Fall 2013 - Duluth Community Garden Program
Transcription
Fall 2013 - Duluth Community Garden Program
Community Gardener’s Companion Fall 2013 Soil Management for the Organic Garden Duluth Community Garden Program by Joel Rosen With the challenging weather conditions of 2013, area gardeners are reporting results that range from poor or disappointing to generally good or even excellent. Microclimates, timing of planting, type of crops planted, and effective irrigation might account for some of the variation, but gardeners should not overlook what is probably the most important factor making the difference: soil. Given adequate moisture, 2013 has been a nearly ideal season for cool weather crops like lettuce, peas, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, potatoes, and onions. If the aforementioned did not perform well for you, the most likely problem is deficient soil. Start by picking up a small handful of slightly damp soil and rubbing it between your thumb and index finger. Roughtextured soil is sandy, a powdery texture suggests silt, and a slippery texture indicates clay. Actually, all soils contain all three types of textures in various combinations. What you’re hoping for is a happy balance that allows soil to remain open and workable enough to allow penetration of oxygen and water but also has enough body to hold nutrients and retain that moisture. The gold standard is loam, a crumbly mixture of all three textures. In general, sandy loam will be easier to work and quicker to dry out when you want to plant, cultivate, etc., while clay loam will retain nutrients and moisture for a longer period of time. Now, let’s look at the components of soil. For the sake of simplicity, let’s assume soil is made up of organic matter, minerals, water, and air. Organic matter is the engine of soil fertility; as organic matter decomposes, it makes available the key macro nutrients nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium. Organic matter content is also important to soil structure. Increasing organic matter content can make heavy clay soil more workable and better at retaining moisture, and it has a similarly beneficial effect on sandy soils, making them better able to retain moisture and nutrients. The mineral content of a soil is the weatherized rock that slowly releases key nutrients in small quantities as it continues the weathering process. In some cases, the mineral content of a soil can be deficient in a particular element, but happily, maintaining a healthy level of organic matter (or increasing it if it’s low) is usually all that’s necessary to build better soil. You might think the easiest way to diagnose soil needs is by soil testing. A good soil test will include measurements of organic matter, nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium, pH, and micro nutrients. Your test results will also come with recommendations on how much of a given component should be added per acre or square foot. While soil tests can provide a great deal of information, following the specific recommendations can be a tricky business that in some cases can make your problems worse rather than better. Instead, try evaluating the appearance of your cultivated plants. Are they dark green (or other vivid color continued on page 5 Table of Contents Soil Management for the Organic Garden.............................. 1 Turning of the Season........................ 2 A Letter from the President........... 3 Wonder in the Garden at Harbor Highlands............................ 4 Fall Garden Cleanup........................... 5 School Garden Installations.......... 7 DCGP Recognized by Duluth School Board.......................... 8 Coming into Bloom—A Reflection on a Year of Service with The Duluth Community Garden Program........................................................ 9 Iron Squash at the 2013 Hillfest.............................................. 10 Fall Classes.............................................. 13 2013 Flower Bulb Sale............ 14–15 The MISSION of the Duluth Community Garden Program is to strengthen the Duluth area community and foster self-sufficiency by providing access for all to food production and preservation resources and promoting sustainable gardening practices. Fall 2013 Community Gardener’s Companion page 2 Turning of the Season: A Bounty of New Community Gardeners Newsletter of the Duluth Community Garden Program by Jahn Hibbs Jahn Hibbs Executive Director Jamie Zak Healthy School Food Coordinator Rheanna Letsos Education and Outreach Coordinator Here already are the shorter days and cool mornings perfect for a walk the garden. I find I am drinking in all of the beauty of the garden– bright colors, gentle sounds, and especially the rich medley of scents —as ravenously as the vegetables, storing it all up for the winter ahead. This summer truly felt like a flash in the pan; it was beautiful nonetheless. Board Members: Alison Wood, President Francois Medion, Vice President Paul Treuer, Treasurer Dan Kislinger, Co-Secretary Pat Farrell, Co-Secretary Anastasia Bamford Anne Skwira Brown Roxanne Richards Sarah Nelson Tom Hanson 206 West Fourth Street, Ste. 214 Duluth, MN 55806 218-722-4583 garden@ duluthcommunity garden.org The Community Gardener’s Companion is published four times per year: Sept-Nov Dec-Feb Mar-May June-Aug This year has yielded a bounty of new gardeners. I am especially grateful for these new relationships, energies and perspectives brought from ideas sown like seeds through chance meetings and word of mouth. I want to give a shout out to Tim, Rheanna, and all of the gardeners at The Emerald Community Garden in Lincoln Park; they not only stuck with planning and re-planning numerous garden building workdays during a difficult spring, but they have also weathered a fickle summer by exemplifying one of the best gifts of community gardening—helping each other! At least one of