Sunday, December 4, 2011

Season finale in The Garden of Concord!

Our final season episode was packed with plenty of fabulous food, fun, and fellowship at our Final Fruits luncheon last month. We are so thankful to all of our garden members, garden angels, our community, and Concord UMC for their incredible support and prayers for our garden! We are so thankful to God for His leading in the creation of the Garden of Concord and the members He has graced us with to work and take care of His gift.

The fruits shared with each other were in abundance through many harvests of prayers, joys, and lots of fresh veggies! Beginning with our “Wake up the Garden” in March, our seasons were filled with many fresh beginnings and blessings to include 21 new family memberships along with 10 new feathered friends! We celebrated love at our First Fruits Luncheon, “Nurtured our Nutrition” with our summer garden series, ate lots of tomatoes at our “Tomato Sandwich Supper”, filled up on delicious dishes at our “Fall Harvest Dinner”, splashed on summer nights, and had an especially good thyme with the kidz!

While our garden is officially in slumber, the Brussels are still sprouting and the kale is still calling! The majority of our beds have been tucked in with cover crop and will be full of fresh energy for our new plantings in the spring. We are also still harvesting a variety of garden gifts to include notecards, postcards, prints, magnets, t-shirts, and calendars…all with beautiful photos of our garden taken by garden members. Your support will significantly help buy our seed and feed...for our plantings and our girls! Great Christmas gifts and stocking stuffers!!

We are planning another “Food and Faith” Bible study in January and will be providing the details soon. Also, mark your calendars for our 2012 “Wake up the Garden” tour and celebration on March 3, 2012!

Thank you again for your shared love of God’s creation in the Garden of Concord. Wishing you many seasons of blessings and harvests of joy through the New Year! It WILL be good!

-Donna Poe

Garden Coordinator

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Many Fall Blessings in the Garden of Concord!

Hi everyone.

Thank you for your continued support and prayers for our garden! With the change of seasons, so is our garden as we have been pulling up our summer crops and planting the fall. We have begun harvesting a few leaves of Romaine, turnip greens, and kale, with our spring mix and possibly carrots due in a couple of weeks. Our Brussels sprouts are over a foot tall, the snap peas are creeping up their trellis, and the beets are looking good. The sweet potatoes are being harvested this week with a few previews indicating football size taters! Still picking peppers, okra, beans, and eggplant, and the basil remains bountiful. We have been thinning out and transplanting runners from our strawberry beds and have tons to share (so let me know if you want any). Our chickens are laying an average of 9 eggs per day and we have one broody hen. We will be planting garlic and flower bulbs during the month of October along with preparing beds and planting cover crops for their winter slumber.

We are so thankful for our new intern, Daniel Corpening, along with two new members this past month..welcome Traci Philips and Jennifer Booker! New fall pictures are on facebook and updates on our blog: thegardenofconord.blogspot.com. Our Kidz Thyme continues on Monday nights from 6-7 with Debbie Cook leading our Jr. gardeners in a variety of fun gardening themed activities and is enjoyed by all (including the moms)!

Our fall garden season officially began 9/1, however, it is never too late to join the garden! Only $10.00 per season with our last work day for fall scheduled to be on 11/19, with some of our fall veggies available to harvest through the winter. If you would like to learn more about our garden and have some seeds of ideas you would like to share, join us at our next Garden Advisory Board meeting on Tuesday, October 25th at 6:30 pm. Come grow with us! It WILL be good!

-Donna Poe, Garden Coordinator

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Feelin’ Like Fall!

Greetings from the Garden of Concord! As our summer season and final wave of water nights is upon us, we are excited about the fresh fall “fruits” now planted and planned! We look forward to a bounty of Brussels sprouts, lots of lettuce, beets, turnips, sugar snap peas, kale, okra, and carrots. It is never too late to join the garden!

We are still harvesting some tomatoes, peppers, beans, eggplant, basil, and melons with sweet potatoes soon! Our chickens are averaging a colorful 9 eggs per day and we suspect that they are all now laying. They are also very food demanding so please remember them with any discarded fruits (especially melon rinds) and veggies (not moldy). Our Kidz Thyme will continue through the fall on Monday nights along with shared tid bits during Garden Gritz!

