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May 2008 Archives

May 1, 2008

Miami: Fairchild Botanic Garden

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Tonight at the Fairchild Botanic Garden in Miami, you can watch their production of A Midsummer's Night Dream.

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Go early and stroll the grounds to see the sculptures of Fernando Botero, the glass art of Dale Chihuly and the installations by Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein shown for the first time ever in a world-class botanic garden.

May 2, 2008

Wildflower Week in NYC: May 3rd-10th

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There are all sorts of events planned for Wildflower week that include native plant give-aways, lectures, guided walks and kids activities where they plant seeds and learn about worm composting.

You can find a full schedule here: NYC Wildflower Week


The website touts all sorts of facts, including this one that seems so hard to believe:

New York has a higher percentage of open space than any major city in United States. About 25% or 53,000 acres is city, state and federal parkland--that's more than Los Angeles, Chicago and Philadelphia combined.

(Where is all this open space?)

This fact is easy to believe:

Gotham's spaces serve 8 million people, more than any other urban park system. However, New York City spends only $41 per resident per year on its green acres, with next to none of it going toward management of natural areas. By contrast, Seattle and Chicago annually spend much more per capita - $164 and $108 respectively.


Revisted: Cuba's Urban Vegetable Farms

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I was recently in Havana, Cuba to write about urban vegetable farm movement for Saveur Magazine.

The Cuban government estimates the urban-area harvest of vegetables, herbs and spices in 2005 including urban farms, intensive gardens, plots of land and family gardens, totaled 4.1 million tons. Raul Castro, before Fidel got sick, spearheaded the push to increase urban farms. When the Cuban government decides to mobilize, it does so in a big way. Their goal is to have every vacant lot in Havana cultivated.

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At the age of 75, Nestor Suarez works seven days a week at an organoponico, or urban vegetable garden in the neighborhood of Vedado. I asked him if this was punishment for a misspent youth, and he laughed, then shrugged and said, "It's my work. I like it."

He gestured to the rows of vegetables--beets, spinach, chives, planted in neat beds. As we made our way through the herb garden, he then started explaining the benefits of the herbs to me: siempre viva is for headaches, chamomile helps with skin problems, anise is to give you a strong stomach. Or, as Nestor put it, "Le da animo." It gives you spirit.

We stopped under the shade of fruit trees, where he showed me a passionfruit, still green on the tree, and then a noni fruit, pale yellow and naturally pocked. He picked a few small ripe bananas for me to try.

"If this wasn't a garden, it would be filled with garbage. Instead, all year long we have food for the people," Nestor said, then added the distinctly Cuban phrase, "Tiene que resolver."

"Resolver" has been Cuban's battle cry, chant, groan since the Special Period. It means to find a way to survive, to make the impossible, possible. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1989, Cuba lost 80 percent of its imports. Known as the "The Special Period," government food rations were cut in half, public buses didn't run, and blackouts rolled through the cities. Hoping to crush the government, the United States tightened the embargo by passing the Cuban Democracy Act (1992) that prevents the docking at a U.S. port of any ship that has docked in Cuba six months prior or that plans to visit Cuba within six months after. This further reduced food and medicine reaching the island.

The scarcity of both imported food and fuel made urban vegetable gardens the most practical solution. Cuba didn't have chemicals to use as insecticides, so they had to use organic methods of pest control.

Corn had been planted around the perimeter of the area. He pulled back a leaf from the plant to show me the blush of aphids gathered. "These keep the aphids off the other vegetables, and then we use ladybugs to control these insects."

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I'd love to get this gardening crew up here on a work visa. Senate, Congress? Please

May 4, 2008

Sky Vegetables

Sky Vegetables
is an interesting Blog/ Website on Urban Rooftop Farming: http://www.skyvegetables.com/

Here are a few stories from them.

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Plastic Wading Pools + Roof = Successful Vegetable Farm
April 4th, 2008

Dr. Ebenezer proved that growing vegetables on a rooftop using plastic wading pools was feasible. In 1997, Dr. Ebenezer and his team were able to harvest 984 pounds of vegetables from 38 pools in an area measuring 1,625 square feet. One pool alone yielded an average of 22.5 pounds of tomatoes, cucumbers, bell peppers, zucchini and a variety of greens. This is equivalent to about 26,800 pounds per acre. This is a photo of Dr. Ebenezer with his wading pools

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By: Geoff Wilson

Gregory Chow has demonstrated already, what can be done in rooftop farming with his award-winning project on the atrium of the 800-bed Changi General Hospital The hydroponic farm on the atrium of the 800-bed Changi General Hospital in Singapore. The bare concrete of the atrium roof was a problem in that it diverted sunlight into nearby wards - to cause objectionable glare and heating. The rooftop hydroponics, growing cherry tomatoes and herbs, solved the problem and created a rooftop farm that now supplies patients with healthy fresh food. Another Singapore hospital is about to go even further in food from the roof.

