Sunday, September 23, 2012

An Encomium for Willie


I'm teaching my students about Encomium and Invective (writing in praise and/or blame of a particular person, policy, place, idea, etc.) for our Rhetoric and Composition class at the University of North Texas where I teach. I thought I'd share a sample Encomium I've written for a friend and mentor of mine, Willie Redmon. Here goes:


Willie Redmon looks like the kind of guy, if he were to be cast in a television sit-com, who you’d imagine leaning up against a fence with a cold beer, shooting the breeze with his neighbor about nothing in particular. He wears overalls. He speaks with a Texas drawl. He smiles a lot and his laugh is best described as a chortle.

But when you meet Willie, it’s more likely you’ll see him with a spade or hoe in hand instead of a beer. When he talks, instead of shooting the breeze, he’ll most likely wax eloquent about the latest crop of vegetables he and his community garden have just donated to the Arlington Food Bank. Willie, you see, is just your average guy who has done something decidedly un-average. He started the Harvesting Hope Community Garden in Arlington, Texas and has, in one year, managed to donate over a thousand pounds of produce to families in need.

Instead of leaning against fences and swapping stories (not that there’s anything wrong with that), Willie has decided that the best way of helping his neighbors is to grow them fresh vegetables. He’s taken the holy admonitions to “love thy neighbor” and “feed my sheep” beyond the abstract and made them practical. It all started in a church service, Willie says. He sensed that a crazy idea he had of starting a community garden on church grounds was more than a notion; it was a calling. He had no money with which to begin his project. “All I had was dirt,” he says. “But I told God I would grow him the best garden I could.”

Willie also didn’t have a green thumb. At his day job, he surveys land properties in the Metroplex. So he knew he had a tough row to hoe, as the saying goes, to create a successful community garden. Yet, once he committed to his idea the resources and help poured in. He received grants from Tarrant Area Food Bank to purchase building supplies. Church members donated plants, seeds, knowledge, and time. An unnamed business benefactor, wanting to participate in community service, donated $10,000 and teams of volunteer laborers to build dozens of raised garden beds.

When you meet Willie in his garden, his overalls will have garden soil on them. He’ll have his pockets full of seeds. He’ll likely snap a fresh leaf of lettuce or a cherry tomato straight off a plant and say, “You should try this.” Meaning, you should take a bite, right now.

Your 21-st century germ phobia may cause you to recoil. What about the dirt, you’ll think? The bugs? But, if you’re smart, you’ll do what he says. The thing is, Willie’s vegetables taste different from the ones you buy at the store. Sure, they’re grown without traditional pesticides but more than that, they’re grown with love. Willie and his garden are more than a sign of the eco-friendly, sustainable food conversations that are trending more each day. Willie is an example of what happens when a simple man listens to a calling. Willie, with his overalls and his vegetables and his easy chortle, shows us that it’s possible, as simple and humble as we may seem, to make a difference.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Planting Party: Game ON! Sunday, Sept. 9 at 5:00 p.m.


Hello Gardeners!

We have a truck full of fall vegetables ready for planting! Courtesy of the Tarrant Area Food Bank and Archie's Greenland of Fort Worth, our order has arrived and is ready to go. We have plenty of plants for everyone--and will disburse them on a first-come, first-served basis tomorrow evening (Sunday, Sept. 9) at the youth garden mission event/planting party, beginning at 5:00 p.m. Whether you have a bed or want to help with the communal area, you are welcome to join us!

Also, Rosie from Archie's Greenland graciously donated a cross vine to plant on the trellis of our garden cottage. The cottage, as many of you know, was funded by a donation from the Damon family in honor of Carol Damon. The cross vine has beautiful orange-yellow flowers (via special request from Toly) and will be a lovely addition to the garden. We will plant the vine tomorrow night and discuss plans for a memorial plaque to display next to the cottage.

The following are the plants we have available. You'll want to consider the size requirements for each plant, and plan your beds accordingly. Of course, you're always welcome to provide your own seeds/seedlings. To help you plan, I've listed some helpful garden planning sites below the list of our plant order.

See you tomorrow night!

