S 4- Lancaster Firming. Saturday, March 13. 1976 Gardening renews heritage For anyone who is a garden enthualaat, (he bicentennial Is an op portunity to renew, strengthen and enrich our gardening heritage. We have many fine gardens that have come down to us from the past These were In general the gardens of the well-to-do who had the means and the leisure time needed to develop and care for them At no lime In our history has the Interest In gardening • and the means to indulge it - been available to so many people as it is today Gar dens planted now in the spirit of the bicentennial can enrich out lives, the lives of our children and even our children's children. A bicentennial garden may be anything that you want it to be. It may be a garden of the past, modified and changed to Ot the needs of our time. It may be a garden of 1976 based around a patio, a balcony or a rock garden. You can also commemorate the bicentennial by planting a tree. This would be par ticularly appropriate since a tree lives for many years and throughout its lifespan will remind you of the oc- RED ROSE FEED & FARM SUPPLY cation (or which it was planted If I were to select one feature or early colonial gardens which Is par ticularly situated for today, I would choose the kitchen garden. This was a utilitarian garden then, providing food for the tabic and a supply of herbs for the numerous home remedies used for minor ailments. The kitchen garden was usually laid out in a formal geometric pattern, with walks dividing the area into beds for easy maintenance and access It was located close to the house for con venience. It was enclosed by a fence to keep out mean dering livestock and also to provide shelter for early and tender plants. A well laid out kitchen garden is just as valuable today as it was in colonial times and it makes an at tractive addition to the landscape. Choose an area which has full sun and good drainage. Enclose it with some kind of fence. This can be as simple or elaborate as you like, depending on the general style of the surrounding area. Divide the garden Into beds with walk*. These may be some kind of brick or stone, but they don't have to be. The beds should be a minimum of three feel wide to n maximum of six feet, length will depend on the •lie of the garden. The beds should be raised and surrounded by on edging of wood or brick. Mulching them will greatly reduce maintenance Herbs, flowers and even preheat oven to 450 degree, dwarf fruit trees can be F for young birds (l, ‘ planted in the outside beds. K rPCS for morc mature ones The Inside bed or beds arc hc.ison and brush reads to devoted to vegetables. poultry with butter and Properly laid out, this kind of o^hc* - fat Place poultry on .1 garden Is an attractive nj ck in a roaster or heavs addition to the landscape. It P-*n and cover tiglith has a permanent framework Poulin is done when leg that gives it year-round joints move casil> an -4 flesh Interest. It Is truly a garden on legs is soft and pliable To to be proud of, and one which brown uncover for the last can yield a great deal of thirty minutes of cooking pleasure over the years. HELPING PEOPLE WITH ... COMPLETE FARM FINANCING THAT’S FARM CREDIT’S JOB Farm Credit has helped raise the productivity on hundreds of farms. These loans have put time-saving machinery in their fields, labor-saving equipment in their barns and more efficient buildings on their land. Farm Credit's sole reason for existence is to produce a ready source of financing for any sound farm need. Let us serve you Plan* for laying out a ■mall kitchen garden, ax well as a fact sited on growing herbs, arc available by writing the Delaware Cooperative Exlcmlon Service. Mall Hoorn, Agricultural Hall, Univer sity of Delaware, Newark, UE 19711 HraUlng Poulin To braise whole poultn fi ■ * A FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT YOUR LOCAL COUNTY OFFICE. Inspect fields Sustained crop yields arc a primary goal of conservation planning slates Karl Hcllcrick. Soil Conservation Service Fields that have erosion or have excessive water do not give top yields Last month, as well as last year, storms caused ex tensive erosion and water ponding problems for Lebanon County landuscrs Hellenck recommends that landuscrs tour their properties to see the damages Drainageways that have become gullies need to have sod reestablished. Sod waterways with subsurface drainage is one alternative *rV VI for thin excess water disposal problem. Conservation planning considers the goals and the soil resources Hcllcrlck stales Each landuser needs to look around his properly whether It be a lot, center, or farm and see what his conservation needs tire Malnutrition m uir m.ilnntntiiin ( i>i lu\u r the IkuK s dHciisi rnmirh *><> til it dr.ilh c m r< si '• It mil (omnimi i,. missis ,sik h m.ilniitntiii’i isri ! i mtimmi in Mir I nih .| SI It- tint 111 flr\r|i)pi,i,' i min' i irs sin.ill (hildri n in h.idh d im.igrd li\ kw.ishiorkoi im.idcipi iii prrU ni l .nul m.ir.isnuis 'n> satin ii nt food of .tin kind ■ «» <■; #)