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In Ithaca, NY, Leigh MacDonald of the Ithaca Children's Garden (a
program of Cornell
Cooperative Extension-Tompkins County), and Cornell
University student intern David McDonald, experimented with conducting
Garden Mosaics in small town and rural settings. Leigh and David
partnered with two groups: teens involved in a summer employment
program through the Youth
Horticulture Apprentice Program (YHAP), and pre-teens participating
in the Greater
Ithaca Activities Center (GIAC) summer camp. Each youth group
conducted Garden Mosaics activities one day a week.
Leigh and David wondered how Garden Mosaics activities might work
with home gardeners and small farmers. They identified potential
gardeners and small farmers through Cooperative Extension. David
then made contacts with individual gardeners by walking around Ithaca
and approaching people who had interesting gardens. His goal was
to show the wide variety of gardening styles among Ithaca gardeners.
More gardeners and farmers wanted to share their gardens than the
youth had time to visit. Some of the more interesting sites included:
a formal designed garden, a plant collector's garden, vegetable
gardens, and a local artist's impressionist garden. The youth visited
and conducted interviews at 11 gardens and four farms, but focused
most of their activities at two sites.
CRS Growers
In 1985, Carol and Bob founded this six-acre
organic farm overlooking Cayuga Lake in Lansing, NY. The farm
includes a large barn, two greenhouses, two fields, and two ponds.
The YHAP youth learned about the variety of ways that Carol and
Bob market their products. The basement of the barn features a large
area for storing produce grown by members of the Finger Lakes Organic
Growers Cooperative. Carol and Bob helped start the cooperative
and a number of area farmers bring together their produce for sale
to larger markets and restaurants. Bob and Carol also have a roadside
stand where they sell their produce during the summer. Their main
income, however, comes from selling their produce at the Ithaca
Farmers Market and to people who are members of their Community
Supported Agriculture.
The YHAP youth learned that Carol and Bob grow a variety of herbs,
flowers, and vegetables, including lettuce, cabbage, squash, potatoes,
peppers, pumpkins, tomatoes, green
beans, garlic, horseradish,
and Jerusalem artichokes.
The YHAP
youth also learned about Carol and Bob's approach to growing
these crops. One youth noted: "organic farmers don't use chemicals
like conventional farmers do (such as synthetic fertilizers). IPM
is integrated pest managementlook for thresholds to see if
it's necessary to do something about pests (depends on amount).
Some bugs are goodsome bad."
The YHAP youth conducted soil
measurements (such as testing for
pH and drainage). They also learned about some of the experiments that are conducted by Cornell University researchers on the farm.
They observed the effects of this summer's drought and of an experimental
weed treatment using vinegar. Helping Bob and Carol with weeding
was another activity during the visits to the farm.
Rob Young's Farm
The YHAP youth also visited Rob Young's organic farm. Rob has a
composting greenhouse filled with vegetable scraps and other organic
materials, which release heat as they decompose. The heat helps
seedlings growing in the greenhouse. Rob also uses the compost on
his farm fields. One YHAP youth wrote:
"In Rob's garden he had lots of edible plants such as tomatoes,
lettuce, wheat, corn, apple trees, and also grew white pine trees.
A good way of keeping the deer away from the food we eat was putting
the food that the deer ate in a fenced off area. Rob is an organic
farmer and doesn't use fertilizers or pesticides. He doesn't have
pest problems because the plants were healthy enough to fight off
the diseases. Compost was used a lot. Once every two to three weeks
he turns it. When he first started out with his farm, he did soil
tests. He rotates crops so the soil replenishes itself. Rob has
had his farm for 15 years and it covers 40 acres."
On the day the YHAP youth visited Rob he had just harvested a field
of wheat. The youth helped separate the wheat seeds from the chaff
and grind the seeds into flour. Unfortunately, there wasn't enough
time to make bread!
Ithaca Home Gardeners
Some of the GIAC youth's favorite places were Lori's curbside garden
and Beth's vegetable garden in downtown Ithaca. One youth made the
following notes about Lori's garden:
"Insectsgood ones, praying mantis. Bad ones, aphids,
Japanese beetles. She uses soap and water to kill them. Roses got
infested by the Japanese beetles. Weeds a lot and cuts grass. Lori
cuts bushes into shapes of animals and arches. She uses compost
when soil gets really bad and waters
the garden every day. Owns
some of the land and the reason she gardens is because of a car
accident and she says gardening is like music."
Lori claims her gardening has slowed down the traffic on her street,
reducing the possibilities for further accidents.
Beth's
garden includes a variety of herbs, vegetables, and flowers,
as well as hops. She also grows fruits, including peaches, pears,
raspberries, blackberries, currants, and gooseberries. Her garden
offers a good example of organic growing methods and the intensive
use of a small space. For example, she places netting over her
peach
trees to keep squirrels and other wildlife from eating the fruit.
The netting was not enough to stop some of the GIAC youth, who
enjoyed
sampling Beth's
delicious berries and peaches! Another activity was identifying
young squash bugs using an insect guide.
The GIAC youth used books and the Internet to learn more about
the plants they found in the gardens (such as lambs ears and rudbeckia).
They also learned about Ms. Charity Smith, who in the 1930's made
vegetable art in Ithaca. She took pictures of her art and sold them
as postcards, which were quite popular at the time. The GIAC youth
were inspired to create their own "veggie
art" and took pictures of their creations. They then wrote
about their project and are compiling their poems. The GIAC youth
took numerous photographs during the summer and were able to thank
Lori and another gardener, Tracy, by presenting a
poster they made about the gardens.
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