Final Market of the Season
Saturday, April 16th!
Come join us as we prepare for the upcoming growing Season! Our programming includes ADULT INTERNSHIPS, GROW CITY YOUTH, GARDEN SHARES, COMMUNITY PLOTS & more. We will be adding events such as school tours and volunteer days, nutrition education, mindfulness/yoga, growing classes, and more in …
As we near the end of November, it’s still a crazy busy time of year for the garden. We are nearly finished transitioning from our summer-fallow fields to planted rows. That means weeding and prepping beds, transplanting, weeding, and continuing to start seedlings. And weeding….. It doesn’t always go as quickly as we’d like. We’re thankful for our two new adult interns, who are learning the ways of the garden and the harvest knife. And for our staff who are making a good start on teaching the entire process to our GrowCity Youth interns at both TFF sites. Jenny and Amanda (our adult interns at the TFF Parkway site) have just completed their first month of harvesting with us at the TFF site, while Will, Chris, and Sam have done the same at the Patricia Davis Community Garden, our second site in Pompano.
Brinkley and Rebecca, GrowCity Youth interns at the Parkway garden, harvested over 300 pounds of sweet potatoes from our summer garden to go into autumn and Thanksgiving meals. We planted those sweet potato slips in late spring and watched them grow and vine throughout the heat and humidity of our South Florida summer. Some of the tubers they harvested are massive, some are the shapes and sizes people are used to seeing at the grocery store, and some are smaller — a full range of sizes, shapes, and colors. We’ll go back through those rows for another look and see if we missed any — there always seem to be a few that get away from us and then start growing once we’ve replanted the row with its new crop….
Our fall fundraising seedling sale brought both old and new friends to the garden in support of our GrowCity Youth program. GrowCity Youth helped out, leading garden tours and carrying plants out to people’s cars. It was a lovely day seeing so many of our garden friends and meeting others new to the Fruitful Field. If you missed it, don’t worry — we plan a second sale for mid-December, coinciding with our GrowCity Youth graduation.
As always, the garden is thankful for our amazing volunteers. If you are interested in getting your hands dirty with us, we would love to see you! Come out to work with us on our monthly Volunteer Work Days (the third Saturday morning of each month 9 a.m. to noon). We also thank our more frequent volunteers, from those that come out each week for a few hours to help with weeding, watering, mowing, or other tasks — all the way up to our adult intern program of six scheduled hours per week to make our CSA program and veggie donations possible. There are always a range of projects that may connect with your particular interests — get in touch with us and come out for a garden tour to see what we do!
Despite the August heat, our first eggplant and pepper seedlings are sprouting in the nursery (they love the heat!) together with broccoli and mini-broccoli, cauliflower–including the new varieties that everyone liked so much last year–kales, tatsoi, cabbages, and many of the others that will start …
Here at TFF, we can’t believe it’s already the beginning of the growing season. Even in these late-summer 90-degree days, tomato, pepper, and eggplant seedlings—as well as kales, cabbages, colorful swiss chards, broccolini, cauliflower, and more—are growing nicely in the nursery. And by the way, …
Noah, one of our summer volunteers, and I plucked two ripe figs from our Brown Turkey fig tree, tore them open to see the glistening pink and white flesh, and then popped them, still warm from the sun, into our mouths. If you’ve had a fig this way, there is simply no comparison to those from the grocery store. Perhaps part of the joy is the surroundings, that indefinable “fig” smell of the fig leaves and fruits, and the satisfaction of looking around our newly cleaned-up food forest area.
We’ve had a busy summer so far fixing things, tidying up areas of the garden that haven’t seen enough attention over the past few years, and building the infrastructure that we need for what we expect to be our busiest and most production season yet.
Here’s a little of what we’ve been doing
Mending fences. Our executive director Chris worked with Charles from Parkway United Methodist mending fences around the property, many of which had been damaged since Hurricane Irma. This is a critical step forward in securing the property for the safety of our teens, our community gardeners, visitors, volunteers, and staff. Gates to the garden are now open only when TFF or Parkway staff are on the property. Visitors and walkers are welcome — just come during our open hours.
Tidying up the food forest. With our GrowCity Youth back in the month of June to complete their Spring session (split up over the week into groups of 4 or 5 teens each), we’ve been able to make a lot of progress. They’ve weeded, mulched, trimmed back branches that were encroaching on the fruit trees, and redefined many of the garden paths that had all but disappeared. Even in the shade, it was hot work.
Expanding plantings
And then there are the big projects
Amazing volunteers (and roommates) Noah and Julian brought their power tools and devoted several days to rebuilding the community plots with new, taller, wooden raised beds with lumber donated by our local Home Depot store. It’s a sight to see, and with more of our community gardeners caring for their plots, we are also seeing more happy plants growing than usual at this point in the year.
Our big project for the month of July is building a new seedling nursery. As many of you already know, our original hoop-house nursery no longer receives enough sunlight for efficient seed-starting due to the fast growth of the many Australian pine trees nearly. After talking to a few of our local arborists, it was determined that trying to cut down — or even cut back — these huge trees was not really an option at this time, so we made the decision to build a new, slightly larger seedling nursery closer to the community plots, where it will receive sunlight all day. (Many thanks to the Frederick A. DeLuca Foundation for making the new nursery possible.)
The old hoop-house still has an important role to play. Now that we’ve cleared out the entire space we plan to use it as a nice gathering/seating space that will take advantage of its pleasant, shaded location. (At least once we are able to “gather together” again.) Chris, Noah, Julian, and Pastor Jim from Parkway United Methodist removed all of the old, rotted wood from the back of the church’s storage shed and refaced it with new lumber, painted it white, and we’re hoping to soon have a garden-oriented mural there. Our few still-usable nursery tables have been moved to a temporary summer nursery under the little hoop-house in our West Rows, where they are nearly filled with our summer’s propagation projects — pots of mint started from cuttings from many different varieties, oreganos, marjoram, rosemary, lavender, pigeon pea seedlings, luffa squash, air-layered mulberry trees, passion fruit, malabar spinach, and more.
As we head into July, we’ve got a lot yet to do, but we’ve made a lot of progress. It doesn’t seem possible, but in not much more than a month we’ll be starting seeds for a new CSA season of veggies, greens, and herbs. We hope you’ll join us in whatever fashion suits you best — as a CSA subscriber, volunteer, intern, community gardener, GrowCity teen, or garden supporter/donor.
If you haven’t been out to see the garden for a while, come visit and see what we’ve been doing! (Summer open hours: 9 a.m. to noon every day except Thursday and Sunday.)
Insects are everywhere in the garden, but, as our GrowCity Youth discovered on Saturday morning’s Bug Hunt, that’s not all bad news. Some are beneficial, acting as natural predators to our less-favored garden pests (like that very pretty cabbage looper that wants to eat all of the broccoli). Others help with pollination. We are especially fond of our garden spiders, which set up webs in among the tomato plants and catch stinkbugs. As it turns out, our GrowCity Youth are pretty good bug hunters, too!