7.30.2009

Garden Party: Matthew Jose of Big City Farms

I think I've mentioned my church's community garden in the past. It's an interesting concept, really: People join the garden for a small investment, volunteer weekly, and take home the bounty. Leaders of the plots don't have to pay, but have complete responsibility for the production. Shareholders who can't volunteer pay more. A tithe of the garden is given to the local food pantry, providing the neediest in our community wholesome, organic vegetables.

I'm disappointed I can't be more involved in the Grace Garden, but I've got my hands full with my own. I have helped promote the garden around the church, and the ministry leader Sara invited me to a garden party last Thursday to celebrate the progress so far. We ate, visited with other volunteers, and ended the night with a talk by Matthew Jose of Big City Farms and then (for me) a garden tour.


Jose is just my age, 25 - which is unbelieveable, considering all he's achieved already. He is the owner of Big City Farms, a community-supported agriculture organization that grows its food on empty lots on the near-Eastside of Indianapolis. The urban-farming concept is using what would be otherwise-unused land, beautifying urban neighborhoods, and bringing fresh produce into areas where it's hard even to find a grocery store. Recently, his efforts have been highlighted in a Mother Nature Network article and Indianapolis publication Nuvo.

Most of what was discussed was organic farming strategies and tips, but I especially appreciated the higher-level local food philosophy he spoke of, focusing on the interconnectedness of a local food economy. He talked about a local restaurant that, rather than pulling all of its ingredients from one industrial supplier, decided to contact local farmers, see what ingredients that they could provide, and plan a weekly menu based on what's in season in the local foodshed. This is a complex task- the restaurant must have lots of farm contacts that each grow different vegetables or fruits, check with them to see what kind of quantity they can provide each week, and plan accordingly. Keeping a static menu and having ingredients delivered on a truck is simpler, sure, but so much is lost. Sourcing locally, the restaurant is supporting farmers in the community, getting fresher produce than any of its competitors, and, because the produce is organic and local, leaving a smaller footprint on the earth (which many customers appreciate and will pay more for).

We, too can source our food locally, but, like the restaurant, it's complex. We may have to visit many booths at the farmers' market to get everything we need. We may have to have a different farmer we go to for chicken, eggs, beef, and pork. We may have to plan our menus around what's in season. Because we need this complex web of relationships to eat locally, when we make the effort, we strengthen the community. Rather than picking up plastic-wrapped cucumbers anonymously at a big box store, we're meeting the growers, getting interesting varieties of the freshest vegetables, and we're healthier for it. And really, it's not much more expensive than the grocery store- and the food is so much higher quality. It's kind of like buying something from free online auctions vs craigslist- in the former, you've got convenient, one-stop shopping and anonymity, in the latter, you've got community connections, a lower carbon footprint, and a better deal.

:: getting off my soapbox ::

Check out what's growing in the Grace Garden!


See all photos from the event here.

7.28.2009

My Almost-Three-Year-Old

I've got a two-year old. He'll be 3 in a month! He's potty trained, but still has accidents sometimes. He loves his mommy and daddy, and his toys! He loves playing outside.  He's pretty good about not putting things in his mouth that he shouldn't. He's a pretty happy boy most of the time, but whines and cries for attention or to let us know what he needs. Like any 2-year-old, he makes a mess of the house all the time, and is always underfoot, wanting to be in the middle of the action.

He even has an impressive vocabulary! Here are the words he knows:
Ball
Toy
Bed
Dinner
Water
Off
No

Good
Back
Down

Sit
Stay
Come
Outside
Treat

Rope
Bone
"Go to your room"
"Daddy's home"


Yeah, my almost-three-year old is furry and has four legs instead of two, if that's not obvious already. When I'm surrounded by human two- and three-year-olds and their parents, like I was last night, I'll throw out a "Well, MY two-year-old  has been potty trained for a year and a half" line, just to not feel totally left out.

I do love my parent friends, though, and was so delighted to spend hours and hours with them last night. I file away their stories, tips, and lessons for future reference, when I have my own two-legged baby- no hurry on that, because, for now, Casey keeps our hands full!

7.21.2009

Harvest time!

In case you've been wondering where I've been and what I've been up to (since I haven't been blogging), here's what I did this afternoon/evening:


I spent my evening picking all of those. Just today. Last week, I picked enough beans to can 12 pints and 4 quarts this weekend, in addition to enough cucumbers to can 12 pints and 1 quart of pickles.



So, the garden has pretty much been my extracurricular activity for the last couple weeks, and will continue to be for a while. One of these days, I need to start digging up potatoes- I dug up a couple plants and think the rest are probably ready, anytime I'm up to it. Anyone want to help?!

And now to present a web directory of seasonal garden photos:

Cucumber patch!


A little cuke:


A bigger cuke:


The corn has tassels!


No tomatoes yet:


... but LOTS of beans



The cabbage is ready:


And, where the cabbage has been harvested, little cabbages are forming:


And, of course, flowers:


Here's a quiz to leave you with: This "flower" appears in one of the above pictures as well. Which one?

7.15.2009

Because I don't post enough Casey pictures

I've talked about everything from technology to term life insurance rates to table setting recently, but I haven't talked about my dog in a while...

