What's New
UNH Cooperative Extension publishes educational materials based
on current research data. Information is reviewed for accuracy and
currency.
Whenever possible, UNH Cooperative Extension materials are available on the
web, either in HTML or PDF format.
Printed copies of many publications are also available from your UNH
Cooperative Extension county office.
Publications
New Book Features History, Economics of New Hampshire Dairy Industry
A new book, “The History and Economics of the New Hampshire Dairy Industry,” documents the beginning of dairy farming in New Hampshire to the present day.
UNH Cooperative Extension published the fully-illustrated book, featuring color photos of today’s industry as well as antique pictures of yesteryears. It contains the collective expertise of 10 authors and was edited by John Porter, professor and dairy specialist, Emeritus, UNH Cooperative Extension, who also co-authored “Preserving Old Barns.” Granite State Dairy Promotion sponsored the publication of the book at the request of the New England Family Dairy Farms Cooperative.
Chapters include information on history, modern dairy farming, producer-distributors and commercial processors, milk marketing, ecology, open space, the role of the University of New Hampshire in the industry, economics, and the future of dairy farming.
Although this book is about the New Hampshire dairy industry, a lot of the history and economics parallel what occurred throughout New England over the years. There is a milk marketing chapter, one of the best descriptions of this complex pricing system written to date.
The thousands of old barns that dot the New Hampshire countryside are a testimony to the dairy industry that was “king” in its day. Today it continues to generate millions of dollars of product value and maintain the open space that makes New Hampshire a desirable place to live. This book gives an appreciation of what took place on the New Hampshire countryside over the years.
Click here for the order form, or send a check for $24 ($19.95 plus shipping and handling), payable to UNH Cooperative Extension and mail to: UNH Cooperative Extension Publications Center, Nesmith Hall, 131 Main St., Durham, NH 03824. For bookstores interested in wholesale prices, call UNH Cooperative Extension Publications Manager Holly Young at (603) 862-1564.
New! Integrated Landscaping: Following Nature’s Lead
Integrated Landscaping: Following Nature’s Lead is a new publication for New Hampshire and other gardeners, landscapers, contractors, businesses and municipalities in the Northeast that want to create beautiful, functional landscapes based on natural ecosystems.
Integrated Landscaping: Following Nature’s Lead is a fully illustrated book. Photos, drawings, and sketches on almost every page provide clear examples of the concepts presented.
Most landscape manuals describe a linear sequence of processes: design, plant selection, installation, and ongoing maintenance. Integrated Landscaping offers a holistic approach that addresses these processes simultaneously. This new way of thinking treats each site as a system of plant and animal communities, considering their interrelationships to each other and their environment.
This manual will help New Hampshire and other landscapers working in the Northeast on either existing or new sites to:
- Establish landscapes that look and feel as if they belong here.
- Integrate natural principles into beautiful, functional landscapes.
- Create landscapes that sustain themselves with minimum cost, energy, and effort.
- Think in terms of plant systems, rather than mere collections of individual plants.
- Use and apply plant-system models designed for challenging conditions.
- Find alternatives to invasive species that offer the aesthetic characteristics they provide.
- Create landscapes that benefit wildlife, both above and below ground.
The extensive appendices provide further information on all topics presented along with plant selection charts and lists.
Cost is $19.95, plus shipping and handling, for a total of $24. Click here for the order form. Payable to UNH Cooperative Extension and mail to: UNH Cooperative Extension Publications Center, Nesmith Hall, 131 Main St., Durham, NH 03824.
Landscaping at the Water’s Edge: An Ecological
Approach
A Manual for NH Landowners and Landscapers Now Available
No matter where you live in New Hampshire, the actions you take in your
landscape can have far reaching effects on water quality. Why? Because we
are all connected to the water cycle and we all live in a watershed, the
land area that drains into a surface water body such as a lake, river, or
wetland.
“Landscaping at the Water’s Edge: An Ecological
Approach” is a new publication for New Hampshire
landowners and landscapers that will explain how our landscaping choices
impact surface and ground waters and demonstrates how, with simple
observations, ecologically-based design and low impact maintenance
practices, you can protect, and even improve, the quality of our water
resources.
Authors are UNH Cooperative Extension specialists and educators with expertise
in horticulture, water resources, turf grass, entomology, planting and maintaining
landscapes and home lawn care. These educators partnered with a sustainable
and ecological designer and other experts united to provide information and
expertise to help landscapers and property owners living along New Hampshire’s
lakes, ponds, rivers and streams make decisions about landscape design and
maintenance that will reduce pollution and environmental degradation.
