Tuesday, March 31, 2009

The Master Gardener Insider Scoop!


Have you ever wondered how MG's seem to know everything? Well, if you know this MG, you know that is not the case (haa), but here is a list of completely free online resources that are MG approved to help you answer your own questions or just impress people at parties:

OSU Plant Facts Plants Dictionary
http://hcs.osu.edu/plantfacts/plant/

Missouri Botanical Garden Plant Finder
http://www.mobot.org/gardeninghelp/plant

University of Connecticut Plant Database
www.hort.uconn.edu/Plants

USDA Plants Database
http://plants.usda.gov/

University of Illinois – UI Plants
http://woodyplants.nres.uiuc.edu/

Lady Bird Johnson Native Plant Database
http://www.wildflower.org/plants/

Landscape Plants of the Upper Midwest (University of Wisconsin–Madison)www.midwestlandscapeplants.org/index.cfm

Plant Native
www.plantnative.org/

Grow Native – Missouri Department of Conservation/Missouri Department of Agriculture http://www.grownative.org/

Monday, March 30, 2009

Connections

wild birds unlimited- tom sheley- bat boxes, platform feeders,
bird seed, houses, bath, garden art, explanations


Straders (riverside)-patty anderson

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Captain Planet Grant Submitted!


Let's cross our fingers! We are also working on a letter to create community partnerships with businesses, churches, etc. We do not get any of our funding from SHRA, so we have to find funding elsewhere, and the grant funding option seems to be very competitive!
Here is the information I included in the grant proposal:


DESCRIBE YOUR PROPOSED PROJECT (Be sure to include how many students will be involved as well as the age range of the participating students):

Our project is a new neighborhood community garden in a city park. This park and garden are surrounded by 230 houses, and the neighborhood includes 76 children. The ages in the neighborhood range from toddlers to adolescents, babies to 18 year olds, elementary through high school. There are 31 families looking forward to participating in the garden.

The Sycamore Hills Community Garden is asking for support from Captain Planet because we would like to make the garden as educational and interactive as possible. All of these projects would be under the supervision of the community adults and gardeners. Eventually, the teens of the neighborhood could take on training the younger children about these issues, as well.

We would like to create beautiful, instructional, and interactive signs around the garden. One such sign would be circular in shape and have two layers that spin. On the top layer, the seasons and months would be illustrated with words and images (“What’s In Season to Eat?”). Through a missing section on this layer, the child would be able to see through to the bottom layer. On the bottom layer would be images of the plants that are ready to be harvested during that season. Signage would also be placed around the plants to explain how each plant can be used and how to harvest it. Lastly, we would like the children to have 3D vegetables and fruit that will describe visually what is growing in the garden.

In addition, we would like funding to help create art in the garden. Along the sides of the fence, we would like to have children decorate wood carvings of garden objects to beautify the fence. We would like to create tall flower, insect, bird, and vegetable statues that a child could poke his or her face through for a photograph. On the back of the stand would be information about the connection of this object to the garden. Other art would include mosaic stepping stones and statues. We want the garden to belong to the community, and especially the children, but in order to do that; we need to provide opportunities to develop their sense of ownership toward the garden and community, as well as to develop an understanding of how to be stewards of the environment.

Lastly, we would like to explain the importance of attracting wildlife to a garden. We would like to make bird houses, baths and feeders with the children as a method to explain the importance of pollinators and predators in the garden. We would also like to create and post bat boxes, in the same vein.

In 2 sentences, what one or two things do you hope to accomplish?

We hope to bring together the different generations within our community through education and experience in the community garden. We hope to inspire and strengthen the children’s connection to the earth by learning how to grow food, care for plants, preserve the soil, and nurture trees.


LINE ITEM BUDGET (Please remember to Itemize your list... Quantity, Items, $ Each and Total Cost.):

1. 1 box, Nails, $5 each & total
2. 10, pine boards, $7 each, $70 total
3. 4, posts, $5 each, $20 total
4. 10, laminated paper signs, $2 each, $20 total
5. 1, Garden guidelines sign, $85 each & total
6. 1, "what's in season" sign, $190 each & total
7. 10, mosaic stepping stones, $5 each, $50 total
8. 2, Plastic vegetable kits, $20 each, $40 total
9. 1, bird bath, $20 each & total
TOTAL: $500


What will you do before, during, and after the project is completed to ensure that the youth involved have learned from this experience?