May 6, 2008

Lawn Alternatives: Moss

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I love moss and I've been trying to use more and more of it--it has the charm of creeping thyme, sort of an enchanted forest feel about it, and is, according to a recent New York Times article Moss Makes a Lush, No-Care Lawn , moss is very good for growing in bad conditions and takes a fraction of the rainwater that lawns need. Visit Moss Acres


A moss lawn could be a stunning look for a shady backyard, with no mowing and no fertilizer. I've mixed moss with tiny hinoki cypress for window boxes, image a landscape with these colors.

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May 8, 2008

Shades of Gray

A client recently told me that her favorite color was gray. This was in reference to her garden. As first I was a little stumped, but then I remembered that silver is just another word for gray. So we create a palate of pale bluestone, perenial borders with silver and gray foilage like lavender, sea holly, lamb's ears, catmint and blue fescue grass. All the blooms will be purple or blue, and we mulched with gray/white stone. The final touch was an aluminum shed. She had some old teak in her backyard, so we used it for doors on the shed. Full pictures to come when the job is totally finished, but here are a few pics of the gray garden in the meantime.

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NYTimes: Urban Farms

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There's a great article, Urban Farmers' Crops Go From Vacant Lot to Market in this week's New York Times, on crops growing in unexpected urban places.


Pull Quote:

This urban agriculture movement has grown even more vigorously elsewhere. Hundreds of farmers are at work in Detroit, Milwaukee, Oakland and other areas that, like East New York, have low-income residents, high rates of obesity and diabetes, limited sources of fresh produce and available, undeveloped land.

Soho Window Box Farm

This week I installed a vegetable and fruit garden in window boxes for a loft in Soho. This family has a big worm composter, so the kids in the family gather their vegetable wastes and feed the worms, then the worm casings are fertilizer for the garden. They really love the worms and the garden. (The youngest is responsible for picking off the strawberry flowers until the fruit starts.)

Here's where I got the goods.

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Strawberries, cucumbers, green beans, and snap peas are from
Crest True Value Hardware on Metropolitan Avenue in Williamsburg.

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Fig tree and raspberries are from David Shannon Nursery and Florist. (They have blueberries and a great selection of fruit trees as well.)

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Lettuces, nasturtium, heirloom tomatoes including green grape, yellow plum, and red cherry as well as specialty herbs are from the Blew Family Organic Farm at Union Square Farmer's Market.

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They ordered their worm composter online, and it really is a Cadillac of worm bins. Here's a similar three level with a spout. (The casings come out in liquid form and you can water your plants with them) Go to Arbico Organics to learn more.

May 12, 2008

Brooklyn Design

On Sunday I visited the Bklyn Designs Show in Dumbo to see what was available for the outdoors. There were lots of beautiful tables--the ipe ones shown here are specifically made for outside; there were some interesting chairs and mobile seating made of lightweight cement, and even some bug lights that could be adapted for outside with some solar lights. The fabrics by Aviva Stanoff are for interiors, but the gorgeous patterns of coral, feathers, nets and florals appeal to nature lovers.

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Laidman Fabrication


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site specific design


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Oso Industries

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Produce-Design


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Robert Martin Designs

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aviva stanoff

May 15, 2008

Bakery Urging Customers to Tear Up Yards and Plant Wheat

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Bakeries Urge Customers to Plant Wheat
by Tina Antolini

Listen at NPR website NPR Website

Day to Day, April 28, 2008 · "To combat the skyrocketing price of flour, several Massachusetts bakeries have taken on a project that's part Little Red Hen, part World War II Victory Garden. The bakeries are recruiting their customers to till up their lawns and gardens and plant wheat."

May 18, 2008

In The News: Guerilla Gardeners of Montreal

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Guerilla Gardeners of Montreal

Read the full article at The Gazette

Pull Quote
These three Montrealers are part of a worldwide army of self-styled urban guerrillas, some operating solo, others in clandestine collectives. What they sow, though, isn't strife, but seeds.

They are guerrilla gardeners.

Their mission: To beautify ugly urban patches and neglected sites by planting herbs and flowers. Illicit cultivation, they call it; their war against the neglect of public space.

May 19, 2008

In The News: Growing Places

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This non-profit program in Boston donates raised bed gardens to the elderly and families who need the produce. Read the full article here: Gift of a vegetable garden yields much more than food


Pull Quote:

Now in its seventh year, Growing Places Garden Project helps qualifying households establish and maintain raised-bed gardens to provide fresh food during the growing season. Cindy Buhner and Kate Deyst are experienced gardeners who head up the organization and share their knowledge, time, and muscle to ease some of the burden of food costs among households in need.

