Gardening Tips From ‘The English Lady’ for July: The Month of ‘Hollyhocks and Hammocks, Fireworks and Vacations’

Maureen Haseley-Jones

OLD LYME — Watering is so important during the heat of summer. If you planted trees or shrubs this spring, particularly evergreens, these plants require extra moisture to establish a strong root system. We have had an abundant amount of rain this spring and into the summer, however it is important to keep an eye on the weather.  

Here in New England, plants require at least an inch of water per week. If you are using a regular hose, you lose 40 percent of moisture to evaporation. However, a hose is necessary for a deep-watering when a plant goes into the ground and for containers.

Soaker hoses in your borders are the best method of watering, attached to a house spigot with a timer. By using this method of irrigation, moisture goes to the roots of plants where it is needed and not on the foliage, which can cause diseases such as black spot and powdery mildew. Soaker hoses attached to a timer can be used efficiently not only in the borders of the garden but also in the vegetable garden, where annual vegetables require a lot of water to produce a good crop. 

In addition, composted manure when added to the containers together with copious amounts to the vegetable garden, helps to retain a good amount of moisture. Manure, used as mulch for the vegetable garden adds more nutrition and the manure as mulch does not cap or form a hard crust, so water goes directly to the roots where it is needed. 

These colorful hibisci make a stunning show during July.

LAWNS – water the lawn only when the green glow begins to fade.  An established lawn will bounce back following dry hot spells. 

I want to emphasize the importance of soil and soil health, which has been severely neglected and abused with poisonous chemicals for years. Soil is the most important element of plant growth; it is not an inert medium that merely holds the plants erect, it is a living organism that needs to be replenished with nutrients. The nutrient is composted manure; manure builds soil structure and together with its bacteria partners joins the millions of microbes below the surface to produce nutrients for the roots of the plants.

If you have not already done so, I strongly suggest that you carefully discard all chemical fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides.

The addition of composted manure to your soil in spring, early summer and in early fall, together with natural brown bark mulch, builds the carbon compound or humus component in the soil.  We are all carbon-based creatures, as is every living element — carbon is our lifeblood and the lifeblood of the soil in our gardens.

As we build the humus component by adding composted manure and fine-bark mulch we are producing the healthiest possible growing environment and the strongest disease-resistant plants. As we add the composted manure and natural fine bark mulch season after season, the humus component continues to build in the soil, continuously extracting carbon from the atmosphere into the soil. 

Add a light layer of composted manure around the root of roses in July.

ROSES – flourish beautifully with the addition of composted manure and mulch, applied on the soil about two feet away from the base of the plant. Roses also require deep watering at least once a week. Now, in July add another light layer of composted manure around the roses. Manure is food for the roots of the roses and no other products are necessary for growth and bloom. Stop adding manure to the roses in mid-August, so that they can gradually move into a slow dormancy through late summer and early fall, which is a natural part of their growth cycle.    

If you are a first-time rose-grower or adding to your rose collection, David Austin English roses are my personal preference.  The David Austin nursery is only 21 miles from my hometown in Shropshire in England; it was a fragrant pleasure to visit the nursery in June. 

David Austin roses are more trouble-free than many other roses and are repeat bloomers, with beautiful colors that enhance our senses together with delicious fragrances.    

Some of my favorite David Austin roses are:
> A Shropshire Lad, a peachy pink
> Abraham Darby, shades of apricot and yellow
> Evelyn (my favorite) with giant apricot-hued flowers
> Fair Bianca, a pure white rose
> Heritage, a soft blush pink
> Carding Mill Valley, which begins as a peachy orange double flower, changing to an apricot-pink

A lovely combination to enjoy are climbing roses and clematis planted together since both enjoy the same planting environment with their heads in the sun and their feet (roots) in the cool manure and mulch. This combination looks great, climbing over a fence, wall or arbor.

MULCH – do not use the artificially-colored red mulch, rubber mulch or cocoa mulch; use only natural brown bark mulch. Do not mulch right up to the base of the plants, as this invites rodents to nest and gnaw on the stems or trunks of the plants.