The SHCG will keep a record of the number of youth engaged in the garden from the beginning of one year to the next. SHCG will use that information to begin to see how involved and supported youth feel in the CG. This will help SHCG to tailor the garden to be more accommodating and/or to continue the practices that are working well. In addition to the numbers, we will send out a survey asking the gardening youth what they learned and enjoyed about the garden, as well as any suggestions they have for the future.

On a more daily basis, the SHCG will conduct a survey before, during, and after each art and/or garden activity to understand how effective the lesson was and what the students learned. The instructor will frame the survey as “meeting learning targets.” Sample learning targets might include: I can build a birdhouse, I understand why birds are essential to a garden, I can used recycled materials to create garden art, and I can explain the difference between an annual and a perennial. Children would rate how closely they met the target by a “thumb-o-meter” in which a down thumb means “did not meet at all” a sideways thumb means “sort of” or “still have questions” and an up thumbs means “100%.”

The youth would also be invited to write on the SHCG Blog as co-authors. Each gardener could be a guest author each week, and could upload photos, write an informative or narrative journal entry, create an online survey, or more. The possibilities for ways to showcase learning with a Blog are endless.

What other sources of funding do you have available to cover costs not funded by the Captain Planet Foundation (i.e. travel, salaries, etc. See restrictions on giving):

The SHCG planners are actively seeking funding from other grant sources, as well as establishing community connections with local businesses and organizations. Donations have already starting coming in, and the garden should be only enhanced by the Captain Planet Funds, not dependent upon.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Wow! A LOT of Kids!


The lovely and talented Linda went through the most recent directory to find out how many rugrats we have in the neighborhood for the Captain Planet grant.

Amy,
I went through the 2007 directory which was the most recent. Here's what we've got:
Ages 0-3: 10
Ages 4 - 6: 13
Ages 7 - 9: 10
Ages 10 - 12: 14
Ages 13 - 15: 15
Ages 16 - 18: 14

Total: 76 children

However there were 50 names listed as children that did not have ages or birthdates assigned to them. I guess that we can divide some or all of the 50 among the categories. I had no idea there were this many children in Sycamore Hills! Obviously the 17&18 year olds would have aged off by 2009, but I think it is safe to assume that we've had replacements of the baby variety.
I hope this helps! Let me know if you need anything else.Thanks!Linda

Thursday, March 26, 2009

I LOVE COSTCO!


I went in yesterday to talk with them about donations to the community garden. They are all about it!!! YES! So we need a letter written that I can bring into Shelley Piunno. They get funds every single month for this exact purpose! Amazing! I have to include my costco membership number in the application, so this opportunity isn't open to everyone.

Also, yesterday I had a meeting at Shepherd's Corners about the American Community Gardening Association National Conference in August. Here is a link to their community gardens. I am helping to plan the bike tour! Anyway, I learned that they have applied for the Fiskar's grant every year and have never gotten it either. Sheesh.

I also learned about some good chicken types for my backyard (don't worry, this isn't happening anytime soon, if ever) from Farmer Eric, and what I didn't know is that some chickens are quieter than others! Also, the egg insides can vary just as much as the color of the shell, and speaking of egg shell color, the legs of the chicken tell you what color the eggs will be! Amazing! I also bought some yummy syrup and got fresh eggs. I actually dropped my syrup bottle and it didn't break, which was amazing, too.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

WAAAAHH!


That is to be said as a crying sound. I can't believe we didn't get the Fiskar's grant. I need feedback! I wrote Fiskars, and they said that they would get back to me. At least that is good:

Hi, Nicole, Thanks for the timely notice. I am incredibly disappointed that we did not receive the grant, but happy to hear community gardening is so abundant across the country. I was wondering if Fiskars has any feedback for our community garden members who pitched in to create the grant materials. We would like to apply again in the future, but feel it would be helpful to understand what we did where we fell short. Any advice or information you could share with us would be so welcome and appreciated. Thanks again,Amy

Hi Amy I will look over your application and get back to you early next week with any suggestions. Thank you,Nicole Mayasich

