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Posts Tagged ‘garden’

A community garden volunteer opportunity!

UCF Community Garden Workday

10 AM – 4 PM

UCF Arboretum

Spend some time up close and personal with an organic garden. The UCF Arboretum has a one acre community garden for students and also open to the public.

Please join in this day to help plant & pull weeds. The garden is well established with a great diversity of vegetables, herbs, & fruit trees. This garden workday is cosponsored by Simple Living Institute, Inc.

The UCF Arboretum is looking for ongoing support from the greater Orlando communicty and you may volunteer any time. Bring your tools, gloves. Carpooling is highly recommended as there is limited parking at the campus. Sign up if you would like to join in. info@simplelivinginstitute.org or call 321-228-4310

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It’s almost planting time… here’s another garden opportunity!

Organic Growers Meeting

7 PM – 9 PM

Camilla Room,
Harry P. Leu Gardens

1920 Forest Ave,
Orlando, FL 32803

The Organic Growers meeting is free and open to anyone interested in organic gardening, organic foods, or products. Arrive early (6:30ish) for socializing & food. After the meeting, the discussion continues til 10p at nearby Ethos Vegan Kitchen.

THIS MONTH

Tina Richards, Environmental Education at UCF Arboretum, will share her expertise & experience setting up the highly successful Organic Community Garden at the UCF Arboretum.

A follow up field day helping at the UCF Community Garden will be held Friday Jan 22nd from 10a to 4p.

A cooking, tasting demo is being added to the monthly meeting: Sign up to show how to prepare something from your garden.

Uncle Matt’s has shared some citrus for us to sample at the meeting.

MORE INFO

As always, bring any surplus from your garden to share, treats for the tasting table, and plants and gardening supplies for the raffle table. (Tix $1 each, 6 for $5) Every month an abundance of raffle items appear along with some tasty garden treats.

Our sales table items includes: totes & t-shirts @$10 $8 each for members worm bins & vermicompost products assorted plants & seeds burlap cloth and garden amendments Let us know if there are any plants or supplies you would like to buy. That’s also where the raffle tickets are sold. $1 each or 6 for $5.

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I’ve been scarce prepping beds and seedlings for planting later in late Jan and early Feb.  There’s a lot of good garden stuff going on around town.  Here’s one…

Turn your garbage into gold… Tia Meer, longtime organic gardener, will lead this hands-on workshop in how to build and harvest a compost pile. Divert organic waste from the landfill while using your yard clippings and kitchen scraps to make your own fertilizer. Participants get a bag of compost to take home.

WHEN & WHERE

January 30, 2010
from 1 – 3 PM at

Econ Farm,
16206 Hamilton Dr
Orlando, FL 32833

COST

Advanced Registration Required. Fees are

  • $15 members
  • $20 non-members

To Register email info@simplelivinginstitute.org Or call (321) 228-4310

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The annual Autumn Stroll is back at Leu Gardens! Make it a date night!

WHERE:

LeuLogogreenback

Leu Gardens
1920 North Forest Avenue,
Orlando, Florida USA 32803
(407) 246-2620

WHEN:

Saturday, November 14, 2009 from 7:00 – 10:00 pm

Gardens close at 3:00 pm, last admittance 2:00 pm
Garden House will open at 6:00 pm for Will Call.

WHAT:

Enjoy live jazz, swing and blues under a starry sky inside Leu Gardens’ 50-acre botanic oasis located in the heart of Central Florida featuring the velvety sounds of the Lounge Cats, soulful voice of beautiful Bobby Blackmon and the dynamic Julie Lyon Quartet. Each band will feature favorite songs as well as originals. Pack a dinner picnic basket full of your favorite foods/drinks and bring chairs or blanket for this outdoor event. Tickets on sale Monday, November 2, 2009.

Tickets:

  • $19.00 General Admission
  • $15.00 Garden Member (members may purchase up to 4 tickets at member prices per membership.)

Tickets are limited, nonrefundable and nontransferable to other garden activities. Purchase tickets at Leu Gardens’ Gift Shop every day from 9:00 am – 4:30 pm or online (The last day to purchase tickets online is November 12, 2009, if available) with a MasterCard®, VISA®, or American Express®. No rain date.

Free offsite parking and shuttles are available at Blue Jacket Park off General Rees from 6:00 pm until 10:30 pm.

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One for the food gardeners like me!

organicgardenworkshop

Sept 26, 2009 from 10:00am – 11:30am or 1:30 – 3:00 PM

Econ Farm
16206 Hamilton Dr.
Orlando, FL

An organic garden can provide top quality fresh produce, fun, exercise, and relaxation on your balcony or at your backdoor.

