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