the gardeners was there every day and if something needed watering, they watered it— whether it was in their own garden plot or not. The Emerald has gotten a lot of attention—it’s not every day we get to build a new garden. I also want to give a shout out to the Hillside Garden and Lilliput Garden in Central Hillside. At Hillside, Jayson, Wes and Paul have been troubleshooting and keeping good communication going as we try out a new water supply plan, and Paul’s MN Teen Challenge crew is keen to put in some work days building a new compost bin and making other site improvements this fall with our David likes to water at The Emerald and is part of the team keeping this garden growing through a tricky first season. new GreenCorps member. Linda has kept the garden growing in Lilliput Park with her St. Mark AME Church community through challenges such as vandalism and poor soil. This year we were able to get compost and a water tank with good supply. That’s not enough on its own, though; Linda has done a great job reaching out to neighbors and people she sees on the street, and some even helped prep the garden while she continued on next page Squash climb the fence behind their sister corn at Lilliput Garden. Community Gardener’s Companion Duluth Community page 3 Garden Program continued from previous page was out of town this spring. This year Lilliput is more beautiful than ever. How will you celebrate Food Day? These are just a few of the successful labors I have seen this season, but I will write them here and share them with you, storing it all up This year, we are combining two events: the traditional end-of-season for the days ahead. DCGP Harvest Dinner and the third annual Vegetable of the Year Food Day celebration. Dan Kislinger shares an original design for an elegant rainwater catchment system, or rainwater harvester (RWH). This one is at Rocky Ledge. A Letter from the DCGP Board President Gardens around the community are showing signs of the fall harvest season. The bounty produced in Northland soils never ceases to amaze me. Within the Duluth Community Garden Program, we owe our successes this season to our wonderful staff and volunteers. From those who tilled the soil after such a late spring and the volunteers working to prepare the new Emerald Garden in Lincoln Park to groups organizing new school gardens and the OVOC squash cookers spreading a love for grilled zucchini—it’s been a fruitful summer. I would like to take this opportunity to extend a warm welcome to new and returning faces in the program. We welcome Anne Skwira Brown as a new board member. Rheanna Letsos has successfully completed her GreenCorps position and has been hired as our education and outreach coordinator. And at the beginning of summer, Jahn Hibbs agreed to take the helm and move into the position of executive director after many years as our program director. Her incredible organizational skills and knack for predicting the needs of our programs will put the DCGP in excellent standing, allowing us to fulfill our exciting infrastructure and programmatic goals. As we wrap up 2013, the board of directors will continue to align our strategic planning objectives with current programs and future goals. We would like to expand our membership base and forge new connections with area businesses. And remember, our door is always open for members to serve on the board of directors or a committee. Board and committee work is a wonderful way to contribute to the organization and make it better. Take good care, Alison Wood, President DCGP Board of Directors Please join us to celebrate your best squash dishes and good, local, healthy food, with community gardeners from all over Duluth at the Vegetable of the Year Potluck and Harvest Dinner. Bring a dish to pass, preferably featuring this year’s vegetable–summer or winter squash. Then, get your vote in for next year’s Vegetable of the Year! You will have 30 seconds to advocate for your choice, followed by a straw poll vote. This event is free and open to the public. Harvest Dinner and Vegetable of the Year Food Day Celebration Thursday, October 24 Holy Family Church 2430 W 3rd St in Duluth 6:00 to 8:00 pm WRITERS NEEDED Submission deadlines are Aug 1, Nov 1, Feb 1, and May 1. Contact newsletter coordinator, Roxanne Richards, rox7070@ gmail.com www.duluthcommunitygarden.org Duluth Community Garden Program Community Gardener’s Companion page 4 Wonder in the Garden at Harbor Highlands by Jahn Hibbs Thank you to new gardeners Leah and Rebecca Anderson for sharing the joy of discovering purple carrots and other wonders in their garden at Harbor Highlands. Leah, Rebecca, and their friends and neighbors Sharon and Kim started their garden in May 2012 with the Garden-in-a-Box kits provided by the MN State Horticultural Society (MSHS.) DCGP partnered with MSHS to distribute the raised bed kits, soil, and plants and complimentary DCGP membership to 50 aspiring gardeners throughout Duluth, with additional plants and seeds to continue their new gardens in 2013. The gardeners at Harbor Highlands made the most of the opportunity, placing their four garden kits together, adding a netting fence, and this year even tilling additional space for planting around the raised beds. “We had wanted to start a garden but didn’t know where to begin. We wouldn’t have started if we hadn’t heard about the Garden-ina-Box program when Sarah Nelson from DCGP spoke at one of our community meetings. Our friend Sharon had experience growing flowers, so we decided to just do it,” shared Leah. “When we picked a purple carrot we thought something was wrong, but I Googled the variety and found out it was supposed to look like that. I learned that the more colorful vegetables are even better for you.” The women said they look forward to continuing their learning in the coming seasons in their garden. The beauty they have created in their neighborhood