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#1 |
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Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Moultonborough, NH
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Very limited areas in Moultonborough are served by the Bay District sewer project. See:
https://moultonboroughnh.gov/Documen...wer-System-PDF |
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#2 |
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I think the heavy rainfall washing everything into the lake didn't help.
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#3 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
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#4 |
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Rain can wash nitrogen and phosphorus into the lake....
But not chlorophyll out of the plant. |
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#5 |
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island
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When I first bought my island camp, the lot of land was mostly sand and was just washing away into the lake during every rainstorm of high water wake days.
The first thing I did was buy a bag of the cheapest grass seed at Sam’s club and just threw it out over the sand hoping for the best. Well lo and behold if that grass didn’t grow and grow dam well without fertilizer or anything and that was 16 years ago! To this day that grass or whatever you want you want to call it (it’s green) has held up and held up well and has never seen an ounce of fertilizer or any chemicals whatsoever! I only water it. It has also kept my land from washing away into the lake! My point is grass does not need to be fertilized to serve its purpose. Yeah mine won’t win any landscape contest but we love it and it has held up amazingly well! Dan
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#6 | |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Merrimack and Welch Island
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I didn't remember that side of the island as being sandy. Recall, around 1900, there weren't a lot of trees and sheep were grazed on the island. People also used to row out to go berrying on Welch. Shirley Burns had pix from those days--Sandy and Mike probably still have them.
Yes, Contractor's Rye (Ryegrass) will germinate quickly and help hold soil in place when everything is moved around during construction. That's what we put down when the power line came through, mostly to maintain a firebreak. No maintenance or fertilizer, but we cut it every few years to keep brush down under the power line. We also planted some white pines, again to put some roots into the ground and stabilize the soil. Those were the right steps, but I don't think we connected it to improved water quality in those days. Only zero maintenance. |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island
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Chris,
You are correct as most of my neighbors lots have low cut brush or blueberry bushes garnishing their waterfront. Unfortunately for me, some of the owners before me decided to dig out the shoreline and remove dirt and sand and whatever along most of my waterfront to fill in another property they owned nearby. This was not done recently but years ago…..now I have to live with it. I changed it in a good way with a lawn! So honestly I am sick of hearing how lawns are bad as they are not! …. Fertilizer is bad! Merry Christmas Chris! Dan
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#9 |
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Lawns provide less natural filter than other formats.
It is the same at my house as it would be if I was lakefront. The water can travel through them at a greater speed, and thus has less absorption in an incline. Also if you do not fertilize a lawn, or allow it to grow much longer, it loses its mono-culture. It is that loss of mono-culture that allows the turfgrass to sustain itself without the addition of fertilizer. |
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#10 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island
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Whatever the hell “mono-culture” is, I’m glad it’s gone if it allows grass to grow without fertilizer! We should all protest against mono culture!! Mono culture should be a banned substance! Who’s with me?? ![]() ![]() Dan
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#11 |
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Mono-culture is when someone is trying to grow only turfgrass.
The application of broadleaf herbicides found in some formats of fertilizer, or applied separately, kills the nitrogen-setting plants leaving only a mono-culture. |
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#12 | |
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Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island
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![]() Dan
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#13 |
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Parties?
I work six days a week and only take off the Sabbath. We only close on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years. Of course being a farm kid, that sounds like a lot of downtime. |
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#14 |
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#15 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Pennsyltuckey, Tuftonboro, Moultonborough
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"When I die, please don't let my wife sell my dive gear for what I told her I paid for it." |
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#16 | |
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#17 | |
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Laconia primary schools used to be highly dedicated to the basics. It was understood that most would grow up to work locally in careers that did not require a college education, but required a lot of basic knowledge on agriculture and the trades. So up until the fifth grade, we did a lot of agriculture which was something most of us were used to... then in middle school to finish off our primary training, they added wood and metal shop, home ec/cooking, and sewing for the full three years. |
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#18 |
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Merrimack and Welch Island
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deleted. Not Germain to Cyanobacteria
Last edited by Descant; 12-26-2023 at 12:48 PM. Reason: deleted. Not Germain to Cyanobacteria |
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#19 | |
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Join Date: May 2006
Location: Texas, Lake Ray Hubbard and NH, Long Island Winnipesaukee
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Recognizing failing septic systems and getting them addressed helps too of course as someone else mentioned.... But there is more, then just poop management to be addressed.... Hopefully people will recognize that the beauty of the area is there to be lost if it is not taken care off...
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Life is about how much time you can spend relaxing... I do it on an island that isn't really an island..... |
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