West Garden Wall Update

Hi all–

Finally, contractors have started work to rebuild a retaining wall in the West garden. The crew did a near job of removing and saving most all the bed planks; moved the spruce tree and rose bush from the Memorial Bed to other side of arbor; put up a large sign explaining what’s being done and why inside the gate so passersby would know what’s happening;; and are cleaning up as they go –sweeping the sidewalk, etc. They’re installed a double-wide gate in the fence to allow for equipment ins and outs; a Parks rep is onsite all day; and Frank has been over to speak with them — the same men our Steering Cte.,Jean and myself met with twice prior to work starting.
The work, weather permitting, should take 3 to 31/2 weeks, due to the snows delay last week, sorry.

REMINDER: We are not allowed entry to this West site during construction, please.
There are No Parking signs up and cars will be moved out if any one parks there during construction, alternate days or not.
Gardeners with beds in the East garden are free to do their Spring prep/planting however.

OPENING MEETING: tba, CHECK YOUR E-MAIL NEXT WEEK.

GREEN THUMB GROW TOGETHER: Saturday, March 20, 9 AM (Bkfst 8:30) Admission at door: $5.00, Hostos College. Full details in the GT Program Guide which you should have all received by now.
Also, on GT’s website.

MUCHO KUDOs to Frank Grech for clearing the mounds/drifts of snow from the sidewalks at both garden sides!

All for now — Lucille

No Workday Saturday (Feb 6)

Due to the anticipated 3-6″ snowfall overnight, the Saturday Special Cleanout WORKDAY will instead be the Snow date, SUNDAY, FEB. 7, 11:00 AM. Various jobs will be announced then, as some things were done this afternoon after our Meeting with 2 Parks and 4 Contractors reps, including the Job foreman. If you need to remove anything from your bed — if it’s one of those in the entry path as shown on Jean’s diagram sent last week — please do so Sunday!

Present at this meeting for the Gardeners’ concerns were: Frank Grech, Jean Jaworek, Ann Levine, Robin Mace, Paula McKenzie, yours truly, and Janice Vrana. All questions were answered, and everybody left happy with the results of this pleasant, friendly session.

IMPORTANT: No Gardeners/gardening in the West garden site will be allowed during the proposed two weeks’ reconstruction sched ule — Starting February 8 through February 22 — weather permitting. Ring bells, chant favorite mantras, light candles for clear, non-freezing temps these next two weeks!

Thanks to Frank for volunteering to be the Contractors’ go-to-gardening liaison during this renovation; and to Jean for making the flyer which has been posted on doors of 12 W., 20 W, and
Townhouse Bulletin Boards. These “To Our Neighbors” notices are in addition to the signs that Parks and Contractors will be posting.

There will be “No Parking” signs and orange pylons/sawhorses in front of the West garden, also.
Contractors will have necessary Permits on site for inspection as might need be.

FYI: The final Ballot count approving the entry route was: 34 Yes, 0 No, 1 Abstain, or 35.

Al for now — Lucille M.

31 January, 2010 15:41

Dear Gardeners,

Construction in the West Garden is due to begin Monday, February 8. We will be meeting with construction and Parks Dept. representatives this Friday for a final review of plans and agreements. Many thanks to Lucille for pulling all of this together!

What this means for you:

If you have a plot on the east side of the West Garden and have perennials you want to save, this is your last chance. Potted plants can be stored in the shade garden.

We’ve scheduled a VOLUNTARY WORK DAY for Sat. Feb. 6. 10:00 (snow date Sun. Feb 7, 11:00). We need to stow supplies now stacked outside the shed, move the Cat headquarters, etc., etc. The weather promises to be warm (the 30s) and clear, so please pitch in.

Thanks,

The Steering Committee

NYC CGC Gardens Conference Registration

Attendance at this all-day Conference by as many as possible, to have influence on the Reps., is of great importance.  It seems the registration began on 4 Jan but I expect that even with the late, 3rd class, mailing there will still be room.  // LM

Agreement Rally.pdf

Unifed we will demand to know from our state and city representatives what is being done to make our community gardens permanent!