has drawn interest from additional neighbors who would like to learn to garden. DCGP will work with them this winter to explore plans to expand community garden space for the Harbor Highlands community. Squash creep from raised beds, mingling with the cabbages and corn planted intensively in the little garden. Vicky Vogels, MSHS Garden-in-a-Box project coordinator, stands with Leah and Rebecca Anderson in the garden they’ve created with their neighbors at Harbor Highlands. Rebecca Anderson and the mystery carrot— “Purple Haze,”—a colorful hybrid DCGP purchased from Johnny’s Selected Seeds. Fall 2013 page 5 Soil Management for the Organic Garden continued from page 1 in some cases), vigorous, large and wellproportioned? If so, you probably don’t need to do much other than continue to add moderate amounts of organic matter every two or three years, keep the soil loose and workable, and provide water whenever rainfall is infrequent. On the other hand, if your plants are pale green or yellowed, undersized or spindly, or subject to unacceptable levels of disease or pest pressure, you need to act to improve soil fertility and possibly tilth. Fall Garden Cleanup remember you’re trying to correct a serious deficiency. Once you’ve got your soil fertility up, an application of half a pick-up load every two to three years should keep your garden growing nicely. A simple pH test you can do at home is also helpful. (Some people can assess soil acidity just by tasting the soil.) If your pH is below 6.5, you should add crushed high-calcium lime to reduce the acidity; most vegetables or flowers like a neutral or slightly acidic soil. Blueberries thrive on very acid soil, so don’t lime any areas where you have blueberries or plan to add them. By Marian Syrjamaki-Kuchta Cook Home Garden What do we mean by fall cleanup at the garden? Or, what do we mean by cleanup, at all, at the garden? Pathways Keep pathways navigable for others who may need to use the pathways around your garden. Older gardeners especially may have difficulty with rocks or things The most reliable way to do this is to add hidden in the long weeds. Wire, twine organic matter in the form of partially or hidden tools are very damaging to or fully composted plant and animal weed whips and other tools. Clear, flat residues: readily available sources include While soil fertility is critical, don’t forget pathways make walking through the to consider tilth and structure. If your soil gardens pleasant and safe for everyone. leaves, hay, straw, grass clippings, and tends to the clay end of the spectrum, it’s So weed your pathways as well as your animal manure. Green manure crops are especially important not to work it or even garden and keep pathways clear of very effective but may not be practical compact it by walking on it when it’s wet. stumbling blocks and rocks. for the backyard home garden. Partial Sandy loams are much more forgiving in decomposition of the material is the this instance. Also, there are many ways simplest approach. With the aid of soil of tilling and aerating, but if you choose bacteria, earthworms, and other living Weeds to rototill, try to limit the number of things, such material continues to If the weeds get away from you, or you passes you make that are not preceded break down at a moderate rate as your want to abandon your garden, please call by significant application of organic garden grows, eliminating the risk of an the office and ask for help rather than matter. Too much tilling can destroy that overdose of a particular nutrient. Avoid let your entire garden go to seed. If the gold standard crumb structure and result weeds do get away from you, remove the raw, undigested organic matter; manure in a fine powder with reduced biological may be too hot (excess nitrogen) and flower heads so they don’t go to seed. activity. Safer options include permanent burn plants, while some organic matter Weed seeds blow around the garden beds (raised or not) that you never step like sawdust will temporarily take up too impacting other gardeners and making much nitrogen in the process of breaking in or till, or the use of a broadfork, also more work for you next year as well. Use known as a grelinette. down. Completely composted residues your weeds to mulch in your pathways. Or are an excellent option if you have carry them to a common compost pile or One final piece of advice: managing soil the material available, but completing create your own compost pile in your own by cooperating with nature, as opposed the composting process is somewhat space. complicated and beyond the scope of this to feeding plants calibrated quantities of nutrients, can look like a poor option Put in some time clearing weeds around article. early in the season when the soil is cold the garden, in general. For example, we and biological activity is slow to ramp up. have huge amounts of tansy at the Cook How much organic matter to apply? In Be patient. Don’t push the season too really deficient soils, a good starting Home Garden. I plan to get out there with hard if the soil is unusually cold. Given point is 50 or even 60 tons to the acre. my loppers and pruner and cut it right good soil fertility and a healthy population down to the ground this fall, as much as I For a modest home garden of 1,400 of soil microorganisms, your garden will square feet (28 x 50 ), that translates can, and then keep weed whipping it as it eventually attain a level of health and to 1.5 tons. Of course, you don’t need to comes back up tender green. Feel free to vigor that results in vegetables, fruits, and pitch in on this at your garden anytime. truck over to the nearest weigh station; herbs that are beautiful to look at and a ball park estimate is all you’re after. delicious on the dinner table. Two or three full-size pick-up loads ought to be just about right. If you’re thinking that sounds like an awful lot, continued