Cheers,
Britta

AUMC Plant Order
Beets (seeds)
Bush Green Beans--15 plants
Broccoli--20 plants
Cabbage--20 plants
Kale--5 plants
Leaf lettuce--5 plants
Radishes (seeds)
Sugar snap peas (seeds)
Spinach (seeds)
Zucchini--12 plants
Acorn squash (seeds)
Spaghetti squash (seeds)
Butternut squash (seeds)
Swiss chard--15 plants
Carrots (seeds)
Brussels sprouts--15 plants

Planning sites: 


Mother Earth News Regional Vegetable Guide 

Gardener's Supply Kitchen Garden planner

Friday, September 7, 2012

Plants En Route; Youth Help This Sunday 5:00-7:30 p.m.

Hello Gardeners,

I've spoken with our plant suppliers, and the trucks with cool-weather plants haven't arrived. This means we will NOT have the majority of our plants in time for a planting party tomorrow morning, so we will reschedule our planting party based on the plants' arrival (tentatively by next Saturday, Sept. 15.)

However, please use this weekend/this week to clear your beds, prepare your soil, and plant seeds. The youth and I will be working in the garden this Sunday evening from 5:00-7:30 p.m. I'll have seeds and planting guides available, and if you need help tilling your bed this would be a good time to have youth helpers do the job. 

Also, if the trucks by chance arrive by this weekend, I will have our plants available on Sunday night and we can have our planting party then. Keep an eye on your email and the garden blog, and I'll let you know.

Thanks for your flexibility and for gardening. If you have any questions, please email or call me.

Cheers,
Britta

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Planting Party Saturday, Sept. 8 10:00 a.m.

Hello Gardeners,

I hope you're all enjoying a long weekend! Kern and I went to the seed party last Saturday and picked up some seed packets for our gardens, along with great information about fall planting. We are set to pick up our live seedlings this week, and we'll have them available for our planting party next Saturday morning (September 8) in the garden at 10:00 a.m. We will have soil amendments available as well for you to include with your fall plants.

In order to prepare for fall planting, please clear your beds of non-producing plants and compost them. (Remember: no diseased plants in the compost bins.) You can also enrich your soil with organic fertilizer (see earlier post on our recommended fertilizer.) Make sure to remove all grass and get your soil nice and loose for the fall plants. We do have a tiller available in our garden shed if you need it. Also, we'll have youth on hand Sunday evening from 5-7:30 p.m. if you would like youth to help you with manual labor, please join us on Sunday evening to support the group.

Here are the suggested fall plants. (We've ordered a variety of these--and I'll report our total numbers after we pick them up.)

Beets (seed)
Broccoli
Cabbage
Kale
Leaf lettuce (seed)
Mustard greens (seed)
Radishes (seed)
Sugar snap peas
Spinach
Turnips
Cucumber
Cauliflower
Zucchini
Winter squash (spaghetti and acorn squash)
Swiss chard
Carrots
Brussels sprouts

Many thanks to all of you for gardening!

Cheers,
Britta

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Painting Party This Friday--Earn Volunteer Hours!

Calling all Gardeners and Volunteers,

Alliance Community Garden is hosting a painting party for our new shed this Friday, July 20, at 9:00 a.m. We will weather protect our new shed and make it a beautiful centerpiece for our garden. If you have extra painting equipment (brushes, trays, rollers) please bring it. 

Youth volunteers can earn volunteer hours for honors' clubs and Scouts--see Britta to sign off on your paperwork. (If you're a leader in a youth or scouting organization, please forward this post to your groups.)

The painting party will be in the Alliance Community Garden, 7904 Park Vista Blvd., Fort Worth, Texas 76137.

For any questions and to RSVP, please contact Britta Coleman.

Cheers,
Britta

Monday, July 16, 2012

McDonell's (Not McDonalds)

Hi Gardeners,

Just a quick post with a fabulous new local resource for our EarthKind garden. McDonnell's in Keller has the Cotton Burr organic compost, and they're a super-friendly small business with tons of information and products for our garden. Hooray!. Here's their website: http://www.mbmkeller.com/

We picked up four bags of compost for $26. They also carry earthworms, but the heat had gotten to their batch so the owner (kindly) wouldn't sell us any. We'll check back soon.