All community gardeners and supp0rters need to be ot this event!

Keynote Speaker Livia Marques
Director, US Dept. of Agriculture People’s Garden Initiative

FREE Registration begins January 4, 2010
online at nyccgc.org or by calling (888) 311-3993

Gardens at Risk…

> From: lucille_mv@yahoo.com
> To: ;
> Subject: Fw: [tb-cybergardens]: Gardens at Risk…
> Date: Tue, 15 Dec 2009 17:32:30 -0500
>
> F.Y.I. : This is but one reason holding Public Events in the
> Garden is of prime importance. // LM
>
> Original Message
>
> Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 5:00 PM
> Subject: Gardens at Risk…
>
> >
> >
> > http://www.citylimits.org/content/articles/viewarticle.cfm?article_id=3848
> > http://www.brownstoner.com/
> >
> > City Limits WEEKLY #712
> > December 14, 2009
> >
> > NO WINTER HIBERNATION FOR GARDEN ACTIVISTS
> > By Jennifer Brookland
> >
> > Advocates, electeds and city officials are busy devising the next
> > best step for preserving some neighborhood oases.
> >
> > With the termination looming next year of a legal agreement
> > protecting community gardens across New York City, gardeners are
> > working to formulate strategies for how to ensure that
> > neighborhood green spots continue to flourish.
> > They’re eager to avoid the pain of uprooting suffered by
> > gardeners like Tom Goodridge, who helped to create a garden at
> > P.S. 76 in Harlem in the early 90s. Dubbed the Garden of Love, it
> > replaced a trash-strewn vacant lot in the kind of transformation
> > being repeated in hundreds of other spaces across the city. But
> > on Nov. 2, 1998, bulldozers plowed without warning through the
> > garden’s fence, flowers and grove of mulberry trees. Along with
> > 40 other newly flattened gardens, it was slated by the city for
> > development into affordable housing.
> >
> > Goodridge and his school community mourned their magical refuge.
> > “I think it’s wrong to raise children without trees to climb and
> > mudpies to make,” he said. Especially when two years after it was
> > razed, all that the city had erected in its place was a sign
> > announcing that affordable housing would be built.
> >
> > Now, a vocal cohort of community gardeners across New York City
> > worries that a similar fate could befall their own sanctuaries. A
> > legal settlement that protects some of the city’s green spaces is
> > set to expire in Sept. 2010, with no new safeguards to take its
> > place.
> >
> > That has advocates debating issues like whether new City Council
> > legislation would be the best path toward longer-term garden
> > preservation – or whether various new routes toward guarding the
> > gardens actually come with more pitfalls than real protection.
> >
> > A small slice of green
> >
> > Community gardens in New York City come in all shapes and sizes,
> > as any observant pedestrian has noticed – but people may not
> > realize that they fall under a variety of jurisdictions, too. Two
> > owners of garden land are the Department of Parks and Recreation
> > and the Department of Housing Preservation and Development, and
> > it is 51 lots owned by HPD – 23 of which are being used as
> > gardens, according to department spokeswoman Catie Marshall –
> > that are potentially threatened by the settlement’s sunset in
> > September.
> >
> > There are also some gardens under Department of Transportation
> > jurisdiction that could be slated for development, said Edie
> > Stone, the director of Green Thumb which is a part of the parks
> > department. Community gardeners can register their land with
> > GreenThumb – which claims to be the country’s largest
> > municipally-run gardening program – to receive financial and
> > logistical support.
> >
> > By Stone’s calculation, about 11 active gardens across the Bronx,
> > Brooklyn and Manhattan could be directly threatened by
> > development once the settlement expires.
> >
> > Activists view the current stage as largely set by events of
> > former mayor Rudy Giuliani’s era. Giuliani’s efforts more than a
> > decade ago to turn garden lots into apartment buildings enraged
> > the gardening community and spurred it to take action. Actress
> > Bette Midler had recently launched the New York Restoration
> > Project, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting green space in the
> > city. The organization joined with the Trust for Public Land, a
> > national land conservation organization, raising $4.2 million to
> > buy up 114 gardens threatened with destruction. At the same time,
> > then-Attorney General Eliot Spitzer brought a lawsuit against New
> > York City, claiming it was illegal to auction the gardens. Both
> > sides reached a settlement in 2002, in which Parks would take
> > over the jurisdiction of lots previously owned by HPD, whose goal
> > was to create affordable housing units. The settlement also laid
> > out a public review process whereby any garden the city wanted to
> > take for development had!
> > to be offered a new location.
> >
> > Praising the settlement, Mayor Bloomberg announced, “We are
> > providing permanent protection to hundreds of community gardens
> > throughout New York City.” Yet permanency was not spelled out in
