With the broccoli, cabbage and kale getting larger every day and the cover crop tickling our knees, it doesn't feel like anything is slowing down in Our Garden. But with the approach of winter and rain, we are closing the public gate on Our Garden for the season, halting weekly gardening classes until March.
It seemed like a good time to look back at our little experiment, at our successes and failures — both of which were abundant — and give a peek at what is to come.
We broke ground — no easy feat considering the garden plots had been fallow for almost a year — in April, not knowing if anyone would turn out to join our endeavor. We were filled with good intentions, an abundance of knowledge and enthusiasm, but little else.
That first class, with a demonstration of double-digging, drew about 70 gardeners with varying levels of experience. Like bees to the pollen, they swarmed the neglected beds and dug in, turning not only the soil but feeding the desire to garden.
The original plan was to install a demonstration garden that would use best-practice gardening methods — water management, organic insect control and composting. The Contra Costa Master Gardeners, who have adopted Our Garden as their own, planted and tended the spring and summer garden, and each Friday we had a class on a different gardening topic, from tomatoes to worms, bio-intensive to bees.
At the same time, we
"This garden is gorgeous, amazing," says Joan Tomasini, food drive coordinator at the food bank. Produce donated to the food bank is sent out almost immediately to those in need. In Contra Costa County, the food bank feeds 76,000 people each month, mostly the working poor and newly unemployed.
What we hadn't known, however, was that in addition to our contributions, we were also planting, nurturing and growing a thriving community of gardeners.
"I was surprised by the dedication of the Master Gardeners," says Jack Rich of Walnut Creek. "It's nice to be around people like that. They're excited by what they're doing and you get excited."
Rich, a longtime gardener, was one of the Our Gardener regulars who rarely missed a class.
"I learned more on planting tomatoes in one hour than I had in 70 years," he says. "I can't wait until next year and for the classes to start up again."
David Rounds, publisher of the Contra Costa Times and Oakland Tribune newspapers, says the project has illustrated that "our newspapers are more than just news, opinion and advertising."
"We strive to be integral and indispensable members of the communities we serve and Our Garden represents the best of this ideal," Rounds says. "It has been wonderful to watch this partnership between the Master Gardeners, the business community, the Food Bank and our readers grow and develop. Thanks to everyone who contributed to making this program a success."
Emma Connery, director of the Contra Costa Master Gardeners program, says Our Garden has become the "perfect venue" for what Master Gardeners is all about — face-to-face education to the community.
"The Master Gardeners gave live demonstrations of gardening techniques and were there to answer specific questions from the public on composting, vegetable garden preparation, irrigation, rodent proofing, food harvesting" and more, Connery says. "Seeing a live demonstration has a greater impact and understanding than reading it from a book."
And the public seems to have agreed. We never had a class with fewer than 40 people; many times we pushed the 100 mark.
Although the education portion of Our Garden is on winter break, we'll continue to grow.
As the winter progresses, you'll still be able to follow our progress in monthly reports on how it's growing, what we're producing, and whether the squirrels learn how to turn off the fence power.
And the countdown to spring starts now.
Here's a quick look of what we did in the past six months:
Keeping up
Our Garden is a year-round demonstration garden.Follow Our Garden at Twitter.com/.
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