Cheers, Britta

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Pssst...Secrets from a Master Gardener


Hello Garden Gang,

I have some secrets to share with you! Here’s an update on our last garden gathering, with some extremely useful information from Master Gardener Jackie Peel. Many thanks, Jackie, for sharing your expertise with us.

Watering:
The best tool for gauging watering needs is a “soil moisture meter.” Where can you get one? We all have one—our index finger! Dig into your garden soil about two knuckles down. The soil should feel like a damp sponge. If it doesn’t, it’s time to water. Watering at night is most efficient, but if your schedule only allows for morning watering, go for it. Remember to keep leaves dry to minimize diseases, and shoot your water directly at the root of the plant for best efficiency.

Fertilizing/Mulching:
Jackie recommends Cotton Burr compost (Earth’s Best or Finest). Each bed can take about 2 bags of the 40lb. variety which can be found for about six dollars at Foreman’s feed or McDonnell's Feed. We should each have about 2-3 inches (!) of mulch on our beds to keep bugs away and keep the soil moist. Also, Jackie says NEVER to use weed and feed, at home or in our beds. The chemicals used to kill weeds will also kill plants and trees. She recommends a slow-release all nitrogen variety fertilizer, such as 17-0-0. We can also continue to use our leftover worm castings and molasses to enrich our beds.

Bug Identification:
Did you know that 90% of all bugs in the garden are beneficial? Wow! So, if you see a bug, don’t panic. Most pests are species specific, which is good news for us since our gardens have such a wide variety. For pest control, Jackie recommends shooting water at buggy sites, and if all else fails, use NEEM. It’s an organic pest control that works for just about anything. NEEM can also be found as Green Light Rose Defense. It’s the same product, so we can use it on our gardens.

She also shared the following tips:
  •  Make the garden work for YOU and don’t be a slave to your garden.
  • A little flaw in produce is okay. We’re too quick to denounce our imperfect looking produce as inedible (or not worthy of donation.)
  • Protect extreme heat with physical barriers. Our peppers, which have looked a little sad, need cover from intense heat. She suggests burlap or netting.
  • Tomatoes quit production when nighttime temperatures don’t get below 80. If your tomatoes have slowed down, that’s why.
  • Other community gardens are good places to steal with your eyes. Visit other gardens and see what’s working!
  • Use holidays to help you remember planting dates. New Year’s we can start seeds for spring, St. Patrick’s day is good for spring planting, 4th of July to start fall seeds at home, Labor Day to plant fall crops. She recommended that we can start seedlings for fall plants at home now. Examples include tomatoes, peppers, pumpkins, winter squash, leafy and root vegetables like carrots, turnips, beets. Now’s a good time to start seeds for broccoli, cauliflower, onions, and garlic and herbs. She recommends using short-maturing varieties to maximize production.


She also shared the following resources with us:

Doug Welsh’s Texas Gardening Almanac
Square Foot Gardening by Mel Bartholomew
Nrhcommunitygarden.com for bug identification and when to plant what
Tarrant County Master Gardener Helpline 817-884-1944

Many thanks to all who attended our meeting—we had a great time!

Cheers,
Britta

Thursday, June 21, 2012

175 Pounds...and Gaining!

Hello Gardeners!

You might have noticed we have a new shed and a bridge! We are working on a deck and an overhang with a produce scale for the bridge, and we'll plan a painting party soon to make it super cute. (Because every garden should have a super cute shed.) Also, we have donated over 175 pounds of produce to the Keller Storehouse! They are so grateful for our donations and they send their thanks to all of you for contributing to their clients' needs.

Here is some important information for the days ahead:

1. Gather in the Garden. On Saturday, July 7th at 10:00 a.m. we will have a Master Gardener come visit our garden and share with us information about watering, fertilizing, and bugs. I hope you'll join us for this informative event! You may also invite friends or neighbors who are gardeners to join us and benefit from this valuable session.

2. Garden Stewardship. Many of us are travelling at various times this summer, and we must care for our gardens even in our absences. If you know you will be out of town, please contact me or other gardeners on this loop to keep up the maintenance on your garden, including watering and harvesting. Unattended gardens waste potential produce that could be going to the storehouse and they also attract bugs and birds. We can trade favors throughout the summer and keep our gardens looking beautiful.

