Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Thanks to Tom

The Stoddart Avenue Community Garden owes a debt of gratitude to Sabrina's spouse, Tom, who has taken on a number of projects this year, including the rebuilding and painting of our picnic table.  This fixture on our corner lot has been a gathering place for neighborhood kids, crews of volunteers and board meetings.  It's now no longer a collapsing eyesore, but a refreshing (and sturdy!) green.

Tom's also been known to water our pantry and neighborhood plots and, most importantly, do the heavy lifting in the parenting department when Sabrina is occupied at the SACG.  So shout out to him.

Last week, we donated a total of 20 pounds of fresh produce to the Broad Street Presbyterian food pantry on East Broad Street, including 6 pounds dropped off by our friend, Sean who gardens in his Berwick backyard. (The donation included this butternut squash.)




Wednesday, August 19, 2020

Pesky Groundhog

Our Garden Manager, Sabrina, is on a mission to restrain our resident groundhog(s).  It -- or they -- have been eating everything tender and green and destroying cabbage right and left.  Several food pantry cabbages had developed beautifully and were ready to be harvested when they were struck down in their prime by the Pesky Groundhog.  There have been multiple sightings over the summer ... the groundhog scurrying under Norman's deck, diving into the berry bushes bordering Sabrina's plot to the southwest, etc.

COVID19 put on hold this year's planned project to dig deep and bury several feet of fencing around the garden.  We have also considered trying to trap the groundhog and seeking help from a wildlife rescue organization. 

In other recent news, 42 pounds of SACG and friends' produce made its way into the grocery bags of clients at the Broad Street Presbyterian Church food pantry this week.




Monday, August 10, 2020

High Summer

 The Garden is in overdrive!  The squash is spreading like crazy and the corn growing about 6 inches a week.  A few gardeners have planted some cool-weather fall crops -- like kale and beets.  Ethan has started seedlings at home that he expects to transplant at the end of the month. Last night, Christie harvested food pantry peppers, cabbage, cantaloupe and tomatoes, while Ethan added a contribution of beets, Swiss chard, and some greens.  

Amy picked up some produce donated by Sean, a prolific gardener who lives in Berwick, to add to the SACG haul.  The combined donation to the Broad Street Presbyterian pantry on Monday, August 10 came in at about 75 pounds.  So far, our city water access remains intact, while Norman's cisterns yield plenty of water as well.  Hats off to Tom, Sabrina's spouse, who tended plots in her absence and has taken the lead on some hardscape project, such as dismantling the tumbled-down picnic table.  We also appreciate board member and neighbor Frank for managing the mowing of the SACG and neighbor lots.

Monday, July 27, 2020

30 Pounds Donated

The SACG has a rich tradition of growing and donating produce throughout the season, with 2019's total clocking in at over 600 pounds.  

Last week, Christie harvested about 30 pounds of beets, onions, carrots and peaches for the food pantry at Broad Street Presbyterian Church.   COVID-19 protocols at in place at the pantry and the delivery person, Amy, was not allowed in the kitchen, but a masked and gloved worker assisted in unloading.  The SACG plans to make a drop off each Monday morning during August.  As the pandemic curtails livelihoods and opportunities, the need for fresh food will only increase.

"Everything looked beautiful – especially the peaches! Almost all of it went home with the families who shopped today – we just have a few beets left!  Thanks to you and all the gardeners."

                  BSPC's Kathy-Kelly Long


Thursday, July 16, 2020

2020 Growing Season

Hey, we may be in the middle of a global pandemic, but the Stoddart Avenue Community Garden is still growing food and building community.
Welcome to our 12th growing season. The year had a somewhat slow start, mainly because our intrepid founder and Garden Manager, Priscilla Hapner retired after last season and we had to organize ourselves in such a way that we could maintain the institution that she had built. The COVID 19 pandemic and a rainy spring also contributed to delays. 
But as the reader can see, we are fully operational now. Sabrina Reynolds-Wing, a longtime gardener, board member and supporter, agreed to step in and serve as Garden Manager. We adopted some policies for social distancing and disinfecting tools. The board scaled back some of the SACG operations and reduced the need for outside volunteers. Board members, neighbors and friends committed to taking on several regular chores to lessen Sabrina's load. The board also recruited a team to manage the food pantry plots, harvesting and donations, headed by Ohio State University grad student, Christie Hammons. We are now in business and about ready to donate a round to the area pantries that Christie has enlisted. You can see early stages of food pantry planting below.  
Joining Sabrina and Christie in 2020 are returning gardeners Charlie, Ethan, Michael and Whitney and Amy.

Our summer has already proven that challenges lie ahead: the strawberry patch suffered from last summer's heat and failed to produce as much fruit as in previous years; our pesky groundhog has shown himself and begun to nibble; June was unseasonably hot and dry; and the city water turn-on got a bit complicated.