Our summer series, “Nurturing our Nutrition” concluded last month with an informative canning class given by Jessica Oswald from the Alamance County Extension Agency. Thank you everyone for your participation and donations! For next year, we are considering “Getting Back into the Kitchen” for a series of guest chefs! For our 3rd Annual Harvest Celebration Dinner on 8/26, we had a roomful of family, friends, food, and fellowship!

Thank you again everyone for your continued help, support, donations, and prayers for The Garden of Concord!

It WILL be good!

-Donna

Monday, August 1, 2011

One Tomato, Two Tomatoes, Three Tomatoes...

We are all about tomatoes now in the garden as we have been enjoying abundant harvests and had great fellowship at our Tomato Sandwich Supper this past Friday night! Brandywine, Amish Paste, Rutgers, Amana Orange, Valencia, and Yellow Pear Cherry are now readily picked with the Mortgage Lifters, German Johnson, and Longkeepers to be maturing in succession through the remaining summer into fall. We are also enjoying lots of leeks, plenty of peppers, bucketful’s of cukes, bounties of basil, still some blueberries, clusters of grapes, and three colors of beans! In a couple of weeks, our edamame beans should be ready along with some cantaloupes with the watermelons shortly following.

Our chickens have been behaving themselves since we topped their run with a roof. They too enjoy our regular harvests along with the extra donations of treats from all of you! They love stale bread, tomatoes, cantaloupe, and especially watermelon! At our recent Garden Gritz while "Chatting About Our Chickens", 4 eggs were discovered in one of the nesting boxes. Hadn't checked recently because we thought they had another month to mature! Looking forward to dozens more soon from the rest of the flock!

The kidz have been enjoying summer garden fun with our water fun nights and Kidz Thyme which have switched for the season. Kidz Thyme is now on Monday’s from 6-7pm and we then slide on Wednesdays. Garden Gritz will also be on Monday nights at 6:30.

We enjoyed Part II of “Nurturing our Nutrition” yesterday with an amazing presentation by Ron Veitel, the general manager and seasoned nutritionist from Saxapahaw General Store on “The Circle of Nutrition”. His talk provided a detailed understanding of how we are connected to God's creation through a circle of rhythm, cycles,and seasons, the plants and animals He provides, our call to take care of His creation to include our own bodies, and the effects of healthy eating verses non. Part III of our summer series on nutrition is scheduled for Saturday, 8/20 from 12-2pm with a canning class given by Jessica Oswald from the Alamance County Extension Agency.

We also look forward to our 3rd Annual Harvest Celebration Dinner scheduled for 8/26 from 6-8pm. Also our fall season registration begins September 1st with a full menu of crops planned with some already started! It is never too late to join the garden!

Thank you everyone for your continued help, support, donations, and prayers for The Garden of Concord!

It WILL be good!

-Donna Poe

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Part II of our summer series "Nurturing Our Nutrition"

The Garden of Concord invites all to Part II of "Nurturing our Nutrition" scheduled for Sunday, July 31st from 2-4:30 with a presentation by Ron Vietel, General Manager of the Saxapahaw General Store and seasoned nutritionist.

The talk entitled "The Circle of Nutrition" will take us on a round trip tour of the many important elements required in obtaining complete nutrition to include environmental factors,soil attributes, planting, harvesting, and consuming local foods. There will be hands on demonstrations, a question and answer session, and of course some healthy snacks!!

The event is free but we would welcome any donations! Space is limited and reservations are suggested.

Event location: Concord UMC Fellowship Hall. 4462 East Greensboro-Chapel Hill Road, Graham (Eli Whitney), NC 27253.

Come nurture with us...it WILL be good!

-Donna

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

COMPOSTING...Collection to completion.

Our 2nd session of Garden Gritz two Wednesdays ago (sorry..a little behind!) was on composting and why we organic gardeners LOVE this free black gold treasure!

We don't feed the plants, we feed the soil and let the soil feed the plants. Compost is made up of partially decomposed organic materials, mostly plants and the manures of plant eating animals, and the soil dwelling microbes that do the decomposing. Compost helps the garden by providing nutrition needed for vigorous plant growth, improving soil structure, increasing the ability of soil to retain water, contributing to the health of plants, moderating soil pH, and feeding soil organisms. No wonder we love it so much and so does our plants!

