GreenThumb October News and Events

GreenThumb’s monthly newsletter of workshops and events not to miss in October!
Access all workshop info and more in: GreenThumb’s Fall Program Guide

Spooky decorations at Berry Street Garden in Brooklyn

Berry Street Garden in Brooklyn. Photo by GreenThumb.

Top Stories

GreenThumb Garden Recognition Awards

On Monday, October 1st, we celebrated and honored this year’s GreenThumb Garden Recognition Awards. Please join us in recognizing this year’s winners below.

Garden Recognition 2018

Greening Partner Award Winner, Manhattan Borough President Gale A. Brewer, standing with Bill LoSasso, Director of GreenThumb and Liam Kavanagh, First Deputy Commissioner, at the Garden Recognition Awards Ceremony.  Photo by Elena Dubas, GreenThumb.

Greening Partner Award
Manhattan Borough President
Gale A. Brewer
Community Engagement Award
Hancock Community Backyard Garden (Brooklyn)
Sustainability Award
Smiling Hogshead Ranch (Queens)
Landscape Design Award
Rockwell Place Brooklyn Bear’s Garden (Brooklyn)
Lifetime Achievement Award (Garden)
Joseph Daniel Wilson Memorial Garden (Manhattan)

Youth Programming Award
Rockaway Youth Task Force (Queens)
Urban Agriculture Award
East New York Farms! (Brooklyn)
Rookie of the Year
Green Patch on Walton Community Garden (Bronx)
Public Art Award
LUNGS (Loisaida United Neighborhood Gardens)
Lifetime Achievement Award (Individual)
Bob Humber – M’Finda Kalunga Garden(Manhattan)

Winter Supply Distribution

Pick up basic winter maintenance supplies, including ice breakers, bags of calcium chloride pellets (salt), and snow shovels for your registered GreenThumb garden at the GreenThumb Winter Supply Distribution on October 27th from 10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. To RSVP and for location details, please visit: WinterSupplyDistribution.

This distribution is only for registered GreenThumb gardens. Gardens in schools, NYCHA developments, or privately-owned yards are not eligible.

Apply for Uprooting Racism Training

Facilitated by Leah Penniman of Soul Fire Farm, Uprooting Racism will be a practical training for community garden leaders to address racism in our communities. We will delve into the history of our community gardens and look at our personal and collective roles as stewards of the land. We will spend time developing tangible action plans for uprooting these dynamics within our own gardens. All levels of experience welcome to apply.

To apply, please fill out the Uprooting Racism Application by December 16, 2018, at 11:59 p.m..

Art in the Gardens

Each month, we will highlight art found in community gardens throughout the city. For October, we are featuring Howard Garden, a community garden in Brownsville, Brooklyn. This garden has been a place for the residents of Howard Avenue to come together to listen to poetry readings and take in the interesting sights the garden has to offer. From a wooden train that doubles as a playset for children to the drawings and paintings of lighthouses, Howard Garden invites people of all ages to explore its art. To read more, visit the new Art in the Gardens page on our website. If your garden is interested in hosting a public art piece or you would like more information about the Art in the Gardens program, please reach out to GreenThumb’s Project Planner, Ariana Arancibia, at Ariana.Arancibia@parks.nyc.gov.

Art in the Parks at Howard Garden in Brooklyn.

Wire Sculptures by Horace Young found in Howard Garden. Photo by Ariana Arancibia, GreenThumb.

Did you know?

Dogs are allowed in all community gardens on NYC Parks property. Dogs should have a license tag, be vaccinated against rabies, and remain on a leash or harness. GreenThumb cannot approve any garden bylaws that prohibit dogs. For further information on NYC Parks policies concerning dogs, please consult Dogs in New York City Parks and Section §1-04 (i)(2) of the Rules & Regulations of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.
If you have any questions, please contact: greenthumbinfo@parks.nyc.gov.

More News & Stories

Grants and Opportunities

Grants for Artists

These grants are for artists, not for garden groups. These opportunities are to inform gardeners of the ways in which garden groups can support local artists that they may want to collaborate with, in order to bring art into their gardens.

Workshops and Events

ALL of our workshops are free and open to the public.

Highlight of the Month:

Tuesday, October 9, Queens: Season Extension and Cover Crops
5:30 p.m.–7:00 p.m.
Corona Taxpayers Association

Harvest your greens and root vegetables well into December with low tunnels and row cover. We’ll discuss and build some simple season extension methods. We’ll also discuss and plant a cover crop seed mix. Registered GreenThumb community gardeners will be eligible to receive row cover and cover crop seeds, while supplies last!
RSVP on Eventbrite

Grow to Learn Workshops

Grow to Learn is the citywide school gardens initiative for New York City. It provides ongoing resources, technical assistance, and training to get learning gardens growing in every NYC school.

Join the Grow to Learn Network and become eligible to apply for a Grow to Learn Mini-Grant, request soil and lumber deliveries to your school, and more, by registering your school garden!

GreenThumb Workshop Survey

Do you have ideas for GreenThumb workshops? Would you like to host a workshop in your garden, share your skills by teaching other gardeners, or simply let us know which workshops you’d like us to offer? Let us know in the GreenThumb Workshop Survey.

Follow GreenThumb on Social Media!

If you or your Community Garden are on social media, follow @greenthumbgrows on Instagram and Twitter, and @GreenThumbNYC on Facebook, to find out about the latest workshops, events, and news at GreenThumb.

About the author

garden

View all posts