As
a home gardener for many decades. I have grown flowers, vegetables, herbs,
bulbs, fruit trees and just about anything else that will grow when placed in
the earth. I am joining our local community garden for the first time. This
garden is for vegetables and it is in the mountains at an elevation of 9,000
feet. There are many good reasons to grow in a community garden. Mine were
purely selfish. I have raised beds for my home garden, but have run into some
soil problems in the past 3 years. At first I thought that I had herbicide
contamination from some purchased manure. The problems started that year. Things just would not grow. Seeds would not
start and already started plants would not grow. They just sat there, as if
they were dormant.
I
did the “bean test” this spring. That is where I dug up some soil from the
garden to start some bean seeds in pots indoors. I did this side by side with some bean seeds
started in potting soil. The beans in
the potting soil grew more vigorously than the one’s in the garden soil,
however, the beans in the garden soil grew adequately, and did not show any
curling that one would expect to find if the soil had herbicide contamination.
So,
for now it is still a mystery. I am trying to grow in my raised beds
again. But I am also trying to grow in
my community garden plot. Additionally, I have planting boxes on my deck where
I am growing the same things that I am growing in my raised beds and in the
community plot. Scientific approach to see where things grow the best. Thus, my
reasons for growing in a community garden are purely selfish. Purely scientific
…or
so I thought…
Just
after 2 weeks of being in the community garden I find that I am connecting with
people I have never met before. Guess what? We have common interests.
Conversations flow about gardening techniques and experiences. A few of us have
started e-mailing one another with different ideas of what we can do for our
gardens. Some people are pulling together, as a community, to get some of the
weeding done in the common areas. One
person was given permission to start a cutting garden in one of the unoccupied
plots, and she is now enlisting help from the other gardeners who might be
willing to donate seeds or starts for these flowers. We are starting to be a
community. CSU Extension – Gilpin County has a test plot in the garden as
well. They are testing various new
varieties of potatoes from the San Luis Valley.
There
are many reasons to have a community garden. Here are a few:
• Community
gardens increase a sense of community ownership and stewardship.
• Community
gardens provide opportunities to meet neighbors.
• Community
gardens offer unique opportunities to teach youth about:
Where
food comes from
Practical math skills
The importance
of community and stewardship
• Studies
have shown that community gardeners and their children eat healthier diets than
do non-gardening families.
• Eating
locally produced food is said to reduce asthma rates, because children are able
to consume manageable amounts of local pollen and develop immunities.
• Community
gardens add beauty to the community and heighten people's awareness and
appreciation for living things.
·Community Gardens are a good place
for extension offices to both teach and learn about various growing methods as
well as to test grow various varieties of goods.
So far most
of the gardens are thriving. There are different styles of gardening. There is
a hoop house with a cover to protect against the intense sun and winds (and
possible some hail). There is a garden with a 4 foot frame around it with poly
carbonate clear sheets attached which will also give wind protection. Many people using floating row covers. These
give the seedlings a chance to establish before critters (voles, chipmunks,
squirrels, deer etc.) get to them. The
youth camp is growing in individual intensive small squares with raised sides
in their garden. They call it a “waffle garden” because the squares resemble
the squares of a waffle. Most people, at
this elevation, start growing mostly cold weather vegetables, such as lettuce,
kale, peas, chard, radishes and carrots.
Some of the ambitious are trying beans, squash, cucumbers and tomatoes.
I am excited to see how all of these gardens grow and which techniques work the
best.
Two views of
the Gilpin Community Garden. What a beautiful spot!
So far we
are having fun and learning from one another. Maybe as we get braver and better
growing at this altitude we can spark some interest and have displays at our
county fair at the end of the summer. Maybe a community garden potluck could be
fun? Who knows where this might go? In the meantime we will just keep on
growing!
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