Wednesday 25 December 2013

Merry Christmas from the Mid-Sun Community Garden



'Twas the night before Christmas and all through the yard

the branches were bare and the ground frozen hard;
The garden plots were dormant and mulched all around
to protect them from wild weeds that threaten the ground.
The perennials were nestled all snug in their bed
while visions of summer sun danced in their heads.
The new-planted trees, had been soaked by the hose
to settle their roots for the long winter's doze;
And out on the herb bed, the new fallen snow
protected the roots of the plants below.
When what to my wondering eyes should appear?
But a truck full of gifts of gardening gear.
Saint Nick was the driver - the jolly old elf
and he winked as he said, "I'm a gardener myself.
I've brought earthtainers and Jeff Casey seeds, too.
Please try them and see what they do.
To start new plants, a propagating kit.
Some shiny new benches and tablecloths too.
To host garden picnics or a herb butter “do”
For seed-planting days, I've a trowel and a dibble,
and a roll of wire mesh if the rabbits should nibble.
For the feminine gardener, some gadgets she loves;
plant stakes, a sprinkler, and waterproof gloves;
A screen and a shovel for the compost pit,
and for pH detecting, a soil testing kit.
With these colorful flagstones, lay a new garden path,
for the kids to enjoy, and bird feeder and bath.
And last but not least, some well-rotted manure.
A green Christmas year round, these gifts will ensure."
Then jolly Saint Nick, having emptied his load,
started his truck and took to the road.
And I heard him exclaim through the motor's loud hum
"Merry Christmas to all, and to all a green thumb!"

Friday 4 October 2013

Not ready to stop gardening? check out this book...looks interesting!




The Year-Round Vegetable Gardener 
How to Grow Your Own Food 365 Days a Year, No Matter Where You Live
By Niki Jabbour

Who among us wouldn’t like to put something fresh from the garden on the table in mid-January? “Even in the dead of winter, we’re able to harvest vegetables”, says Niki Jabbour in her book The Year-Round Gardener. Those words are bound to make Canadian gardeners take notice, especially since Niki gardens in Nova Scotia, a province not noted for its balmy climate. In Niki’s book she tells us that success is all about getting the timing right and that there are three growing seasons: cool, warm and cold—a new way to think about the seasons in which veggies grow. One chapter is devoted to growing into winter; something many gardeners may never imagine possible.

The book is written from hands-on experience and jam-packed with detailed information and insightful instructions to ensure successful harvests, for example “intensive planting techniques”. The second part of the book deals with the importance of choosing the right crops and takes the form of an encyclopedia of vegetables and herbs covering their individual planting, growing and harvesting requirements. Side bars (“Niki’s Picks”) tell you which varieties are her favourite performers and why.

What makes this book unique?
The notion of being able to harvest vegetables year-round is foreign to many Canadian gardeners.The Year-Round Vegetable Gardener removes the mystique and opens your eyes to the possibilities. This book is not dumbed down in any way; rather it provides solid information written in an easy-to-understand manner that any level of gardener can follow. 

Price: $23.95
Publisher: Storey Publishing

Thursday 3 October 2013

gardening fun!


Super DAVE, the superhero of Mid-Sun community Garden

Super Dave!
What can we say?
We have our own superhero!
He does a lot...
he's reorganizing the compost,
directing mulch traffic at work bees,
fixing wheelbarrow wheels,
trimming grass and cover crops,
and here he is organizing the shed,
Thank you Dave, a big thumbs up...

 

Tuesday 1 October 2013

HARVEST PARTY!

Gardeners,

come celebrate garden season at the

Harvest Party Celebration

 our casual social garden gathering where

your guests are welcome

share your TAPAS(appetizers)

regale us with your garden tales

in the Meeting Room

@Mid-Sun Community Center

Friday, October 4, 2013  
630-830

Sunday 29 September 2013

How to save tomato seeds...and other brilliance...