“Landscaping at the Water’s Edge: An Ecological Approach” is
a fully illustrated book. Photos and sketches on almost every page provide
clear examples of the concepts presented. The appendices carry extensive information
pertinent to state regulations, along with recommended plant lists and other
resources.
Cost is $20. Click here for
the order form. Payable to UNH Cooperative Extension and mail to: UNH Cooperative Extension Publications Center, Nesmith Hall, 131 Main St., Durham, NH 03824.
New, Interactive CD on Lawn Care Available
Interested in getting a greener, healthier lawn and having fun learning how?
UNH Cooperative Extension Educator Sadie Puglisi and WWW & Media specialist
Faye Cragin have teamed up to produce Integrated
Pest Management for Turfgrass, an interactive CD and website about caring
for grass in home lawns, as well as in municipal and commercial landscapes such
as athletic fields, cemeteries, golf courses and office parks.
The CD and website offer information on the basics of integrated pest management,
how grass grows, identifying and managing turf diseases, scouting for grubs,
an herbicide glossary, and interactive decision tools about herbicide use. Quizzes
at the end of each section will test your knowledge.
The website is available to everyone at extension.unh.edu/agric/turf/turfipm.htm.
For those who don’t have Internet access, the CD comes ready with Macromedia
Flash that can download onto your computer in just seconds.
CDs cost $5 each. Click here to order. Payable to UNH Cooperative Extension and mail to: UNH Cooperative Extension Publications Center, Nesmith Hall, 131 Main St., Durham, NH 03824.
A Landowner's Guide to Inventorying & Monitoring
Wildlife in New Hampshire
Introducing a publication to help you better know and understand the wildlife
on your land. If you are a New Hampshire landowner and curious about the
wildlife on your land, this book is for you. This book includes:
- Tips for observing wildlife
- How to keep records of wildlife observations
- Guidance on creating a habitat map of your property - what to look
for, and how to map it - Detailed how-to descriptions of wildlife inventory methods, including birds, mammals, amphibians & reptiles, and insects.
- Data tabulations sheets for each inventory method
- Descriptions and contact information for national and statewide wildlife monitoring programs where you can contribute to larger studies of wildlife populations
Written by Malin Ely Clyde, Darrel Covell and Matt Tarr of UNH Cooperative
Extension.
Click here for
the order form. Payable to UNH Cooperative Extension and mail to: UNH Cooperative Extension Publications Center, Nesmith Hall, 131 Main St., Durham, NH 03824.
A totally fresh publication, The Best Plants for New Hampshire Gardens and Landscapes - How to Choose Annuals, Perennials, Small Trees & Shrubs to Thrive in Your Garden uses the concept of habitat gardening to help gardeners and landscapers choose and care for plants in our unique New Hampshire environment.
The 96-page publication includes:
- Lively, easy-to-read text and useful charts
- Pen and ink illustrations, and black & white photos of selected plants
- Sections on plant selection and care
- Specialty plant lists and an index for easy referencing
Written by Cathy Neal and Margaret Hagen of UNH Cooperative Extension, along
with Leslie van Berkum of van Berkum Nurseries, this book is published by the
New Hampshire Plant Growers' Association in cooperation with UNH Cooperative Extension.
Click here for
the order form. Payable to UNH Cooperative Extension and mail to: UNH Cooperative Extension Publications Center, Nesmith Hall, 131 Main St., Durham, NH 03824.
Preserving Old Barns
Ever wonder about the history of the many barns along New Hampshire's scenic
byways? Or how you might restore the barn sitting in your backyard? A unique
resource on preserving old barns is now available in an illustrated book featuring
many of New Hampshire's historic and scenic barns.
You will find "Preserving Old Barns" not only offers a history of New England
agriculture through the evolution of barns, it also deals with structural renovation
of deteriorating farm buildings. This book will help barn owners assess the
structural integrity of old farm buildings, as well as provide instructions
for some basic repairs.
Authors John Porter, a UNH Cooperative Extension dairy specialist, and Francis
Gilman, retired agricultural engineer specialist with UNH Cooperative Extension,
spent their careers with farmers around New England helping them update and retrofit
barns and have applied this knowledge to the renovation of old barns. Together they
have more than 50 years of field experience working with agricultural producers.
"Preserving Old Barns" is a fully illustrated book. Photos and sketches on every
page provide clear examples of the concepts presented. A special colored section
showcases more than a dozen beautifully restored barns.
While the book may deal primarily with New Hampshire barns, the concepts can
be applied to any agricultural structure. Buy "Preserving
Old Barns" at retail
garden centers throughout the state or from the UNH Cooperative Extension Publications
Center.

