Good Afternoon Gardeners!
This
Saturday, May 9th from 9-10:30 am we are holding a HUGE Planting Day! We
have a bunch of tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, chard, kale, tomatillos
and basil that are ready to go in the ground and need all hands on deck!
The past few days of rain have really soaked the garden adn teh soil is
prime for pulling weeds and planting. The Grand Junction Main Street Community Garden is a product of friends and families in your neighborhood working together on a communal plot to create a productive garden. The Community Garden features shared rows of vegetables, herbs and flowers, cared for and harvested by you. Please join us!
Thursday, May 7, 2015
HUGE Planting Day: Saturday, May 9th, 9-10:30 am!
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Great Story in the GJ FreePress
This week we got great coverage in the local Free Press! Read on about the garden, our history, and the great community it fosters. We still have a few slots open for new members too!
http://www.gjfreepress.com/news/16144942-113/growing-a-community-garden-new-members-welcome-at
http://www.gjfreepress.com/news/16144942-113/growing-a-community-garden-new-members-welcome-at
Monday, March 30, 2015
2015 Garden Season
We hope everyone had a great winter and is now enjoying this glorious spring and looking forward to of all the growing opportunities! We set some important dates for the start of the 2015 garden season. There are signups to be completed, direct seeding to take place, signs to be painted, compost to be spread and hand-tilled, and fun events to be planned. Dates and details are below.
We really want everyone to ENJOY their time being part of the garden and feel like the garden is their own backyard. Like last year we will try to limit emails and rely more on this website and Facebook to relay more detailed info on plants, to do lists, and other fun tidbits. Also, "like" us on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/ pages/GJ-Main-Street- Community-Garden/ 150874234966542)
Sign ups:
We will hold two sign-up and work days on TUESDAY, MARCH 31st, 5:00-7:00pm and TUESDAY, APRIL 7th, 5:00-7:00pm. Please plan on attending as this year we will once again be limiting the garden to 40 participants. Cost will be $50 per household for the season. Cash or checks accepted.
Expectations:
Our weekly work sessions will be held on Tuesdays from 5-7pm and Saturdays from 9-11am. Throughout the season all members will be required to participate in a beginning of the year event and an end of season event as well as 15 hours throughout the season. In order to allow everyone to keep track of their participation, there will be a sign up sheet located on the side of the toolshed. Every week there will be a garden leader who will be responsible for helping direct the activities, weeding, planting and harvesting for the evening. Please let us know if you want to be a garden leader this summer, these are critical to keeping the garden going!
Keep in mind our garden is all natural and herbicide and pesticide free! (This means more manual weeding and sometimes creative ways to address bugs!) For those of you that are new, we plant the garden together, meet on Tuesdays/Saturdays to care for the garden and harvest once a week. Everyone present on Tuesdays/Saturdays is encouraged to take home a share of veggies. For people that can't make Tuesday evening work sessions you should plan on working and harvesting at a time that works for you, and remember to log your time on the sign up sheets.
We will be creating garden committees this year to tackle some individual projects so let us know if you are interested in a specific project or becoming more involved
- Compost: creating/installing a better system and turning compost weekly
- Irrigation: maintaining the system and improving as necessary
- Art/Information: create more informative bulletin board/kiosk, signs around the garden
- Other ideas?
If you cannot make it on Tuesday, we will be accepting members until we reach 40. We will also develop a wait list-if necessary-after the sign-up day. We will do an assessment of participation in mid-June, and if some spaces open up then we'll invite people from the wait list to join.
Plants & Plantings:
We have already started all of our transplants in the greenhouse in Palisade (tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, kale, chard, herbs). We also encourage all members to start their own seeds and bring the starts to the garden to plant, especially if there's something different that you'd like to see in the garden, a certain variety that you'd like to try growing or just want to start your own seeds but have no garden of your own to plant them in!
Upcoming Dates:
- Tuesday, March 31 - Sign Up Day/work day - remove rocks and weeds, spread compost, organize shed
- Tuesday, April 7 - Sign Up Day/work day - remove rocks and weeds, spread compost, organize shed
- Tuesday, April 14 - Work day - finish spreading compost, set up new compost bins
- Tuesday, April 21 - Work day - build beds, lay drip tape/weed mat, direct seed greens
- Tuesday, April 28 - Work day - continue to build beds, lay drip tape/weed mat, prep for planting
- Tuesday, May 5 - Planting Day 1!
