Monday, September 16, 2013

Whole Lot of Thanks!

Thank you Whole Foods Whole Kids Foundation!

This year's garden activities will be possible in part by a $2000 grant we applied for from Whole Foods.  The focus is on growing local, organic food and teaching kids where their meals come from - the ground!  Customers at Whole Foods for the past couple weeks have been making donations at the four Whole Foods throughout Vancouver to support these agricultural initiatives at many schools:

Monday, September 2, 2013

Super Local Spud Salad

Welcome Back to School!  Eat Wolfe-grown potatoes on Thursday!

We're going to dig up the potatoes that have been growing by the gym.

The Welcome Back BBQ is on Thursday evening, and we hope to have dug, washed, cut & cooked our very local potatoes to serve to everyone.  These are potatoes from Wolfe gardens grown near the gym.  In previous years, we usually plant a few different varieties to teach about biodiversity.





Sunday, July 28, 2013

Bee Friendly Main Street


Honey sticks, propolis, pollen, honey, frozen treats and more - all in the neighbourhood.
They have books, good photos, sample bee hive boxes and suits to look at.
If you keep your garden watered, the bees will get their nectar.
They have the HoneyBee Centre in Cloverdale, and are now just south of King Ed on Main Street.

BTW if you need wasp nests removed, Joe Wasp is your guy!



Saturday, July 27, 2013

5 Summer Watering Tips

For the Bees, please!
You can get a flower, but if it doesnt have enough water, there won't be enough nectar (the bee's food).  
We owe 1 in 3 bites of food to a pollinator.  So water your plants and feed the bees at the same time!

1.  Water timing - in the early morning or the late evening - water will evaporate quicker in the daytime

2.  Water thoroughly for a long time every few days - if you only do a light watering, it won't penetrate the soil.  Roots will move to where the water is and you want deep root growth so the plant can survive drought conditions.  Not sure?  stick your finger in or dig down 4 inches to see if anything has gotten wet.

3.  Good Soil Soil - Keep your soil full of organic matter that helps absorb and slow release moisture.  Sandy soil drains quicker and won't retain water so more frequent watering would be needed.  Adding compost annually helps.

4.  Mulch - if you can't get to every area - use bark mulch, wood chips, even cardboard to help keep moisture in.  Bonus:  less weeding.

5.  Build irrigation dams.  If soil is super dry, water will just run off or away from your plant.  Build little moats to keep the water in a specific area, even around one plant.  Be patient as your water ssslowly finds a way to get absorbed by those ultra dry particles!

Household tip:  Containers and raised beds dry out quicker than in-ground plants.  Move containers if you are going away to shady spots that are less stressful.  We are near setting a record for longest days of sunlight and the least amount of rain.  It's a good thing we have those West Coast mountains and reservoirs full of H20 (as opposed to a desert ecosystem where the water is way way way underground!)

Thanks to the Wolfe Watering crew - keeping our gardens alive in the heat!

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Summer Watering

Hi all,

Our easy breezy schedule of summer watering has begun.

No green thumb required!

If you want to help out, please email generalwolfegardens@gmail.com

We all do a little, and everything will keep growing until the students are in their new grades.

Happy Summer Everyone!

Thursday, May 30, 2013

School Gardens all over town


Together we'll grow healthy foods for the school community and engage students in experiential learning.  We'd love for you to come and join us in building this new farm!
When: June 1, 2, 3, 4
Where: David Thompson Secondary School map here
Time: 9:30am - 1pm, 1:30pm - 5pm each day.
What to wear: Clothes you can get dirty in! Long pants! Closed toed shoes! Gardening gloves, Rain-Gear: we'll be working outside rain or shine.  RSVPs to volunteer@freshroots.ca

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

30 x 30 Challenge

Get outside!  The David Suzuki Foundation interviewed on CBC radio, Queue, Jian Ghomeshi
Challenge your family to take the challenge to be outside for 30 days in a row for 30 minutes.



Excerpts from the CBC radio interview:

Kids spend an average of 6 minutes outside a day and 6 hours in front of electronics (computers, TV, cell phones).  This is the reversal of 99% of human existence was outside, or even 100 years ago when most children were left outside to play.  With the explosive growth of cities, we need to be surrounded by other species - plants and pets.  Canadians spend an average of 9.5 hours sitting down.

He gives the example of taking a walk around and breathing in the greenery and reflecting on the reliance we have on plants.  We would not be here if we don't have plants, even though we are now largely an 'indoor species'.  The evolutionary history we have changes our physical needs to be active.
Vitamin D from sunlight and obesity are markers of this, and we work against what our bodies require.

If we only love our technologically created recent habitat, we won't take care of our environment.
Nature is our home, we are born out of it and we go back to it when we die.
Humans are disappearing from the outdoors at a rate that would have us on an endangered list!

We need clean air and clean water for our survival.  We focus on economy more than our atmosphere.  We forget our fundamental biological fact.  Without clean water and air, we can't survive.
We are not separate from nature, we are a part of nature.

The interview quoted above with David Suzuki interviewed by Jian Ghomeshi, CBC radio Queue;
http://www.cbc.ca/video/player.html?clipid=2384012833&position=3588086&site=cbc.news.ca

'We could never have loved the earth so well if we had had no childhood in it"  - George Eliot

Take It Outside - a good teacher reference  http://www.takeachildoutside.org/