Posts Tagged ‘garden mentor’

Donating Edible Crops to the Food Bank

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Last year we donated food from our garden for 28 continuous weeks to the Food Bank. Last week, we started up our seasonal fresh food donations again.

Edible Starts Ready to Take to the Food Bank

Edible Starts Ready to Take to the Food Bank

Today, rather than donate freshly harvested food, we’re donating edible food starts for food bank patrons to take home, plant and cultivate themselves. It’s a new idea for the food bank and for me.

Today, we’re dropping off several flats filled with red cabbage, purple cauliflower and broccoli. Plus, a few tomato plants. As the season progresses, we’ll take more along with more harvests from our garden. As well, I’ll be donating some of my garden mentoring time later in the season toward helping those who visit the food bank understand more about growing their own food. More on that to come. For now, I’m off to drop off the crops!

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Let the 2010 Harvest for the Hungry Begin!

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

May 6, 2010 marks the first day this year that I was able to drop off fresh food from the garden at the local Ballard Food bank. I had great intentions of growing hardy crops through the 2009-2010 winter, but alas in mid December, despite having hoop houses in place, I failed to protect all my crops from a hard freeze.

Radish & Radish Greens - 2010 Harvest for the Hungry

Radish & Radish Greens - 2010 Harvest for the Hungry

So, after donating 28 weeks straight from June 2009-December 2009, I admitted a chilling defeat, pulled out the stinky frozen crops, and began planning for future months when I could harvest enough to feed our family and to share. So, it is today that we begin again taking food from the garden to help feed others.

To be honest, we’re not harvesting a lot from the garden just yet. We have some lettuce, but not enough to share yet. Same deal with chard, leeks and mizuna. And, I didn’t plant kale for the garden this spring. Instead we’re growing more cauliflower, cabbage and broccoli. We only have so much space after all. And, those cool season crops as well as cilantro and spinach are still a little ways off toward harvest. Warm season crops are still plugging away in the greenhouse as well. And, our potatoes are quietly opening their eyes under soil and straw in their towers. (We did get near freezing temps over the last couple nights. Summer’s still a way off for Seattle.)

What do we have? Well, a whole heckuva lot of radish. And, honestly, some of them aren’t that fantastic. I’m growing them in a couple of locations — one spot is producing some decent roots. The other, well, not so much. Despite testing the soil and renovating the soil, I’m fairly certain a full soil exchange is in order in this bed, which is producing root crops showing signs of nibbling creatures, slugs, and even nasty nematodes. All is not lost when it comes to radish — the greens are fantastic! We’ve been mixing them into beans and stews and other tasty meals for weeks now. And, today, I took a huge bag of the greens and the not-so-awful radish roots to share with the food bank.

Green Victoria Rhubarb for the Food Bank

Green Victoria Rhubarb for the Food Bank

As well, I took what must have been nearly 20 lbs of rhubarb. In my garden coaching travels, I often run into new clients who have more food than they know what to do with. In some cases, I encourage them to sign up with programs that will harvest their overflowing fruit trees. In other instances, I suggest making donations to food banks. Really, there’s no need for homegrown food to rot away. Recently, I met a new client we’ll call Ms J.

Ms J. has more rhubarb growing in her garden than she can keep up with. The stuff simply adores her. It spreads and multiplies happily in her space. Too, she’s done her share of dividing and spreading it around as well. In our first gardening session she confessed she’d be digging some out and composting it. I chimed in right away offering to take divisions or cuttings off her hands. I’m not really interested in growing rhubarb myself; it isn’t my favorite vegetable. But, I knew the food bank would be thrilled to distribute edible food starts and the food itself. So, after a long day at work, Ms. J came home, cut down stalk after stalk of rhubarb. She trimmed it, removing the toxic leaves. Washed it and bagged it up for me to retrieve in the morning. Getting in the community team spirit  Ms J. pitched in and really hit a home run for Ballard — with just a little directional nudge and support from me, her Garden Mentor.

