Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

More Dirt on Dirt.

Here is a fantastic resource for dirt issues. I have just started working on my microbes in my garden soil. It makes so much sense I now think about what is going on in the garden soil when my plants don't seem to be doing well.

Get the Dirt on Dirt

I have believe I have posted links to Dirt The movie before. I wanted to post a new link so any one wanting to watch the film online can do so. If you have not seen this film I strongly recommend watching it. Dirt is where we came from and it is when we will return. It is so important to a existence. We need to make sure we protect it.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Local foods taste good.

With the price of gasoline rising, now may be the time to start enjoying a more local diet. Here is 8 ways to get you started. I often joke about after you pick and eat your first fresh garden tomato you will never buy the ones at the supermarket again. Which is true in my case.

With transport prices going up our food security is in jeopardy. I was at a local cafe eating dinner last Wednesday evening, and there was a sign that stated "Tomato on Salad by request only". This is where we are headed I am afraid. We can no longer afford crappy tasteless Tomatoes.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Pink Petunias in the Snow

More information to help you get your fall garden started. This is for zone 5 so here in zone 7 all her tips should work out for you.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Time to get ready.

It is hard to imagine with the heat of the summer outside, but fall garden planting is just two weeks away. Here is the schedule.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Making a new life just like the old life

I wanted to share this article with everyone. For those of you who has shopped at the Nam Hai you can relate to the part about the market. I go into the Nam Hai and I look at the produce and wonder what all the stuff is and how do you cook it. The Nam Hai has a lot of root crops. I wonder if they are different kind of potatoes?

There is a movie called The scent of green papaya. I could not find a link to watch it online, but I would recommend watching it if you see it at the rental place or in a bargain bin. The story is rather boring but the food and garden scenes are my inspiration. As I create my outdoor living space I want to replicate the house in the movie.

A quote from the article; "Without stringent regulations or organic certifications, the Saturday open-air farmers market still welcomes all comers." Here in Tulsa these families selling their surpluses would be considered criminals. As I was driving down Charles Page Blvd, I saw a hand written sign nailed to a telephone pole. The sign advertised Home Grown Veggies for sale straight from the garden. I didn't pursue the location of the garden to see if it was in the city limits (illegal) or in the County (might be illegal). But I could not help thinking, how have we gotten to the point that hard work, skills, and entrepreneurship are considered criminal activities in the City of Tulsa. Is it just to limit competition with the big box corporate stores? Or are there previous produce illness outbreaks that have prompted draco

Times are changing and we need to change our 1950's suburban sprawl zoning. We have to be able to be more local with our food. And if someone has a "Green Thumb" they should be able to sell their surplus with no interferences or burdens placed apon them.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

OPCG Work Party

Breaking ground and first planting party at Owen Park Community Garden. Edison and Santa Fe. Tonight at 6pm

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Requiem for Detroit

I watched this BBC documentary last night. Very good insight into the rise and fall of American's fourth largest city, and the collapse of the industrial world as well. It ends with the Urban homesteaders raising food on empty lots. I loved the guy talking about he makes $500.00 a week growing food in Detroit, and the other guy exclaiming "That is about the same that I make working at Chrysler. You can watch it online. If you have a slow Internet connection, press play, let it connect and buffer, then hit pause till it downloads.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Saving your garden seeds

I was watching the documentary Collapse, and one of the things he stressed was to save your seeds for next years planting. I have started growing a variety of sweet pea and I have been successful in saving to seeds and getting them to germinating the next year and actually be the same plant as the parent plant.

I was talking to a friend about saving seeds and she told me that her mother had green bean seeds that had been passed down from mother to daughter for countless generations. She was so distressed about it because at the time she was not gardening and did not get the bean seeds from her mother to plant before her mother died. She has contacted relatives, but no one has the bean seeds for her to start growing. That strain of green beans that her family ate for generations is now lost to the ages.

As I plan my garden this year I want to try and grow varieties I can save the seeds from. I was shopping for seeds at my local garden center, I felt lost. I know I can always refer to the OK State fact sheet. But can you save the seeds and get the same plant year after year?. The fact sheet does not say. The seed packs aren't labeled. Should I just buy some and hope for the best? It could be two seasons before I find out it was a bad decision. Then just because it is an "Heirloom" doesn't mean it will grown well in Oklahoma.

Then just like the Lone Ranger, I get an email discussing the topic of seed saving. It seems the Kerr Center has done the trials and here is the list. So for those of you who are concerned about securing seeds as part of your food security, you will find everything you need to get started.

Friday, March 19, 2010

In case you missed it...

Kim Flottum editor of Bee Culture Magazine and author of The Backyard Beekeeper. will be the keynote speaker at Bee Buzz this weekend. Rich Fisher interviewed him this week on Studio Tulsa. You can listen to the Interview online.

More from Cleveland.