- Tuesday, May 12 - Planting Day 2!
Tuesdays/Saturdays- from then on every Tuesday from 5-7 and Saturday 9-11 we'll have garden sessions!
Fun Things:
Since we want this to be a fun year, we are thinking of having more potlucks, perhaps a couple talks on various ag related subjects and show a movie or two. Let us know if you have any ideas! These would probably be on Tuesdays after the garden session. We know there are quite a few kiddos that come to the garden, and if there's someone out there who wants to organize a small kids' plot, or even a coordinated dirt pile for kids to play in during work sessions, let us know! If you have other ideas on how to make the garden more fun, interactive and community oriented, feel free to share your ideas in the comments section of this website!
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Harvesting How-To
Harvesting is one of the most satisfying parts of gardening and if done correctly will help yield a seemingly unending supply of produce. Generally, it's best to harvest only ripe produce, allowing the newer veggies to grow to their full potential over the next few days. In the Garden we harvest ripe stuff together as a group every
Tuesday and Saturday, and then encourage people to harvest individual
portions of greens (chard, kale, arugula, mustard etc) and herbs on
their own. Below are a few tips to harvesting in the Community Garden, with some photos of ripe produce.
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Carrots: Pull carrots very carefully to avoid pulling of the tops. You may want to gently loosen the soil around the carrots with a garden fork then wiggle and pull them out. A carrot is ready when you can see a little bit of it above the soil, or when the soil is brushed away you can seen the top orange part.
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Kale: This dinosaur looking kale should be harvest when the leaves are over 12" long. Snip off 1-2 of the outer most leaves per plant when harvesting. |
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Kale: This curly kale should be harvest when the leaves are over 10" long. Snip off 1-2 of the outer most leaves per plant when harvesting.
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Pepper: turn red after being on the plant for awhile, these are still wonderful to eat and cook with.
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Tomatillos: harvest these when the papery shell starts to split and make way for the green or purple fruit inside. When ripe these fruit are very easy to pick by hand as they will fall off easily. Lift up the vines when picking tomatillos and look for fruit that may have fallen naturally. |
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Mid-season catch up
Happy
Tuesday gardeners!
We hope you are all enjoying summer! As promised this year, we are not sending out many emails, but rather keeping everyone updated on our FB page and blog (here!). However, we wanted to get everyone up to speed and make sure you all are aware of what is going on; so here is the news:
Growing:We hope you are all enjoying summer! As promised this year, we are not sending out many emails, but rather keeping everyone updated on our FB page and blog (here!). However, we wanted to get everyone up to speed and make sure you all are aware of what is going on; so here is the news:
The
garden is finally taking off after a rather slow spring. There were a
few glitches in the watering system- but they are all fixed now thanks
especially to Trish and Matt. Please be careful when
walking around the irrigation system as some connections are fragile. If
you see a break please let us know ASAP. We have had more pests than
usual this year, so we will be spreading diatomaceous earth around
seedlings, squash and cucumbers. We will also be fertilizing the garden
with an organic fish fertilizer this week which should give it all a
nice big boost. We'll repeat this again in the first week of august.
Remember we have garden sessions every Tuesday from 5-7pm, Saturday mornings and you can also stop by whenever it works for you.
Yes!
We have a brand new compost barrel. Please bring your kitchen scraps
(just NO meat/eggs/dairy) and a moderate amount of seed-free lawn
clippings to the black bin every week. Just open, dump in your scraps,
and close. The sooner we get it filled the sooner we can get it
composting. It will need about 100 days to compost and then we can start
the cycle over again. This will be great for the garden next year and
it keeps your food waste out of the landfill.
There
are tons of weeds- like always and we encourage everyone to do their
part. If all 40 members pulled a few weeds every week our garden would
be spotless :). Right now we want to pay special attention to getting
out all of the GOATHEADS. There is a huge patch of
them near
the alley way, and there are babies all over the garden. These hurt feet
and paws and will puncture bike tires. Please pull every-single-one and
put them in the trash. After that pull weeds wherever, remembering that
the herb beds in back need weeding as do the front flower beds near the
road.
