Wednesday, June 23, 2010

The Art of Mixing Soil

You might not think very much about the soil that fills your garden bed. Maybe it looks dark brown, you notice if it is dry, or it is just the background to the beautiful flowers and tasty vegetables that grow out of it. Here at Green City Growers we think about your dirt. We spend abundant time on the art of mixing dirt, working with a palette of peat moss, compost, vermiculite, and top soil to create that deep brown that makes your greens happy.

Last week we mixed some quality soil for two new clients: Ula Café in Jamaica Plain and Mathworks, a software company in Natick, MA. After loading up the truck with forty-two bags of compost, an assortment of other soil components, a wheelbarrow, seven wooden raised bed frames, and irrigation tubing, Jessie and I drove to Ula Café where we met her brother Brett to install the beds. Once the beds were laid out, we mixed the soil, pouring the different ingredients onto a tarp, swinging the tarp from side to side so that the peat moss, compost, and vermiculite swirled together in a mess of brown, black, and silver, and dumping the mixture into the beds. We reached our arms into the dirt, mashing up large clumps of compost and looking for buried treasure: a hidden heap of airy vermiculite or a dry pocket of peat moss. Our work done, we ate a lunch of delicious sandwiches at Ula Café where the beds would soon grow a variety of herbs, and moved on to Mathworks where we installed four vegetable beds on the patio outside of the cafeteria.

Yesterday, another summer intern, Marianna, and I spent the morning mixing up two large tubs of soil to repot some zucchini, peppers, and eggplants that had outgrown their small pots. With the heat of summer upon us, the summer crops are raring to go!

-Amy Shmania, summer intern

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Making Local and Sustainable Choices: Panel Discussion

Jessie from GCG will be speaking on a panel next Tuesday, November 17th at Suffolk University hosted by the On-Your-Feet-Project. The topic: making the right choices. Come join us for what should be an interesting and informative event



Speaker Series on Local and Sustainable Food

OYFP is holding the 2nd Round of their Speaker Series at Suffolk University Law School. Learn about local and sustainable cooking and eating choices just in time for the season of over eating.

Our distinguished speakers:

Alex Loud, Slow Food Boston
Matthew Kochka, ReVision Urban Farm
Jessica Banhazl, Green City Growers
Jamey Lionette, Lionette's Market

More Information to Come!

The Details

Date: Tuesday, November 17th
Time: 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Location: Suffolk Law School Faculty Dining Room, 4th FL Suite 495 120 Tremont Street Boston, MA, 02108-4977 617.573.8000
Cost: Free

Monday, November 2, 2009

Slow Food Event! Urban Farming: Livestock Edition.





Slow Food is hosting an exciting talk that we here at GCG are very much looking forward to. Details Below:

A Discussion with 'Farm City' Author Novella Carpenter

Location: Fort Point Artists Community store, 12 Farnsworth St, Boston
Cost: Free
When: Friday, 11/13/2009 5:30PM

Details (From Slow Food's Site)
Novella Carpenter lives in Oakland. I mean, really IN Oakland. As in downtown. But that certainly hasn't stopped her from farming - and she has now written a memoir chronicling the transformation of her backyard from bare land to full-blown animal & veggie paradise!

The book, Farm City: The Education of an Urban Farmer, is newly released, and we've coaxed Novella out of sunny California to cool New England to read from it and talk more about her experiences. By doing so, we hope to be inspired to make a little more out of our available space on rooftops, outside windowsills or in yards.

In order to tie Novella's work back to local issues, we've invited Belmont resident (& resident chicken expert) Joan Teebagy to join us. More people are opting to raise their own hens for eggs, and Joan teaches classes on the subject at Codman Farms in Lincoln. But be sure to check your town laws! As many of you may have read, there is an on-going battle in Arlington about residents rights to keep backyard chickens.

So join us right after work on Friday, November 13th at 5:30pm. We'll have some light nibbles, a little cider, and enjoy the reading & discussions that commence. Advance RSVPs and a $10 donation to the Slow Food fund that supports local agriculture are duly requested!

Directions:
Made in Fort Point, the FPAC Store is located at 12 Farnsworth St, just off Congress Street and next to the new Flour Bakery.

The gallery space is a 5 to 10 minute walk from the South Station Red Line T, or the Court House stop on the Silver Line. There is also street parking in the area.