Note: Do not use Cocoa mulch, produced by Hershey, this mulch has a Thorazine compound and other poisons, which are hazardous to pets that are attracted by the chocolate odor. Ingestion of this chocolate mulch can cause seizures and death within hours.  

HYDRANGEAS:  Plant Hydrangeas in a sunny area if you live near the coast, which allows them to enjoy gentle seas breezes. Away from the coast, plant Hydrangeas in part-sun on the west or east aspect of the garden. Plant them in organically rich soil with composted manure and add extra composted manure around the base now in July. 

If you have the blue Macrophylla Hydrangea, add some peat or aged oak bark around the base as the acidity in the peat or oak bark encourages a deeper blue color. Hydrangeas are a wetland plant and require plenty of water throughout the summer. We had a late spring and with all the spring and early summer rain and good sunshine, the foliage and bloom of the hydrangeas is performing well. Watch out for powdery mildew and spray with the following powdery mildew recipe you can mix yourself:

Two tablespoons baking soda, one dessert spoon of vegetable oil, a squirt of dish soap with a gallon of water in a sprayer. For any recipe spray you make at home, spray only in the morning when there is no wind and when the temperature and humidity added together do not go above 180. 

Encourage a deeper blue in Macrophylla Hydrangeas by adding some peat or aged oak bark around the base to increase acidity. Photo by Gemma Evans on Unsplash.

Pruning Hydrangeas – Prune Hydrangeas immediately after they finish blooming in late August or early September but no later, as Hydrangeas set their buds for the next season by mid September. If you prune after September, you will lose next season’s bloom. When you prune, cut out some of the old wood and the weakest of the new shoots. In October put more composted manure and brown mulch around the base to nourish and protect the roots through the winter. 

Did you know that garlic is the antibiotic of the garden? I love garlic to use in my recipes and it is an important anti-fungal element to protect your plants and I suggest planting more garlic in early fall. 

To avoid fungal diseases plant garlic around strawberries, tomatoes and raspberries to avoid fungal diseases. 

Plant garlic:
> around mildew-prone plants to prevent mildew on such plants as summer phlox and bee balm.
> under fruit trees to avoid scab and root disease.
> next to ponds or standing water to control mosquito larvae or pour garlic water into the water to deter adult mosquitoes. 

Where you notice marauders have been munching, like insects or animals, make a garlic spray to apply on the plants including vegetables. 

GARLIC SPRAY RECIPE

4 large, crushed garlic cloves, unpeeled
2 teaspoons of vegetable oil
1 squirt of mild dish detergent

Put all ingredients in 2 cups of hot water in the blender, blend, then leave overnight, then put in a gallon sprayer with cold water and spray in the early morning when there is no wind, observing the rule of 180.  Observing the rule of 180 is when the temperature and humidity when added together do not go above 180.

HOT PEPPER SPRAY RECIPE

To deter squirrels and chipmunks try a hot pepper spray using either four hot chilies or one cup of cayenne pepper in two cups of hot water, in the blender, blend and leave overnight then put in a gallon sprayer with cold water and spray the problem areas in the early morning.

This pepper spray works well to deter squirrels, chipmunks, deer as well as dogs and cats that may be leaving their deposits in the garden. 

HANDS: Gardener’s hands are their tools of the trade so it’s important to take care of them. My hands remain healthy by indulging in a hot cream treatment once a week before bed. 

Hot Hand Cream Recipe:
Combine Calendula cream with honey and essential oil of lavender heated in the microwave, apply generously and put on white cotton gloves for sleep. When I wake up my hands are soft and smooth as you can only imagine. Wear gloves, when working in soil that contains manure or when spreading manure. Manure is an organic product that contains bacteria; bacteria is great for the soil but like many bacteria not healthy for you. The garden gloves I prefer are the soft leather farmer’s gloves that are washable.  

Many herbs are at their peak rin July and are ideal for using in flavored oils.

FLAVORED OILS – Many herbs are at their peak right now and are ideal for using in flavored oils. The oil I use as a base is organic olive oil. I harvest basil, parsley, sage, tarragon and oregano in a morning, rinse them well, pat them dry with a paper towel and then make the recipe. Then choose an herb and add to two cups of oil.  