Check out this link to the Lee Valley newsletter!
Learn how to save those tomato seeds!
 It has a fabulous photo tutorial!


Sunday 22 September 2013

garden gratitude for the season

Garden gratitude for a great 2013 growing season
We have much to be grateful for during this 2013 GROWING SEASON
·         A CELEBRATION TO BEGIN THE YEAR!  5 years of growing and all the plots rented in ONE DAY! 
·         NEW GARDENERS! What a treat to welcome many new gardeners and it was very exciting to work alongside them and see their delight in their growing and celebrate their successes.
·         RASPBERRY RAZZLE DAZZLE—Our raspberry bushes were adopted by a hardworking crew of gardeners and given a fertile bed to thrive in!  We look forward to a bumper crop of berries in 2014—with a strawberry patch too!
·         SHEDwe are still so honoured to be given a shed, a safe and beautiful home for our ever growing tool collection!  Thanks, community partners!
·         PATHWAY PROJECT PROGRESS!  After hours of digging, hauling, calling, emailing, wheelbarrowing...mulching...the paths look MUCH better and hopefully the maintenance will be less for a while. 
·         Hard working gardeners and community helpers from the Dream Center, Options Calgary make our garden great!
·        Garden experiments...COVER CROPS and a POTATO CONDO.  One of gardener’s creativity and curiosity at work—and such a great learning experience!  See our blog from more info.
·         Our First GARDEN FIELD TRIP!  to Jeff Casey’s Urban farm in August, this was a follow up to a generous invitation he gave during his early spring Tomato workshop we hosted.
·         FUN-DRAISING—we continue to sell notecards, teacup bird feeders, and later this season we sold garlic for fall planting and seed for cover crops for soil improvement. All available to you.

Friday 20 September 2013

one gardener's zucchini adventure...:)



My last zucchini was very small & shriveled on the vine. I picked it anyway & put it in a bowl on the table with my tomatoes & onions.
On a recent Friday morning when I was on the phone & computer my 2 year old grey tabby cat, Boomer, decided he wanted to play. He dropped the zucchini on my computer & proceeded to make a nuisance of himself until I threw it down the hall & returned to my phone call.
Within seconds he was back with the little zucchini  dropping it on my computer again. I think he was telling me I need to eat more veggies while simultaneously asking me to play Fetch the Zucchini. At this point I was laughing so hard I couldn't continue my phone call for a few minutes.
Who needs cat toys when you can use produce from your garden?
I learned a lesson that morning. Vegetables aren't just for people!
Incidentally Boomer is still playing it. I have no idea where it is at the moment but I'm sure he does.
Jennifer Pake

BUTTER BONANZA!

The secret ingredient was laughter shared among friends
 when we made herbed butter
one sunny morning in the garden.
 
We worked and we ate samples of 2 kinds of butter;
 

 one savory & one sweet --using herbs from our gardens...
we sampled our creations on baguettes & bread & homemade biscuits that Dave and May brought. Thank you!
 It was good. Maybe a little too good. We ate a lot!
 

Saturday 14 September 2013

Wintersowing update--from gardener Jennifer!


Here are some pictures I took of the results of the winter sowing class I attended.

I sowed wildflower seeds & put the milk jug in the snow as directed.
About 6 weeks later or so tiny plants started to grow. Soon they filled the jug. When they got tall enough I transplanted them to a pot & set it on my east facing front steps. Beautiful flowers grew on long stems.

 Now they are dying but some new little green plants are popping up, perhaps to take the place of the other ones.

I planted seeds in 3 jugs @ that class. This is the only one that grew but the results are amazing & I plan to do this again next winter.
Thanks for the class, it was educational & I love the results I got.

Some of our community gardeners...and their amazing garden success

Check out Lisa's vertical garden
 
Dinner at Cheryl's...does it get any better than this?
 