For a gardener at any skill level, this Simple Living Institute workshop will give you tips on how to start a new garden or cultivate an established garden. Learn hands-on how to design a garden, start seeds, rotate crops, improve soil structure, and control pests.

Participants will receive a handout with essential organic gardening information.

Cost:

  • $12 members
  • $15 nonmembers

Advanced Registration Required
To register, email info@simplelivinginstitute.org or call 321-228-4310.

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The Henry Nehrling Society invites you to participate in our first annual Henry Nehrling’s Garden Groove!

Henry Nehrling’s Garden Groove is a music & arts festival-styled benefit for the Henry Nehrling Society and Nehrling Gardens. 100% of the proceeds (including the vendors’ fees) will go directly to the Nehrling Gardens Acquisition Fund.

The benefit will be held on Saturday, September 19th, 2009 at Vignetti Park in Ocoee, located at 1910 Adair Street, just minutes west of Downtown Orlando.

GardenGroove

COST

Tickets are a $20 donation with kids under 10 years old FREE! You can buy online too.

MUSIC SCHEDULE

MORE ACTIVITIES

Come meet Smokey the Bear! 10 AM – 1 PM.

These activites will take place throughout the day.

  • Moon Bounce
  • Dodgeball & Kickball
  • Face Painting & Bubbles

Hula-Hoop Workshop
Hula Hooping is not just great fun, it is also good exercise. Look for us around the stage throughout the day. Stop by and say hi and give a hoop a go. Can’t hula hoop? Stop by anyways and get some pointers from the other hoopers. You’ll be surprised what you are capable of! 25 professional hoops in three sizes will be available for use during the event. For more information on hula hooping and other spinning activities check out FloatingCircle.com and our MeetUp Group for other local spinning opportunities.

Enchanted Walkabouts
This Enchanted Walkabout program is designed to instill Earth Awareness and Nature Appreciation in everyone by getting people to see and feel their connection to the natural world. To be able to communicate with the trees, butterflies, dragonflies, the wind, the flowers, the rocks and all other natural creations with honor and respect. To have people become One with Nature, rather than just walking through the woods and not seeing the beauty and purpose of all. To remind people of their role as Stewards of the Earth and to take better care of their home planet.
It is the only home that we have and to stop taking this world for granted!

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Mid-July is seed starting time if you are planning a fall garden.  But what if you are new and not sure what to plant?

It’s no secret that I’m a square foot gardening fan. One of my favorite resources is the Kitchen Garden Planner at Gardeners.com.

READY MADE PLANS

You can select from 6 pre-planned designs — the All American, Cook’s Choice, High Yield, Plant It and Forget It, Salsa & Tomato Sauce and Salad Bar.

saladgarden

MAKE YOUR OWN

You can also click and drag an assortment of plants from the menu bar down into the grid area to make your own design:

designgarden

It will tell you how many of each plant will go into each square foot.

There’s also Step-by-Step care tips, a Vegetable Encyclopedia, and Supplies and Accessories that you can buy at the website.

BOTTOM LINE

While the vegetable encyclopedia is informative, you are also going to want to check out the Florida Vegetable Gardening Guide from the extension office (PDF Version) to get Florida specific info.

I do wish it allowed you to specify how big your bed is rather than limiting it to a 3 ft x 6 ft bed in the planner. That would be a nice improvement down the road. Expanding the 30 item plant list to include more herbs, fruits and vegetables would also be good.

The planner is easy enough for kids to use and you can print out the designs.  It’s definitely my favorite of all the online planners I’ve seen so far and good for beginning gardeners.

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There’s a lot of interesting things happening downtown this weekend.  I’m probably attending this class before I peek at the Summer Sale at Avalon.

permaworkshop

WHAT:

Introduction to Permaculture Workshop

WHERE:

Florida School of Holistic Living Education Annex
1109 E Concord St
Orlando, FL

WHEN:

Saturday, July 25, 2009 from 10 AM to 12 PM

WHO:

Hosted by Central Florida Urban Homesteaders

MORE INFO

The word “permaculture” was coined and popularized in the mid 70′s by David Holmgren, a young Australian ecologist, and his associate / professor, Bill Mollison. It is a contraction of “permanent agriculture” or “permanent culture.” Permaculture is about designing ecological human habitats and food production systems. It is a land use and community building movement which strives for the harmonious integration of human dwellings, microclimate, annual and perennial plants, animals, soils, and water into stable, productive communities. The focus is not on these elements themselves, but rather on the relationships created among them by the way we place them in the landscape. This synergy is further enhanced by mimicking patterns found in nature.