For thyme and lavender, I use only the flowers with one cup of oil to a handful of blossoms.  

Puree the herb mixture in a blender and store covered in a wide mouthed jar for three days, shake at least three times a day for the first two days and on the third day let the mixture settle to the bottom, then strain it through a paper coffee filter or cheese cloth into a clean jar.  You will now have a tinted but clear mixture.  

Refrigerate each mixture and use within two to three weeks. The herb oils I make are lavender, lemon, garlic, shallots and basil with olive oil as the base – these are my favorites and are great brushed on vegetables and meats for grilling. The lavender oil is great with desserts. Rosemary and lemon oil taste excellent on salads. 

MOLES & JAPANESE BEETLES: I know I have given you a few mole remedies in the past; but I have not given you the exlax method for a while. I can attest to the fact that I have used this method as have many fellow gardeners for years, as it works well.  Buy Exlax, the main ingredient of which is Senna, a natural herb. Insert Exlax into the mole holes, the moles and voles eat it, then die of dehydration.  

If you have dogs and cats, do not use the chocolate Exlax only the plain Exlax, as chocolate is dangerous to pets.  

In early April of next year, apply organic grub control, which means less grubs for the moles to feed on, and without their supply of grubs, the moles will go elsewhere for food. In addition, the white grubs of Japanese beetles can be diminished with the grub control.  

Japanese beetles love our plants and here is a method to deal with them naturally. In the early morning, the Japanese beetles are drowsy and can be captured. Lay a drop cloth under the plant or plants where you see them and gently shake the plant; the drowsy beetles will drop onto the cloth, which you gather up and drop them in a garbage bag and discard.   

Many of us are committed to organic gardening without chemicals, which has enabled the earthworm population to once again increase; earthworms are a great boon to the garden soil as their castings add 50 percent nutrition to the soil together with 11 trace minerals.  

SUMMER PHLOX – I just love my summer phlox and to keep the mildew problems at bay, I use the natural baking soda mix I mentioned above. I have found that white Phlox Miss Lingard or white Phlox David are more resistant to mildew than other summer phlox. Monarda, commonly known, as Bee Balm and Hydrangeas are also prone to be affected by powdery mildew, and this is where the baking soda recipe once again can be used.  

For a second bloom on the Summer Phlox, prune off 10 to 20 inches from the flower stems after the first bloom has gone by and within a few weeks you will experience a new bloom. 

KEEP YOUR GARDEN CLEAN – a healthy garden is a clean garden. Do not put any diseased items into your compost. 

Deadhead all annuals and perennials for a second bloom and clean up all spend blossoms.  

When Coreopsis and Spirea have bloomed, use garden shears to shear off dead flowers and they too will rebloom.

CONTAINERS – Make sure you have composted manure and fine bark mulch applied on top of the soil in your containers and keep them watered as containers dry out quicker than garden soil. In hot weather the containers will need to be watered daily, morning and evening watering is the best. If you do not have time in the morning before you leave for work or errands, empty your ice cube trays on the containers; this provides slow-release watering until you can get to them later.  

Enjoy being in the garden, stay hydrated, continue to stretch and take time to ‘smell the Roses’.

If you have any gardening questions, please email me at MaureenHaseleyJones@gmail.com and I’ll see you in your garden in August.

Also if you would like a garden consultation, contact my son Ian at LandscapesByIan.com. He has a brilliant gardening mind and, if I might say (yes, perhaps slightly tongue in cheek!), ‘The apple does not fall far from the tree.’

About the author: Maureen Haseley-Jones is a member of a family of renowned horticultural artisans, whose landscaping heritage dates back to the 17th century. She is one of the founders, together with her son Ian, of, The English Lady Landscape and Home Company. Maureen and Ian are landscape designers and garden experts, who believe that everyone deserves to live in an eco-conscious environment and enjoy the pleasure that it brings. Maureen learned her design skills from both her mother and grandmother, and honed her horticultural and construction skills while working in the family nursery and landscape business in the U.K. Her formal horticultural training was undertaken at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew in Surrey. 

