Loaves & Fishes Giving Garden A cooperation between Mondelez Global, U of I Extension Master Gardeners and Prosek s Greenhouse.

Similar documents
Planning Your Vegetable Garden

Some Things to Start Off With

Vegetable Gardening 101

Fall Vegetable Gardening

A Beginner s Guide to Vegetable Gardening in Kentucky Plans and Preparations

Growing Vegetables in Containers

Container Gardening Basics

SEASONAL PLANTING STRATEGY AT A GLANCE

Fall Vegetable Gardening

SEED SOWING INSTRUCTIONS

Best Vegetable Garden Ever. C Compost will improve your soil C Calendar to plan your garden C Consistency in your care

Starting Transplants & Sowing Seeds. George Bushell

Gardening Basics. If you are lucky to have a big, sunny space for planting, you may only need to add good soil on top of what you already have.

Spring Vegetable Gardening. Presented by: Kent Phillips

I. Establish a Core. II. Develop a Plan. Garden size. Location- be sure the garden has. Recruit your garden work force

Risley Avenue Primary School Scheme of Work 2016/17

YOUR FARM. AT WORK. CORPORATE WELLNESS PROGRAMS

Vegetable Gardening. Courtney Keck, M.S. Horticulture Horticulture/4-H Educator Canadian County OSU Extension

Virginia Cooperative Extension- York County

gardening and [ADVANCED ACTIVITY PAGE] W145 Healthy Lifestyle Choices A S Tomatoes Repels flies, hornworms and mosquitos C E S Carrots

Square Foot Gardening. Presented by Sandra Cook U.R.I. Master Gardener, Class of 2008 Certified Square Foot Garden Instructor

BASIC ORGANIC GARDENING Specific Harvests: Cool and Warm Season Crops; Cole; Vine; and Perennial Crops with Introduction to Berries

Master Gardener Vegetable Specialist Training. Prepared by: Thomas LeRoy

Introduce edible flint and the reason this guide was created

ALLOTMENT CORNER. March. In the vegetable garden

Planning Your School Garden Program

What is a keyhole garden?

Building a Raised Bed Vegetable Garden: The Easy Way For South Florida Gardens & Schools

Plant Parts In the Garden LESSON

SOIL TESTING RESOURCES MSU

Two Key Principles. Backyard Vegetables. Five Factors to Consider in Selecting a Garden Site. Drip Irrigation

Seed Starting Indoors and Outdoors

GARDENING PLANNER. ourhappyplace.ca

Growing With Your Food: Planting an Edible Garden

COLD CROP VEGETABLES

Growing Transplants. ID-128 Home Vegetable Gardening in Kentucky (pages 8-10)

The Gardening Timetable. The Timeline:

IN OUR COASTAL CLIMATE

school garden planting guides

CLASS NOTES ON WATERING YOUR VEGETABLE GARDEN

Hands On Planting the Fall Vegetable Garden

LOcal Gardening Initiative of Carbondale (LOGIC) Project ID# 15SP103 Award Dates August August 2016 Total Funds Used: $18,992.

Charlotte Glen Horticulture Agent, Pender County Cooperative Extension

4. Use the Plant Cultivation Chart to look up whether or not the plant variety needs a heating mat to start the seeds, and type of plant hardiness.

Home and Market Garden Fertilization

SCIENCE NEWS. If your child has specific plant allergies, please let me know so I can plan accordingly.

Vegetables Chapter 10 OSUE MGV Training. Pam Bennett OSUE State MGV Coordinator Horticulture Educator

Roof Garden Gal An Experiment Five Floors Up!

GARDEN MANUAL. Agro-Bio Diversity. October 2015 / Issue 01

Photosynthesis Pictorial

GROWING A SCHOOL GARDEN

TRACKS Lesson Plan. Lesson 4: Physical Activity and Planting a Garden Grades 9 12

NCR-SARE Youth Educator Grant Project

HAPPY VALLEY GARDEN. Lazy Days of Summer?!?

Extending the Season

Part Round House Productions 1 Inc. All Rights Reserved.

CLIENT GUIDELINES Field Sampling for Pesticide Analysis

Once again I am glad that I got all the winter digging done before the rains came.

2018 Colorado Planting and Task Overview Calendar

Growing Vegetables Part II. To Direct Seed or to Transplant? Why Use Transplants? 1/18/2012

U Paper Towel Gardening

Home of Underwood Gardens

SCIENCE NEWS. If your child has specific plant allergies, please let me know so I can plan accordingly.