For those who qualify, Growing Places will set up gardens, complete with seeds, seedlings, and periodic visits to check on the garden, at no cost to homeowners. In the fall, the organization returns to help with garden cleanup. It operates with a yearly budget that just doubled to about $60,000 with the hiring of Jodi Breidel in the new role of executive director.

May 21, 2008

Darwin's Garden at the NYBG

I made my way out to the The New York Botanical Gardens to see the exhibition "Darwin's Garden, an Evolutionary Adventure" last weekend. Much of it spreads through the gardens and is more about interpreting the existing gardens. This was particularly interesting when walking through the tropical rain forest and moss rooms. Science facts, tales of his life and explanations of eco-systems was a great way to re-experience the gardens. His gardens (and the views of them from his house) are stunning, with lots of foxgloves, delphinium, and poppies. He had over 100 vines growing, as he was fascinated with their growing patterns and their desire to stretch upwards. His kitchen gardens are recreated and will evoke envy (keep in mind, this is a very climate controlled situation), and you get to look down cupped plants with magnified lens and get a "bug's eye" view of their stamens. The exhibition is up until June 15th and it's really worth the trip and would be great for children.

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May 22, 2008

Why they call it catmint

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May 24, 2008

Upcoming

What: Free Urban Gardening Class

When: Thursday, May 29, 7:00 PM

Where: (A location for this meeting hasn't been chosen yet)

Meeting Description: WHAT: Free Urban Gardening Class

In this class we will go over more advanced permaculture techniques such as intercropping and catch cropping. We will provide details on the various vegetables and crops that can be grown in season right now. Additionally, we will have live demonstrations of planting 2 annual crops(Pole Beans, Squashes) and 1 perennial crop (asparagus).

WHERE: 420 E 12th St New York, NY 10009

WHEN: Thursday 5/29, 7pm

WHO: Adam Horwitch (Urban Rooftop Gardener)
Ke Xu (Suburban Backyard Gardener)

COST: Free to attend. Optional Fee of up to 5 dollars.


SPONSORS: Green Sacs, Tri-State Food Not Lawns

Learn more here:
http://permaculture.meetup.com/61/calendar/7985938/

Chelsea Flower Show

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To see a video of the garden installations at the Chelsea Garden Show, click :
here to see it.

In a separate article, the horticultural editor, Andrew Fisher Tomlin speaks about the trend of

"Slow Gardening" .


Pull Quote:

Wallpaper horticultural editor Andrew Fisher Tomlin said yesterday at the Chelsea Flower Show Garden Design Forum that slow gardening would be a long-term trend. He said that as economic crisis drove people to reconnect with gardens through grow your own and spurred the return of a new romanticism, hard landscaping would give way to soft.

May 25, 2008

Indoor Edibles

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The progressive people at Deep Green Living ordered some indoor edibles. I have to admit, I'm guilty of putting emphasis on aesthetics as opposed to bumper crops, but there's no reason that edible plants can't also be beautiful.

I've mixed herbs with lettuces and pansies in Eco-pots. Since mint is so aggressive, I left them in their containers and put them in a larger square pot. The mints here include chocolate, orange, pineapple and spearmint. They smell just wonderful.

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This container has thyme, rosemary and a pansy. (The rosemary and thyme both like to be a little dry but the pansy just looked so cute, I couldn't resist adding it. We'll see how it works.)

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This one is bronze fennel, sorrel, and purple basil.


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Here's a few cat grasses from the Farmer's Market--the plan is to try and lure the kitty away from the other plants.

May 28, 2008

Small Gardens in NYC that City Dirt Recommends

City Dirt Recommends:

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Noguchi Museum

The flow between indoors and out is perfectly seamless here, with trees growing through the roof, and outdoor rocks and benches serene around the sculptural trees in the courtyard. This is one of my favorite museums in New York City. It's has a subtle, peaceful beauty, but the creative energy of the Japanese-American artist Isamu Noguchi is palpable.

Tucked away in Long Island City, it's worth the trip.

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Battery Park City Battery Park City

Renowned Dutch garden designer, Piet Oudolf designed these gardens that run along the Hudson River. Native grasses and big clusters perennials like catmint and blazing stars are just stunning. He also created snaking rows of barberry that sets off variegated boxwoods and grasses. He is truly a master. The Battery Park City Park Conservancy is to thank for this.

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Avenue C Community Gardens

From the funky to the lovely to the "what the hell is that?" the community gardens along Avenue C in the East Village are great places to drop into. You might catch a live theater, a game of dominoes, or just a stunning clematis vine in bloom.

About May 2008

This page contains all entries posted to City Dirt in May 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

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