Interested in learning more about growing food for yourself and the greater community? Get in touch to set up your own Garden Mentors session here. Or, meet me at the 2010 Green Festival in Seattle in June where I’ll be speaking on the subject of growing food to feed yourself and the other hungry people in your community.

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Grounding The Garden Mentor

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Yesterday ranked among the top ten worst days I can remember. And, it wasn’t just one thing that made it awful. All day, the bad news just kept rolling in. By evening, it got to the point that when Bob pointed out that our in-recovery Beta fish was laying on the bottom of his bowl, I shrugged and numbly replied, “If the poor guy dies today, I won’t be surprised.” If you know me, you know it takes a lot for me to reach a point where empathy is outside my reach. Yesterday, got me to that point.

Me and Isabella Enjoying Her Garden Over Breakfast

Me and Isabella Enjoying Her Garden Over Breakfast

Among other things, my darling, happiest-girl-in-the-world niece Isabella was bitten in the face by a dog. One of my best friend’s sweet cats was hit by a car and died. My friend moved to another state so fast we didn’t have a chance to say good-bye. Another friend’s mother had a severe stroke and was taken off life support. Shall I go on? I could; there’s more….

But, no. Odds are I’ve already shared enough for you to have likely named dubbed me “Debbie Downer” and clicked off the page. So, in case you’re still here, I just want to turn the mood around.

Today I got out in the field. I worked hand-in-hand with one of the most faithful Garden Mentors clients, Mrs. C.  And, it grounded me.

When I arrived, late and shaken off my usual A-game, she smiled and welcomed me, with a sniffle. Despite feeling under the weather, she was looking forward to working with me, her long-time Garden Mentor. For two hours we evaluated, dug, divided, discussed, trimmed, layered, photographed and chatted. Her appreciation. Her enthusiasm. Her general love of her ever-improving and always-evolving garden brought me back down to Earth. Our gardening session reminded me why I love being her Garden Mentor.

As the sign says, Garden Mentors provides encouragement, empowerment and joy in the garden — to people and to the planet. Who wouldn’t love doing that? Even during a time when the Universe or God or whatever-you-call-the-unknown is dishing out the ugliest of the hard stuffs of life, getting into the garden manages to literally bring me down to earth, grounding me in the truest sense, reminding why I love what I do. Sure, the ugly stuff is still ugly and the painful stuff still hurts. But, being out there in the wind and rain and sunshine and plants and death and bunny damage and new life and dirt and slugs and bugs building a garden with a gardening enthusiast like Mrs C. somehow makes all the bad news a little less sharp and painful. Sharing knowledge, success and even failure in the garden simply brightens the edges of every dark cloud not with a silver lining but instead with an unsurpassed, gorgeous, glistening flower bed springing forth in every joyful color of the rainbow.

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Meet Garden Coach Robin Haglund at the 2010 Northwest Flower and Garden Show

Friday, February 5th, 2010

The 2010 Northwest Flower and Garden Show is in full swing. And, this is not the year to miss the show. Truly, it is one of the best I’ve seen in years!

Here are a few locations where you can drop by this weekend to meet up with me while you’re at the show. If you enjoy reading gardenhelp.org, drop by to meet up with me at the show to enjoy a couple of helpful gardening seminars geared for adults and kids too!

Who Wants Garbage for Dinner?
The Wonderful Way of Worms

When: Saturday 2/6/2010 and Sunday 2/7/2010 at 5pm

Where: The Sprout! Stage

Garden Mentor Teaches Kids about Worm Bins

Garden Mentor Teaches Kids about Worm Bins

As we worry about building a better environment for the future, we should start teaching our children ways they can contribute.  In this lively hands-on session for kids and parents, we’ll look at the “naked-eye” creatures that come to life in worm bins!  How do worms eat our garbage and what comes out when they’re done munching on fruit and veggie scraps, coffee grounds and egg shells.  Kids will love this, and parents will too!