3. Harvesting Permission on Wednesdays--Please Reply. Our garden donates produce to the storehouse on Wednesday mornings. I visit our gardens and harvest from my own bed and the community garden that morning. If you would like to give me permission to harvest ripe produce in your garden that morning, please reply to this email. I will only take what looks like is Super Ready to go so the produce won't go to waste and the storehouse can benefit from each of our gardens.

Many thanks for all you do!

Cheers,
Britta

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Citrus Oil Spray Recipe

Hi Gardeners!

Last Saturday we met and talked about bug prevention in our garden. Author J. Howard Garrett has a great recipe for citrus oil that's easy to make and is Earth-kind for our gardens. His recipe, which can be found in his book, Texas Organic Vegetable Gardening, is as follows:

Citrus Oil Spray
Fill a container 1/2 full with any citrus peelings or pulp. Orange is best. Fill the remainder of the container with water. Let it sit in a cool place for a week or so. Strain. Use one cup of homemade concentrate per gallon of spray. Note: Commercial orange oil is more powerful than homemade orange oil. It is a powerful solvent and can burn plants. We recommend using it at a rate of less than 2 ounces per gallon of water as a spray and always mix with molasses and compost tea.
This natural spray works on all kinds of bugs and doesn't hurt plants at all. You'll need to reapply after a rain, of course, but it's so easy and cheap to make it's worth the effort. We keep our orange peels in a little container in the refrigerator (see photo--shown without lid) and then transfer the oil and the water into a spray bottle that you can find at Lowe's or Home Depot.

Hope you find this recipe useful. I highly recommend Garrett's books, and you can order them online or try to score a copy at Half Price Books.


Cheers,
Britta

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

No May-Be about it--May's Successes in the Garden!

Hello All,

 Many thanks to those of you who were able to attend the May 16 service in the garden. We had over 50 people singing and worshiping and fellowshipping in the garden! What a blessing from the Lord! 

Here are some important updates and opportunities:

 1. Donations. We have donated over 54 pounds of produce to the Keller Storehouse in the month of May! Please keep your donations coming--the storehouse is beyond happy to receive our fresh produce on behalf of their clients. I take a trip to the storehouse every Wednesday, so you may drop off your donations at the church or at my house.

 2. Education. Katey Rudd has invited us to the Community Garden Committee meeting this Friday at 1:30p at Southside Community Garden, located at Southside Church of Christ (2101 Hemphill Street, FW 76110.) I will attend, and will bring back my notes. Anyone who would like to join me is welcome. Also, Katey sent me this weblink as a valuable source for our garden--check it out and we can talk about how we can implement some of the tools for our garden. http://www.gardeningmatters.org/coordinating-resources

 3. Gather in the Garden. For those of you who are able, let's meet in the garden this Saturday at 10:00 a.m. to share our gardening successes and concerns, and talk about bugs, fertilization, watering, harvesting, and ideas for future growth. I'll also share feedback from the Southside meeting.

 4. Get Excited: The Local Growing Festival is coming soon: June 23rd! Actually, Public Health wants to honor you all as gardeners and will be giving certificates of appreciation to gardens at the event. We have an opportunity to create a small display for a booth to advertise our garden. Please let me know if you plan to attend. There will be some excellent mini-workshops held by Master Gardeners that day as well. I can't attend as I have a conflict, but I'd love for someone from our garden to represent.

 Thanks again for all your hard work in the garden--it's so fun to watch it all grow!

 Cheers, Britta

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Ellen's Notes from the Garden

Hello Garden Gang,

Many thanks to all of you who came to our garden gathering last Saturday. We had a great turnout, and Ellen did a wonderful job of reporting her meeting notes from the Bhutanese garden. Colleen shared a resource for seeds: High Mowing Organic Seeds.

Here's a snapshot of the egg seedlings that I brought to the meeting, and how they've grown just since Saturday--aren't these adorable? I told the kids if they're lucky I'll put them in their Easter baskets!

Here are some of Ellen's notes from the meeting, for future reference. Thanks, Ellen!

