ha with his original thoughts on kneeling during the anthem. Beyond getting killed in the court of public opinion, I’m still wondering if defenders will line him up for a little extra shot if they don’t buy the apology. Hope not.

Buckle up on the kneeling protests, though. Because with his presidential campaign in peril (at the moment) expect DJT to inflame tensions to fire up his base as a likely nasty campaign rages through the NFL’s first 10 weeks. And with Adrian Peterson already saying “without a doubt” he’ll kneel I don’t see the players backing down. So the brass had better have a better plan than the last time.

I couldn’t be more sick of the unending series of stories on Jarrett Stidham and everything you-know-who does in Tampa Bay. I’d rather wait to see what happens on the field. But for the record, Stidham will be better than expectations, at 43 TB won’t meet his and thanks to a year off to get healthy and recharged Gronk has the best year of the three.

It’s just one guy’s opinion, but I like Jalen Rose’s reasoning for why he thinks the Celtics will beat Milwaukee if they meet in the playoffs. He said with the Bucks’ huge home court advantage lost, the games will be more like playing a pick-up game in the park. And if they were, Giannis is picked first for sure, but the next five guys taken would be all Celtics. Meaning the C’s have the overall talent edge and that could be deadly for the Bucks in a neutral site.

Vegas doesn’t buy that, however, as the C’s odds to make the finals have gone up from what they were in February.

Heard this from a caller on talk radio: to reward teams like Milwaukee losing their earned home court advantages, let the highest seed choose who they face in each playoff round from the lower seeds. That would add major bulletin board “I’ll show you” material into the mix, which I love.

I wonder if the NBA doing all play-by-play announcing remotely from home base studios with noise from Orlando mixed is the beginning of the end of road announcers being on site in the future.

No baseball season makes the Mookie Betts trade look even better, as the Sox keep the three prospects while L.A. gets no games from Mookie and still has to swallow David Price’s contract.

Finally, I’m fine with baseball not getting started because with all the problems going on around them, if they’re too clueless to work it out, so be it.

Forty years later…

Principal retires after decades in Manchester

After 40 years of service in the Manchester School District, Arthur Adamakos is retiring and will officially end his tenure as the principal of Manchester Memorial High School on June 30. Adamakos discussed the highlights of his career in education and what it’s like to be retiring during a pandemic.

Tell us about your career in education.

I was born and brought up in Nashua. I went to Boston University, and then to Rivier University for my master’s degree. … I started out as a substitute teacher in Nashua, just for a few months. Then, when I got certified, I was offered a position at Hillside [Middle School] in 1979. After a year and a half there, I got transferred to [Manchester] Memorial [High School], and I was a teacher there for six and a half years, from 1981 to 1988. Then, I became an assistant principal at [Manchester High School] West, and I was there for six and a half years. In 1994, I left West to be the principal at Hillside for a year and a half. In 1995, I came to Memorial, where I’ve been ever since, except for a two-year span when, in 2000, I was the assistant superintendent of schools for secondary ed in Manchester. … Then, I came back [to Memorial], where I’ve been for the last 18 years as a principal. So, [in total] I’ve been the principal at Memorial for 23 years. That’s a long time.

What was your biggest challenge this year as a high school principal?

This year, obviously, Covid-19 and remote learning has been a challenge. We had no prior training when all of this happened on March 16. We don’t train to become online teachers in our profession. We prefer to have our students in our classrooms, work with our students one-on-one and have positive day-to-day interactions with them. You can’t do that remotely.

How does it feel to be retiring after such an unconventional end to the school year?

I always get excited as the year progresses, because the nicest part of the year is all the ceremonies at the end of the year celebrating the students’ achievements. Those will not be taking place this year because of social distancing. It’s unfortunate for me that I’m going to miss out on that. … It’s certainly not the way I intended to go out of my career, but the priority is that the kids stay safe and healthy.

What will you miss most?

I’ll miss the people I work with. Kids come and go; they’re here for four years, and then they move along, but a lot of our faculty have been here for 10, 20, 30 years, so we’ve been together as a group for quite a while. I’ll miss seeing them on a regular basis.

How would you like to be remembered as a high school principal?

I want to be remembered as a firm but fair person who listened to the kids and sided with them more often than they thought, and made sure they had the best experience they could possibly have while they were in high school.

What have your students taught you over the years?

They’ve taught me to be young — to feel young, to stay current, to know pop culture. They’ve taught me that it’s important to constantly be changing my approach to things. Some people in my position don’t change a darn thing in the 30-odd years of their administration. The way I operate now is certainly not the way I did when I first started, back in the ’80s. My approach is much different. The way I look at things is much different, and the kids taught me that. They’ve taught me how to evolve.

Do you have any parting words for your students?

Education is a lifelong experience. It doesn’t end with high school. I’ve been out of college for 42 years now, and I’m still learning new things each and every day. I hope that [the students] never stop using their minds to learn new things, even as they get older.

What will you do now?

This September will be the first time in 50 years — from the time I entered first grade in 1962, all the way until now — that I won’t be going back to school and entering a school building every day. I’m kind of on pins and needles about that. I’m an adjunct faculty member at Southern New Hampshire University — I teach in the Education Leadership graduate program — so I’ll still be teaching, but it won’t be the same world that I’m in now. It will be nice to be able to relax and take some time off, though. I’ve been working nonstop for a long time. … I’m an avid golfer, but I’ve had to take it easy the last few years. I’m getting a shoulder replacement surgery next month, so hopefully next year I’ll be able to start playing again. That’s something I’m really looking forward to. Anything else that comes my way? I can’t predict that, so I’ll just take it as it comes.