Friday, May 30, 2014

Report: Seedtime Celebration


The Friends in Commons blog serves as a chronicle of Katie’s Commons.  The Commons was conceived as a pantry garden, planted, tended and harvested by community volunteers, to supply Stone Soup Food Pantry and our neighbors with fresh produce.  It has grown to include educational, hospitality and beautification goals in its mission. Below is a recent report sent to those on the Katie’s Commons email list.  It summarizes pretty well what has been going on since the last blog post.


Greetings Commoners,

Last night (May 28) as we blessed seed, soil and water in the midst of a blessed rain shower we celebrated Seedtime in the Commons.  Despite the wet weather, underneath the Gloria Dei picnic shelter burgers and hot dogs were grilled and delicious salads and deserts served.  Twenty-four folks were in attendance, representing many of the Commons' constituencies: Trinity Church, Mulberry Methodist, Glroia Dei, neighbors, food pantry patrons and IMPACT  families.  (IMPACT is the Mulberry after school program). We finished the evening (in the GDLC social hall, it was getting pretty cool following the rain) with a great concert by Jay Brooks.  We also learned that Pastor Phil "Gabriel" Whisler can provide pretty good "fake trumpet" backup for Neil Diamond and Elvis songs.  The entire evening was made possible because of work of a number of volunteers coming together for the common good.  Thank you, everyone.
All this follows an exciting couple of weeks.  We delivered our first produce, radishes and lettuce, to the Stone Soup Food Pantry and the Cornerstone Food Pantry.  On Tuesday kids from IMPACT came to the garden to plant the green beans they started a few weeks ago.  We now have an entire bed dedicated to IMPACT's work and sharing.  We are down to two empty beds, which we will plant in the next week or so.  A larger "tomato bed" is being developed out of the stuck dump truck incident, or Crawford's Folly, about which we do not speak aloud.  I am sure a similar incident inspired the old saying, "When the world gives you ruts, make tomato beds."
Please come by the garden when you have a chance.  We have made sure that each bed contains a number of weeds for your picking enjoyment; dig in.  You are welcome.

Peace,
Mike


Monday, April 7, 2014

Itchin’ to Plant Something

           Slowly, slowly the earth tilts on its axis; the spring equinox comes and goes.  At last we are on the summer solstice side of that dance and  I've been itching to plant something.  Under lights in my home office about 140 seedlings are growing.  I wonder if they are growing "too fast."  The cold seems to have gone so deep into the year I wonder if the plants will be past ready to transplant while frosts are still on the ground. April 29th is the average last frost date in our area but this year it could certainly go into mid May or beyond. There are so many variables.
            I have been particularly anxious to make some progress in Katie’s Commons.  Brett Barker and I put together a couple of frames in time to do a show and tell for the Community Club of Mulberry in late March.  Since then, when time and funds allowed, a few more frames have been added for a total of six at this writing.  The plan is to have ten in place by the time planting season is in full swing.  The next step was to fill them with soil.  We worked on that today (4/7/14).  Sharon Walker, of Jubilee Stables, offered us soil and composted horse manure and made arrangements to have it delivered.  Originally the plan was to dump it in the parking lot and wheelbarrow it to the garden.  But I thought, “If we could dump it closer to the garden, it would be easier and faster to move.  And if the pile killed some grass, that would be a good spot for a melon patch.”  I was warned that the northwest corner of the church property was deceptively wet.  Walking a possible route for the dump truck, I noted the ground seemed a bit spongy.  I drove my car along the route – no problem.  Then the dump truck came brimming with composted manure.  I was talking with Sharon, my back to the truck, when she said, “Oh.”  I turned and said, “I hope he keeps moving.”  She said, “He’s up to his axles.  I don’t think he’s going anywhere.”  Half an hour later and with the help of a very large four wheel drive tractor, the truck was free and our pile of compost was dumped conveniently near the garden.  Let's not talk about the condition of the lawn where the truck sank.
            With a crew of five, Ed Fisher, Ron Rodenbarger, Randy and Carol Engler and myself, we managed to fill the six frames in about an hour and a half.  There should be enough soil to fill the remaining frames when they are complete.  By this weekend, if the wet weather does not persist too long, we might plant a few rows of cool weather greens such as spinach and lettuce with some radishes as well.  It was, all in all, a very good day.
            In addition to a few work days over the next month, our first "hospitality"event is in the planning stage.  On May 28th at 6:30 we will have a Seed Time Celebration and Picnic at the garden.  Save the date.





