Categories
Community Development

Compost Bin Building and Nourishing The Garden

193568007_a207b3de10_oJoin us for our “Green With Envy” Compost Bin Building and Community Garden visioning session on Sunday May 3rd at 4:30pm at the new Community Garden at Vincent and Lowry Ave N. We’ll work together to build some compost bins that will be used as part of our ‘Green with Envy’ pilot Community composting project (along with 10 other northside gardens overseen by Project Sweetie Pie). You’ll get your hands dirty learning how to build your own compost bins and we’ll talk about the garden, how to make yours thrive, and what we want the community Garden at Vincent and Lowry to look like this summer.

Volunteers of all ages are welcome, just come ready to get your hands dirty!

[button link=”http://connect.clevelandneighborhood.org/compost_bin_build” type=”big”] RSVP Today![/button]

Categories
Community Development

Planting for Pollinators: How Raingardens Can Help

butterflyMetro Blooms just scheduled a free raingarden workshop in the Heritage Park Community Room on Wednesday, June 10th from 6-9pm just south of Cleveland. We have additional workshops scheduled throughout the city as well if residents are interested in a different date/location.  At the workshop residents will learn about pollinator plants and raingardens and then have time to meet 1:1 with a Landscape Designer and Master Gardener to discuss their own property. Residents can register for a workshop at metroblooms.org

Learn more about why Planting for Pollinators is important…

In a world without bees, your next plate of food would have considerably less variety. By some estimates, one of every three bites of food we take depends on pollinators like bees. Pollinators are the small creatures—among them bees, butterflies and hummingbirds—that carry pollen from plant to plant as they forage, unknowingly performing an important step in the production of fruits and seeds.

In recent years, we have observed severe declines in various pollinator populations. Honey bees are a key example. According to the USDA, beekeepers lost an average of one-third of their colonies every winter from 2006 to 2011. In the last couple of decades, the monarch butterfly population has declined 90 percent in North America.

This is worrisome. Consider the following: more than 80 percent of plants depend on pollinators for survival. In this country alone, bees and other insect pollinators contribute more than $24 billion a year to the economy.

Why are pollinators disappearing? A leading cause is lost habitat. Quite simply, many pollinators no longer have the food and other resources they need to survive. They are also vulnerable to pesticides, in ways that are currently being studied.

While this problem exists globally, we can act on a personal level to help solve the problem. Our gardening practices can create urban habitats that attract and sustain pollinators. Choosing native plants is a step in the right direction: pollinators and plants that evolved in the same areas generally benefit one another. For example, milkweed attracts bees and butterflies. To reproduce, monarch butterflies actually need milkweed because it is the only plant their caterpillars eat. Practices on this scale can establish pollinators in our own backyards.

Which brings us to raingardens, one of our favorite topics. Metro Blooms teaches people how to plant raingardens as part of our mission to promote gardening, beautify the community, and help heal the environment. These shallow depressions, planted with native vegetation, allow stormwater to be cleaned naturally as it soaks into the ground, diverting polluted runoff from our waterways.

Creating raingardens that are also habitats for native pollinators is, quite simply, smart design. The raingardens help clean and preserve natural bodies of water and function as habitats for bees, butterflies, and other insects and small animals that pollinate. In turn, the pollinators, just by doing what they do, help the raingardens thrive so they can work efficiently to clean our water.

Learn more at one of our eco-friendly raingarden workshops.  This year we will offer lots of information on designing raingardens for pollinators: metroblooms.org/workshops.php

By Aleli Balagtas

Aleli Balagtas is a freelance writer interested in gardening ecologically.

Categories
Community Development

Cleveland Tiny Fields Expands!

72120324We are excited to be expanding Tiny Fields in Cleveland this year to up to 12 spots! The Tiny Fields Project distributes boulevard vegetable garden kits to Cleveland Neighborhood residents on a pay-what-you-can model with a maximum cost of $30 to start a new tiny field. Each kit includes enough seed and seedlings to plant a boulevard or alley with a variety of vegetables, a guide to vegetable gardening, and help to till and install new beds. Families participating then follow along using social media and learn throughout the season. Learn more at the Tiny Fields website or Apply Today!

-From Kelly Maloney, Volunteer Tiny Fields Coordinator

Categories
Committees

North End Community Garden Enters 3rd Year

The North End Community Garden again welcomes new gardeners for our 3rd year.  We are on Penn, near Lowry, just south of the North End Hardware Store, across from the Aldi parking lot.  Everyone is welcome to participate.  Gardeners may have a rectangular plot of their own or opt to be part of the communal effort with many circular plots.  The suggested fee for the year is $20, and this is cheerfully reduced or waived for anyone for whom it may be a hardship!  Gardeners may work in the garden at any time, and we also schedule weekly times when many gardeners choose to work together there.  For more info:northendcommunitygarden@gmail.com or contact the Kosowski family at 612-529-8628.