on page 12 Fall 2013 page 6 THANK YOU! Share all your squash recipes on our One Vegetable One Community Facebook page. Thank you to Chad Johnson and Kirsten Aune for the tour of the hugels and crater garden at Spirit Mountain Farm. Gardeners from The Emerald and the Land Stewardship Committee were invited to see the project created last fall. We gained ideas for planting the minihugels at The Emerald and learned more about permaculture. Plus, find recipes and growing tips at www. duluthcommunity garden.org. Above: Kirsten Aune and Chad Johnson, permaculture farmers at Spirit Mountain Farm. Left: Chad Johnson describes the process of planting hugels at Spirit Mountain Farm to Tim and Bevan from The Emerald Community Garden. “I’ve just spent a morning visiting farmers all over the country via the Internet and the phone. Regardless of where we’ve started from – North or South, wet climates or dry, high altitudes or low – we are all the same right now. Every market report is remarkably like every other. There are a few variations… but outside of these extremes every market manager mentions tomatoes, sweet corn, eggplants, peppers, and new potatoes. Right now, at this moment, every part of the country seems to be caught up with nightshades and corn. While what I appreciate perhaps most about farmers’ markets are the regional differences across our land that show themselves so well, what I love about this moment is the opposite, that we can all eat the same foods at the same time. Like a national holiday that everyone takes, it’s a moment of unity in a huge country with a diverse culture and geography.” Excerpt from Deborah Madison, “All Caught Up! Early September,” from her 2002 cookbook Local Flavors: Cooking and Eating from America’s Farmers Markets. Community Gardener’s Companion Duluth Community page 7 Garden Program School Garden Installations By Jamie Zak The work of planning, installing, and implementing five school gardens in Duluth Public Schools, with funding from the Statewide Health Improvement Program, has been in full swing. We broke ground, installed raised beds, erected fences, moved earth, and applied mulch. Some schools planted perennials this past spring. Others are planning for a big fall push to get sheet mulching down in order to have a spring bed for planting into next season—all timed to the tune of school bells. It takes a village...to build a garden, and it has been a real community effort. Each of the five schools have come together to build their gardens with members from their respective communities pitching in with construction and gardening skills. Other members have contributed their time garnering donations from local businesses to provide lunch on installation days, lumber/building material for raised beds, labor and materials for a toolshed/greenhouse, and garden tools. Gardening is being identified far and wide as a powerful educational tool and a tangible resource for increasing the health of our youth through learning how food is grown, harvested, and prepared. This project continues to ride the incredible momentum of interest which people have for school gardens. In meetings with our various stakeholders, it has been said more than once that in the 21st century a garden/outdoor classroom will be as normal to find in a school as a gymnasium or library. When renovating or rebuilding a school, in will go an outdoor space where students will connect with plants, animals, and other people; they will learn about growing food, cycling water, building soil, and how plants and animals interact. This year, gardening will find a place in the curriculum as an educational tool for reaching academic standards in math, science, arts, construction technology, and family and consumer science classes, while creating opportunities for students to taste and enjoy fresh, healthy food in the cafeteria and classroom. With the many identified benefits of installing a school garden, this year we anticipate the gardens will enrich school communities and enhance 21st century learning in our schools. Here’s to a great start to the school year! Community Gardener’s Companion Duluth Community page 8 Garden Program DCGP Recognized by Duluth School Board Old Storm Windows Available 10 of them -- 30” x 53” 30 of them -- 29” x 29” with 4 panes 10 of them -- 23” x 29” with 6 panes They would make a perfect green house or cold frames. Also available are a set of wood and glass patio doors. Anyone interested should call Keith @ 218-834-4252 (Two Harbors) At the monthly meetings of the Duluth School Board, a student, teacher, or community member is recognized for their service to the Duluth Public Schools. At the August 20th meeting, the Duluth Community Garden Program and Healthy School Food Coordinator, Jamie Zak, was presented for recognition by school board chair Tom Kasper, Superintendent Bill Gronseth, and the members of the school board. The work being recognized included the following listed below. The Duluth Community Garden Program selected five schools to receive its Food Literacy Grant for School Gardens and Farm to School Programming (funded by the Statewide Health Improvement Program). The grant includes a budget for installing a school garden and facilitates Farm to School planning. Proposals from each school included gardenintegrated curriculum; taste-testing from the garden; and increasing the health of students through food literacy in the garden, cafeteria, and classroom. The schools receiving this grant are Congdon Park and Myers Wilkins Elementary Schools, Ordean East and Lincoln Park Middle Schools, and East High School. Garden designs include a combination of handicap accessible raised beds, lower raised beds, and on-grade beds. Schools will grow perennials, such as raspberries, rhubarb, and herbs that will be low-maintenance and will produce when school is in session. Annual crops will be selected and sown at