Garden Meeting 3/29/2012
Neighborhood Needs Community Center – Bhutanese Refugee Garden
Altamesa, Fort Worth, TX 76133

What a great outreach they have to get a diverse group of people together. It's amazing. They also have a” feed the community” outreach and they feed around 150 families. With these families they partner with 5 other churches and also supply groceries, clothing and of course garden goods.

Tour of the Garden and suggestions from others.
1. All the beds we toured are maintained by the Bhutanese. They come in early morning or at dusk to attend their garden. At this time they have 27 families that work the beds and they are all full.
2. All beds had numbers on them and are full. Regardless of how many beds you have it is important to get the as full as you can quickly to attract new people.
3. Last year they out of the Bhutanese Garden they produced 895 pounds.
4. They had a board on the side of the building that charted the bed and weight.
5. They had a great little sitting area under a tree that was wonderful for the older people to rest.

Suggestions from other Gardens in attendance.
1. Garden in Arlington - This last Halloween they had a trick or treat event that attracted people to the church and in the Garden each Family sit up chairs and had candy. They would ask the kids questions. Example: Which garden has beans? The kids would run off and ask questions then come back and they would get their candy. Out of that they had 2 families
2. Suggestion to get help – Craig’s list
3. Fort Worth - When it gets hot create a natural resource to create shade. Example: cut limbs from tree that has a Y shape place into the ground then a cross beam at the top and start with branches, twigs and build from there. They tried a thin cloth at first and the first wind and rain took it away.
4. Call the volunteer center of north Texas. The Arlington Garden was able to connect and they received $20,000 which purchased 2 sheds and a chipper where the community could bring their branches and they mulch and use it in their garden.
5. While working in your Garden esp. on build days or work days have a banner made and place out front. Most of the gardens do this and they have people that walk up and find out what is going on.
6. If you know it’s going to rain or the weather is not good outside before planting use your church's gym and have a seed party inviting the church family to join in. Have sandwiches and fun for the kids. It does not need to be very big just let the kids know they will be playing in dirt.During this event have a pot painting event and have little pots placed in a certain area of you garden so the kids can watch their plants grow.


Actual presentation
1. Buy in Bulk. Seeds can be stored. Decide what you want to grow in the coming year and store being ready for the season. See handout on seed storage.
2. They had plastic containers that stored the seeds. Small and compact. Do not store in a shed or outside. They need to be stored in a climate controlled area such as your house. They do not need to get to hot or cold before you plant.
3. Transplanting information (from Texas Vegetable Gardening Guide – Argrilife Extension Service)
4.Companion plant growing. See handout.
5. Call outs for planning companions:–
·Alliums (onions, garlic, Leeks etc helps with fruit trees and night shade tomatoes, potatoes and peppers. It repels slugs, aphids and other pests.
·Beans help with Beets, Corn & Brassicas. They help with containing bacteria that fix nitrogen, and it helps to fertilize other plants.
·Beets help with Lettuce, Alliums & Brassicas . Beets help with adding minerals to the soil.
·Borage helps with strawberries, Cucumbers and almost anything. Borage repels many pests and attracts honeybees.
·Marigolds help with Squash, Tomatoes & Asparagus. Produces pesticides that deter nematodes & beetles.
·Geranium helps with Tomatoes, Grapes, Aubergines &Roses Geraniums help trap crop and attract the pest away from the other plants.
·I love that if you plant Basil under your tomato plants it makes the tomatoes taste sweeter
6. Handout – Plants Families.
7. Thinning Plants – Thinning is best when the soil is damp. Thinning is harsh because you see plants that you don’t want to destroy however if they are thick after planting they are competing for water, nutrients and sunlight that seedlings need to grow.

Friday, March 30, 2012

Bricks and Gather-in-the-Garden at 10:00 a.m. Saturday

Hello Garden Gang,

Two quick notes:

1. We're meeting in the garden tomorrow at 10:00 a.m. The Neffs attended the spring gardening class on Thursday and will share information on dealing with insects for this potentially "buggy" spring season. We'll also talk about watering guidelines, soil amendments, and natural ways to keep our plants healthy. I'll share a short devotion and we'll pray for the gardens.

