October has turned out to be a freakishly productive month
at the Stoddart Avenue Community Garden.
Our produce donations have been off the charts, particularly because one
of our gardeners has been donating most of his giant tomatoes.
We have also had more volunteers help than we
have had at this time of year in the past.
Yesterday, we had 15 OSU students helping to clean out the Garden for
the season.
We have also had some
vandalism, which severely damaged our front gate.
At the beginning of the month, I took both of our
Community
Service volunteers to the Bexley Community Garden to help for a couple of hours
put that Garden to bed for the season.
Then, we took some of their end-of-season produce (mostly green tomatoes
and some okra) to a free produce giveaway at nearby Fairwood Elementary School
that was organized by
the Genesis
of Good Samaritans.
There was a long
line of people when we arrived, including many senior citizens.
Then, it was back to the SACG where we
watered our food pantry and neighbor beds, harvested around 50 pounds of
tomatoes and peppers, raked, mowed, etc. for a couple more hours.
It was a very, very long day of gardening,
even before I returned to my own home garden.
By the time I arrived at Faith Mission’s homeless shelter to
drop off the fresh produce, no one could be found to answer the kitchen door.
So, I called the Pantry Manager at the All
People’s Fresh Market on Parson’s to see if she could re-open the Market for
what was in my trunk.
However, she was
on medical leave and could not find her replacement.
Sigh.
So, I called Faith Mission’s help line and found a social worker to let
me in.
The delay kinda ruined my
benevolent mood.
The next week, I had two CS volunteers who helped rake, mow,
water, harvest and pick up litter.
That week, we harvested over 75 pounds of
produce.
The next day, someone visited
the Garden vandalized our sign, knocked over the neighbor bed tomato trellis
and pulled two pickets off the front gate, breaking one of them into three
pieces.
Grr.
One more thing for me to fix in all my spare
time.
We finally had a frost, but it must have been light because
it only killed our sweet potato vines, which turned black, and the melon vines.
So far, that is the only cold damage that we
have suffered.
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Yesterday, we were blessed that the Ohio State University
Pay It Forward Program wanted to return t
o help us clean up the Garden for the
season after all of the help they gave us for their Community Commitment day in
August. Luckily, I had picked a Saturday
when OSU was not playing football, so we had a great turnout.
It was nice to show them the lettuce that their group had earlier planted in August.
Team One was tasked with cleaning out the corn co-op
plot.
This involved chopping the corn
and bean stalks down to no higher than 6 inches and then cutting back the
out-of-control black raspberry brambles in the west fence and bagging
everything.
I had to discuss the concept
of lawn waste bags because it has become apparent that only suburbanites use
them.
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Team Two was tasked with harvesting cherry
tomatoes,
removing the volunteer-cherry-tomato-plant-that-almost-devoured -Columbus and
had taken over the northwest corner of the Garden, harvesting sweet potatoes,
bagging the tomato vines and then harvesting peppers. I had to teach them how to harvest the sweet
potatoes, so as not to destroy them, but you know what they say about best laid
plans.
As it was, the groundhog had so completely devoured the
vines this season that there was only one large sweet potato to be found.
The rest might make good use for fries, but they
were barely larger than my thumb.
Sigh.
We had almost 40 pounds of
sweet potatoes last year, and only 5 this year.
What a difference a groundhog makes, n’est
pas?
One of their team worked for years
at a nursery and was all too familiar with the problems of a groundhog.
She had no wisdom for me, but suggested blood
meal deters rabbits.
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Team Three was tasked with cleaning out the food pantry tomato
bed, bagging the tomato vines, nesting and storing the tomato cages, and harvesting
the sweet potatoes in that plot (which were even less impressive than the other
bed).
We had to get some help from Team
Four to remove the tomato trellises.
Team Four raked the front lawn, mowed, pruned the brambles
around the shed to make room for the tomato stakes, cages and trellises,
mulched the fruit trees, cleaned out the summer neighbor bed (i.e. peppers and
tomatoes), cleaned out the melon plot, harvested peppers and watered the food
pantry plots.
Team Four also helped me to turn off the water hydrants.
Amy and I could not figure out how to turn
the water off at the meter, so I had to get a different tool and turn it off
inside the Garden and this requires more upper body strength than I have.
I hadn’t planned on doing this for another
couple of weeks, but Rain One called in a panic -- just after Friday’s freeze
warning was announced - that they could not get into the Garden to blow out our
water lines and turn off the water for the winter.
I had changed the gate combination since last
year.
I had not expected this and, as I explained,
we are thinking of having the water meter removed for the winter because we
discovered in June that the City charges us for having the meter every month
even when the water is turned off.
It
might be less expensive just to have the meter removed in October and replaced
next May, if there is even a SACG next May.
But, I hadn’t realized that we were looking at a freeze warning which
could cause the water lines to burst when I told them not to worry about us
this year.
Simon and his two set of twin daughters came to clean out
his plot of their summer crops and to otherwise distract the OSU students and
my CS volunteers.
I cleaned out my 16 tomato plants, cages and trellises and
harvested more of Charlie’s tomatoes and ran around answering questions.
Amy came and cleaned up two sections of the
strawberry patch and pruned the remaining asters that I had started on last week.
After everyone left, I gathered up all of
the tools which the OSU students left lying around the Garden and took our 41
pounds of fresh produce to Faith Mission downtown.
Next week, some of the Capital University students are
returning after they got rained out on their volunteer day in September.