 

Friday 13 September 2013

PATHWAY PROJECT CONTINUES

Gardeners,

Just when you thought the garden was winding down....


    • keep harvesting, plenty of delicious produce waiting to be eaten!

    • Saturday--two gardeners are bravely steering a sod cutter through the center block, follow them down the garden path and roll up the sod
    • cover crops can be planted!  Email the garden to buy yours or show up on Sunday for the City of Calgary Neighbourwoods tree planting presentation at 12pm
    • an INTERFAITH FOODBANK donation is
      getting organized...stay tuned
    • a POTATO CONTEST is spudding along...stay tuned.
    • a crew from outside our garden is coming on Sunday to roll up sod, lay down cardboard and landscape fabric, mulch heavily...
    • please come on out, cheer on Sunday's crew, share snacks, and enjoy the late summer blitz

    SAVE THE DATE! Mid-Sun Community Garden Harvest celebration

    Friday, October 4, 2013   6-9pm
    Mid-Sun Community Center meeting room
    Join your fellow gardeners and guests to celebrate the season
    Hope to see you there!
    Details to follow

    

    Cover Crop update--you can still plant yours!

    Flowering pea
      ·         Look at the beautiful blossoms on the cover crops!
      ·         An eager gardener will soon “chop and drop”, before they go to seed.
      ·         The tops will be left on the plots to decompose over winter.
      ·         Then in spring, one month before planting, the roots and tops will be tilled under.
      ·         12 plots have already been planted this September. Very fast work, gardeners.
      ·         Most crops have germinated and a few are 2” tall. YES!!!
      ·         Remember to water, just like in spring.
      ·         Crops planted in September will not flower but will freeze except for fall rye. All good.
      ·         Root development now will nourish the soil. Organic matter is also added.
      ·         A garden is regularly tilled in the fall and the spring so the only extra step is scattering the seed. For minimal effort and cost, soil can be improved.
      ·         It’s not too late, you may still plant and we expect rain next week.


    Sundance gets their Neighbourwoods Tree Education event




    Nasturtiums



    Some great garden learning on nasturtiums....
    Won't produce flowers if the nitrogen is high in the soil,  the fact mine haven't produced flowers is a good sign.  And companion planting will seduce those aphids away from your vegetable crops.  

    Wednesday 11 September 2013

    Cover Crops for Community Garden Plots--we have seed for sale!

    Cover Crops or Green Manure
    ·         Cover crops are grown to be dug into the soil before maturity in order to improve the soil for the next food crop. Cover crops feed the soil.
    ·         When an area is not being used for food production, cover crops can and should be grown.
    ·         Benefits:
    1.      Replenish nitrogen and “fix” it in the soil.
    2.      Add nutrients that are depleted.
    3.      Increase water holding capacity.
    4.      Loosen packed soil.
    5.      Suppress weeds.
    ·         Some examples of cover crops are the grass family (fall rye, barley, buckwheat or oats) and the legume family (clover, hairy vetch, broad beans or field peas). For overwintering (leaving the plants in the ground all winter), we have:
    Crimson Clover:
    ·       Sow in July, Aug., early Sept.
    ·         Can interplant with vegetables.
    ·         Red flowers in late spring.
    ·         Hardy to -23 degrees.
    Winter Field Peas
    ·         Sow in late Aug., early Sept.
    ·         Use inoculant on seed.
    ·         Plant 1 to 3” deep
    ·         Hardy to -23 degrees.
    Fall Rye
    ·         Sow in late Aug., early Sept.
    ·         Sow no deeper than 2”.
    ·         Looks like grass.
    ·         Hardy to -40, good for Calgary.
    ·         May continue growing in spring.
    ·         Cut down before it is 12”.
    ·         Excellent soil builder.

    Buckwheat
    ·         Sow in spring or summer and in empty spaces during growing season.
    ·         Grows tall with broad leaves.
    ·         White flowers attract bees.
    ·         Winter kills.
    ·         Adds calcium.
    ·         Good after breaking ground for new gardens. Grow 2 successive crops.