> > the settlement. The Memorandum of Agreement that settled the fate
> > of those gardens carried a term of eight years, until September
> > 2010.
> >
> > The Trust for Public Land pointed out that after that date, the
> > gardens would be left vulnerable again. “No deliberative system
> > governs the fate of the city-owned lots transformed into gardens;
> > no comprehensive plan determines the disposition of the land; no
> > guidelines protect the value these gardens bring to their
> > neighborhoods,” read a report published by the nonprofit.
> >
> > Other gardens were handed over as part of the settlement or
> > afterward to the parks department. While most gardeners view
> > Parks ownership as protection, some fear even that won’t preserve
> > the spaces from future development. Parks maintains it has no
> > plans to develop the gardens.
> >
> > “There’s a persistent fear among a certain bunch of the gardeners
> > that suddenly the parks department would decide to get rid of all
> > the gardens under their jurisdiction,” said Stone. “While that’s
> > theoretically possible, that’s highly unlikely for a thousand
> > reasons.”
> >
> > HPD maintains that expiration of the settlement will not impact
> > the pace of the agency’s ongoing plans for development. “Many of
> > the gardens and former gardens in [our] jurisdiction have already
> > been designated to developers. The others will be designated and
> > developed through our affordable housing programs,” said
> > Marshall.
> >
> > Staking claims
> >
> > With such a small number of gardens possibly threatened, most
> > community gardeners aren’t kept up at night by the thought of the
> > city snatching their plots away. But Hajah Worley, of the New
> > York City Community Gardens Coalition, thinks they should be
> > worried. The Bloomberg administration seems interested in
> > protecting green space, said Worley – but what about mayors to
> > come?
> >
> > “This is a development-oriented city that we live in, so we can’t
> > ever just sit back and think we are safe,” he said.
> >
> > Stone, the director of GreenThumb, acknowledged that nothing in
> > the law prevents the Parks Department from transferring land to
> > another agency, which could then develop as it wished, though she
> > thought that was highly unlikely.
> >
> > “The city is as committed now as it was in 2002 to preserving the
> > gardens,” said Parks Department Assistant Commissioner Jack Linn.
> > “Only a wacko would suggest getting rid of them.”
> >
> > Linn confirmed the Parks Department was committed to preserving
> > community gardens for the long-term. Deciding how best to do that
> > legally is the challenge. “Currently, no such legal protection
> > exists – it would have to be created new for the very first time.
> > So these things become complicated,” he said.
> >
> > Nevertheless, Worley and others don’t want to count on the city’s
> > promises today when it comes to protecting their gardens
> > tomorrow. They’ve approached the attorney general and City
> > Council to pass legislation that would protect the gardens, this
> > time for good.
> >
> > “That’s what we’re aiming at, getting some kind of concrete
> > protection [for] ten years from now when community gardens are
> > looked at as real estate,” said Karen Washington, the coalition’s
> > president. “It’s up for debate. Why can’t we have that
> > conversation? What’s the best way that community gardens can be
> > preserved?”
> >
> > City Council has tried to address that question twice already.
> > Two resolutions were introduced in the past three years. One in
> > 2007 sought to extend the existing settlement by preserving all
> > existing GreenThumb gardens and set aside more parkland, open
> > space and vacant lots for gardens. Another resolution introduced
> > in 2009 called for GreenThumb gardens to be represented on the
> > official New York City map as city parks.
> >
> > Neither bill was voted on, however, and as the Council calendar
> > is cleared for the new year, they won’t be. Several
> > councilmembers are formulating new legislation, slated for
> > introduction in early 2010, aimed at protecting the gardens.
> > “Something will happen over the next few months to bring
> > attention to this matter,” said Bill Murray, legislative aide to
> > Queens Councilman James Gennaro, chairman of the Committee on
> > Environmental Protection. Gennaro’s bill, now being finalized,
> > would call on the mayor and attorney general to extend the 2002
> > memorandum of understanding, Murray said. “People have forgotten
> > about it, but the settlement does expire and something’s got to
> > be done.”
> >
> > But Stone cautions that even protecting the land under the
> > current settlement’s provisions doesn’t necessarily mean
> > protecting gardens. Even if legislation is passed that puts all
> > gardens under park department protection, nothing prevents the
> > department from using that land for other purposes.
> >
> > “The Parks Department could pave over them all and stick a
> > basketball court on it and that would be totally allowed,” she
> > said.
> >
> >
> > This message has been processed by Firetrust Benign.
> >
>

