Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Fresh Success



As we head into August, the Garden Challengers are just starting to taste the fruits of their labour. Spicy radishes and fresh lettuce make for a quick salad with dinner. As we visit each challenger, it is amazing to see the difference in the way that things grow from one place to the next. Different sun, soil, and moisture conditions produce vastly different gardening results. We were amazed to see tomatoes flourishing without the help of a greenhouse, and melons sprouting so easily from seed.
The berries seem to have ripened overnight too, saskatoons, currants, and raspberries are getting heavy on the branches, ready to be made into delicious jams and jellies. Watch for upcoming cooking and food preservation workshops!

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Seeds of Change


It has been a cool and rainy last couple of weeks. At our demonstration garden, our seedlings have sprouted and transplants have recovered (some are even growing quickly!). With the Garden Challenge start-up complete, we are now entering a new phase in the Garden Challenge: Maintenance! Weeding, watering, fertilizing, and nurturing our plants. We will be checking in with each of the Garden Challengers next week and can't wait to see how everyone's gardens are coming along!

We recently did a soil test of the topsoil we have been using for the raised beds, and found that it could use a boost in nutrient levels (Nitrogen, Phosphorous, and Potash). When we do our mid-point visits with the challengers we will be bringing along a mix of great organic fertilizers to rejuvenate the soil and encourage healthier plant growth. It's a mix of composted lawn clippings, composted leaves, peat moss, wood ash, kelp meal and bone meal.

Helping start gardens in the community has been such an inspiring learning experience. Gardening seems to be very contagious. Once you start, you might just notice your friends and neighbours starting to pull up the weeds and plant some little seeds of change.



A lovely day at the demonstration garden.



This is a photo of us hard at work on our final start-up day for the Garden Challenge. It was a beautiful, dry day - perfect for transporting a load of topsoil.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Garden Challenge Kick-Off


It is mid-June and the Garden Challenge is in full swing! The youth team has been out to visit a number of participants, digging around in their backyards, delivering fresh topsoil, and helping families set up raised-beds. Word is quickly spreading that there is a team of young, hardworking green thumbs wandering about the Hazeltons lending a helping hand to aspiring gardeners.

The biggest challenge so far has been transporting topsoil. We never imagined that a little box of dirt could be SO HEAVY! After putting in a day sandbagging for the flood, the youth team had little energy to spare for shovelling. A number of participants are building Raised-Beds. We hosted a workshop at the end of May with Bob and Alice Smith to demonstrate a simple model. Bob, who runs a small mill was nonchalant about the workshop, saying that he had come to "show us how to nail four pieces of wood together". It was pretty comical just how easy it really was!

Visiting the participants has been really exciting and fun. Backyard gardening seems to be one of those things that everyone has on their to-do list, but never get around to doing it for one reason or another. Teaching our children about the land and getting them outside is another big reason that people are eager to dive in to the dirt. The next round of visits begin in mid-July, and it will be great to include all the young ones for some summer fun.