Vegetable Gardening 101

TAKE YOUR GARDEN TO HIGHER LEVEL! Rebecca Krans Michigan State University Extension Consumer Horticulture Educator

Squash in. the Schoolyard by Susan Blackaby Build Vocabulary. Online Leveled Books H O UG H T O N MIF F L IN H ARCO URT

ANNUAL SEMINOLE GARDEN PROJECT.

Vegetable Gardening When Mother Nature Doesn t Cooperate

My Tower Garden Journal

Super Soil for Organic Gardening. George Bushell

Organic Gardening. Plano Community Gardeners Share Their Experience

SEASON EXTENSION. Nahshon Bishop Lincoln University Cooperative Extension Small Farm Specialist Southwest Region

Creating Your Organic Garden:

Session 3: Raised Beds and Container Gardens

SMALL IS BEAUTIFUL. E. F. Schumacher, economist

FY2018 Wayne Metro Community Garden Program APPLICATION Due by 5:00 PM on January 26, 2018

My 2018 Vegetable Garden Journal Introduction

Home Harvest USA Total # of Gardens $ Harvest Home Gardens # $ Community Gardens # School Gardens # $ TOTAL # $

Level 2 Certificate: Principles of Garden Planning, Establishment and Maintenance

Horticulture 2011 Newsletter No. 43 October 25, 2011

GrowCamp - U LT I M AT E V E G E TA B L E G R O W E R. Grow your own

One formal workshop (three hours) was held in Jinotega; 22 women.

Session 4: Maintaining Your Garden

Harvest & Post-harvest Handling. By Liz Birkhauser Farm Manager, Birch House Farm

With the following directions you can be successful at growing vegetables.

Create Your Spring Planting Schedule

Page1. Title: Planning a Garden Using a Grid Grades: 3 Subject: Science, Math Time: 45 minutes

Parts of a Plant Educational Resource Packet

Texas Home Gardening Guide

Companion Planting: Plants Need Friends, Too!

Extending the Season The Vegetable Garden in Carteret County, What Now?

Vegetables. There are two different types of vegetable planting:

School Awards Carlibar Primary School s Evidence

COMPANION PLANTING FOR EDIBLES

Winter Gardening with Low Tunnels. John and Linda Mount July 20, 2014 Rev: August 4, 2015

COMMUNITY LUNCH & LEARN. Workshop Notes. Container Gardening

Practical Ways to Start Following Permaculture Principles in Your Garden

FORESTRY RESOURCES DECEMBER 2016

Site Requirements. 8 hours full sun. Close to water. Deep, well drained and uncontaminated soil

Growing Vegetables In Containers

Transcription:

Loaves & Fishes Giving Garden 2015 A cooperation between Mondelez Global, U of I Extension Master Gardeners and Prosek s Greenhouse. Garden update, July 9, 2015

The last garden update was from June 8 th. Four weeks later, I thought by now we would be done with cool season weather; reporting only on warm season progress, but not so much. There is still cool news! The majority of the cool season crops were harvested over the past few weeks (thanks Maureen, Fritz, and Laurie who helped with the bulk of this) Be sure to check the harvest totals and pictures to see just how successful the addition of cool season plants to the garden were. The sugar snap peas are still producing and new planting of spinach is off to a good start with cooler temps than normal. There has been much more rain than average as well which means more weeds in the garden than in years past. With several teams canceling because of weather, help is needed! Especially in the carrot bed while they are very young. Kale and collard greens are still thriving and harvest of outer leaves is ongoing. Garlic is ready to harvest. Warm season crops, tomatoes, summer squash, and peppers are doing well, cool temperatures and rain considered.

Month in review. Planting: New crops that have been planted since the last update are carrots (thanks Diane this is a great example of broadcast planting. She took her time and planted carefully which means very little thinning needed. Will include a picture once the bed is weeded. (see below) Spinach has germinated well. Green beans as well.but there are a few pest problems to report. Who says rabbits like carrots best it is the tender beans as they emerge that they love. Beets have been planted in both the large bed and in containers in potting soil. Come check this out along with potatoes and sweet potatoes growing in crates.it is fun. A new row of cucumbers has sprouted this past week in the large bed. They will be trained up the metal trellis which needs to be secured for windy days. Help needed: Always. We have been so fortunate (to a point) to not need to spend as many hours watering this summer as normal. Only the bales and young plants have needed more frequent watering than our scheduled work days. Remember, if you can t come a day or cancel because of weather the work in the garden still needs to be done. Please consider when you might be able to work extra time to help or find someone to work for you. Did I mention that help is needed? It is! Pests: This is the current challenge in the garden. Ideas for how to keep the little furry guys out of the garden are appreciated. Am considering adding fine meshed wire to the bottom of the entire enclosure. I have seen mice in our straw bales when I water and found a small brown furry guy (vole/mink/weasel?).hiding under a bag of potting soil. Oh and rescued a large toad from a water bucket filled with rain water from the last storm. Keeping the garden area free of litter and cardboard etc is very important. It allows the maintenance crew to mow more easily and gives little guys less nesting opportunities.