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Ornamedibles: Ornament Your Garden with Edible Plants

When: Sunday 2/7/2010 at 3:30pm

Where: Rainier Room

Delicious and Beautiful Purple Cabbage

Delicious and Beautiful Purple Cabbage

In recent years, organic edible gardening has experienced resurgence as Americans have become more attuned to where their food comes from and what the true cost of fresh organic produce is.  In this seminar, award-winning garden designer Robin Haglund provides practical, proven methods of maintaining curb appeal and functionality while balancing tolerance, site requirements and homeowner’s goals to create beautiful spaces ornamented with edibles. Robin will provide solutions for a range of garden sizes and you will reap the bountiful harvest of her decorative vegetable and fruit gardening ideas.

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When: Saturday 2/5/2010 from 1pm-3:00pm

Where: WSNLA show garden entitled “There’s No Place Like Home”

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Garden Coach Teaches Children about Worm Composting

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

I was invited to present two very different seminars at the 2009 Northwest Flower and Garden Show. On both Saturday and Sunday I donned my garden coaching hat and gave a hands-0n, interactive, kid-friendly “seminar” on worm composting. This was my absolute favorite, and I’m exceptionally sad that its unlikely I’ll get to have this much fun with kids at the show in the future (because this was probably the last year). Perhaps I’ll get to bring this to classrooms instead someday. Regardless, teaching kids about worms was one big highlight for me this year.

Coloring and Sorting Through Worms!

Coloring and Sorting Through Worms!

Honestly, I wasn’t entirely sure what my audience age range would be, so I had a few activities up my sleeve and no formal lecture planned. My best guess was that I’d have kids from 2-10 in my audience, and what kid this age wants to sit through a lecture? Fortunately, I my age guess was pretty accurate, and the kids loved the program.

I brought in two worm bins to illustrate types of bins families could use. One bin was full of actively working worms. The other was an empty wooden outdoor bin to show what they really look like/how they’re constructed. I also had lots of crayons and two-sided information sheets — one side with worm recycling for the kids to color; the other side filled with worm composting information, book ideas and more for the entire family. I brought in a tub filled with nearly-finished worm compost filled with loads and loads of wiggly worms. I also had some dry, finished worm castings to show what our garbage turns into after the worms are done. And, of course, I had some food items to show kids what part of our garbage the worms like to eat.

The kids piled to the tables as soon as the crayons and coloring sheets were laid out. As they got going, we talked about what worms eat and don’t eat. (My favorite response was, “Flaming carrots ’cause the worms might catch on fire and explode if they eat them.”) We talked about feeding the worm castings to our gardens to create more good food for ourselves — peas were a favorite choice among the kids to grow for themselves. And then the real fun began, I scooped up piles of working worms and put them on the tables. The kids dug through the muddy worm casting piles to pick out worms and millipedes and even a baby spider.

Feeding Worms & Tucking Them into Bed

Feeding Worms & Tucking Them into Bed

They found partially eaten beet roots and garlic and egg shells, and we talked about how the worms convert this “garbage” to compost. Then, to wrap up, I invited the kids to join me in feeding the worms and tucking them in. Each child picked a piece of fruit or vegetable waste or even a damp napkin from the pile and put it in a hole inside of the active worm bin. Then, they covered them up and we closed the hatch. As one little boy said, “They’ll be nice and warm in the dark where they like to be now.”

Really, it was a fantastic experience. The kids were so much fun and so were their parents and grandparents who were taking loads of photos of the fun event. It was fantastic to even have a few kids in the audience who were already composting with worms at home or at their school. Some were very knowledgable about worm composting already! As well, I received many good questions from parents interested in starting their own worm composting systems, and I’m fairly certain I helped motivate a few to start up systems of their own.

Interested in starting a worm bin at home?  Consider trying out an inexpensive bin you can build in just about 30 minutes at home. Or, if you need a larger system or want an outdoor wooden chest style worm bin, please get in touch for pricing for a custom-built box from Garden Mentors.

And, of course, if you have children and would like to schedule a garden coaching session to include them, please get in touch. Garden Mentors offers programs to involve anyone and everyone in the family in the garden!

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