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Archive for the ‘community garden’ Category

About a month ago, I received a tip in the middle of the night that the garden was gone.  Gone, I thought?  That’s impossible.

But when I went to check it out, it was about as “gone” as a garden could be.  The remaining autumn plants and perennial shrubs were removed.  In October, I bought clover seeds online, to sow as a ground cover over the winter and bring much-needed nutrients to the soil.  I also read that clover works especially well with grape vines, which I had recently planted and had high hopes for covering the cinder block wall.  But instead of a lush green ground cover, I found mulch.  And under the mulch was some synthetic netting, I suppose to keep out the “weeds.”  And under the netting, I found those baby weeds, my little green clover sprouts with no hope for survival.

Obviously, I was enraged.  I went into the Ba Le Bakery where the garden is located, and got in a long line of customers.  Persistently, I asked a couple of employees, and finally a more helpful manager what happened, or what could have happened.  They clearly had no idea; they concluded that some Mexican neighbors came by and took the vegetation.  I told them that people had been picking stuff all along, but nobody has ever mulched over the whole darn thing.  Finally, they gave me the number of the gardener for the entire shopping center, but I never could get a hold of him.

I feel that this is the end of an era for me.  And I’m not sure if I should even continue this blog.  I’m tempted to keep posting about my nature/garden-based findings throughout the city, since that’s what I’ve always loved: the way nature creeps its way through urban environments.  We will see what happens, and if I will ever find another prime location for a guerrilla garden.

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Sunny sunflowers

 Someone gave the gift of Christmas cactus

 

 

 

 

 

(more…)

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Hello friends!!!!  I’m sure you are wondering what I’ve been inheriting from nature’s bounty these days!

Though not quite guerrilla, this is the community garden around the corner.  The Mighty Writers kids grew this plot and it’s bursting with arugula, dino kale, tomatoes, basil, jalapeno, chard, rosemary.  Good lord, I just can’t eat it all.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At 6th and Washington, the only plant that really loves the heat is the sunflowers and, I guess, this squash which I didn’t even plant this year…

I’ve just been picking up trash, sprinkling some rotenone dust to keep away the bugs, and doing a little weeding.  Otherwise water is left to mother nature.

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 This season, I planned to have 3 gardens in South Philly:

1.  Last year’s garden at 6th and Washington

2.  Giant empty lot at an Unnamed Location

3.  Hidden shady spot at the old YMCA on Catharine

The garden at 6th and Washington has some tough-ass kale, collards, garlic, and parsley still growing from last year.  Crazy weird flowers are shooting out from these plants.  It is overgrown beauty.

But not just crazy weird flowers!  After the flowers fell off…. magical beans appeared.  A woman came up to me today and told me she speaks to my plants whenever she walks by.  She demonstrated saying things like, “very good job, very nice work”  This woman told me the collard seeds were combined with beans at some point … I don’t know!   Could this be true??

I will meet lady next Sunday at 5pm if anyone would like to join us for  plant convos.

In other news,

people sarcastically joke about guerrilla gardening being “edgy” and “badass,” which I agree is so silly.  But I got in some edgy, badass trouble the other day at the Unnamed garden.  I really can’t say too much more about what happened because I could truly put several aspects of my life at risk if do… but I absolutely positively cannot continue to…. GROW VEGETABLES.

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Cauliflower sprouts have been planted!

Carrot seeds!

Garlic cloves!

…but someone removed the markers so I don’t know where they are exactly?

Ladybug and praying mantis sightings!

Corn husk compost!

Wheat pasted signs, but I don’t think they will hold up for long. Any ideas for something better to cover the wall?

I also wanted to give a shout out to Amy, who has offered to volunteer some of her time at the garden. South Philly thanks you.

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In my excitement for fall, I went out and purchased so many seeds without realizing I had little land left to plant them! So I cleared the weeds and trash on the other side of the wall of the garden on 6th Street to make more room. I haven’t had much success planting seeds in the city sidewalk soil, but I made another attempt this weekend and planted carrot seeds. What’s next? Maybe kale or cauliflower!!!!

I also wheat pasted this blog’s address on the wall. Has anyone seen it??

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0818091701

A neighbor, who has already been to the garden to harvest tomatoes and basil for frying, offered to add some worm juice to the soil. Yum!

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The flowers on the pumpkin vine might be the biggest hit of the garden. The other day a neighbor stopped at the garden to tell me about this great sounding Italian-tapas-like recipe for fried squash blossoms. I found this recipe online and can’t wait to try it with the pumpkin flowers:

How to Cook Zucchini Blossoms
janetarfin Member
By janetarfin
eHow Community Member
Article Rating: (0 Ratings)
How to Cook Zucchini Blossoms

You can use the blossoms from your zucchini plants to make a little known and delicious Sicilian specialty.

Difficulty: Moderately Easy
Instructions
Things You’ll Need:

* Fresh male squash blossoms
* eggs
* seasoned bread crumbs
* butter
* frying pan

1.
Step 1

There are always more male than female blossoms on a zucchini vine. First thing in the moring, between 7 and 8 am, go out to the garden and collect sturdy fresh male blossoms. These are the ones which are on long stems and do not have a tiny, baby zucchini growing under them. (make sure the female blossoms get a little of the pollen before you take all the boys! See my other article about this.)
2.
Step 2

Wash the blossoms and remove the stamens from them. Beat your eggs and prepare the bread crumbs on a plate. Melt the butter in the frying pan.
One egg will coat four or five blossoms.
3.
Step 3

Dip the blossoms in the egg, than the bread crumbs, and fry lightly in the butter until golden. Enjoy for breakfast or a snack.

If you have a lot of blossoms and want to serve them as an appetizer with dinner, put the uncooked, fresh blossoms in a bowl of cold water in the fridge and they will keep until later.

Yummy!

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After returning from WWOOFing, I visited the garden and found myself pretty impressed with the plants. They are strong little organisms, and I’m quite proud of them.

Many thanks to Danny T for adding a sunflower and tomato plant, and doing a bit of maintenance.

My organic farming experience will very valuable to the garden, methinks, as now I know some natural fertilizing and insecticide techniques. I also stopped at Triple Oaks to get some seeds for the fall! For some reason I was all bummed out that I’d have to end gardening soonish, but that was silly because now I know I might be gardening well into December. I have plans for kale, leeks, carrots, potatoes, etc

I also came home to a fabulous Gmail inbox. Turns out someone actually saw my sidewalk chalking of this blog’s addy! and wanted to ask me some questions for a community research paper of sorts. Turns out Lotus is a quality teacher in the making, and wanted to learn about the community where I’ve been gardening and where she will soon be student teaching. Anywho, I’m honored that she considers the garden a “community asset,” and I’m really hoping we can get some of her kiddies involved in the guerrilla gardening experience come autumn.

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July 20th I’ll be leaving for some Kentucky WWOOFing and I’ll be gone for 2 weeks.

If anyone could stop by the garden during this time and pull out even one weed or pick up even one piece of trash, I’d be plenty grateful.

Our garden needs:

-weeding

-trash picking

-watering

-picking the tiny leaves off the top of the basil

-re-staking, since the stakes keep falling… or getting removed

0709092010

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