Notes from Nov 5th Cornell Soil Health Lecture

[Note: brackets indicate holes in the notes that I will fill for permanent copies, wanted to get this done today, so you know I haven’t disappeared.]

Soil, Nutrition, Fertilizers, and Amendments
Lorraine Brooks, Cornell University Cooperative Extension 11/5/09

Soil – should:
– preserve plant growth
– reserve and purify water
– function as Nature’s recycling system
– provide habitat for a variety of living organisms

Tilth – the workable quality of soil

Soil Texture – description of how fine or coarse
The particles in soil are: sand, silt, and clay.
With ideal pore space, soil is: 45% mineral, 25% air, 25% water, 5% organic matter.
Sand has the largest particles, measuring 2.0 – 0.05 mm, and provides macropores.
Silt is next, 0.05 – 0.002mm
Clay is the smallest, aggregate > structure

Spaces between aggregates are macropores, which improve permeability and drainage. Most pores are micropores.
– Structure may be destroyed by compaction or excessive
tillage.
– Tillage of wet soils can damage structure.
– Loss of organic matter (no worms, no aeration; no
bacterial breakdown of leavesand insects, no
refinement of gross materials)
– Compaction squeezes aggregates into horizontal
strata.
Permeability – the rate at which water flows through the soil
Soil Pores
– micropores responsible for soil’s waterholding capacity
– with macropores – faster water flow
– with micropores – takes longer to dry out

Factors Affecting Soil Porosity
– texture
– structure
– compaction
– organic matter

Permeability – of sand, rapid; of clay, the opposite

Soil Organisms
– a 1/4 tsp. has 1 billion microorganisms
– located closest to roots
– main functionis to breakdown plant debris, etc.
– releases energy, nutrients, carbon dioxide
– creates soil’s organic matter
– most active at 70- 100 degrees F.

Ecohabitat of Soil
organic matter – plants – fungi ( mycorrhizal and
saprophytic) – nematodes (root feeders, and fungal and bacterial feeders) – arthropods –
– roots need oxygen for growth, and produce CO2 that
needs to leave the soil
Earthworms
– earthworms increase porosity by making permanent
burrows
– consume two tons of dry matter per acre per year
– partly digest organic matter, and mix it with the soil

There is an invasive problem with worms in the NE U.S. increasing the rate of breakdown of matter, so that it doesn’t coordinate with other species’ use of nuntrients/materials.