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

You're Kidding


24 March 2009
Dear Fiskars Project Orange Thumb Applicant - Amy ,
Thank you for submitting an application for the 2009 Fiskars Project Orange Thumb grant program - over 1000 outstanding applications were received!
It was obvious that each garden possesses the ability to make a difference through their unique initiative- however, this made selecting grant recipients particularly challenging. After full consideration of each application, your garden was not selected for a 2009 Fiskars Project Orange Thumb grant.
Please note that this is an annual program - so be sure to apply again for the 2010 grant cycle. Application information for next year's grant cycle will be available in November. Please visit http://www.projectorangethumb.com/ frequently for updates on the 2010 Fiskars Project Orange Thumb grant application process.
Sincerely,
Nicole Mayasich
Fiskars Project Orange Thumb
nmayasich@fiskars.com
Fiskars Garden & Outdoor Living
780 Carolina Street
Sauk City, WI 53583800.500.4849 phone 608.643.4908 fax http://www.fiskars.com/

Creating a Connection with OSU MG

Here is an email about creating a connection with the OSU Master Gardener program, of which I am a proud member. I worked hard for the MG title, and I don't mind sharing that fact with you! :) Anyway, this partnership could be really exciting; full of possibilities!

Cory, I would like to help at LAMC. Should I contact Mike Fribley? Also, at some point, I would like publicize the same kind of work opportunity at the community garden I am working on. Is there a special way to create a partnership between the MGs and a garden/work site? Something that is always ongoing? ThanksAmy

Amy:
I forwarded to Mike and Juliet to loop you in. Send Mike an e-mail as well to follow-up.
I want to have the Franklin County MGs formalize our relationships with other organizations with Memoranda of Understanding. I have a draft MOU on our website to use in starting discussion with the other organization(s) http://franklin.osu.edu/horticulture/master-gardener-training-new
I also want photos, text, etc to put on our web site to trumpet MG work around the county.
Thanks!

Great Examples of Other Community Gardens

LAMC Garden Green Patch
Click on the picture to visit their blog.

Here is a community garden connected to a church. I really like how they have organized the webpage and the blog, including the sponser's logos, as well as the structure of the garden. The OSU Master Gardeners are going over to help out because Mike Fribley, a MG, has been heading up the efforts on this garden. I am impressed, and think we can use a lot of these ideas.

4 Seasons City Farms


I love this garden! Under this name, there are actually 12 or so gardens around the Ohio Ave, Bryden Ave. area. This garden utilizes MySpace to get people involved, partners with United Way (I don't know that we qualify for that?), has a beautiful logo and informative website (even a press page!), has big celebrations, and donates to the local food pantry. Again, an excellent source of ideas for our own garden.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Compost Bins

This image comes from: http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/home_garden/stories/2009/03/22/compost.html
Which is part of a great article from the Columbus Dispatch to inform our future compost bin design decisions. Click on the title of this post to read more from the article that also includes this:

Saturday, March 21, 2009

GREAT idea email


Dear Neighbors:
Attached is a invitation from Macy's to participate in fund raising for community environmental theme projects.
It looks like this program might be a good fit in pooling together some funds for the SH community garden that was discussed some time ago.
In this program the environmental project supporters sell $5.00 Macy's sale coupons, the group keeps the $5.00 and the purchaser gets a coupon worth $5.00 on their next $15.00 purchase, plus a discount card for 20% and 10% on special days.
If interested, the follow up contact person is identified in the letter.
Also, any other school or organization you are aware of that has an environmental project would be able to participate in this Macy's fundraiser.
You can also participate by directing money in support of the National Parks Service.
Dick

Monday, March 16, 2009

Dollars from dirt: Economy spurs home garden boom

In the green: Gardening industry sees boom as families grow own veggies to save on groceries

Gillian Flaccus, Associated Press Writer
Sunday March 15, 2009, 9:28 pm EDT

LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) -- With the recession in full swing, many Americans are returning to their roots -- literally -- cultivating vegetables in their backyards to squeeze every penny out of their food budget.

AP - Adriana Martinez works in her backyard garden in Long Beach, Calif. on Wednesday, March 11, 2009. With ...

Industry surveys show double-digit growth in the number of home gardeners this year and mail-order companies report such a tremendous demand that some have run out of seeds for basic vegetables such as onions, tomatoes and peppers.

"People's home grocery budget got absolutely shredded and now we've seen just this dramatic increase in the demand for our vegetable seeds. We're selling out," said George Ball, CEO of Burpee Seeds, the largest mail-order seed company in the U.S. "I've never seen anything like it."
Gardening advocates, who have long struggled to get America grubby, have dubbed the newly planted tracts "recession gardens" and hope to shape the interest into a movement similar to the victory gardens of World War II.

