Category Archives: meetings

April Updates from Steve: GrowNYC Plant Order Placed

Our pick up date will be Saturday May 12 10:00a.m. in the Bronx, reachable by public transportation if you can volunteer to help us. With good organization we can have the plants back to the garden by 11:30 that morning and have a plant sale.

April Monthly Meeting  this  Saturday April 14, 2012    12 Noon

If you cannot attend send comments, issues, reports by email by Friday

2012 Dues need to be paid this month. see Ivy , or Michelle, or Steve

Bokashi II Workshop this Sunday with Shig Matsukawa and Carey King
 

March meeting minutes from Eren

 

Hello Gardeners!

Just a (Mad) Re-Cap of the March meeting just to make sure we’re all roughly on the same page!

Okay, so in attendance Marta, Michelle, Gamillah, Mamie and Mike, Marilyn,Eren and Jon. Also, briefly Angelo, Max (Sage and Mom), Roy.

 

March clean up plans for April opening announced

 April 22nd Sunday “Earth Day” which will have “Seeds to Soil ” kick off. Michelle Jackson will let us know what is up. We’ll need to promote, have volunteers and HAVE FUN!   

  

***Since we ALL agreed that we need an organized plot layout not haphazard squeezing people into odd locations that don’t make sense and make a MESS the idea of giving a certain number of BARRELS or large pots in certain locations (NOT IN PATHWAYS) to some people that are on the wait list These will be very distinctly marked and treated with the same respect as a plot.

 

IDEAS:

 

                     – The “Community Herb Plot,” must stay.YEAH! Let’s get a hold of Jen (kudos to her and her planting guidance to her last season-let’s do it the same way. If ain’t broke don’t fix it!). See photo below and the sign age already done ready for planting.

                     – The chalkboard stays… Michelle says that she has chalkboard paint and suggested that we might paint that one wood wall on the tool shed with it and expand a writing space in chalk (?).

 

                    – Re-instate a plastic tub with sealed plastic sleeved booklets general garden information to be left for all key garden members to refer to. This tub will be kept properly in the tool shed easily accessible and out of the elements.

 

                   – The barrels for those on wait lists, honorary memberships etc… already mentioned.

 

CONCERNS:

 

                    – The above mentioned designation of plots to people who want to be new members. We only have so much space and so many plots and the capacity  to make a few  new plots which will not deter from not just the functionality of the garden but the aesthetics of the garden. We only have so much space in that garden. Full is full! It is a wonderful to be popular and loved-lol.

 

                     – Pathways. There must be pathways/walkways for both safety and for functionality. People need to navigate from the front and the back of the garden especially to the mulch box. Those paths must be delineated and once made respected. People tend to take short cuts (I for one don’t relish finding footprints in my back plot area because my path next to my plot was blocked for some reason and my greenery was incidental to getting back to the front or to the mulch pile instead of walking all the way around…)and let’s make it easier for them. Once paths are made known they can be lined, paved, chipped etc. We can all decide to make a uniform pebble, wood chip, brick, rock or broken whatever more uniform filler- in the future. Do not cover or take stones or paving from other people’s plots- get your own. Be creative.

 

                       *Where exactly is the plot for the Pre-school across the street going to be? We need to build borders around it, mark it and make it official! I was there and met them they are all cute- let’s not be vague or unclear about the plot/space.

 

                    – People putting things away. The tool shed is a presence let’s use it. It shall be finished.

                    – Watering  individual watering is over course up to the plot owner. But the regular watering, that will again be on a schedule. Last year was good. We must make sur that the designated water tubs stay that (water tubs) and are to be filled and always covered…

 

                   –  MULCH! How are we to handle the insane pile of sticks and leaves not in the wooden bins and dispose of all those plastic tubs behind the bin (stuff fro those groceries still remain behind the bin against the wall. It needs to be maintained those of us in the back deal with the smell, and if there is to be an official paying member’s plot right up against the wall next to it, it should be tended to, and there needs to be delineation of plot boundaries and paths….

 

                   –   I will put up my infamous signs yet again… Manners, respect, etc… lol.

 

                   – Garbage disposal and pick-up. We need to know the hours and days what for what. Garbage cans should be marked again (will put up the signs ) to try keep things organized.  Regular trash, recyclable, branches/plants etc..

 

                   – We need to get a list of who is returning as regular members. And a solid confirmation of their return. We must hear from some who have not been around and make an executive decision as to whether to give them their plot hold when there are others who will be more active gardeners (maybe give those older members an honorary membership no keys but invitations to events and maybe a barrel?).

 

                   – We are working on a finalized list of the new member requests. Decide how many we will take, how many can be offered pots/barrels and how many stay wait listed but with invitations to participating members of the community to look good for consideration ie. earn brownie points! lol.

