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Saturday, October 3, 2009

Plant Sale Success!

Just got home from the plant sale and we did very well! $189!

Thanks to everyone who came and bought plants. This was our first try at it and I would have been happy with a hundred dollars. We almost doubled that and I'm ecstatic! To give you an idea of how much that is, it's:
189 packages of seeds
or 14 cubic yards of composted cow manure
or half of the Pea Patch greenhouse
or the entire water system for the 38x17 wide row plot, including a timer
or almost half of the garden shed on our want list
or 18 fruit trees (where are we going to put them all?!)
or the entire asparagus patch, complete with soil ammendments and fertilizer for a year.

We had very few plants left ~ not even enough to completely fill the back of my little Toyota truck. Not bad when you think what we started with (picture above, and that's not all of them). Thanks to Alice, Kelly, Connie and Bettie for all the help and plants. And to all the new friends we met today ~ thank you, thank you, thank you for buying them! We enjoyed meeting every one of you and look forward to working with you in the Pea Patch next year.


The book fair inside did quite a good bit of business as well ~ almost $800! That's a lot of books sold and a lot more books we can buy. Incredible. Jane was busy all day long both Friday and Saturday and it sure paid off.

I have to add this:

The next gorgeous piece of art made by Alice (left), Carol (right) and their quilting group. It will be raffled off to benefit the library. Each year they make one of these and each year it's more beautiful than the last.

Now I'm headed outside to plant some garlic before the rain comes...

Thursday, September 24, 2009

The Plan

A group of us with the Spicewood Community Library are building a teaching garden. This will be an organic garden where we'll hold classes for the general public on things like seed starting, saving true seed, intensive planting, building good soil, etc. It will also be a demonstration garden, giving people ideas on a cheap way to build a greenhouse, how to build and use cold frames, different ways of building beds (rock, wood, roofing metal, cinder blocks, unsided wide rows, etc.), how to make gardening accessible for the physically challenged, and where people who've never tried out an uncommon tool like a diamond hoe can do so before buying one. I hope to also have guest lecturers as often as possible. And I'll be talking to the elementary school next door to see if they can use it as well.
We're not going to do the first planting 'til late January and first class 'til atleast spring. At first, it'll be small class size, on things that can be taught in half-hour or hour classes, like making tomato cages out of cement form wire, direct seeding (depth and spacing) and installing drip irrigation. As time goes on and we raise money/donations for the greenhouse, more seating with tables for desks, etc., we'll hold larger, longer and more regular classes.
So far, the county commissioner has leveled the 80'x60' plot for us, and we have a fence built around it. The wire was donated by Bob Lacey, a local resident, and the rest of it, including labor and those gorgeous posts you see in the pictures, was donated by Austex Fence (SUCH nice guys!). Isn't it gorgeous?! Once Austex is finished building the gate, they'll come back out to hang it and cut the posts off all the same height.



And here's the plot plan I've drawn for the hardscape. Walkways around the large areas are atleast five feet wide. The wide row plot will hold seven 3'x17' beds with two foot wide walkways. The fruit tree and grape areas are eight feet deep.



We still have much to do and many things to obtain. I've made a list of both and put them here:

~*~

I'll be updating those as we go along, so those lists will be changing over time (hopefully with the Want List getting shorter and the To Do List getting longer!).




It will be some time before the final garden looks like the plan above, but we'll get there. I'm so looking forward to the journey!

Sunday, September 13, 2009

The Map


We've got a plan! Everything fit nicely in 80'x60'. Yeah, it'll take a few years to look exactly like this map, but I'm excitedly looking forward to it.

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Liberal redneck gardener and knitter who believes climate change is real, healthcare is a right, victims are telling the truth, love is love is love, and Black Lives Matter.