Casey's great, still. I still swoon over his cuteness, and am embarrassed by his misbehavior. Especially when he breaks the Invisible Fence to greet a neighbor and her dog on a walk, then chases their cat up a tree, then comes back to our yard with one of their dog's tennis balls in his mouth. And then, the next morning, when I let him out the front door and then I realize he's taking longer than usual to come back and then realize it's because he's not in the yard at all. I check the back yard, and hear barking- Casey's barking- coming from the back of the neighbor's house and, finally, he comes home- with another tennis ball. It's embarrassing. I have a tennis-ball thief in my home.

The reason he breaks the Invisible Fence is this: He's a smart dog. He's figured out there's a range where his collar will beep, and a range where he'll get shocked. While we're out of his area of the yard (which is fairly frequently, since he can't get to the garden, driveway, mailbox, or garage), he sits right on the edge of the yard waiting for us, right where his collar beeps, but before he gets shocked. After doing this for a couple months, I think he's draining the battery down enough that the shock doesn't really hurt all that much. Watching him go through the fence with the battery mostly drained, he just kind of shakes his head, as if it was annoying, but not painful, which makes the fence not that much of a deterrent, and chasing the cat or rabbit through it pretty easy.

I guess I'm lucky- we have a sheepdog, which means he'll wander a little, but never run off for good. He knows how to get home, and always comes home. I've never been worried about losing him- just about making our neighbors hate us! I guess "Good fences make good neighbors" holds true in this case- and we're bad neighbors!

So, our question now is, where can we buy these collar batteries in bulk?!

7.10.2009

"So Distressing"

So, I was playing with the "random quotations" link from a couple posts ago, and came upon this one:
"At the worst, a house unkept cannot be so distressing as a life unlived." - Dame Rose Macaulay

At that... the house & yard may be a little unkept, but we're off to live life! We're heading off to Cedar Point this weekend to enjoy the roller coasters between rain showers. Sounds better than sitting at home playing a PS3 or twiddling my thumbs... or mowing the lawn!

Have a great weekend, everyone!

7.09.2009

Thinking about hospitality...

Over the last week, on two occasions, I've had dinner guests over with less than 48 hours notice- and I love it! I'm posting about Hospitality over at Homemakers Who Work today, come over and check it out! I also made a mention of our Fourth of July cookout (which was one of the thrown-together dinners) on my food blog.

I really feel strongly about hospitality more and more- not about having the pearl necklace and cute apron to greet guests and serve hors d'oeuvres, but the significance of inviting people into my home and making them feel relaxed and welcomed and loved. Here's hoping I accomplish at least one of those!

Hogback Summit makes its debut!

So, as I've mentioned an FEW times before, I'm not on Facebook. Via a blog, I saw a fun Facebook meme that I wanted to give a try (Sorry! But it looked fun!). Here were the rules:
The "Pretend Rock Album Cover Game"
1. Go to "wikipedia." Hit “random article” and record the title of the random article, like "Rahmane Barry" or "709th Airlift Squadron". This is your band's name.
2. Go to "Random quotations"  The last 3-5 words of the very last quote of the page is the title of your first album.
3. Go to "Flickr/Explore Last 7 Days" Third picture, no matter what it is, will be your album cover.
4. Use Photoshop or similar photo editor (Picasa, Picnic, whatever) to put it all together. Yes, I used Paint.
5. Force all of your friends to view your angsty/sexy/inspired/brilliant work by posting to your own blog or Facebook profile.  If you do share yours in a public arena, let me know so I can appreciate the genius of you as well!

I ended up with the band name Hogback Summit and a quote by Lyndon B Johnson. Not exactly sensical, but that's not really the point.

Let me know if you play along- leave your link in the comments!

7.07.2009

Garden Update

  • I harvested all the carrots, and they're prettier than last year's.
  • The pea harvest came and went and only gave us a few meals worth of peas. Very disappointing.
  • I harvested 2 heads of broccoli a little while back, and I got around to cooking them last night- only to discover (once they were on the table) that they were full of worms.  Not at all what you want to see on your table. Gross gross gross.
  • I harvested on absolutely huge cucumber yesterday. Learned my lesson: I need to check for cucumbers more often. I figured since there was one very-overripe cucumber, that there'd be some ripe ones, too. No such luck.
  • Also, I think I have squash bugs attacking the cucumbers already- the leaves are already starting to turn yellow. I hope for enough cucumbers to make pickles, and, if I get that, I won't be too upset.
  • The tomatoes have flowers, and that makes me happy. All is not lost.
  • I'm going to set out the soaker hoses tonight in hopes of watering the cucumbers & green beans to encourage all those baby cucumbers & baby beans to quickly grow up into full-sized veggies for me to harvest. I'm really looking forward to the beans.
  • I started cauliflower seeds last weekend, in hopes of having a fall garden. Other fall crop plans include broccoli, spinach, chard, kale, and carrots. Unfortunately, I only have the carrot seeds right now. Where can I get seeds this late in the season?
  • And the weeds remain.

LinkWithin

Blog Widget by LinkWithin