    *** Time is needed in beginning for roots to establish and after tilling for decomposition.
    Procedure:
    1.      Clear the area and till it.
    2.      Scatter seeds evenly, rake in and water.
    3.      Till entire crop under before mature or one month before planting.
    4.      Never let it go to seed.
    Congratulations to the many keen Mid Sun gardeners who have taken the initiative to improve their soil through cover crops! We still have seed available for gardeners in the community who wish to purchase. Each package covers approximately 32 sq. ft. and is $4.00. You may email us at midsungarden@gmail.com.

    

    Saturday 31 August 2013

    A garden visitor....



    In mid August Jennifer Pake's mother, Judy Strong, from Mesa, Arizona, came to visit.
    Judy is a former member of the Richfield, Minnesota, garden club & had a vegetable garden in her back yard when her 4 children were growing up.
    Gardening is not nearly as labor intensive in the desert climate of Arizona. While on vacation to see Jennifer she visited the Midsun Community Garden & was very impressed. She helped pick vegetables in Jennifer's plot & gave  the beautiful plants growing under the Midsun sign a good drink of water. Doing this reminded her of how much she misses gardening in a northern climate. She plans to return again next summer to visit her daughter & lend a hand in the gardens.
    Thanks for your help Judy!--Jennifer Strong

    Friday 16 August 2013

    confessions of a gardener....about workbees

    That was me.  I'd open my inbox and groan...sometimes OUTLOUD. 
    Seriously? 
    You want ME to come to the GARDEN and work? 
    Questions flooded the mind:
    What would we do?
    who are these people?
    Does anyone go?
    why do they go? 
    Don't they have a life?
    Why would I do all this extra work? 
    Who would be there?
    Do I have the skills?
    What if someone asks ME some gardening query?
    In short: 
    I didn't go--FOR TWO YEARS.  The workbee went in the trash.
    But I must confess...I did drive by once...it was easy--Saturday morning and I saw all these people at the garden...
    and I thought, that is that workbee...and that could be me...and what are they doing?
    So then I'd read the emails and see what was being "celebrated"....really?  is this for real?
    So another workbee invite came, a bit too enthusiastic for my liking...
    I thought "I'll just go check my garden and if things look ok I might say hi.."
    I showed up all casual and nonchalant...
    and there they were, eager beavers--gloves and tools and hats and smiles...really?
    yes.
    And they said hello and asked my name and we chatted.
    A few them were weeding...I did manage to show one of them my plot,
    and ask a few questions that I was dying to know about some varieties I had seen around the garden...
    and I thought,
    NO ONE HAS ASKED ME TO WORK YET---?
    who are these people, I thought they wanted help?
    after a while, I did wander over to the garden where most of the gardeners were pulling weeds from the clay and I watched. 
     I was greeted, more introductions and smiles, offered some watermelon...
    and then someone asked me what I THOUGHT should be done...huh? 
    I checked my watch, a few minutes can't hurt...
    and that's how I went on my first workbee.
    This could be you...and if you have read this far,
     you might want to know that this Tuesday there is a scheduled workbee at the garden,  August 20, 7 pm.
    You are encouraged to come, meet some other gardeners and have fun. 
    What you could do, if you are shy like I can be, is "check" your plot...say around 715/720ish..and see what happens...
    This might be a great time to debrief this Saturdays' FABULOUS opportunity to visit Jeff Casey's urban garden (go go go!)
    I'd go on Saturday too, really, even carpooling with those eager beaver gardeners...but I have a small baby and she trumps tomatoes for now...
    Maybe you'll see me Tuesday night if she goes to sleep...hope so--if not, Wednesday morning I hope to be by and water..
    but Tuesday I mean I hope we can meet at the garden (and the baby sleeps!)
    See you on Tuesday?