In the The Garden of Concord, we begin, side dress, and end our beds and seasons with compost and lots of it. We have been feeding and making our own compost from the beginning and supplementing the large volume needed with gracious donations from Brooks Compost every year. One of my favorite days of the year is when the semi from Brooks pulls up early Spring and I stand there smiling and thanking God while watching 38 yards of rich dark dirt dumped into a huge pile that the kids will be so excited about at the the next garden work night! Without getting too technical,I will share with you some of the basics that I have learned and how we make our compost.

Getting the right balance and recipe for compost is not too difficult, however, the finished product occurs faster if you follow a few simple guidelines. Like everything else that grows, Compost is made up of many elements. The two most important are carbon and nitrogen. Carbon is the "brown" component of compost and would involve the layering of sources such as dried out stems, stalks, or leaves of plants, straw, hay, dried out pea, and bean vines, and fall leaves. All free stuff naturally occurring and gifts from God! The nitrogen element, or "green" factor would include grass clippings, kitchen scraps (veggies, fruits, eggshells, stale bread, coffee grinds..) and any non diseased freshly pulled up plant debris. Our chickens do their part by donating their droppings and feathers when we clean out their coop area.

We had originally built a 4-Bin system using scrap lumber and have since added additional bins with donated pallets for the sides tied together and also one on the bottom (great for airflow). We begin a pile by layering 6" of browns and then following with some greens, then a thin layer of dirt or finished compost and this is when the chickens donations can be added also. Time for more browns again with approx 3" of crunchy dry stuff. The layering then continues while trying to keep a ratio of approximately 30-1 by weight and roughly 3"-1" in volume. Two additional important elements to the living compost is providing sufficient air flow and water. We water in between layers for the consistency to resemble a wrung out sponge and also by turning the pile frequently (after the pile has been layered up to 4'), sufficient airflow will be obtained. Without the above 4 elements and layering increments, the pile will not heat up properly, will delay a timely completion, and maybe get smelly! We strive for workable finished compost within 4 months, but you can still get some good compost w/o a lot of effort by letting it just sit for a year or more.

A fully layered 4' pile should heat up to approx 140-160 degrees fairly quickly and stay up there for 3 weeks or so. If the temp starts dropping, we make sure it has been well watered and fluffed up a bit. After 3-4 weeks, it is time to turn the pile (moving the materials from the outside top to the center bottom) to Bin #2 with then continued frequent watering, fluffing, and checking temp to see if it is maintaining a good heated temp range to around 110 degrees. Another 3-4 weeks later, time to turn to #3 and then subsequently to #4. The temp finally drops to around 80 degrees and we then work it through a sifter we made to shred up and remove any large pieces such as non-decomposed branches. If the pile is not reheating at this point and remaining at around 80 degrees or below, it is considered stable and ready to feed to the garden!

That is my version of "Composting 101" excluding many more details that I could go into, but our Garden Gritz break is over and it is time to get back to work and take care of God's creation!

It WILL be good!

-Donna

Sunday, July 10, 2011

SAVE (and change) the date(s)!

Hi everyone.

We have several garden activities planted this month that you won't want to miss! We continue to slide into the week on Monday nights with lots of cool water splashing fun and on Wednesday's, we break for Garden Gritz with thyme for the kidz at 6! No cooking on Friday, July 29th (postponed from the 16th) as we join together to feast at our Tomato Sandwich Dinner from 6-8 in the fellowship hall. On Sunday, July 31st (originally scheduled for the 10th) from 2-4:30, we welcome Ron Vietel from Saxapahaw General Store for Part II of our summer series "Nurturing our Nutrition".

The kids will have a BLAST the week of July 17-21 with an "out of this world" vacation bible school planned with Concord UMC. Galactic-Blast takes off on Sunday, the 17th and continues through the week beginning with a provided meal at 5:45 pm followed by a full spaceship of discoveries, stories, singing, dancing, crafting, and praising God! The activities conclude each night at 8:30 and there will be a special performance by the kids on Sunday morning, the 24th followed by a covered dish fellowship luncheon. For more information, please contact Commander Kevin Miller at kevin.c.miller@duke.edu. Please note that because of all the cosmic activity happening that week, we will not have our Monday night splash night, nor Kidz Thyme scheduled, however, the garden WILL be open and hoping for visitors by the parents of the Jr. Astronauts!