the correct time to produce early for May/June and late for September/ October. Here’s a way to use old windows. Make a “frame” of straw bales in a rectangle shape, over good garden soil, and lay old windows on top. Voila! Mini greenhouse, cold frame, whatever. On the internet, Google the phrase “straw bales for cold frame” and see lots of examples of others doing this, too. Using this setup, one year I had heads of lettuce by the end of May and, by starting lettuce seeds every few weeks, harvested right up until Thanksgiving. — Marian Syrjamaki-Kuchta Fall 2013 page 9 Coming into Bloom—A Reflection on a Year of Service with The Duluth Community Garden Program By Rheanna Letsos I remember one year ago today and the interview with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) like it was yesterday. I was in Grand Rapids with my family, and I had the interview over the phone. The MPCA is located in St. Paul, so they did not mandate travel for this part of the process. I was not driving at the time. I did not drive a single day for three years. (This is documented in the Youtube video “Carless in Duluth.”) So, by many standards, I was living an environmentally conscious life. Plus, I had just finished my service with AmeriCorps at Stowe Elementary and I had coordinated quite a few environmentally-conscious events, such as the planting of 50 white pines, the creation of a school garden, and The Tomato Man Project’s first vegetable distribution to elementary students. I was ready for the next step in this field of environmentalism. But, what exactly did I want to focus on? I knew I wanted to be a model of an environmentally conscious lifestyle: drive less, recycle, eat organic, and help with access to healthy food. What I didn’t know was how this all was connected to the work I was to do, and how it connected back to me. I remember very clearly my first fall work party at the Emerson Community Garden, coincidentally where I garden now, or maybe not so coincidentally. I couldn’t quite understand how putting up the deer fence and trimming weeds was going to help us with healthy food access. Even though I was in touch (at least what I thought was in touch) with my food, I really did not know how to build something from the soil and rocks to grow food. All I saw was soil and rocks, and thought that it wasn’t much. But it is more than meets the eye; it is the very foundation of a garden. The soil is our foundation, and we have to build on that for access to healthy food. I believe that we are going to change the world through gardening and healthy food access. I could see the long-range vision for this change clearly, but I could not see the trees that formed the forest, so to speak. I thought that buying local and organic, cooking my own food, and changing the way we educate others about food was the only way to healthy food access. But there is a whole other world out there, and it starts with soil and rocks! Helping to prepare gardens for the spring with fall maintenance was a start. In the spring, after hibernating in the winter months at the Duluth Community Garden Program office learning about our programs, I started to see the seasons in a different way. I realized how busy spring really is, and how important it is to align yourself with the seasons and be in tune with those shifts. I was a busy bee helping to prepare for our Spring Fling, Fruit Tree and Shrub sale, and Seed and Transplant sale. It was such a joy to help people who had never gardened before get started, and those who had gardened before reclaim their land and build upon their already many accomplishments. I coordinated the volunteer efforts (over 500 hours in three months) that built The Emerald Garden, Lincoln Park’s new community garden. And when Mayor Ness and the news came for the National Neighborhood Night out at The Emerald and spoke of crime prevention, my experience truly came full circle. Starting from soil and rocks, engaging the community around healthy food access, and helping the gardeners and neighbors vision and build their own garden—that is change. That is part of the food access movement. I will never be the same after my experience as a GreenCorps member at the Duluth Community Garden Program. I know now that connecting to the earth through gardening brings you so much more than I ever imagined. It brings you joy; it brings you community; it brings you healthy, affordable food; it reconnects our generations to each other and to the land; it empowers youth through education and outreach, giving them the power to choose and build healthy minds, bodies, and communities; it brings a peace and calmness that we are in desperate need of today; and it brings with it on the wings of the little butterflies and bees–the future! I am reminded of the song “The Rose” “Just remember in the winter far beneath the bitter snows Lies the seed that with the sun’s love In the spring becomes the rose.” I want to thank everyone in the community, everyone with the Duluth Community Garden Program, and everyone in my family for being so strong and knowledgeable in your areas of expertise. Because of you and your dedication to our communities and access to healthy food, I have been able to do what I love and help us all make a difference. I will forever reflect back on my year of service as a time when I came into my own, making the impact I choose to make on the world, as one of my greatest challenges and at the same time my greatest joys. It is with an empowered hand I pass the torch to a future GreenCorps member. I look forward to serving the community in my new role as the education and outreach coordinator with the Duluth Community Garden Program. Fall 2013 page 10 Iron Squash at the 2013 Hillfest Most Complimentary Preparation of Squash Zeitgeist Chilled Fresh Squash Lasagne with Herbed Cheese Spread with Chilled Summertime Carmelized Apple, Roasted Butternut