2. The children's ministry is going to build a butterfly garden and we're in need of bricks. If you, your neighbors or your friends have extra bricks, please bring them to the garden this week. If you need help transporting them, let me know and I'll bring my truck. If you have Facebook, you might post this need as your status and see if anyone you know has bricks they can donate. Builders in Park Glen often leave extra bricks in garages, so the treasure trove we need might be all around us!

See you tomorrow in the garden!

Cheers,
Britta

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Happy Seedlings, Happy Spring


Today the sun is shining, the weather is cool and brisk, and the rains have turned everything spring-like and green. The cucumbers, marigolds, and okra I started inside are happy, happy, happy. Currently they're taking a sun bath on my front porch, but here's a quick pic, and a snippet of poetry that captures the tone of today. Enjoy.

Oh, give us pleasure in the flowers today;
And give us not to think so far away
As the uncertain harvest; keep us here
All simply in the springing of the year.

--Robert Frost

Monday, March 19, 2012

We're Up and Running...How Much to Give?

Many thanks all of you who came out for our work days during Spring Break. We had over 30 helpers in the garden, and together we dug, planned, planted and prayed Alliance Community Garden into existence! So far we have 20 beds for individuals/families with only two remaining beds still open. We have a pumpkin patch, a blackberry bush area, a communal area for eggplant and squash, and a gorgeous new spiral herb garden.

We were also able to plant our new trees: two figs, two persimmons, two plums and one peach tree. We're working on our irrigation so we can easily water our gardens (right now we're dragging hoses, but it's all good...) and we're still raising funds for a shed to house our tools. The missional giving Sunday in April goes to the community garden, so the opportunity for AUMC to further support the garden's mission is just around the corner.

Speaking of giving, many of you have asked what percentage of your crops you should donate to the food bank. My answer is: as the Lord prompts you. We want all of our gardens to produce a healthy bounty not only for our gardeners, but for those around us who are in need. Keep in mind that the donations we've received from TAFB and TCPH were given so we can be a part of the solution in educating folks on better nutrition and giving them access to healthy vegetables they wouldn't otherwise be able to afford. We'll have a station soon where you can drop your crops for donating--it will be so exciting to see how much we can give!

Additional warm-season plants are on the way including squash, okra, beans, melons, cucumbers, lettuce and snap peas. So, for those of you who haven't completed your beds, you might want to save a little room for these crops. I will let you know when they come in.

We're expecting a heavy dose of rain this evening, so I'm thankful for the refresher for our plants. I'm still a novice to the world of gardening, but I'm learning new lessons every day...

Today's good word is from Oswald Chambers in his devotional, My Utmost For His Highest. Chambers writes, "A life of faith is not a life of one glorious mountaintop experience after another, like soaring on eagles' wings, but a life of day-in and day-out consistency; a life of walking without fainting." Together, may we walk this life of faith, in and out of the garden, with consistency and grace.

Cheers,
Britta

Friday, March 2, 2012

Work Day, Saturday March 3

Hello Gardeners,

I have glorious news: four beautiful dump trucks brought us compost/soil and mulch yesterday and this morning Lowe's brought our cinder blocks and work tools. Hooray!

All this means we can have a work day this Saturday, March 3, beginning at 10:00 a.m.


The work will go like this: the front-end loader will help us level dirt for the beds, we will build the beds with the cinder blocks, and then we fill the beds with our fresh soil using the front-end loader, wheelbarrows and shovels. It will be a big job, but with plenty of volunteers, the work should go smoothly. We will have a volunteer on hand to document service hours, so send any Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts or Honor Society students our way and we'll put them to work.

The soil amendments will arrive within a week, the seedling plants should arrive in a couple of weeks, and I have seeds and planting guides for anyone who wants to sow directly.

Here's what to bring:
1. Newspapers and cardboard to line the beds.
2. Work gloves.
3. Cap/hat, sunscreen, water bottle, snacks etc. for your personal convenience.
4. A happy heart.
5. HELPERS!

We'll have three wheelbarrows and some shovels, but if you want to bring your own supplies, feel free. Most of all, please be in prayer that this garden will be done in service and glory to God. Remember, one plants and one waters, but God provides the increase.

Cheers to all, and see you tomorrow in the garden!