But our sisters' plot corn is as "high as an elephant's eye" and the SACG is feeding all of us now.  Happy summer!

Friday, January 3, 2020

New Year and New Leadership


With a new decade comes new leadership at the Stoddart Avenue  Community Garden.  Your recently retired Garden Manager is making one last post to thank you for assisting and contributing to the success of Stoddart Avenue Community Garden.  Community gardening is often exhausting, frustrating and relentless because it always involves a lot of work and challenges. We could not have accomplished all that we did without your generous support. As we start to prepare for the 2020 season, we wanted to share some of our great memories over last summer.

April saw us break ground for our 11th growing season on an unseasonably warm day with amazing assistance from OSU’s First Year Leadership Initiative.  We spread your wood chips on our paths and around the fence lines, straightened the front gate trellis, straightened our platform raised beds, picked up neighborhood litter, and made more progress on the south side of the Garden with our fence straightening project.     Ken Turner, a former Board member, completely refurbished one of our old and rotting benches.  (Hint hint:  we still have one other bench which needs similar TLC so that we can sit on it again). 

For our annual Earth Day celebration the following week, we planted a honeycrisp apple tree (to go with our McIntosh, Jonathon and Granny Smith trees planted last Fall). Our Stoddart/East Main corner looked cheery with bulbs planted in December which had been donated by Strader’s Garden Centers and distributed at the December GCGC holiday party meeting at the Conservatory.   We also weeded, transplanted, replenished potting soil in the platform raised beds, spread mulch donated by Ohio Mulch and Keep Columbus Beautiful, painted our rain barrel, tidied the strawberry patch, made progress on the northern side of the Garden for our fence straightening project, spread compost, planted grass, and prepared garden beds. 

In June, the Franklin County Municipal Court began again sending us community service volunteers, who helped pick up neighborhood litter, mow the lawns around the Garden, pick cherries, berries, and tomatoes for our weekly food pantry donations, edge flower beds, weed and water food pantry plots and tidy up our alley.  These court-ordered volunteers came almost every week for the rest of the season, and even helped a little at the nearby north Bexley Community Garden.  (Money can buy beautiful landscaping, but skilled hands are still needed).    

In June, we also had help from neighborhood children and visiting volunteers at Urban Connections’ annual summer day camp who came twice that week to help us pick cherries and berries to donate to the Salvation Army on East Main Street.  This year, Urban Connections received a Neighborhood Partnership grant from the Columbus Foundation and the United Way of Central Ohio to work with the SACG on their camp theme of Growing Together in Christ, which included lessons on planting, harvesting and water at the SACG, despite the rainy weather.  We had a bumper crop this year of tart pie cherries, so we needed all of the help we could get.

As you may recall, it pretty much stopped raining at the end of July.  Lucky for us, the Mid-Ohio Food Bank paid for two water hydrants to be installed at the Garden last summer.   The City generously fills our rain cisterns once a year and did so again this year at the beginning of August, but that water was gone in a flash. Sadly, the abnormally dry summer was not our only challenge.  Groundhogs returned to the Garden to eat our heirloom tomatoes, kale and particularly sweet potato vines.  Last year, we harvested around 40  pounds of sweet potatoes, but this year only 5 pounds.  Sigh.  And, because our next door neighbor did not garden this year, the local thieves climbed our fence, broke our front gate and stole our produce instead, including most of our cabbage and vandalized most of the kale that the groundhogs had not eaten.  I cannot blame the four-legged or two-legged varmits, though, for the complete failure of our winter squash crop.  I remain mystified.  But, we had a bumper melon and grape crop to compensate.

OSU and Capital students came in August and September, respectively, to help us plant our Fall crops of beets, turnips, lettuce and radishes.  Although the Capital students were mostly rained out, the OSU students helped us to water, weed, harvest, mow, picked up litter and reorganized our shed.  

OSU students returned at the end of October (after our first frost) to help tear down the Garden, cut back and bag the dead corn and bean stalks and tomato vines, stack the tomato cages and trellises, prune raspberry brambles, harvest our pathetic sweet potato crop, clean out the neighbor and melon beds, mow, etc.

It was again freakishly cold for our closing day in November, but we had a great turnout and got everything cleaned up and put away for the winter.

As you know, I am retiring from the Garden after 11 years, but am being succeeded by long-time Board member and multiple-year Volunteer of the Year, Sabrina Reynolds-Wing.   So, like many things, the Garden leadership is passing from Gen X to Millenials.  I appreciate everyone’s support over the years and expect you to continue supporting Sabrina as she leads us into another decade.  We could have not gotten to this point without her.