The strawberries were a delicious first bite of spring! The lettuce and small greens are done for the season and we are moving on to lots of green beans, tops of the basil plants and greens like chard. The garlic may be ready as early as next week! And in a couple of weeks we will start having lots of tomatillos, peppers and tomatoes too! If you see little blue borage flowers at the beginning of the rows- feel free to pick a few and put them on your salads- they taste like cucumber. And remember you are always welcome to harvest herbs as needed.
As always, we welcome your feedback and
encourage you all to get more involved if you want to say, lead
composting, organize social events, plant a special variety of something
or become a garden leader!
See you soon,
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Work session tonight. Jess is your garden leader and will be directing the following:
Weeding: Everywhere! There are giant weeds in the pathways that need to go. The dead weeds can be left in the pathways, but GOATHEADS should be thrown in trash. There are lots of goatheads popping up and we need to pay special attention to getting them all out!
Re-seeding: We will be reseeding the areas where we harvested the radishes and spinach as well as the “annual herb” area where nothing is growing (middle of bed) and the chamomile bed and we can take out the peas as well. The irrigation lines should be pulled back, and then the weeds pulled and the soil re-worked with a pitchfork. After leveling the beds back out, replace the hoses. The front bed near road should be planted in summer squash, three seeds per area a couple of feet apart. The other areas should be seeded with kale, broccoli and pok choi cabbage …and mustard greens if we have room.. Those should be seeded in two parallel lines about 8-12" apart, one on either side of the irrigation lines. Please seed these regularly, one seed every ½ inch or so. These do NOT need to be clustered along the holes in the irrigation line. After seeding, cover the seeds, water well with watering cans, and at the end sprinkle all seeded areas with a heavy dusting of diatomaceous earth across the newly seeded beds. We have a lot more bugs than usual this year and this should help with some of them. Label all rows when done!!
Harvest: there are beans to be had, please make sure all of the ripe ones are harvested so they will keep producing. Also people can harvest cilantro and herbs as needed. Please pinch all flowering ends of the basil. And greens (arugula and chard) can be harvested as people want. Encourage people to come harvest lettuce in the early mornings as it is less bitter then.
Fertilizer: I will be buying some fish fertilizer to spray the garden. This should be done at the very end, as it kind of smells! But parts of the garden could use a little boost!
Weeding: Everywhere! There are giant weeds in the pathways that need to go. The dead weeds can be left in the pathways, but GOATHEADS should be thrown in trash. There are lots of goatheads popping up and we need to pay special attention to getting them all out!
Re-seeding: We will be reseeding the areas where we harvested the radishes and spinach as well as the “annual herb” area where nothing is growing (middle of bed) and the chamomile bed and we can take out the peas as well. The irrigation lines should be pulled back, and then the weeds pulled and the soil re-worked with a pitchfork. After leveling the beds back out, replace the hoses. The front bed near road should be planted in summer squash, three seeds per area a couple of feet apart. The other areas should be seeded with kale, broccoli and pok choi cabbage …and mustard greens if we have room.. Those should be seeded in two parallel lines about 8-12" apart, one on either side of the irrigation lines. Please seed these regularly, one seed every ½ inch or so. These do NOT need to be clustered along the holes in the irrigation line. After seeding, cover the seeds, water well with watering cans, and at the end sprinkle all seeded areas with a heavy dusting of diatomaceous earth across the newly seeded beds. We have a lot more bugs than usual this year and this should help with some of them. Label all rows when done!!
Harvest: there are beans to be had, please make sure all of the ripe ones are harvested so they will keep producing. Also people can harvest cilantro and herbs as needed. Please pinch all flowering ends of the basil. And greens (arugula and chard) can be harvested as people want. Encourage people to come harvest lettuce in the early mornings as it is less bitter then.
Fertilizer: I will be buying some fish fertilizer to spray the garden. This should be done at the very end, as it kind of smells! But parts of the garden could use a little boost!
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
Compost time!
Gardeners, please feel free to put your home compost materials like kitchen scraps and small amounts of leaves (NO dairy, meat or woody materials) into our new black compost bin. Once we have filled it we will let you all know. At that point we'll simply allow it to "compost" for about 3 months and then we'll start the process over again. Happy composting!
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