Looking ahead on the calendar for August, we finalize our summer series with a canning class presented by the Alamance County Extension Agency in the afternoon of the 20th as we practice with some of our own harvested tomatoes and cucumbers. On the 26th, we share our favorite garden recipes with each other and the community at our 3rd Annual Harvest Celebration Dinner. All of our dates can be found on our blog (thegardenofconcord.blogspot.com) and the details for our garden events will be provided in succession!

Thank you everyone for a great summer and your continued support of our garden! It WILL be good!

-Donna

Monday, July 4, 2011

FIREWORKS in the garden with lots of RED tomatoes, WHITE potatoes, and berry good BLUEberries!

Happy July everyone and thank you for all of your help, support, and prayers for our garden. Our hot nights have been on fire with many members and kids (and chickens) working and taking care of our garden while enjoying abundant harvests graced by our God. We have been sliding into summer on Monday nights with lots of water fun, water pools, and watermelon and will continue through the remaining summer. Come splash with us…it WILL be cool! “Kidz Thyme” from 6-7pm on Wednesday nights has now been paralleled with “Garden Gritz” at 6:30 every week for a short water break and chat about garden tips and topics.

While we have retired most of our spring plantings, we are still harvesting Swiss chard, carrots, lots of basil, dill, parsley, and other herbs, along with a few strawberries still sighted. We have begun harvesting blueberries, beans (green, yellow, and burgundy!), potatoes, jalapeno and banana peppers, leeks, and even a few tomatoes! Stock up on your Duke’s mayo because we have over 200 tomato plants in ground to harvest until the first frost. The peppers and eggplant have begun flowering while the beds of sweet potatoes, cantaloupes, cucumbers, and watermelons are all filling up fast. We also look forward to one of our newest plantings..Edamame beans!

This past month we had our first gathering of our Summer Series “Nurturing our Nutrition” with the class, "Learn How To Make Cultured Vegetables" led by garden member, Denise Kennedy. Over 20 people shared in fellowship and tastings while listening and participating in a hands on demonstration along with a great Q & A session about general nutrition. Our next class will be on the 31st of this month from 2-4pm with Ron Veitel, the general manager and chef from Saxapahaw General Store sharing a presentation on nutrition and the benefits of consuming healthy, organic, and locally grown foods. More information will be provided soon. Also save the date for Friday the 29th to attend our Tomato Sandwich Dinner from 6-8pm. Yum!

Our next GAB (Garden Advisory Board) meeting will be held on Thursday, July 7th at 7pm and is open to anyone interested in sharing ideas and/or learning more about our garden.

Thank you again everyone for a super summer! Praying for many July blessings (and more rain)!

It WILL be good!

-Donna Poe

Monday, June 27, 2011

"Support" feature is under construction...

Thank you for your past,present, and future support of our garden! The "Support" feature to the right enabling donations to be planted in our garden will be operational shortly...it WILL be good!

Kidz Thyme!

Our Kidz Thyme program is full of fun organized, supervised garden activities every Wednesday night from 6-7pm led by Debbie Cook and helpers (moms:) Stories, snacks, crafts, dancing, (and yes gardening!) are shared with our Jr.Gardeners designed to nurture a love for gardening (and eating vegetables!) along with taking care of God's creation while also giving the moms some alone time in the garden as well. Ages ranges from 2-12 with the older kidz helping out with the little ones. Come spend thyme with us...it WILL be good!

Garden Gritz: Maters and Taters!

While the kidz had their thyme, we had our first Garden Gritz gathering last Wednesday night at 6:30 and talked about maters and taters. Briefly, we discussed the two different types of tomato plants (Determinate-having a set amount of fruit produced, a bushy type plant with no pruning necessary; and Indeterminitate-plant/vine continually grows with an indeterminate amt of fruit and needs to be pruned regularly to keep under control..especially the suckers). We talked about the varieties planted in the garden to include "Brandywine" (A tomato sandwich tomato dark pink/red in color) The first two beds planted in May and we just harvested our first 4 maters today!; Next up, "Amish Paste" (A smaller Roma type tomato..new to the garden this year) Planted 1 1/2 beds of this heirloom tomato; Rutgers (a fav from last year. Good tomato for slicing or saucing...the tomato that Campbell's Soup grows for their soup!); Our yellow tomato bed consists of "Valencia" (which we grew last year and they were de-lish), "Amana Orange", and "Yellow Pear Cherry" (cute as anything) all of which are low acid tomatoes great for those that don't do well with regular maters. Next up is the locals' favorite.."German Johnson". A whole bed..so stock up on the Duke's mayo! Last but not least (and to be the longest!) we have planted "Longkeeper Tomatoes" recommended to us by our own Marion and Bobbie Hargrove. They were so excited about this breed of tomatoes which enabled them to enjoy a tomato in March saved from their last season's harvest in VA...sounds good to me! We have planted each bed a couple weeks apart to prolong the harvest of fresh sweet maters until the first frost and hopefully if the Longkeeper's pan out, we will enjoy our favorite fruits of the garden while the snow is falling!