Squash Bisque Best Use of Squash— Comfort Food Essentia Health Butternut Squash Biscuit with Vegetable Marmalade. This was down home comfort food with an exotic twist. Best Use of Squash— Comfort Food Essentia Health Zucchini Date Pineapple Muffin By Michael Gabler I hope you were one of the lucky people that got to try the squash dishes prepared by local chefs at the 2013 Hillfest! These chefs are committed to helping One Vegetable One Community spread the excitement for growing and eating local food. When you’re eating at these establishments, thank them for their support of One Vegetable One Community and the Duluth Community Garden Program. Best in Show New Scenic Café Kaddo Bourani–Sweet and Spiced Essentia’s Entry Peoples’ Choice Award/Most Brilliant Combination of Flavors Chester Creek Café Pickled and Grilled Squash Salad Chef Shannon from Essentia Health New Scenic Cafe’s Entry Chef from New Scenic Cafe Community Gardener’s Companion Duluth Community page 11 Garden Program Judges Henry, Jen and Carolyn enjoying the entries. To the left, Zeitgeist’s Chefs, and above, their entry. Vegetable of the Year Potluck and Harvest Dinner Free and open to the public. From top left, Adam from St. Ann’s, their muffin entry, and Chef Avery from Chester Creek preparing their entry. Thursday, October 24 Holy Family Church 2430 W 3rd St in Duluth 6:00 to 8:00 pm Duluth Community Community Gardener’s Companion Garden Program Zucchini Apple Crisp continued from page 5 Rocks Take the time to remove rocks entirely from your garden space. At the Cook Home Garden we have been improving the roadway, filling in low spots in the road using the rocks we dig out of our gardens. Like Antonina says, “Marian, don’t be lazy!” So, instead of tossing the rocks into a corner of my garden space, where the tiller will get clogged with them, or where future gardeners will have to deal with them, I collect them in a bucket and spread them on low spots in the roadway. If you don’t have a road that needs improvement, talk to your garden coordinator about it...and perhaps if you don’t need road improvement, then build a rock garden for flowers in the commons area outside of your official garden space. Wire and strings Pick up wires and strings. Keep them up out of the gardens and surrounding areas. Left laying about anywhere they will get tangled in a weed whip, lawn mower, or tiller blades. Some gardeners use yarn, string, wire, and whatnot to hold things together. This is fine, but be very careful about picking them up – that simple act will save big headaches and equipment repairs. And when you decide you no longer want your garden space, make a clean sweep through and pick up all the strings and wires you used there, including bits of leftover fence and tomato cages. (I’ve had to unwind many wires and strings from my lawn mower blade and weed whip – not fun!) At the end of the season, clean up your garden of all these “traps” for machinery or fellow gardeners’ feet! If you put the wires and string in, it’s your job to take them out again. Think of the tiller and the lawn mower hazards they will become if you leave wires and strings laying in the grass or buried in your garden. And don’t leave a mess for the next guy. Planting pots, water bins, and other accessories from Sarah Nelson I found a great way to use those childsized zucchinis that always end up in my basement at the end of the growing Keep track of your containers, and if you season. (The large ones actually store are going to be abandoning your garden, pretty well into the winter months.) This please take these things with you. If you recipe uses large zucchinis sliced in the plan to return the next year and you want shape of apple slices. When cooked they to leave them at the gardens over the are the same consistency, shape, and color winter, then plan for spring, when you as apple slices. You could mix zucchini may want tilling, and these things will be with other fruit, or instead of a crisp, make in the way, for you or for someone else a pie! Use your own favorite apple crisp who will be using your space, or for the or pie recipe and substitute zucchini for tiller. Talk to your site coordinator; your half of the apples. This is adapted from site may have a designated space to Feeding the Whole Family: Recipes store tomato cages, tools, watering cans, for Babies, Young Children, and Their and other supplies over the winter. They Parents: Cooking with Whole Foods by should not remain in your garden. Empty Cynthia Lair and Peggy O’Mara and is water containers before freeze-up. Plastic not too sweet, so add more sweetener bins will probably break apart when the if you must! water freezes. Topping 1 cup regular rolled oats Trash ½ cup flour (any type will work—whole I keep a trash bag at my own garden wheat, gluten free, etc.) for things that turn up...pieces of glass, 1/4 teaspoon salt planting markers, broken transplant pots. 1/3 cup of chopped nuts (optional) I take this bag home and put it in my 1/4 cup canola oil residential garbage can. Will you do the 1/4 cup maple syrup same at your garden? Do not toss things away into the bushes. Mix first four items together in a bowl, then add the oil and syrup. Stir well and So, you probably get the idea. Make set aside while you prepare the fruit and it easy on yourself and the rest of the vegetables. gardeners. Keep your garden well tended year round, and take some time in the Filling cool autumn days to enjoy cleaning up 2-1/2 cups apples - peeled, cored and your garden for next year. You might till sliced in some leaves, add manure or compost, 2-1/2 cups zucchini - peeled, center with plant garlic, or tulips. Make your space a seeds removed and sliced nice place to return to in the spring. 