Sunday, July 26, 2009

Open House Follow-Up

Thank you to everyone who came out to our Open House on Saturday July 18th!

We had a couple dozen community members visiting along with a couple dozen volunteers present. We had a BBQ to appreciate our volunteers who have worked hard to get the garden to where it is now. Our neighbours got an extensive tour of our garden and what its doing.

Here are some photos from the day:

A southern facing view of the garden from its centre point.
Tomatoes visible in the foreground, hot-house on the left side of the frame.

Two of our volunteers reseeding lettuce in between existing rows.

A volunteer is harvesting snow peas.
Snap peas and raspberry bush visible in the foreground.

Some of our younger volunteers are taking a tour of the garden between the beet and carrot rows.

Thank you all again for your interest in the UofA Campus Community Garden. Visit again shortly for tips and tricks in the garden as we go along with harvesting, composting, reseeding, and doing some final transplants - the organic way!

Monday, July 13, 2009

Garden Open House - Sat July 18th


We're opening our fence gates to give our neighbours and friends in the community a better look at our garden on the UofA campus!

This Saturday, July 18th, from 10am - 4pm, we'll be having an open house at the garden. There will be a market of fresh produce, herbs, potted plants and compost available for purchase (be early!), as well as an opportunity to observe our plant growth, and learn our gardening techniques.

RSVP on Facebook
RSVP via E-mail

See you all there!

Volunteer Opportunities

For Saturday, we will need volunteers present for the following activities:
  • Setup - 9:30am - 10am
  • Transplanting demo - 10:30am - 11am
  • Composting demo - 11am - 12pm
  • BBQ - 12pm - 2pm
  • Setdown - 4pm - 4:30pm
  • Being present - 10am - 4pm
If you are available for any of these activities, sign up on the right column under Open House Volunteer Shifts!

My schedule in the garden this week (weather depending) is:
  • Mon July 13 - 12pm - 4pm
  • Tues July 14 - 12pm - 4pm
  • Weds July 15 - 6pm - 8pm
  • Thurs July 16 - 6pm - 8pm
  • Fri July 17 - 12pm - 4pm
Stop on by during these times if you'd like to work in the garden, and would like a helping hand.

See you all soon!

Friday, July 10, 2009

Those Thieving Magpies!

Some guests to our garden are exceptionally friendly and resourceful; others aren't so much. As mentioned before, we are growing raspberries and strawberries, which have been blooming and riping since the end of June. However, someone's been coming into our garden and eating them.

Let me introduce to you, the common Magpie. The Magpie is not a welcomed guest to gardens, as they like to steal fruits, pull out plants, and attack or scare away other, more friendly birds. To get them out of your garden and to stay out, as well as with most pests, there are two organic methods one can use and should become familiar with: exclusion and frightening.

Frightening animals is a safe and highly recommended method of pest control in our garden. In the Magpie case, we installed a few additions to our garden:


In this picture, you can see a shiny pin-wheel at the bottom, and a hanging tin-foil tray at the top. These things refract light, move with the wind, and occasionally cause small noises. Inconsistent and unexplained shining of light, noises, and movements tend to scare most birds. Putting these things next to and on our berry producing plants has successfully reduced the amount of Magpies hanging out around them.


This is a scarecrow, and an actually morbid one at that. Scarecrows give the illusion that there is a gardener present, and even further, you can see that this gardener is reflecting light. Other recommendations for scarecrow construction include faces with eyes on both sides of the head, lose fitting clothing that moves in the wind, and shiny objects in their "hands," each of which would mimic an actual gardener, without one being present.

Without causing harm to the actual animal, you can exclude it from entering your garden. In the case of a magpie eating our garden's berries, you can cover plants in a breathing blanket, or chicken wire. This method, however, becomes very complicated and frustrating, if you're working with a lot of gardeners. It can be efficient for some pests, if all that is necessary to exclude the animal is a fence around the garden.

Our Naturalization Project actually had a hare visit while I was writing this. They came right in, hopped over to our Saskatoons, and just started eating the leaves off of it. It began to eat whole plants, and grasses in our native bed. In this case, we'll have to keep a gate closed in order to prevent hares from getting in, or wanting to get in, to eat our plants.

Happy gardening, and good luck with your pests!

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Sweet Successes to Savour

When June arrived, we had a lot of challenges with the excessively hot and sunny days, which damaged or killed off some of our plants. However, in the Campus Community Garden, there have been lots of successes!

We appreciate all the volunteers who had laboured heavily in the garden during these dry periods, and watered constantly. One of the fruits of their labour is the collection of some of our harvest. In June, we've harvested at least 24lbs of mixed greens, including Spinach, Red Mustard, Arugala, and Red and Green Leaf Lettuces. However, when the volunteers have had their fair share of salad mixes, we donate the rest of our harvests to the Campus Food Bank. At least 10 lbs of the harvest was donated throughout June.

Half-way through June, we noticed our Spinach bolting. This is when the plant produces less leaves for consumption and more seeds for spreading. It results from the longer and hotter days in the summer, which means that the early spring is the best time to plant and early summer for harvest, or late summer for early autumn.

We're going to give planting spinach another shot in the shadier garden areas, and in between existing rows to see how they will turn up. We're also figuring out ways to reduce pests in our garden and what to plant in mid-summer. So check out our blog shortly for these updates!