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Subject:
From:
Michael Rebman <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 5 Aug 2019 09:17:00 -0600
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Greetings,

My county seems to be one of the few that does not have a Master Gardener
program.  I will have to contact a neighboring county.  As for historic
grounds, I am uncertain of what existed in the backyard.  The house is
located in middle of a shortgrass prairie, and the town itself started as a
merchant town for local ranchers.  Photographs shortly after the house was
built show grass/dirt in the front yard of the house and the neighboring
houses, all the way to the foundations.  A postcard made shortly after it
was built shows young trees in the yard, and lines along the left side that
could imply a garden.  There were houses in the town with vine-covered
trellises and possibly willow trees that obviously did not survive.  By the
1940s, there was shrubbery in most of the town, but this house did not have
any visible in a 1940 photograph showing the front and part of the left
side.  My predecessors unfortunately picked a boring house for preservation.

Thank you,

Michael R. <[log in to unmask]>


On Mon, Aug 5, 2019 at 6:14 AM Michelle Zupan <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:

> Hello Michael,
>
> First you need to decide if you want the grounds to be historically
> accurate.  There is a great deal of research available -- from the National
> Park Service on down -- on what plants would have been in a historic garden
> from your time period.  (Hint: clover was not one of them, it is also
> impossible to remove once you have it.)
>
> A good, accurate, and easy starting point are herbs. If you are in central
> or southern NM you can start them this fall. If you are in northern NM wait
> until spring.  Herb gardens functioned as kitchen and medicinal gardens for
> the residents, so think rosemary, cilantro, dill, lavender,  fennel, even
> amaranth would have been accurate for your area. Most herbs are perennial
> (come back year after year), so they become low maintenance.
>
> Next, think about food crops for the kitchen plot. New Mexico is the
> perfect place for a 3 sisters garden and you can talk about the Native
> American agriculture.
> https://aces.nmsu.edu/pubs/_circulars/CR457/welcome.html
>
> Finally, talk to your local Master Gardener group --
> https://aces.nmsu.edu/ces/mastergardeners/  They MUST have service
> projects to maintain their MG status and museums are some of their
> favorites.  They will put in whatever you want.   And, they will likely be
> willing to help with the Spring festival you are thinking about. Trust me,
> gardening with kids is NOT as easy as you want it to be!
>
>
>
>

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