Today s garden lesson theme: Proper plant spacing yields bigger, healthier harvest. When Ronalyn first planted the red cabbage seedlings, she followed the directions on the donated cabbage starts to the letter. (which is, incidentally, why it is a good idea to post the crop info next to crop for plant and harvest date, etc) This variety was to be planted 18-24 inches apart. The bed looked empty when she was done but at harvest, the pictures tell you just how much space cabbage leaves require to thrive. Thriving means less disease, less competition for nutrients, and larger heads. Even drier soil at the plant root which we needed this rainy year! Need we mention more food? On average, the red cabbage yielded 4 lbs each and the green cabbage 3.5 each. Susan and Jerry harvested the broccoflower and cauliflower on June 27, 2015. As you can see from the photo, the same rules apply to spacing!

Harvest News. little change big result. A simple, but effective improvement to our harvesting practices. Some of what we harvest, we place in small quantities in bags provided by Loaves and Fishes. Other crops, such as cabbage, cauliflower, and broccoli we just put in crates. A quick note to harvesting practices,: If you are scheduled for a 2 hour shift, please perform garden work before harvesting. This means food will not have to sit in the sun longer than necessary. Adding a note of when crop was harvested helps communicate to the volunteers at L&F from whom the donation is and when it was harvested. This helps ensure that our donation will get the proper handling once it leaves our hands. And most importantly.. the respect our hard work and donated harvest deserves. Please take a moment to attach the note to each crate we deliver. The slips of paper are in the notebook in a plastic baggie in the storage cupboard.

One of these things is not like the other.. so.ask a Master Gardener! I ll buy anyone the drink of their choice if they know or can research just why this cauliflower grew this way. It tasted fine but looked odd. It never made it to the food pantry. Can t wait to hear what you all find! I don t think it could have been prevented but interesting. Eat your greens Master Gardeners, Diane and Ellen, harvesting collard greens and broccoli on June 9, 2015. That day s harvest was 44 lbs of cool season crops.

To compost or not to compost? That is the question Fritz and Ronalyn on June 30 th harvesting green and red cabbage. We have a compost bin and have been adding healthy compostables and straw throughout the season. Note to team: we should start taking out some compost! Ronalyn is using Fritz s heavy hammer to smash the stalks which helps them break down more quickly. We have a small compost heap hiding behind the straw bales for the slower compostables. Nice gardening tip, thanks team!

DATE POUNDS CROP 16-May 11.0 radish, red&green kale, collard greens, early broccoli 23-May 2.0 radishes, early broccoli 30-May 38.0 broccoli, kohlrabi(1), collard greens, red&green kale, radish 2-Jun 10.0 radish, broccoli, lettuce, pak choy, kohlrabi(3-4) 4-Jun 9.5 radish, kohlrabi (2) - 3 pounds radish unusable; woody, tough 6-Jun 18.0 10.5 PakChoy, 7.5 lbs lettuce 9-Jun 44.0 16 broccoli,7 lb cabbage(2),10lb pak choy,4.25 Kale, 5.5 collard greens, lettuce,parsley,spin 13-Jun 3.0 1.5 lb cabbage (1) collard greens and kale.5 each, radish 16-Jun 9.5 9.5 kale, lettuce, peas, radish, and parsley 20-Jun 55.0 cabbage, broccoli, kale, lettuce, sugar snap peas, mustard greens 23-Jun 0.0 no harvesting done 27-Jun 36.0 17 brocco/cauliflower,10cabbage(3), 2lb mustgreens, 7sugar snap peas, rest radish lettuce FYI. 30-Jun 37.0 11lbgreen cabbage, 3.5 green/red kale, 21.5 lb red cabbage 7-Jul 0.0 no harvesting done record rainfalls in Naperville Monday night! 11-Jul 0.0 14-Jul 0.0 273.0

Maureen started new crops of beans and beets in containers from Loaves and Fishes. They are thriving here next to sweet regular potatoes. Since she sent me this picture from June 13 th, the tops of some of the beans have been chewed off.we are making some bunny very happy. Usually once the plants get a little bigger this should not be a problem.we just need to get some warm weather so they will start climbing out of reach. Ideas / help appreciated.

Food for thought. This is a photo from my front stoop. The cucumbers love the radiant heat from the brick wall and stone pavers and bugs don t. I have limited space at home for veggies and am always looking for creative ways to sneak them into the landscape. They hide themselves well! Just had to share. Thank you all and hope too see you all soon!