Gardens Founded in 2001 - Home in 2002

Echinacea - Photo by Laura Davis

The garden began in 2001 with the help of Norm Erickson, a Northland Hospice volunteer, at the corner of Switzer Canyon Drive and Turquoise. At that time the home had not been completed but a beautiful sign was placed on the corner. Norm continued to work on the beds on the east side of the sidewalk along Switzer Canyon Drive and in front of the home, until 2008. The rest of the gardens were developed by a core of Coconino County Master Gardeners initially led by Laura Davis and since 2007 by Loni Shapiro.

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.
_________________________________________________________________

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.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Workdays 7/22 & 7/25


On Monday our crew did not need to water. The rains have left all the garden very moist. Betty Marcus spent her time deadheading. Julie Holmes cleared invasives from around the roses, and the Girls for Good filled bird feeders and baths. I spent my time getting material for the Thursday workday, weeding lots of pine and elm seedlings, and replacing some plants in Zane's garden.

We had another productive day on Thursday with 9 volunteers from AmeriCorp helping. As usual, they tackled some big projects, and managed to find time to weed, clean up pine needles, and spread mulch as well.
Sandstone Pad
Rock Pathway
Adding Weed Cloth to Rock Path
"Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others cannot keep it from themselves."-  James M. Barrie 

The three projects were all pathways: a sandstone pad/path to the new trellis, adding weed cloth to our new corner pathway, and lining the rock mulch path from Switzer to the Rose garden with rocks.

Rebecca Davis helped manage the weed cloth project, Jeanette Sletten reworked our small shade garden along Switzer (she added Knickknick and Coral Bells to the existing vinca and leveled the soil. Betty Marcus spent her time deadheading and taking some of these beautiful photos. Carol Hudenko finished adding perennials to the corner. Whitney Fessler and I weeded some of the many ragweed and bindweed already growing on the corner. Linda Guarino was back and worked on compost. We have another small pile of finished material. Joe Harte worked on tree pruning and removing suckers.

I returned home on Thursday and found my tomato plants essentially done for the season. On 6 plants I had maybe 10 tomatoes left. The storm brought devastating hail to the east side and particularly Mt. Eldon. I had broken solar lights, and a hot tub cover full of holes. Thankfully the new roof made it through. Ah! weather in Flagstaff is always a challenge for gardeners.

"The good rain, like the bad preacher, does not know when to leave off."-  Ralph Waldo Emerson

Blooming:
Shasta Daisy, Julia Child's Rose, Red Monarda, Burgundy Daylily


 

Photos by Betty Marcus

New in the Garden:
Sandstone path to the new trellis
Rock lined mulch path to the Rose Garden from Switzer
Updated corner garden (perennials, weed cloth on path)

Work for the next few weeks:
Watering - inside and outside as needed.  Make sure native bed with new wildflowers is wet, porch plants, new clematis and honeysuckle, corner garden, moon garden trellis, native garden wheelbarrow, and Jobs tears, and shade garden along Switzer
*Weeding as needed. Check rose garden for perennials choking out roses and remove pine seedlings
   With a garden tour coming up pine and elm tree seedlings need to be removed
*Gather rock for a native garden rock garden, and to line the new path from Switzer to the Rose garden
     Once created, fill with soil/compost, and transplant some plants from other areas of the garden
*Circle garden - transplant some blood grass, and weed (Chia?)
Reset bricks under the bench just north of the Faerie Garden
*Finish weed cloth on corner (about 6 feet)
Move mulch to needed parts of the garden
Clean up compost area

Upcoming:
August 9   Peaks Residents Garden Visit 1230pm
August 17  10am-12pm Garden Club Visit
August 25  430pm-7pm Thank You Potluck/Judith Chaddocks

Thanks, Loni

No comments:

Post a Comment