Blessings,
Britta

Monday, February 27, 2012

Hooray for Troop 205!

Hello Garden Gang!

Many thanks to Jack Webb and Boy Scout Troop 205 for hauling cinder blocks for us this weekend during their overnight campout in the garden. The troop neatened our new work area for us so we can prep for our Big Garden Build, hopefully for this Saturday, March 3rd. I've spoken with Katey Rudd, and it looks like our supplies should arrive this week. As soon as I get a green light (get it, green?) I'll holler. Actually, I'll email, but you get the idea.



As a reminder, I've got seeds and a seed planting guide from Marshall Grain for those of you who'd like to help grow seedlings. I've been in touch with Denise Cyr who will head up a seed-growing campaign with AUMC Preschool. Thanks, Denise.

Please keep praying for the garden. I read this passage last night as part of my Lent devotional, and I thought I'd share it with you:
Romans 6:5-8 "For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we will certainly also be united with him in a resurrection like his. For we know that our old self was crucified with him so that the body ruled by sin might be done away with,that we should no longer be slaves to sin—because anyone who has died has been set free from sin. Now if we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him."
That word "united" means to grow in union, or to plant in union. The word describes how two plants that have been planted together and are growing together, closely entwined or even united. (Nelson Study Bible.)

Have you ever seen two plants growing so closely together that they seem as one? What a beautiful image of our union with Christ, that we would be planted so closely to the source that we would actually grow entwined, closer and closer, to our Lord. This is my prayer for each of us, with this new mission field of the garden and in our personal journeys with Jesus.

Be blessed!
Britta

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Garden Update: Plans and Prayers

Hello Gardeners!

We've had some more good news for the garden!

Here's what's happening:

• Katey Rudd finished our garden plans and Jack and Kern are headed to the HOA meeting tonight for final approval. We have a contact on the board who thinks the garden is a good idea, but we appreciate prayers that all will go smoothly tonight.
• As many of you know, we've had wonderful donations from church members and area businesses, and we've been blessed with grants for supplies from TAFB and TCPH. We're expecting a shipment of building materials and tools, hopefully to arrive later this week—possibly February 23.
• Gardeners are stepping up with ideas and donations—we've got contacts for free mulch, a possible greenhouse, and two free tillers so far. Thank you, gardeners!
• Will and Ellen Neff attended a class and have thoughtfully shared their notes with us to help us in the garden. We'll hand out copies of this at our next garden party.
• We received packets of seeds for our seed-starting efforts. If you're interested in free seeds, please contact me. I'll have them through build-out days and beyond! (Cue Buzz Lightyear.)
• Kern contacted Dig Tess and they'll be marking our lines this week, so we don't cut off electricity or phone lines while we're tilling. I'm sure our AUMC office staff will be pleased with our efforts.
• Ben and David have been in contact with Al Shave who is generously allowing us to use his front-end loader to move dirt.

Here's what’s next:
• Cash donations for the garden are coming in nicely (many thanks to all who have given!), but we're still a ways off from the slab and shed we need to house all these new supplies.
• WORK DAY! Once we get confirmation that our supplies are arriving, we'll send word about a work day (possibly for this weekend.) Kern and I will be doing prep-work this week, starting this afternoon. Jack and the Boy Scouts are camping on the land this weekend, and will be able to continue with the prep work. Once we schedule the workday, we'll need all hands on deck. So once you hear the call, please grab your teenagers, your neighbors, and your work gloves and be ready to go.

Here's what we need:
• Newspapers and cardboard for lining the bottom of new beds
• Vegetable and fruit scraps for compost
• Prayers for HOA meeting and new shed
• Donations for shed and other common areas
• Laborers for work days

Thank you all for your hands and your hearts as we work together to create this garden. Please continue to pray—God is moving and it's so much fun to be a part of the journey!

Cheers,
Britta Coleman

Monday, January 30, 2012

Making Dirt: Compost Do's and Don'ts

Hello Gardeners,

We had a great meeting on January 22nd, and Colleen gave us an excellent overview of what we're including in our Community Garden Compost pile. We want your garbage! (Sort of.) Please read through the following guidelines that she shared with us, and join us in making dirt.