Plant Nutrition
– commercial fertilizer is synthetic; has fast release; can leach nitrogen into groundwater, if excessive for amount needed.
– organic preferred
– there are 17 nutrients plants need
carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosporus, potassium,
iron, zinc, molybdenum, manganese, boron, copper, salt, [______________]
– roots take up nutrients primarily as ions dissolved n the soil’s water
– an ion is an electrically charged atom/grop of atoms; positively charged are cations, negatively are anions
– fertilizer only increasesplant growth if the plant is deficient in the nutrient applied.
Nitrogen – Phosphorus – Potassium
– N – nitrogen is for rapid growth, dark leaves
– P – phosphorus: cell division
– K – potassium: thickening of cell walls
– sulfur: nodulation of legumes, seed production of all plants, [________]
Ca – calcium: [___________]
[ ] – chlorophyll
Zn – zinc – growth hormones, starch, seed development
Fe – iron – chlorophyll formation

Deficiencies of Nutrients – most common are of the primary nutrients
– phosphorus and potassium are usuallly p lentiful in natural soil for landscape plants; might be needed for vegetables
– nitrogen is very mobile, goes to young growth first — lack: stunting, small leaves, slow to fruit — in excess: dark leaves, heavy
growth, [________]

Fertilizers
Previously, 5-10-5 proportion of the primary nutrients was usual; now some organics have the same, some not.
[Ex.: Home Depot 10-6-4, check online for affordable 50 lb. bags]

Ph is the one soil test done, if any — low number=acid, high=alkaline
– 6.2 – 6.8 is the desirable range
– Cornell has test kit to order
– if ph is low, apply lime – prevents butterfly moth egg deposits
– in North, soil tends to be alkaline
– if 5.0 – 6.2 [ ]
– if 7.8, apply granular sulfur (not available here, mail order cheap from Peaceful Valley Supply at groworganic.com) –
– rhododendrons and azaleas like acid soil
– Spring – green aphids, Fall – grey ones — with good soil, plants have more resistance to pests
– compost spikes high ph when new, and goes down later, which is why it’s good for it to be aged more than a couple of years
– concrete in city environment contributes to “sweetening” the soil — Bx. gardens are where brick buildings with cement have been
knocked down, soil is 8.0ph

For soil testing, call Donna the soil tester at the [GreenThumb/Cornell Extension] office.
Cornell Univ, Cooperative Extension, Urban Environment, 40 E. 34th St. – Suite 606, New York NY 10016-4402
t. 212.340.2997, f. 212.340.2908 llb84@cornell.edu http://nyc.cce.cornell.edu

4Brooklyn College Soil Study

The 104th Street Community Garden participated in a soil study performed by The Brooklyn College Environmental Sciences Analytic Center. The following is a preliminary release regarding soil samples throughout the city. The overall results do not necessarily reflect the health of our own garden, but do indicate alarming levels of heavy metals, including lead, in New York City soils. We eagerly await the results of the follow up study and will report any results specific to our garden, when the report becomes available.

Brooklyn College results:

“The Brooklyn College Soil Analysis lab received many soil samples from residents throughout New York City. The lab analyzed heavy metal content in the soil with some surprising results. Lead content in some soils were sometimes as high as 2000ppm. As a follow-up pilot study we would like to measure the air quality in and around some of these gardens. Looking at the air quality may show us whether particulates from the soil are getting into the air, and we would like to see if this is happening and to what degree people are breathing in heavy metals as they work/play around the soil. By performing this pilot study we would like to determine if we need to expand our research not into just soil analysis but into air quality surrounding community and private gardens throughout NYC.”