Those gardens, modeled after a White House patch planted by Eleanor Roosevelt in 1943, were intended to inspire self-sufficiency, and at their peak supplied 40 percent of the nation's fresh produce, said Roger Doiron, founding director of Kitchen Gardeners International.
Doiron and several colleagues are petitioning President Obama to plant a similar garden at the

White House as part of his call for a responsible, eco-friendly economic turnaround. Proponents have collected 75,000 signatures on an online petition.

"It's really part of our history and it's part of the White House's history," Doiron said. "When I found out why it had been done over the course of history and I looked at where we are now, it makes sense again."

But for many Americans, the appeal of backyard gardening isn't in its history -- it's in the savings.

The National Gardening Association estimates that a well-maintained vegetable garden yields a $500 average return per year. A study by Burpee Seeds claims that $50 spent on gardening supplies can multiply into $1,250 worth of produce annually.

Doiron spent nine months weighing and recording each vegetable he pulled from his 1,600-square-foot garden outside Portland, Maine. After counting the final winter leaves of Belgian endive, he found he had saved about $2,150 by growing produce for his family of five instead of buying it.

Adriana Martinez, an accountant who reduced her grocery bill to $40 a week by gardening, said there's peace of mind in knowing where her food comes from. And she said the effort has fostered a sense of community through a neighborhood veggie co-op.

"We're helping to feed each other and what better time than now?" Martinez said.
A new report by the National Gardening Association predicts a 19 percent increase in home gardening in 2009, based on spring seed sales data and a telephone survey. One-fifth of respondents said they planned to start a food garden this year and more than half said they already were gardening to save on groceries.

Community gardens nationwide are also seeing a surge of interest. The waiting list at the 312-plot Long Beach Community Garden has nearly quadrupled -- and no one is leaving, said Lonnie Brundage, who runs the garden's membership list.

"They're growing for themselves, but you figure if they can use our community garden year-round they can save $2,000 or $3,000 or $4,000 a year," she said. "It doesn't take a lot for it to add up."

Seed companies say this renaissance has rescued their vegetable business after years of drooping sales. Orders for vegetable seeds have skyrocketed, while orders for ornamental flowers are flat or down, said Richard Chamberlin, president of Harris Seeds in Rochester, N.Y.

Business there has increased 40 percent in the last year, with the most growth among vegetables such as peppers, tomatoes and kitchen herbs that can thrive in small urban plots or patio containers, he said. Harris Seeds recently had to reorder pepper and tomato seeds.

"I think if things were fine, you wouldn't see people doing this. They're just too busy," Chamberlin said. "Gardening for most Americans was a dirty word because it meant work and nobody wanted more work -- but that's changed."

Harris Seed's Web site now gets 40,000 hits a day.
Among larger companies, Burpee saw a 20 percent spike in sales in the last year and started marketing a kit for first-time gardeners called "The Money Garden." It has sold 15,000 in about two months, said Ball.

A Web-based retailer called MasterGardening.com is selling similar packages, and Park Seed of Greenwood, S.C., is marketing a "Garden for Victory Seed Collection." Slogan: "Win the war in your own backyard against high supermarket prices and nonlocal produce!"

Cultivators with years of experience worry that home gardeners lured by promises of big savings will burn out when they see the amount of labor required to get dollars from their dirt. The average gardener spends nearly five hours a week grubbing in the dirt and often contends with failure early on, said Bruce Butterfield, a spokesman for The National Gardening Association.

"The one thing you don't factor into it is the cost of your time and your labor," he said.
"But even if it's just a couple of tomato plants in a pot, that's worth the price of admission."

Kitchen Gardeners: http://www.kitchengardeners.org/
National Gardening Assn: http://www.garden.org/home
Burpee Seeds: http://www.burpee.com/
MasterGardening: http://mastergardening.com/
Harris Seeds: http://www.harrisseeds.com/

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Sycamore Bark

It is lovely and distinctive, and it is the name of our neighborhood, park and garden.

Spring is On its Way!

And our garden will emerge!

Seats in the Garden!


Aren't these cool?!

Water Issues

We thought we would be able to tap into this through the city, but due to cut backs, we can't. They also checked into finding a possible tap, and Maureen says they don't seem to have one.

So feel free to save these, fill them with water, and bring them with you to water your plot!

Our Locale!