Gardens Founded in 2001 - Home in 2002
Echinacea - Photo by Laura Davis
The garden crew is active from April-October and sometimes in November weather permitting. Work happens weekly throughout the garden season on Monday and Thursday mornings from 8:00 am-12:00 pm. It also is scheduled for one Saturday a month from April through October. Cancellations due to weather will be posted by 6:00 am of the workday on this blog. You must attend a spring orientation to the garden and Northland Hospice & Palliative Care in order to work. A summary of the work that has been done is included on the blog. Look for weekly postings on this blog during the garden season.
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Volunteering in the Garden
2015 Calendar
April 13, 11:30-1:30 Lunch and orientation for new volunteers at hospice and TB testing for all
April 16, 9:15-10 TB tests read and 10:00 garden orientation. First Thursday workday 9-12
April 20, First Monday workday 9-12
May 2, Saturday workday 9-12
If you are interested in volunteering, please email CrysWells@gmail.com.
Please note: TB testing is required annually for all garden volunteers.
If you have current TB results that were done by a physician or at a hospital, these may be submitted to Northland Hospice.
If you are unable to attend the meeting, please contact the volunteer coordinator Kathy Simmons (ksimmons@northlandhospice.org) to schedule a time for testing and orientation.
Friday, June 3, 2011
Workday 5/30/11 & 6/2/11
Wow! What a beautiful day to work in the garden. We had one of our biggest volunteer days for the season with 17 volunteers showing up to help.
Nancy Palmer, Marcia Lamkin and Rebecca Moore weeded, watered and placed sandstone pieces for a pathway in the Michael Moore Garden. Kay Balzer, Becky Lewis and Jim Woods all worked on the 1/2 circle garden. They gathered rock from Kay's property with the help of Jim Wood's trailer and then began creating the hardscape. Jim was quite a trooper with recently fracturing some ribs. Judith Chaddock, Cynthia Katte, and a new master gardener all worked on the roses. They pruned, uncovered the crown area, fed and then watered. The aphids are already abundant with our cooler/wetter spring. David Hockman continued to work on the north pathway. With a few more pavers he should be finished next week. Crys Wells and Vicki Goodwin both watered needed beds not yet on the drip and pots for our plant sale. Char Wallace finished pruning the lavender and helped with watering some roses. Marilynn VanWagner did the nasty job of pruning the germander along the inferno strip. Joe Harte pruned some trees and repaired some drip lines on the inferno strip. Linda Guarino and Carol Lease both continued to work on repairing and adding drip lines. Betty Marcus watered the south inferno strip and the corner garden. I spent my time updating the sensory pots and planting vegetable that Linda brought from her greenhouse.
New blooming in the garden:
Ox-eyed daisy, salvia, Austrian Copper rose, some penstemons, colorful iris (pink, yellow, orange), and the hawthorn and mountain ash trees
New plants added:
Veggies - pickling cuke, zucchini, Japanese cuke, Japanese eggplant, summer squash, bunching onion, salad burnet
Sensory pots - Color/Little Zebra grass, pineapple sage, statis, alyssum
Touch/Carex,horsetail rush, white licorace, yellow strawflower
Taste/Fern leaf dill,chocolate mint, stevia, curled and Italian parsley
Smell/Chocolate mint, alyssum, Provence lavender, trailing rosemary, fragrant Persian stonecress
Tea Garden - German chamomile
Plans for next week:
Planting annual pots and hanging baskets
Finish planting perennials
Finish north pathway
Rose care - aphid control
Watering as needed
Continue adding drip lines
Get soil for front 1/2 circle
Come join us on Monday (9a-12p) or Thursday (8a-12pm). Parking is available on Turquoise just past Switzer Canyon Drive or in the 1st Congregational church lot.
Hat and sunscreen are recommended for this warm weather. Water and snacks will be provided.
"Perhaps our best hope for gardening as an art is that gardening is an activity whose never-achieved aim is progress towards a never achieved work of art."
Geoffrey Charlesworth The Opinionated Gardener 1988
Loni
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