3 Tablespoons maple syrup or sugar 2 Tablespoons water 1 teaspoon cinnamon Preheat oven to 350. Lightly grease an 8” x 8” inch baking pan. Prepare fruit and place in pan. Pour maple syrup, water, and cinnamon over fruit and stir to mix. Top with the oat mixture. Bake for 45 minutes uncovered. Cool and enjoy! Fall 2013 page 13 Fall Classes GARDENING 101: Fall Garden Maintenance Saturday, September 21 11:00 am–1:00 pm The Emerald Community Garden; meet at Harrison Community Center Instructor: Katie Hanson, DCGP Gardening Educator, Master Food Preserver and mother of two Class fee: $10 suggested donation No matter how experienced a gardener you are, each year you will experience successes and…things you would like to improve. The planning and work you do in the fall will increase your chance for success the following season. Learn techniques such as sheet mulching, building contour beds and planting garlic and set the stage for next summer’s harvest! Hands-on instruction at The Emerald Community Garden; dress for the weather! We will meet at Harrison Community Center for children’s programming drop-off and carpool to The Emerald. Limited children’s programming* available at Harrison. TASTE OF SUMMER FOOD PRESERVATION: Pressure Canning Tomato Sauce Thursday, September 26 6:00–8:00 pm Lincoln Park Middle School, FACS Classroom Instructor: Katie Hanson, DCGP Gardening Educator, Master Food Preserver and mother of two Increase your self-sufficiency and learn how to preserve low-acid foods with a pressure canner. Katie Hanson, gardener and Master Food Preserver will instruct participants in a hands-on demonstration of pressure canning tomato sauce. Participants will leave the class with an understanding of the safest method for pressure canning and quality reference materials that will give you the confidence to incorporate pressure canning into your food preservation efforts. TASTE OF SUMMER FOOD PRESERVATION: Ferment Your Own Sauerkraut Thursday, October 3 6:00–8:00 pm Harrison Community Center Instructor: Dan Kislinger, aka Dr. Demento Fermento, community gardener and fermentation fan Learn to preserve your garden bounty through fermentation in this hands-on class. If possible, participants should bring a small cabbage head, (2–3 pounds) other vegetables such as onion, carrot or beets to add to the mix if desired, a wide mouth quart jar, and a tool to mash the cabbage. (A rolling pin without handles, a meat tenderizer, plunger from a potato ricer or other such implements work great.) We will have some materials available if you are unable to bring them. Or, you may swing by the Lincoln Park Farmer’s Market from 3-6 at Harrison right before class! Pickling salt, scales, recipes and instruction to get you started will all be provided. You will go home with a jar of soon-to-be sauerkraut started and ready to ferment. TASTE OF SUMMER FOOD PRESERVATION: Community Canning Pickles Saturday, October 5 10:00 am–2:00 pm Holy Family Church Kitchen, 2420 W 3rd Street Do you find it cumbersome canning in your kitchen? Do you enjoy socializing with gardeners? Bring your beets and carrots (pickled beets, dilly carrots) and join your fellow gardeners for an afternoon of canning and socializing in a spacious institutional kitchen. All the beets and carrots brought for pickling will be weighed and participants will take home a finished product in equal proportion to what each participant contributed. Some beets and carrots will be available for purchase for those without extra in the garden. Formal instruction will not be provided but there is always a lot to learn from your fellow gardeners. Master Food Preserver, Katie Hanson will be on hand for technical support. Many hands and an institutional kitchen make quick work! SQUASH HARVEST: Cooking the Vegetable of the Year Thursday, October 17 6:00–8:00 pm Lincoln Park Middle School, FACS Classroom Instructor: Francois Medion, Duluth Grill Urban Farm Manager Class fee: $20. Tuition assistance available—(218) 722-4583 Learn new ways to handle and cook squash with Francois Medion, Urban Farm Manager of the Duluth Grill. Francois’ fascination with food culture, growing, and preparing fresh food is contagious. Come enjoy some great food, great stories and new cooking tips to make you feel like a pro in the kitchen. Come hungry! SQUASH HARVEST: Cooking the Vegetable of the Year Tuesday, October 22 6:00–8:00 pm Lincoln Park Middle School, FACS Classroom Instructor: Michael Gabler, One Vegetable One Community Ambassador Class fee: $20. Tuition assistance available – (218) 722-4583 Learn new ways to handle and cook squash with Vegetable of the Year Ambassador Michael Gabler. Michael is an avid gardener, soulful cook, and passionate advocate for empowering folks everywhere to bring more fresh vegetables to their table—especially giant squash. This class will feature recipes from some of the best kitchens in Duluth. Be prepared to get involved, sample some great food, and take recipes home. Come hungry! continued on page 16 www.duluthcommunitygarden.org 2013 Fall Flower Bulb and Wildflower Seed Fundraising Sale Narcissus King Alfred Jumbo/DN1 Classic vivid yellow daffodil, vigorous, excellent for naturalizing. Deer resistant. Blooms in April. 18" to 20". Zone: 3-7. Narcissus Felindre Fragrant Welsh heirloom. Late-flowering. Deer resistant. 14" to 16". Zone: 3-7. Narcissus Thalia Circa 1916 heirloom, the fragrant award winning "Orchid Narcissus." Deer resistant. Good for naturalizing. Blooms April/May. 16" to 18". Zone: 4-9. The Fragrant Narcissus Mixture Exquisite mixture includes the most fragrant varieties. Deer resistant. Blooms April/May. 14" to 20". Zone: 5-9. Fritillaria meleagris: Syn: Guinea Hen Flowers, Snakes Head Fritillary, the Checkered Lily. Circa 1575, this prized naturalizer with small, bell-shaped, checkered flowers in maroon-purple and white prefers a sheltered spot in the garden with light shade and somewhat cool, moist soil. Good for forcing. Deer resistant. Blooms April/May. 8". Zone: 3-8. Allium Hair Appearing a bit like an alien life form, it launches several unusual flowers per stem for an unmatched, whimsical performance. Its green, tentacle-like flowers come forth from a purple base, a bit like an underwater sea urchin. Deer resistant. Blooms in June. 18" to 24". Zone: 4-8. Allium aflatunense Purple Sensation Globe-like 4"-5" clusters of vivid violet-purple, star-shaped florets. Deer resistant. Blooms May/ June. 24" to 30". Zone: 4-8. Tulipa humilis Persian Pearl This award-winning species tulip is deep magenta-rose with a buttercup-yellow star on the inside and an exterior, silvery-gray flush. Blooms in April. 