‘Savage Brothers’ Draw Large, Lively Crowd for Festival Kickoff Concert


OLD LYME — Hundreds gathered last night on the lawns of the Florence Griswold Museum for the traditional kickoff concert for this year’s Midsummer Festival.


The Savage Brothers’ band played “funkin’, rockin’, and rhythm” music, which delighted the large crowd …


… and spurred numerous audience members of all ages to stand up and dance.


The weather was kind …

… the atmosphere was energizing …


… and the sunset was stunning!


SweetSeidners.com was one of the onsite food trucks. Lymes’ Youth Service Director Mary Seidner’s sister-in-law, who owns the business, was kept busy making sales of all kinds of delectable cookies and brownies.

All in all, it was a wonderful evening.

Old Lyme Library Board Issues New Statement Answering Additional Questions Related to Recent Book Challenges

OLD LYME — On Wednesday, July 27, the Old Lyme Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library Board of Trustees issued a statement titled, Old Lyme Library’s July 11th Decision … Some Questions Answered.

The statement answers a series of questions about the recent book challenge process, which culminated in the decision to retain two specific books in the Teen/Tween section of the library. The library had received a request to relocate the books, which had been signed by 135 residents.

The decision by the board was unanimous, although one member resigned in advance of the meeting.

The statement also makes public OLPGN Library Director’s formal Reconsideration Analysis & Findings of the books in question.

The statement, which has been published on the library’s website, reads in full:

Old Lyme Library’s July 11th Decision… Some Questions Answered. 

On June 17th, the Board of Trustees of Old Lyme’s Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library received a letter signed by 135 members of the Old Lyme/Lyme community, asking that two books be removed from the Teen & Tween section of the library. 

As part of the review process, Library Board members were asked to read the books in their entirety. After having been confronted with selected images sent to them by the concerned citizens, many members were surprised to find the books focused primarily on developing healthy relationships based on communication and trust. Some still felt that the books were concerning and dealt with unduly mature topics. Others reacted by saying, “I wish I had this book growing up.” 

With so many differing opinions of the books among board members, how did the Board reach a unanimous decision with its vote on July 11? 

After allowing members to share their personal feelings about the books, the Board shifted its focus. With the understanding that individual values, beliefs, and experiences differ, Board members set aside their personal opinions and evaluated the books through the lens of the “Standards of Selection” established in the library’s Collection Development Policy and addressed in the Director’s “Reconsideration Analysis”, the full text of which can be found at oldlymelibrary.org. They grappled with the ideals codified in the American Library Association’s Freedom to Read Statement, and they voted unanimously to uphold the principles embodied in the library’s policy. 

How in the world did the books get there in the first place? 

Staff take into consideration a wide array of information when making decisions about what to add to the collection. They consult professional review publications (e.g. Library JournalBooklist, The NYT Book Review), follow bestseller lists, pay attention to local interests and author interviews on major media outlets, and consider direct requests from patrons. Individual titles are measured against the “Standards of Selection” outlined in the library’s Collection Development Policy with an effort to develop collections that (1) position the Library as a source for lifelong learning; (2) provide opportunities for engagement, discovery, and creativity; (3) provide resources that anticipate and respond to patron needs and expectations; and (4) embrace diversity. 

How are community values addressed in a library developing its collection? 

While library staff endeavor to support community interests (Old Lyme’s Phoebe has, for instance, a much larger art collection than most libraries its size) staff do not attempt to reflect community values for three primary reasons: (1) no single understanding of community values exists, (2) in its effort to embrace diversity and offer resources for patrons to challenge their own thinking, consider other points of view, and broaden their minds, the library necessarily provides materials that may challenge even majority opinion, and (3) a principle role of public libraries, as articulated by the American Library Association, is precisely to support the marginalized, underrepresented, silenced, and disadvantaged. Embedded in the library’s practice is the understanding that by striving to serve and support all patrons we inevitably offend, alienate, or challenge others. Books are powerful tools that elicit strong emotions, and we believe patrons’ concerns deserve to be heard. It is for this reason that the library has a “Request for Reconsideration of Library Materials Form” and an established review process as part of our policy. 