For more information about lead in NYC gardens, read the New York Times article:

For Urban Gardeners, Lead Is a Concern, May 13, 2009
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/14/garden/14lead.html

Lead Remediation tips recommended in this article include:

  • The best approach to avoiding lead contamination in gardens is what we do at the West 104th Street Garden: Build raised or contained beds lined with landscape fabric and filled with uncontaminated soil. Plants that are grown in containers with soils from a garden center are unlikely to contain high amounts of lead.
  • Replace the contaminated soil or alkalinize it by adding lime or organic matter such as compost. Higher alkalinity (pH level above 7) allows soil particles to bind with lead, making it less likely to be absorbed by plants and the human body if the dirt is inadvertently inhaled or ingested.
  • Plant kitchen gardens with fruiting crops like tomatoes, squash, eggplant, corn and beans, which do not readily accumulate lead.
  • Avoid lead-leaching crops, such as herbs, leafy greens and root vegetables such as potatoes, radishes and carrots.
  • Planting greens, specifically Indian mustard and spinach, for a couple of seasons before growing crops intended for food. This phytoremediation, or plant-based mitigation, allows lead to be removed from the soil. These plants must not be eaten or composted, but disposed of as toxic waste.
  • To avoid contamination from lead dust blowing in the wind or rain splashing off lead-painted structures, situate gardens away from buildings.
  • Wash edible produce thoroughly with water containing 1 percent vinegar or 0.5 percent soap.
  • $

  • Cover soil with sod in areas where you are not planning a garden.

Hummingbird Moths Spotted in West 104 Garden

Here are 2 shots of a Hummingbird Hawk Moth, (along with a definition gleaned from wikipedia) some of us spotted on a butterfly bush in the west garden. Apparently they’re somewhat unusual, so a real coup for the garden.


Robin

From wikipedia:

“The Hummingbird Hawk-moth is distributed throughout the northern Old World from Portugal to Japan, but is resident only in warmer climates (southern Europe, North Africa, and points east). It is strongly migratory and can be found virtually anywhere in the hemisphere in the summer. However it rarely survives the winter in northern latitudes (e.g. north of the Alps in Europe, north of the Caucasus in Russia).

Moths in the Hemaris genus of the family Sphingidae are known as “hummingbird moths” in the US, and “bee moths” in Europe, which sometimes causes confusion between this species and the North American genus.

Robin

NYers for Parks: Daffodil Updates

Daffodil Photo Contest

New Yorkers for Parks has launched a photo contest for the best photo of blooming daffodil flowers. The winner will receive a gift certificate to B&H Photo. Please click here to learn more about the contest.

Daffodil Project Benefit Breakfast

The Annual Daffodil Project Benefit Breakfast will take place on Wednesday, April 22nd, 8:00am-9:30am at the Bryant Park Grill. We hope you will be able to join us. Please RSVP and learn more about the Daffodil Project Benefit Breakfast.

Become a New Yorker for Parks

Donate to NY4P and get great gifts like a Time Out New York magazine subscription. Donate today.

It’s Official – We’re a Green Thumb Community Garden

We are now officially registered as a Parks/Recreation- Green Thumb community garden for the next two years. This is very important as the original Attorney General’s Agreement expires in 2009 and all registered gardens weigh in the decision to extend this Agreement another 3 years. One of the major selling points is that these gardens will be open to the public 20 hours a week, including free special events, workdays, neighborhood group uses, etc. Open Hours are to be posted from May through October — and we have 15 of those between Wed., Sat, Sun usual schedule already. Members can submit suggestions for events we can support to offer at our Garden’s Opening Meeting in the Spring.

Also, those of you who signed the GT sheet at our Closing Meeting with your e-mail address will be receiving the GT Program Guide via e-mail this season, all else will continue to receive them and postcards from GT via regular mail.

KUDOS to:

Frank Grech for keeping our sidewalks clear! He’s been BUSY this season!

Jean Jaworek for a fulfilled 2nd Winter Solstice and Can-Do Collection! And to those who bundled up to bring food bundles!

OTHER:

Happy Chinese New Year to all.