We also talked about potatoes and the importance of harvesting them on a cloudy day or as the sun sets. A natural forming toxin called solanine that develops in sunlight turns the taters green. Ironically, when the potatoes are cut and planted, we set them out in the sun to develop a thin layer of solanine which helps protect them from diseases and pests. After harvest, however, the solanine is not needed nor wanted because in small does if consumed, they can be toxic and in large amounts, fatal (yikes!). So if you can't wait until our next garden harvest of potatoes and have to buy them from the store and you notice green on them, either cut that section out or better yet, just throw out and wait till our next harvest!

Thank you everyone for a great first Garden Gritz! Next week we will chat about composting from collection to completion. It WILL be good!

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Springing into Summer in the garden...

"There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven...a time to plant and a time to uproot…" (Ecclesiastes 3:1-2)

Our summer season begins this month with a garden full of many fruits and friends! We have been blessed in abundance and welcome the plantings of so many new members this year along with the replanting of past members! We have lotz of kidz attending our Wednesday night “Kidz Thyme” now led by Debbie Cook (thank you Debbie!) as they engage in an hour of garden themed activities full of crafts, dancing, singing, snacks, and yes..gardening too! Thank you everyone for your help and support! It is never too late to join the garden! Come grow with us!!

Some of our spring plantings have begun to final with flowers while many are still producing. Our long awaited peas, broccoli, garlic, strawberries, and onions were well worth the wait and we look forward to our beans and blueberries later this month. Our tomato plants are in ground with more planned…looking forward to that first tomato sandwich!! Lots of peppers planted too with eggplants following soon. Many cantaloupes and watermelons seeded and praying for no squash bugs!

The garden girls are very happy in their new home and playground (Thanks John Galloway and Tim Cook!) Our 10 chickens are fed a menu of organic feed with garden greens daily and will return their gratitude with fresh eggs to share in the fall! We also look forward to welcoming many butterflies into their new houses built for them by Bruce Pederson (thanks Bruce!) and painted by the many hands of our kidz! Bruce has also planned and will be building our garden shed later this month (thank you again!)

This past month we celebrated Mother’s day with our annual flower sale with many plants purchased in support of our garden (thank you!). We also enjoyed our 1st Annual First Fruits Potluck Lunch as we showered Eric Prenshaw and his fiancĂ© Carley, with gifts for their upcoming wedding along with thanking him for all his help in the garden through his internship. Thank you everyone for your help and support towards both of these events.

Following on our successful summer series last year of learning how to cook with our harvests, we have planted three workshops this summer designed to nurture our knowledge on nutrition and learn about why all this good food we grow in the garden (and buy locally) is so good for us. We begin with the class, "Learn How To Make Cultured Vegetables" led by Denise Kennedy, a natural chef and certified nutritionist (also one of our garden members!) on June 11th from 2-4pm in the fellowship hall. There will be a talk, hands on demonstration, door prizes, and product purchase opportunities. The cost is $10.00 per person. See Donna Poe for signup and details.

In July, we welcome Ron Veitel, the general manager and chef from Saxapahaw General Store on Sunday, the 31st from 2-4pm with a presentation on nutrition and the benefits of consuming healthy, organic, and locally grown foods. In August, Jessica Oswald, from the county extension office joins us on Saturday, the 20th from 12-2pm for a two hour lecture and hands on demonstration on preserving our food through canning, drying, and freezing methods. We will provide more details soon on both of these events. Save the dates for our super summer series!

Looking forward to growing with you this summer…it WILL be good!

-Donna Poe
The Garden of Concord