A central theme in permaculture is the design of ecological landscapes that produce food. Emphasis is placed on multi-use plants, cultural practices such as sheet mulching and trellising, and the integration of animals to recycle nutrients and graze weeds. However, permaculture entails much more than just food production. Energy-efficient buildings, waste water treatment, recycling, and land stewardship in general are other important components of permaculture.

More recently, permaculture has expanded its purview to include economic and social structures that support the evolution and development of more permanent communities, such as co-housing projects and eco-villages. As such, permaculture design concepts are applicable to urban as well as rural settings, and are appropriate for single households as well as whole farms and villages. “Integrated farming” and “ecological engineering” are terms sometimes used to describe permaculture, with “cultivated ecology” perhaps coming the closest.

ABOUT NATASHA MCINTOSH

Natasha McIntosh received her certfication in Permaculture Design from the renowned Permaculture instructor, Scott Pittman two years ago. She traveled in Central and South America for 1 1/2 years working on various organic farms, permaculture farms and urban agriculture projects as well as several ecovillages. She returned in February ’09 and has been actively involved with the Local Food Alliance and various garden projects.

COST AND RSVP

$25 tuition includes materials. Register with a friend and save $5 each ($20 tuition).

Call 407-595-3731 or info@holisticlivingschool.org to save your seat as space is limited.

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For those interested in learning more about organic gardening!

Organic Growers Meeting
hosted by Simple Living Institute

July 15

7 AM – 9 AM

Leu Gardens
1920 Forest Ave.
Orlando, FL

The meeting is free and open to anyone interested in organic gardening, foods, or products. Arrive early at 6:30 for socializing, food, and beverages. Afterwards we continue the discussion nearby at Ethos Vegan Kitchen from 9-10pm.

This month Nick Francisco of Blodgett’s Nursery will chair an Open Forum on gardening successes and challenges. Bring samples of plants and or write your comments and questions on a note card. Nick will also discuss the BRIX quality evaluation system.

As always, bring any surplus from your garden to share, treats for the tasting table, and plants and gardening supplies for the raffle table. (Tix $1 each, 6 for $5)

Simple Living is adding a sales table to the meetings.  Items include wormcomposting products, garden patch boxes, totes & t-shirts.  2 gal banana plants at $8 each; 1 gal blueberry, pineapple & papaya plants @ $5.

For more info call  (321)228-4310 or email info@simplelivinginstitute.org

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March 4 is the last frost date for Central Florida. If you haven’t already started, there’s still lots you can do do garden this semester.  One easy project is growing salad greens in a windowbox. It doesn’t take up much space so even apartment dwellers can get in on the green thumb action.

Choose the Seeds

It doesn’t really matter what you grow — Asian greens, southern greens,  spinach,  lettuces… we chose a looseleaf lettuce mixture from Seed Savers Exchange because we wanted to do the “cut and come again” approach. You could just as easily do tighter heads of lettuce and harvest the whole thing.

lettuce1

Get a Windowbox

You can use any kind of window box.  I have a fondness for self-watering ones where you can fill a reservoir and then the plants can get what they need as they need it. I tend to be forgetful about watering things in containers so having a water reservoir helps the plant get some water consistancy even though I may be a bit flaky!

The 39 inch models we have were a little splurge over at Gardeners.com.  (Google for “gardeners.com coupon” — you can usually at least find a free shipping one!)

I like that the reservoirs have covers with a little floating stick indicator to tell us when the water level needs topping up. It gets hidden onces the plants fill in and bugs stay out.

Any kind of potting soil will do, but I like the plainest possible with no added fertilizer or gel crystals. If you can find organic potting soil it’s bonus.  Fill your planters up and then have child sprinkle seeds around and water. Place in sunny spot. We started them in the patio in a sunny corner since it was too cool out yet.

 

lettuce2

Watch It Grow

About five days later you will see little sprouts peeping out.

lettuce2a

They’ll get taller and as the weather warms up you can move them to a good sunny spot outside.

lettuce4

Here’s the same lettuce a few days after being outdoors — it likes the sun!

lettuce5

Here is the same one in the corner of the box ready to cut.  It filled out nicely:

lettuce71

Harvesting

“Harvesting” the windowbox lettuce isn’t anything more than using a pair of snub nose school scissors to let my daughter give the plants a trim.  She holds up one of the oak leaf lettuces and the tray she gathered.  The lettuce will grow back so you can come again to harvest more later.

lettuce8

We turned the first batch into a tomato and avocado salad to go with our lunch. That particular lettuce mixture is tender and mild tasting.

lettuce10

We had harvested from the top box and will hit the bottom box next.  If you love salad, planting two boxes should keep you in good supply for quite a while! When the plants finally poop out or bolt, just sprinkle some more seeds and grow a fresh crop!

lettuce11

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