 

                  – This group’s consensus, no more tree chopping. Please refrain from chopping off the tops of those pretty set of 4-5 (used to be ) tall bushes against the North wall that had those pretty blue flowers, they were gorgeous – let them be. They are lovely against the wall and don’t block sunlight.

                    The chopping of the Fig Tree. Leave the top alone, if it grows tall great ladders can be used ( we have two in the garden) to pick the fruit. Hacking it off in the middle is UNACCEPTABLE- What in the world was that about? It is where it is. If there are other ideas they must be thought through and voted on.

 

                   – Since TRUCE is still currently in the building and their move date is unclear we need to find out what the status is. Yvette  is no longer part of the organization.

                    – When we speak to people who haven’t been around and still quote “want a plot,” that there is a distinction between having a plot and planting and having a plot, planting maintaining the plot and participating in the garden.

 

                     – Problem gardeners. Not repeating the same mistakes. Stopping major wrong behavior immediately. No probation- just Parole! lol.We’re all going to have small disagreements but huge violations of decorum and the making of other members feel completely uninspired to come to the garden or create malaise are not  what we want.

                     No overhanging planting structures unless it is explained approved and maybe vertical…?

 

                     – Concern for certain plants or flowering plants being brought into the garden that are harmful or parasitic. Last years strange (Morning Glory?) viny over growth that choke several plots. Should we send out a newsletter alert and /or keep some flyers at the front of the garden during planting season?

 

WE HAVE A GREAT GARDEN WITH ALL IT’S QUIRKS-LET’S KEEP IT THAT WAY.

 

AS IT STANDS: 

 

Michelle has the box – Volunteer needed to work on becoming a 501C!

Dues due next month.

Soil drop-off, bags?

Fertilizer?

Trips to the Bronx for plants seedlings? We should coordinate with anyone with cars? all the carts we have etc…

 

 

007.jpg
 

See you all in the Garden!

 

Saturday, October 22nd End of Season Celebration, Carrie McCracken Community Garden, Seeds to Soil

This Saturday, October 22nd from 4-7p.m. join us to celebrate the end of the harvest season in your local community garden.

Creatively Green event by Seeds to Soil in the Carrie McCracken TRUCE Community Garden at West 117th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue.

Download and share the flyer announcement
Participate in envisioning plans for the future:
Bring a picture, drawing or writing of what it means to be creatively green in Harlem.
Have your portrait taken as part of a crowdsourced Inside Out Art Action project supporting urban environmental sustainability.
View images and interviews of your neighbors showcasing how both small and large gestures can have a positive impact on our neighborhood.
Share your vision of the sustainable future of our neighborhood.
Exchange ideas with your neighbors over some food.
Celebrate the first full year of the New York City Parks designation of the Carrie McCracken TRUCE Community Garden!

Sunday, October 16th Harlem Garden Tour and Lido Restaurant Reception

On the occasion of the Black Farmers and Urban Gardeners Conference at Hostos this weekend, we invite you to meet gardeners in Harlem!

Mini Harlem Garden Tour 2011 brochure

Whings Lido Celebration Flyer

Lido Celebration Mixer Announcement

Despite pressures from encroachment and gentrification; Harlem Community Gardens continue to provide focal points of pride and common ground  for residents and visitors alike. This short tour gives just a peek; because there are new gardens being formed as well as stable veteran gardens and revived gardens. Harlem boasts many school gardens, municipal housing gardens as well as independent organization gardens. Harlem gardens operate under many agency jurisdictions. some are Land trusted,and many are preserved under new Parks Department rules issued this year.

Tentative Tour Schedule

The Joseph Daniel Wilson Memorial Garden:10:00-10:20 (122nd //7th & 8th)
Little Green Acres: 10:25-10:45 (122nd near 8th)
10 minutes walking/meandering time:10:45-10:55
Hattie McCracken/TRUCE Garden: 10:55-11:15 (St. Nicholas //117th&118th)
10 minutes walking/meandering time(11:15-11:25)
The New 123rd Street Block Association Garden11:25-11:45 (123rd // 7th and Malcolm X Blvd)
10 minutes walking time: 11:45-11:55
The Clayton Williams Memorial Garden:11:55-12:15 (126th & 8th)
Meet at Lido after the conference, from 5:30-6:00pm- 9:00pmish…
Reservations are under Eren T. G. (Carrie McCraken Garden)
646-490-8575
2168 Frederick Douglass Blvd @ 117th Street
Italian Style reasonably priced upscale local returnee restaurant with a new name…

 

September Meeting Report

Many thanks to Alexis, Fatima, Ivy, Marta, Michelle, Roy, Steve, Tena and all the gardeners in attendance at this month’s regular second Saturday meeting!

