Before they started working |
Our irises were donated by the CG at the Epworth UMC |
On Wednesday evening, there was almost a full complement of
all SACG gardeners when I brought my extra tomato, pepper and eggplant
seedlings for distribution. I was able
to plant a few peppers in my plot and start on my asparagus beans, as well as
transplant a dozen or so volunteer sunflowers.
However, I discovered to my horror that despite receiving an inch of
rain on Tuesday, very little of it made it into our rain cisterns. The hard rain washed a lot of tree pollen
into the gutters and clogged the downspout strainers. So, I left my seedlings at the SACG overnight
so that I could return on Thursday morning with my ladder to clean out the
gutters (again after already doing it once on Friday).
After they finished working. Photo courtesy of Adam Cairns |
Luckily, the UMW volunteers were running late, so I was able
to clean out the gutters and get everything unlocked before they arrived (as
well as transplant a few volunteer cosmos).
I was supposed to be sharing 25 volunteers with another community
garden, but they were not sent the memo and did not know to arrive. (I checked the email later and it was never addressed to my neighbor). Good thing for the SACG, though, because only 2 volunteers
arrived for the SACG and this meant that I got to keep all 11. (Never fear, I contacted the other garden
leader to let him know and he didn’t mind that I kept them all). But, it meant that I had to call for help
with refrigerating their lunches, etc.
Cathy – always my angel in such emergencies – was extremely supportive.
Sabrina also came to help and brought her two-year old son,
Finn. The ladies gushed over him and his
blonde locks. I took a team of the
women and tasked them with weeding and then digging lots of holes in our tomato
plot. While they did that, I dug out
some trellises (extra wire fencing) and wood stakes that we store next to the
shed. We hung the trellises and then planted more
than a dozen tomato plants in the plot.
We put cages around the plants that were not trellised.
We tasked another team with weeding and then cultivating a
row every two feet in the root crop plot: carrots, turnips, beets and sweet
potatoes. I usually plant more closely
together, but with the Community Service volunteers coming to help water these
plots over the summer, I wanted to make sure that there was enough room between
the rows so that they could walk down them without stepping on any plants.
Sabrina led the effort in the vining crop plot: zucchini,
melons and pole beans. They weeded it
and then created mounds for the squash and melons. I helped to hang a trellis for the beans and
then they planted beans on both sides (I hope).
Meanwhile, I tasked another lady with planting the lettuce
seedlings between our rows of broccoli, brussels sprouts and cabbage. Bill explained that the seedlings came from
the Mid-Ohio Food Bank by way of the Franklin Avenue Community Garden. He was trying to stop at all of the local
community gardens having a work day to share the extra seedlings.
We also took some of the lettuce seedlings over to the
neighbor beds along the alley and planted some extra lettuce there. I then took a group over to the neighbor bed
and we hung a trellis and planted six tomato plants and then a dozen pepper
plants.
After lunch, I marked off four rows where we will plant corn
for our co-op plot and we cultivated two such rows. Fittingly enough, our Iowa volunteer then
planted two rows of corn. All of the
plants and seeds were then well watered in as we finished up before waiting for
their bus to take them back downtown.
While we were watering and collecting the tools, a Dispatch photojournalist, Adam Cairns, noticed all of the orange shirts. Curious, he stopped by to take a few
photos and interview the women. He was
a good sport. Before taking a group
photo with his own super camera, he took lots of cell phone shots for the
women.
While gardening, I was able to chat with a couple of the
women. One lady grew up in Pyongyang (now in North Korea). Her mother had a vegetable garden during
World War II, and so she developed a love of fresh food and flowers. However, when she got married, it was hard to
get fresh food or flowers for her wedding.
She remembered that someone showed up with a bouquet of daisies, so she
was delighted with our daisies. I wanted
to send some home with her, but wouldn’t you know that my wine bag full of
daisy seeds was in my basement at home!
The daisies we have in bloom were not quite ready to produce seeds yet,
or I would have sent her home with seed heads for her own garden. She also loved our peonies, but wished that
we had some pink ones in bloom. Maybe
next year. I would have loved to have
had more time to chat with her. She
worked pretty hard.
The lady from San Diego was so delighted with our efforts
that she called her sister to see what they were growing at their community
garden in southern California. It was
hysterical. About the only item we had
in common were watermelons. They are
still suffering from water restrictions there, so gardening is the subject of
debate. The Alaskan lady told me that
their food pantry won’t accept much fresh produce, so they invite the patrons
to stop by their garden for items, such as fresh dill. They also cannot grow corn up there.
I had told the UMW volunteers that I had been raised as
Methodist (and was wearing my United Methodist Mississippi Relief shirt from
Hurricane Katrina relief). John Wesley
has a number of famous sermons and sayings, including:
Do all the good you
can.
By all the means you
can.
In all the ways you
can.
In all the places you
can.
At all the times you
can.
To all the people you
can.
As long as ever you
can.
And these women put that into practice yesterday by sowing
all they could to help the SACG raise more fresh produce for area food pantries
and Faith Mission’s homeless shelter. Big THANKS to the Great Columbus Growing Coalition for arranging for the UMW to assist the SACG and the following community gardens yesterday: Linden Garden Association, Bible Skipway CG, Franklin Avenue CG, St. Vincent DePaul Garden (at Christ the King Catholic Church), CMN Memorial Garden, Lincoln Park Education Garden, Southside Head Start Children's Garden, Fresh Town Farms, Four Seasons City Farm (with Old First Presbyterian Church), and Garden of Communion.
So, tomorrow, on Saturday, I will try to get the rest of my
pole beans planted, work a little more on prettying up the path edging, and finally turn my attention to our herb garden, etc. I told our neighbors that if they
uncovered one of their raised beds, we would fill it with tomato seedlings
(because I have a LOT of extra seedlings).
I also told his teenage volunteers that I would loan them a hoe and
teach them to use it because they have been weeding plots by hand. One of our neighbors is improving the
landscaping along the alley, so I promised him some supplies and, to properly
thank UC for helping us out today, we will weed around their raised beds and
fill it with some of our extra wood chips. Hopefully, the weather will cooperate.
Our strawberries are coming in gangbusters, so I hope that
we get lots more rain (after I leave at 2:30) so that they also get much
bigger.
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