I always thought it surreal to go into the Shopping Malls from the 1980's with the imitation outdoors environment under the expansive glass atrium ceilings. Promenade Mall is a good example of this. The outdoor shopping center was enclosed to allow complete control of the shopping experience. And of course you have to have the sound of falling water to give you the right white noise in the background. But what do you do when Macy's packs up and leaves? You revamp the Food Court.

I have been reading a lot about Cleveland Ohio.

Cleveland is one of the northern cities hit hard by job migration. Like Detroit and Flint, Cleveland's citizens are coming up with some innovative survival tactics to rebuild their community. I have ranted before about the Tulsa Development Authority holding land in common just to grow Bermuda grass. I think the concept of a "Land Bank"is much more inline with today's realities than the "Development" concept of the 1970's urban renewal. Why does a place have to hit rock bottom, and land revert back to nature before land use becomes a political topic. It is crazy that we have huge discussions about Tulsa's parks and rec centers. But no one every claims we do not have the money to mow or maintain TDA land.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

My Bees were flying yesterday.

I has so happy to see the Bees flying yesterday. We are starting to get acquainted. Get acquainted? Yes these are new born bees so they don't know me yet. I was kinda worried about the Dog lying in the sun right in the middle of the Bee yard. I was afraid the Bees would trigger the alarm like a bear was coming in for the attack. But they settled down and started the orientation flights. They still haven't got use to the cat. The girls just don't like dark and woolly. I have mixed feeling about spring being here. I am glad the the cold is got, but I am in my new house and I am surrounded by a Bermuda grass desert. I have a lot of work ahead of me and a blank slate to do what ever I choose.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Late Notice.

Tulsa Community Garden Association Meeting. This evening at the Blue Jackalope on third and Phoenix. 5:30 pm.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Owen Park News

After the new year I am going to hold a meeting with Chris and anyone else who want to attend to about the future of Owen Parks Community Garden. The location we are using now does not get enough sunlight. I plan on starting a face book group to organize the neighborhood.

Brady Heights Garden News

Meeting to decide the future of BHCG is scheduled for December the 28th. Call Justin for more details. You can get his number off the sign in front of the garden.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Sad News

Any one willing to help out I am sure BHCG would greatly appreciate your support.

Justin Pickard wrote:

We are officially losing the community garden lot. As some of you know, an heir of the deceased lady who owned the fire-damaged-house that was bulldozed by the City, contacted us a couple months ago wanting to reclaim the lot. Because the lot is encumbered with so many liens (close to $40,000 with the City's liens and a mortgage lien), we believed that no heir would want to go through probate to get a lot that had so much debt compared to its value ($5-10,000). Unfortunately, we guessed wrongly. The heir who contacted us has a wealthy nephew who is a very successful boxer and is unconcerned about losing money on the deal. At one point he considered selling us the lot, but now has decided firmly that he is not going to do that. He has asked us, graciously, to move everything off the lot by the end of January (so we wouldn't have to do it during the holidays).

Obviously, the need to move everything is discouraging. However, it is quite doable. (1)The bed frames will pull up easily and are light to move; (2) I have a friend who has a front end-loader and we can scrape the soil from the beds and transport it with that (3) the fence can disassemble into sections (4) that just leaves fruit trees and strawberries to pull up and some other odds and ends. The main concern I have is that we nail down quickly a new location to which we can move the garden, so that we do not have to move everything twice. And having had this experience, we would want to have the ownership of the new lot sealed to avoid this happening again.

There are two lots that are possibilities (and if anyone knows of others, let us know). One lot is for sale at 1024 N. Denver Ave. (sw corner of Denver and Latimer by the Tisdale Pedestrian bridge). It has some advantages such as its central location in Brady Heights proximity to the commercial buildings (when say when our grocer and Tara's coffee shop are open), room with the closed off portion of Latimer for holding famers' market, outdoor concert's or neighborhood block parties, etc.). Novus Homes is currently asking $15,000, which is probably why they have been unable to sell it. We could offer less. I spoke with the owner and he is interested in self-financing it, but only for two years. This would give us the option to break it out into manageable payments.

The other available lot is the second lot north of Marshall on the east side at 1207 N. Cheyenne Ave. The owner of it actually contacted me when he saw my number on our garden sign. I am now having trouble getting a hold of him, but I think he would take $5-6,000 for it. The lower cost would obviously be a benefit, plus the easy proximity to the current garden in terms of moving everything. I also see it as an opportunity to get to know our neighbors to the north of Marshall. The adjacent owner of the blue house to the south is a sweet elderly lady, who said she was definitely in favor of the garden being there.

What does everyone want to do? Should we have a meeting to discuss this? We could hold it at my house. Should we try raising money prior to the end of the year to catch the tax deductible donations? Or should we try raising it amongst ourselves? Russell or others, do you know of grant opportunities? Again, I'll stress that we really need to work out a permanent location so that we only have to move things once, which means we need to do that in the next month.

Justin Pickard