How does a library judge what is age appropriate? 

The judgment of age-appropriateness is likewise a matter the library staff do not engage in. Age-appropriateness is highly subjective, both in the sense that youth of the same age vary widely in developmental progress and in the sense that what one individual or cultural group considers appropriate another deems inappropriate. This latter point is aptly illustrated by the current debate surrounding these two books. Well-informed people of good faith in our community hold widely varying views on the age appropriateness of the books. Should one group in the community, or for that matter one librarian, determine what is appropriate and made available for all others in the community? For these reasons, professional library practice, not just at the Phoebe but around the country, avoids making judgments of age appropriateness. Library staff place books in one of the three broad age-based collections (children, teen & tween, and adult) most closely matched with the publisher age recommendation as corroborated by professional reviews. 

What can a concerned parent do about the Library’s Policy? 

Please note that Library staff do not act in loco parentis. Per state statute (CGS 53-21a), young people should be of at least twelve years of age to visit the Library unaccompanied. Library staff necessarily assume unaccompanied youth have full access to the Library and all its collections —including the adult collections. Limiting access to content is the responsibility of the parent. If you feel you need to accompany your child to the library or any particular collection, we welcome and encourage your presence. 

We are grateful to the citizens who expressed their concern and raised awareness of this very important and complicated topic. And we are grateful to the others who spoke out in support of retaining the books. Ultimately, however, the Board’s decision rested on the principles found in the American Library’s Association’s Freedom to Read statement, espousing freedom to read for all members of the community, irrespective of the relative size or outspokenness of the opposing groups. 

Respectfully submitted,
The Board of Directors of Old Lyme’s Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library 

Lyme Democrats Announce Slate of Candidates to Run in November Municipal Elections 

Lyme DTC To Publicize, Encourage Kristina White’s Election to Board of Selectmen as a Petitioning Candidate 

Pictured above are candidates endorsed by the Lyme Democratic Town Committee for November’s municipal election. Pictured from left to right are Steve Mattson, Gavin Lodge, Kristina White, Adam McEwen, Mary Stone, and John  Kiker. Missing from photo are Anna James and Jim Miller.

LYME, CT – The Lyme Democratic Town Committee (DTC) announced Wednesday, July 26, that, at a  local Democratic caucus held Monday night, a slate of nine Democratic candidates was nominated  and endorsed by the committee to run in the Nov. 7 municipal elections.

The committee also announced that it would be actively encouraging Kristina White’s election to the Lyme Board of Selectmen as a petitioning candidate. 

In announcing the candidate slate, Lyme DTC Nominating Committee Chairperson Liz Frankel  explained, “Under state election law, a town committee may only nominate one candidate for first selectman and one candidate for selectman when the board of selectmen is composed of a first selectman and two selectmen.”

She continued, “The Lyme DTC is not nominating a candidate for first selectman this year,  but would like to see John Kiker and Kristina White, who are both currently on the board of  selectmen, elected as selectpersons. As a result, we nominated and endorsed John as our selectman candidate and will be actively publicizing and urging Kristina’s election as a petitioning candidate.” 

Running for election this year in Lyme on the Democratic Party slate will be: 

John Kiker for Board of Selectmen 

Steve Mattson for Board of Finance 

Jim Miller for Board of Finance 

Adam McEwen for Board of Finance Alternate 

Kristina White for Planning & Zoning Commission 

Mary Stone for Planning & Zoning Commission Alternate 

Anna James for Zoning Board of Appeals 

John Kiker for Lyme Library Board of Directors 

Gavin Lodge for Region 18 Board of Education 

Kristina White will appear on the ballot as a petitioning candidate. 

Frankel said, “We’ve recruited a talented slate of individuals this year who are not only highly  qualified, but extremely interested in serving the town we all love and cherish.” 

The Lyme DTC’s stated mission is to support and strengthen the Democratic Party in the Town of Lyme and  the State of Connecticut. 

Editor’s Note: The article above is based on a press release issued July 26 by the Lyme Democratic Town Committee.