Steve reported on final preparations for the composting workshop on Sunday (big success, report coming soon).

Roy collected dozens of figs for all, they are sweet and delicious, many gardeners are enjoying them as they ripen to a dark purple.

Steve reported on attempts to coordinate participation in the 125th Street farmers market. He introduced WHINGS and summarized some recent collaborations between gardens. He also reviewed partnerships with Harlem4, Housing, schools and other groups. He presented a history of community garden organizing in Harlem over many years and his plans for the future, a stirring presentation that these brief notes cannot capture.

Gardeners discussed recent concerns about theft of crops in the garden. Contradictory accounts of incidents in the garden led to the conclusion that we do not know who is responsible. All in attendance agreed that theft will not be tolerated and will be reported promptly to our garden contacts and/or the police. Please do not hesitate to call the local precinct if you witness forced entry, aggressive behavior or any alarming misconduct in our garden. We remind you to lock the gate behind you when working alone. Bring friends and meet us for open hours on the weekends! We encourage you to call a garden contact or write to info [at]harlemgarden.org if you have any reports or questions.

Eren is working on a harvest celebration for October and welcomes your ideas and participation. Arts and crafts are on the agenda!

Michelle is developing a video project on the garden and hopes to share it with us soon.

Thanks to Ivy for weeding and tidying the flowers!

Join us October 14-16 at Hostos for the second annual Black Farmers and Urban Gardeners Conference: http://www.blackfarmersconf.org/conference-info

Join us Saturday, October 30th at Riverside Church for the Food Faith and Health Disparities Conference: http://www.theriversidechurchny.org/events/index.php?event=10681&filter=9

It’s been a very successful season overall and we have much to be proud of. Our official growing season winds to at the end of next month. Time to start cleaning up and dreaming big for the year to come!

Postponed: Creating Better Garden Compost, Workshop this Sunday in the garden at 3p.m.

THIS PROGRAM IS POSTPONED DUE TO HURRICANE WARNING – WE WILL RE-SCHEDULE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE

WHINGS workshop event to share knowledge and build partnerships to produce more healthy food from community gardens,  in the greater West Harlem area.

Sponsored and co- hosted by: Carey King, Harlem Community Farm Share

and Steven Kidd, Carrie McCracken TRUCE Garden

Sunday,  August 28 at 3:00p.m.

Carrie McCracken TRUCE Garden, 143  St. Nicholas Avenue between West 117th and 118th Streets

Featured Trainers:

Shig Matsukawa- Author “How to recycle all food waste by Fermentation”

Expert in Bokashi system for food waste recycling. And…

Elaine Jefferson- “Oregon Farm Girl” Oregon State University Engineer

specializing  in hydroponics and  vermiculture (worm composting)

Calling: Community Gardeners; CSA members; Environmental Justice Advocates

Letʼs meet, learn, and work together for better food waste recycling.

On the day when the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial is commissioned; let those of us who canʼt attend, write a new chapter in our communityʼs struggle for food sovreignty and green development.

All are welcome! Send a representative if you can’t join us.

Second Saturday In August

Our meeting brought us together in the shade of the tarp. Thanks to GreenThumb for our new signs, which Mike and other gardeners promptly displayed on our fence. We also looked at nearby empty lots and their soil – certainly our lot is much improved. The roof on the tool shed is almost complete and ready to help keep our supplies dry and organized.

 

 

 

June photos

broken bricks make nice paths between plots

 

getting tools and getting to work

 

good meeting attendance even in the rain

 

grapes forming

 

roses bloom

 

mulberries are a hit

 

lush cabbage

 

young gardeners show their strength

Our garden’s future looks brilliant! Thanks to all our gardeners who participated in the workshops and panels at the “Youth in Gardens: Growing Peas & Justice” conference organized by the New York City Community Garden Coalition.

Max on stage

It is very inspiring to everyone in the garden to have such experienced and dedicated young gardeners showing us the way forward.

Max, Karen Washington, Asche, Sage and Sojo

May Meeting Report

While many gardeners were busy with other events at the same time, we did touch base and get some great work done at our second Saturday gathering. The rain held off and we had a productive day weeding, planting tomatoes and more. Special thanks to Alexis for the gardening books she gave us. Collard, marigold and tomato seedlings were available for all gardeners and some perennial flowers went into the front beds. All gardeners are encouraged to inquire about seedlings still available and to take dirt from the delivery.

Pee Wee and Mike

Ivy braves the pollen to tend the front flower beds

Richard's exotic greens

Jen's community parsley harvest