Monday, February 24, 2014

The Survey Says …

            During the last pantry days at Stone Soup Food Pantry we surveyed the patrons to determine what they would like in their pantry garden.  Seventeen surveys were completed representing about 50 people.  The top four picks were: Tomatoes, Green Beans, Cucumbers, and Melons; all received more than 10 votes.  We will make sure theses fruits and veggies receive special priority in the garden.  We also will have room for plants that received fewer votes such as Lettuce, Carrots, and Lima Beans.  In addition, we identified at least six more people who are open to helping out in garden this coming season.  Come on spring!
            Friends in Commons met on February 8th at Gloria Dei Church.  The weather was somewhat kinder than in January and 11 people came together to enjoy coffee, hot chocolate, sweet rolls and conversation.  Wonderful and diverse ideas were shared about the garden, getting it going and what it will mean.  I came away with a growing understanding that Katie’s Commons is so much more than a garden.  It is indeed a Commonwealth, a group of people building and nurturing community.  Out of our meeting came the beginnings of a mission statement: Katie’s Commons: Sowing the seeds of community, food, knowledge, hospitality, and beauty.   It seems that the Commons will have at least three subsets: garden, education, and hospitality.  Those who may not feel called to “serve and preserve”[1] the land in the production of food may find a call in teaching or offering hospitality to the community.
            The next gathering in the Commons will be on March 15th at 10:00 a.m. at the Mulberry Public Library.  Our theme is tentatively entitled: Sharing Seed, Stories and Zucchini Muffins.  This will be a chance for local gardeners to meet, learn about Katie’s Commons, share saved or left over seed and trade stories and knowledge about gardening in Mulberry.  What seeds and practices work in our neighborhood?  What was less than successful?  What might one do differently in the future?
            I confess that in many ways I am just “wingin’ it.”  I realized there is much I do not know as I cobbled together a budget that realistically represents to grantors what we hope to do.  In addition to the use of land, a storage building and access to water given by Gloria Dei, a guess is that we will need about $2200 to build beds, fill them with soil, buy tools, irrigation equipment, etc.  We have received several generous cash donations which have given us the “seed” money to get things rolling.  In addition, to date the Commons has applied for three grants.  We have received the gift of seed from Seed Savers Exchange.  Two other applications, one with Kitchen Gardeners International and one with Home Depot, are under consideration.  We will probably hear from them in the next six weeks or so.  I intend to continue to seek and apply for grants and gratefully welcome donations.
            This is such an exciting time.  I am grateful for the interest and support of so many people with whom I hold so much in Common.
           



[1] a perhaps more accurate and contextually appropriate translation of Genesis 1:28.  See Scripture, Culture and Agriculture: An Agrarian Reading of the Bible by Ellen Davis

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Will the groundhog even be able to get out of its burrow? And why would it want to?


             We had the first community meeting of Katie’s Commons this morning, albeit a small meeting.  As I sat in my office yesterday watching the snow blowing across the parking lot, I was put in mind of a white tide rising unimpeded until it crashes upon the beach, in this case the piles of snow from earlier storms, sending a spray flying, in this case a spray of ice crystals. With more snow and high winds predicted overnight I was pretty sure travel would be difficult to impossible by morning.  I contacted those who I had heard were coming to the meeting and asked them to stay home and put a cancellation message on the church voice mail.  But because I had placed flyers throughout the community and at the food pantry I wasn't sure the word of cancellation would get around.  So I headed for church a little after eight this morning.
            The drifting in my driveway was just shy of the limits of my car.  The town roads were passable.  The church parking lot from a distance did not look too bad.  However, the snow shoals of yesterday had grown by several feet; a direct assault on the front door was impossible.  An overland route to the front door, around a tree and behind the snowbank, was possible and this in turn allowed me access to a side door, locked from the inside, on the West side of the building where the wind had swept the icy sidewalk clean. Once opened, a little salt on the sidewalk made for fairly safe entry into the building. A few minutes later the coffee pot was on.  Access and coffee are about all any Lutheran church needs for a meeting.
            One brave soul, a close neighbor, showed up right on time.  We had a delightful meeting.  We talked about what the Commons is to be.  Certainly the garden is a main component of our work.  It will, as said elsewhere, be a link in the food security chain of our community, planned, planted, tended, and harvested by a community of diverse volunteers for the benefit of our food pantry and citizens without easy access to fresh produce.  But the garden has always been only part of the mission of Katie’s Commons.  There is also an educational element.  We will offer educational opportunities related to food issues, e.g. food preparation and preservation as well as seed saving and basic gardening skills.  Recently it occurs to me that there is yet another component that has always been there, but needs lifting up: community building.  A third volunteer opportunity, therefore, in the Commons is hospitality.  We talked about these pieces of Katie’s Commons, discussed funding and possibilities for grants (we have received a grant of seeds from Seed Savers Exchange and have applied to Kitchen Gardeners International for a monetary and supplies grant), and the immediate goals we must focus on, such as beginning to construct raised beds by Easter and planting in late May.   Our first meeting raised some interesting questions and generated energy to move things forward. I also received affirmation that valuable knowledge, skill and experience resides in the community, far beyond the personal resources of any individual.  It takes a village to care for the common good.
            We will try for a general community meeting again on February 8th.   Gardening, if nothing else, teaches one patience, especially when dealing with the weather.