 We are only able to overcome our various challenges because of the generosity, well wishes and material support from generous folks like you.   Thanks again and feel free to stop by and mock us while we work.   

New Year and New Leadership


With a new decade comes new leadership at the Stoddart Avenue  Community Garden.  Your recently retired Garden Manager is making one last post to thank you for assisting and contributing to the success of Stoddart Avenue Community Garden.  Community gardening is often exhausting, frustrating and relentless because it always involves a lot of work and challenges. We could not have accomplished all that we did without your generous support. As we start to prepare for the 2020 season, we wanted to share some of our great memories over last summer.

April saw us break ground for our 11th growing season on an unseasonably warm day with amazing assistance from OSU’s First Year Leadership Initiative.  We spread your wood chips on our paths and around the fence lines, straightened the front gate trellis, straightened our platform raised beds, picked up neighborhood litter, and made more progress on the south side of the Garden with our fence straightening project.     Ken Turner, a former Board member, completely refurbished one of our old and rotting benches.  (Hint hint:  we still have one other bench which needs similar TLC so that we can sit on it again). 

For our annual Earth Day celebration the following week, we planted a honeycrisp apple tree (to go with our McIntosh, Jonathon and Granny Smith trees planted last Fall). Our Stoddart/East Main corner looked cheery with bulbs planted in December which had been donated by Strader’s Garden Centers and distributed at the December GCGC holiday party meeting at the Conservatory.   We also weeded, transplanted, replenished potting soil in the platform raised beds, spread mulch donated by Ohio Mulch and Keep Columbus Beautiful, painted our rain barrel, tidied the strawberry patch, made progress on the northern side of the Garden for our fence straightening project, spread compost, planted grass, and prepared garden beds. 

In June, the Franklin County Municipal Court began again sending us community service volunteers, who helped pick up neighborhood litter, mow the lawns around the Garden, pick cherries, berries, and tomatoes for our weekly food pantry donations, edge flower beds, weed and water food pantry plots and tidy up our alley.  These court-ordered volunteers came almost every week for the rest of the season, and even helped a little at the nearby north Bexley Community Garden.  (Money can buy beautiful landscaping, but skilled hands are still needed).    

In June, we also had help from neighborhood children and visiting volunteers at Urban Connections’ annual summer day camp who came twice that week to help us pick cherries and berries to donate to the Salvation Army on East Main Street.  This year, Urban Connections received a Neighborhood Partnership grant from the Columbus Foundation and the United Way of Central Ohio to work with the SACG on their camp theme of Growing Together in Christ, which included lessons on planting, harvesting and water at the SACG, despite the rainy weather.  We had a bumper crop this year of tart pie cherries, so we needed all of the help we could get.

As you may recall, it pretty much stopped raining at the end of July.  Lucky for us, the Mid-Ohio Food Bank paid for two water hydrants to be installed at the Garden last summer.   The City generously fills our rain cisterns once a year and did so again this year at the beginning of August, but that water was gone in a flash. Sadly, the abnormally dry summer was not our only challenge.  Groundhogs returned to the Garden to eat our heirloom tomatoes, kale and particularly sweet potato vines.  Last year, we harvested around 40  pounds of sweet potatoes, but this year only 5 pounds.  Sigh.  And, because our next door neighbor did not garden this year, the local thieves climbed our fence, broke our front gate and stole our produce instead, including most of our cabbage and vandalized most of the kale that the groundhogs had not eaten.  I cannot blame the four-legged or two-legged varmits, though, for the complete failure of our winter squash crop.  I remain mystified.  But, we had a bumper melon and grape crop to compensate.

OSU and Capital students came in August and September, respectively, to help us plant our Fall crops of beets, turnips, lettuce and radishes.  Although the Capital students were mostly rained out, the OSU students helped us to water, weed, harvest, mow, picked up litter and reorganized our shed.  

OSU students returned at the end of October (after our first frost) to help tear down the Garden, cut back and bag the dead corn and bean stalks and tomato vines, stack the tomato cages and trellises, prune raspberry brambles, harvest our pathetic sweet potato crop, clean out the neighbor and melon beds, mow, etc.

It was again freakishly cold for our closing day in November, but we had a great turnout and got everything cleaned up and put away for the winter.

As you know, I am retiring from the Garden after 11 years, but am being succeeded by long-time Board member and multiple-year Volunteer of the Year, Sabrina Reynolds-Wing.   So, like many things, the Garden leadership is passing from Gen X to Millenials.  I appreciate everyone’s support over the years and expect you to continue supporting Sabrina as she leads us into another decade.  We could have not gotten to this point without her.

 We are only able to overcome our various challenges because of the generosity, well wishes and material support from generous folks like you.   Thanks again and feel free to stop by and mock us while we work.