This dry and hot summer has been exhausting at the Stoddart Avenue Community Garden. We never would have made it this long without our newly installed running water though, courtesy of a federal grant through the Mid-Ohio Food Bank. Also, because watering each of our plants by hand takes so much time, we have been very fortunate to have assistance from community service volunteers from the Franklin County Environmental Court. They mow our lawn, pick up neighborhood litter, water our plants, and weed around the Garden, etc. We have also been blessed with a return visit from Ohio State University students through the Pay It Forward program.

We have continued to make weekly food pantry donations and are only slightly behind last year’s pace. Weirdly, we have not been able to grow any winter squashes to save our lives. I am completely mystified. We had only 2 delicatta squashes in the co-op plot and I had only one acorn and one butternut in my plot. Usually, we have dozens of winter squashes. Not this year. I’m wondering if it is the new fertilizer that I started using . . . . . .

We are having a bumper grape crop because I completely failed to in any way prune the grape vines last year. This means that we will have a miserable crop next year, although I intend to prune them way back

Our corn crop has done really well this year. I staggered the plantings so that we could extend the season. The last couple weeks have not been impressive, but I suspect that is because they were not getting enough water. The ears were really small the last week. Not even worth cooking.

Yesterday, we had a bumper cherry tomato crop. Simon’s four young daughters and his better half helped me to fill a bag to take to Faith Mission.


This year’s OSU group was one of the best that we’ve ever had. They came three weeks ago and I split them into four teams. The first team watered all of the food pantry plots, the strawberry patch, the blueberries, the fruit orchard, and the neighbor beds and then began harvesting peppers, etc. They took a few peppers from Simon’s plot (which we returned to him) and a few tomatoes from mine and Charlie’s plot, but otherwise did a good job. One guy mowed our lot, the orchard lot, the Block Watch lot, the Urban Connections lot and the UC backyard. I let him harvest our tomatoes. One team weeded the dill and mint forest and then planted beets and turnips. One team weeded along the alley, picked up neighborhood litter and reorganized our shed. One team weeded the west chain

Even better, they called this week and wanted to return this month or next. I asked them to come after our typical first frost because they could help me to harvest and clear out the food pantry tomatoes, pack up the tomato cages and trellises and cut back the corn stalks, etc. No one ever wants to help me clean out the Garden once it starts to get cold and bleak. An OSU sorority came one year and we wreaked devastation on the dying plants. I am psyched.

In two weeks, Capital University students will be coming to help weed, water, mow and plant radishes. We are not finished at the SACG by a longshot.
No comments:
Post a Comment