From Colleen's handout:

Compost provides numerous benefits to a garden. It adds nutrients to garden soil, encourages worm activity, provides mulch cover and reduces recyclable yard and raw kitchen waste that would otherwise end up in local landfills. Successful composting uses a '50/50 Rule': 50% Carbon (brown material) and 50% Nitrogen (green material). To ensure continued success, it is important to know which material can and cannot be included in the composting process.

COMPOST NO NO'S: These items should not go into a compost pile...

1. Meat products: these can attract unwanted visitors to a compost bin as well as cause the compost to develop a foul odor.
2. Dairy products: these will also attract visitors and encourage foul odors.
3. Animal feces: including bedding and litter. This poses a potential health risk. Cat litter may contain a pathogen that can carry taxoplasmosis. The exception to this rule is chicken and cow manure from farm animals, as these animal's diets are plant based.
4. Diseased plants: these will transfer fungal diseases to healthy garden plants.
5. Weeds: these will thrive in a compost bin rather than break down, resulting in weed seed transfer to the garden boxes.
6. Paper products: including household shredding, newspaper (contains additives and synthetic resins), cardboard, coffee filters, paper plates, etc. Unfortunately, many paper products contain man-made chemicals that can alter soil ph levels.
7. Walnut shells: these contain juglone, which are toxic to some plants (especially tomatoes and apple trees).
8. Sawdust: treated wood contains many harmful chemicals such as arsenic, carcinogens, insecticides and fungicides.
9. Cooking oil: this will alter the soil ph levels.
10. Rice: attracts unwanted visitors.
11. Cooked leftover table scraps: these can contain cooking oils, dairy or meat products. Can also attract rats.
12. Coal ashes: this can be toxic to plants.
13. Dryer lint: dryer sheets contain perfumes and chemicals that can alter soil ph levels.

COMPOST DO'S: The following items are beneficial additions to a compost pile...

1. Raw fruit and veggie scraps
2. Egg shells
3. Coffee grounds
4. Grass clippings: pesticide free, please.
5. Leaves and plant trimmings
6. Pine cones and needles
7. Hay, straw, alfalfa
8. Pet and human hair
9. Nuts and shells: except for walnuts (see Compost No No's above).
10. Tea leaves
11. Farm animal manure, such as that from chickens and cows.

For questions regarding any items that have not been included in this list, please feel free to contact us.

The information on this list was gathered from many helpful gardening sources such as www.motherearthnews.com, www.organicgardening.com, www.texasgardener.com, Reader's Digest 1001 Hints & Tips For Your Garden, Reader's Digest Illustrated Guide to Gardening, as well as personal gardening experience. Happy Gardening!

Friday, January 20, 2012

Garden Party This Sunday at 2:00 AUMC

Hello Gardeners!

Please join us for our first Alliance Community Garden Party this Sunday, January 22, at 2:00 in the Family Life Center at AUMC. This will a time of celebration and planning as we take the second-step in our journey with the community garden. If you like to garden, to pray, to build things, to create artwork, to plant seeds, or just like to eat--we want you! We'll share ideas, discuss design, and pray for the future of the garden. This will be your opportunity to reserve a bed for spring planting. We will have Katey Rudd, a Tarrant County Garden Coordinator, on hand for expert advice. We'll also have a taste of the garden!

Hope to see you there!

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Cauliflower as Big as Your Head

The Alliance Community Garden has continued to produce delicious vegetables, in spite of it being January. We recently harvested cauliflower and broccoli, and were able to offer it as an altar arrangement for Sunday Services. What a joy to share! The Archibalds and the Fitzpatricks each took home samples, and report that AUMC vegetables are awesome. (That's an official term, folks.)

We've set a Garden Party for January 22, at 2:00 p.m. in the Family Life Center of AUMC. Whether you like to garden, pray, build things, create artwork, or just like to eat--we'd love to have you join us and share your ideas. This will be a time to pray, brainstorm, and celebrate what God is doing in the garden.



We've spoken with the Keller Storehouse and we're setting up plans to donate a portion of our future harvest. So, the efforts of our gardening will be a blessing throughout our community and will help feed families and children in need, right here in our area. Who's excited?!