6". Hardiness Zone: 4-8. Giant Darwin Hybrid Tulip Mixture Predominantly yellows, reds and bi-colors with a sprinkling of pinks and whites. Superb for bold garden displays and bouquets. Blooms Mid April to May. 20" to 24". Zone: 3-7. The Tulip Single Late Majestic Mixture Handpicked, this mixture is the finest in the world of colorful, distinct varieties. Blooms in May. 20" to 26". Zone: 3-8. Tulip Flair Intense radiance that is hard to imagine or believe. Flowers in Mid-April. 14". Zone: 3-8. Hyacinthus orientalis Blue Pearl This dark purple hybrid has large floral spikes composed of florets with paler petal edges. A good early forcer. Fragrant. Deer resistant. Blooms in April. 8" to 12". Zone: 4-8. Hyacinthus orientalis Aiolos Ivory-white with cream highlights. A good forcer. Deer resistant. Blooms in April. 8" to 12". Zone: 4-8. Paperwhite Ziva Longtime favorite yields large trusses of fragrant, snow-white flowers with up to two stems per bulb. Flowers in 4-to-6 weeks once potted after the top growth is at least 1-1/2" tall. Ready to force. Best to pot from mid-October to the end of February. Amaryllis Merry Christmas Huge Christmas-red flowers with a darker throat. Good for forcing. Comes with clay pot and appropriate soil mix, ready to grow. Midwest Wildflower Seed Mix Includes 26 species (as seen at the UMD campus on University Drive). Packet covers up to 250 sq. ft. Seed mix includes Baby's Breath, Dwarf Cornflower/Bachelor Button, Candytuft, Sweet William , Indian Blanket, Prairie Coneflower, Mexican Hat, Tall Cornflower/Bachelor Button, Red Corn Poppy (Legion Poppy), Lance Leaf Coreopsis, Mixed Red Poppy (Shirley Poppy), Wild Cosmos, California Poppy, Blanketflower, Black Eyed Susan, Wild Perennial Lupine, Purple Coneflower, Russel Lupine, Plains Coreopsis, Siberian Wallflower, Blue Flax, Scarlet Flax, Drummond Phlox, Sulphur/Orange Cosmos, Gloriosa Daisy, Dwarf Sunflower ‘Sunspot’. Narcissus King Alfred Jumbo/DN1 Narcissus Felindre Narcissus Thalia Fragrant Narcissus Mixture Fritillaria meleagris Allium Hair Allium aflatunense Purple Sensation Tulipa humilis Persian Pearl Tulip Flair Hyacinthus orientalis Blue Pearl Giant Darwin Hybrid Tulip Mixture Hyacinthus orientalis Aiolos Tulip Single Late Majestic Mixture Paperwhite Ziva Narcissus papyraceus Amaryllis Merry Christmas Midwest Wildflower Seed Mix 9/3/2013 Duluth Community Garden Program Duluth Community Garden Program 206 West Fourth Street Suite 214 Duluth, MN 55806 218.722.4583 www.duluthcommunitygarden.org [email protected] We thank all our supporters: Arrowhead Professional Chefs Association Blue Cross Blue Shield Center for Prevention Chester Park United Methodist Church Lafayette Community Edible Garden Lloyd K. Johnson Foundation Marshall Hardware Martin DeWitt Fine Arts Peace United Church of Christ Cities of Service Impact Volunteering Fund Positively 3rd St. Bakery Duluth Grill Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Duluth Ecolibrium 3 - Duluth Energy Efficiency Program (DEEP) Whole Foods Co-op Edelweiss Nursery And all of our members Healthy Duluth Area Coalition Thank you! continued from page 13 *Limited children’s programming is available for youth ages four and up at no charge at Harrison Community Center, courtesy of Northern Expressions Arts Collective. Sorry, we are unable to accommodate infants and young children at this time. For classes traveling off site, parents must sign a waiver and have a cellphone on. Call 722-4583 to register. Pre-registration is required to ensure enough supplies for all participants. Class is free to Lincoln Park residents through the Lincoln Park Fair Food Access Campaign. Unless otherwise listed, a suggested $10 donation is welcome but not required of other participants to sow the seeds of continued educational programming. www.duluthcommunitygarden.org 2013 Flower Bulb and Seed Order Advance order deadline is September 27, 2013. Include your phone number and e-mail address so we may contact you when your order is ready for pickup. Questions? E-mail: [email protected], 218-722-4583 Name Address E-mail Phone ( Name of item from description sheets ) How many? Price each Narcissus King Alfred Jumbo/DN1 - pack of 5 bulbs $7.50 Narcissus Felindre - pack of 5 bulbs $7.50 Narcissus Thalia - pack of 5 bulbs $7.50 $30.00 The Fragrant Narcissus M ixture - pack of 20 bulbs Fritillaria meleagris - pack of 5 bulbs $7.50 Allium Hair - pack of 5 bulbs $5.00 Allium aflatunense Purple Sensation - pack of 5 bulbs $5.00 Tulipa humilis Persian Pearl - pack of 5 bulbs $5.00 Giant Darwin Hybrid Tulip M ixture - pack of 20 bulbs $20.00 The Tulip Single Late M ajestic M ixture - pack of 20 bulbs $20.00 Tulip Flair - pack of 5 bulbs $5.00 Hyacinthus orientalis Blue Pearl - 1 bulb $1.50 Hyacinthus orientalis Aiolos - 1 bulb $1.50 Paperwhite Ziva - pack of 5 bulbs $7.50 $15.00 Amaryllis M erry Christmas - 1 bulb +1 pot and soil $5.00 M idwest W ildflower Seed M ix - 1 ounce Subtotal DCGP member 10% discount Additional donation M embership $25 G New membership G Renewal M ail the completed form with check payable to the “Duluth Community Garden Program ” to: Duluth Community Garden Program 206 W 4 th St Suite 214 Duluth M N 55806 Grand Total 09/18/13 Office use only Date received Order# Check # Check amount Date processed Email/phone sent Member order G Non-member order G Total