Sunday, August 3, 2014

August Update

August Update

Folks,
   Most of the work done on the Green Team this spring and summer has been with the Greenhouse. Even though we often have over 100 tomatoes on the vine, they have not ripened as fast as I thought they would. When ones have turned red, I have taken them to the church and put them on the counter at the receptionist's desk. I really had hoped the Roma tomatoes would ripen all at once and we could can them for future use, but not yet. Here is a photo of the ones I harvested this week.
  Now this is not a huge basket and the harvest is small. I lost about 8 this week to a mouse that I cannot seem to catch. I thought squirrels were getting in but I blocked all possible access points. I put in 3 mouse traps but none were caught and all had cheese removed and were trap opened. Either smart mice or medium rat. They may live in there.  Ideas folks?  None of the tomatoes in the outside raised gardens have been bothered.
   I should have photos for you of the inside and outside gardens. I would like for you to drive down and look for your self. Hugh Wilson did a great job with his back hoe in making the road widened to the greenhouse and outdoor chapel in the woods. The door is not locked. I have only used organic fertilizer on the crops and no bug spray. I often eat them off the vine and you can too.  I assume that we will have tomatoes through this month and maybe next month
    I water daily, prune the bottoms, pull off suckers( wayward stems) and do some harvesting. I have not had the time or energy to build the complete automatic irrigation system. If you recall, I do poorly in the heat and only work early in the morning and late in the evening. My energy level is fair then. Do not know why I picked a project that keeps me out of the air conditioning and in the heat. I do have a fan in the greenhouse and that helps.  Maybe this week I will finish the automatic watering system.
    I now have some help. Mark Thomas, son of Bob and Kathy Thomas is a rising Jr at AC Flora and will be a part of the International Baccalaureate  (IB) program. He needs to participate in a community leadership program and has asked to work with me and the Green Team. I had Mark as a middle school Sunday School student a few years ago and he was great. He has just started and I have only used him once for last weekend when I was out of town and needed watering for Sat and Sun. I hope all of us can find constructive ways for Mark to help the Green Team in our activities for the next two years and help him develop some leadership skills.

   Come down to the farm as I call it to Kim. We have green peppers, tomatoes, cucumbers, flowers, basil, parsley, rosemary, sage and soon, carrots and squash.  I am starting to plant seeds for fall and winter crops. I will be keeping Mark busy and any volunteers busy too.
  Bob

Build Your Own Rain Barrel
Thursday, August 7 2014
4-6 pm
St Michaels and All Angels’ Church

Rain Barrels can collect rainwater off your roof, which can use to water your garden, wash your car or any other outdoor use. Rain water can help you save water, save money and reduce storm water pollution.
Learn about
    * Rain Barrel construction                                 
    * Storm water run off and pollution
    * Rainwater harvesting with barrels.
Program Fee: $35.00 includes all materials
         Pay fee to church
Coordinated by: SMAA Green Team and
         Clemson Extension



Pay Registration fee to SMAA:      One per family and more than one family member can work on barrel!
Name (s) ______________________________________________________________Phone______________
Address___________________________________________________________________________
City__________________________________________email________________________________   


    

Saturday, June 21, 2014

June 2014 Green Team Update

Folks,
   One of the first things we notice about the Green Team at St Michael and All Angels's is that it does not get published very often. As the editor of it, I think about doing it often, but I always want to share something that is completed first!  Well... I have some things to share from the growing side.

  Since January when I started buying supplies, I have built a green house or hoop house that many amateur and professionals call the structure I have made. I followed several designs I found online, my major teacher for about everything.  I have made mistakes, from which I have learned much and still am learning a great deal. I am not a master gardener, but one who likes to fiddle in a garden. No master gardener has come forward to help me in my task so mistakes happen.

So here is the hoop house or the farm as I tell my wife, Kim, where I spend so much of my time these days
Since February I have spent from two to eight hours a day working on this farm and a little in the adjacent outdoor chapel and composting units. As many of you know, I have multiple sclerosis and tire very fast when doing work that requires energy. This means that I often work thirty minutes, rest twenty, work thirty etc...
On hot days, my output may just last 10 minutes before resting. Heat really zaps me. Since May, my output has become limited so I work early in the morning and late in the afternoon or evening.  Otherwise, you will find me in air conditioning on my bed or couch.  But work is being done.

Tomatoes
This is our prime crop this year. In the greenhouse, I have about 45 plants of three variety, Celebrity, Roma and Marion. They all are producing some small fruit ( or is it vegetable)
                             
These are the ones in the green house and these have  grown fast, all organic. But they do take watering at least every day. This is difficult as I am still using a hose to water them. Hugh Wilson borrowed a backhoe for us to search for the waterline from the irrigation line from the pump in the woods. It took us forever and over 100 feet of digging 2 ft deep and finally found the line, that we broke. We found a special connector for the 2 inch pvc pipe and I also ran a line off of it to the greenhouse with an off/on switch outside the greenhouse.  I also ran a line to the sink I installed at the rear of the greenhouse and one to an irrigation drip line that will be used in the greenhouse and outside in other gardens. ( I hope this is not too much info)
Well... that line is not working too great yet... been too hot for me to figure out why as it takes most of my time and energy to water all the crops.  I also ran a trenching machine 125 ft to the power pole next to the irrigation pump for electricity. I have put in the conduit and will pull the wire next week to the greenhouse. This will give us our own power for lighting etc. We now run extension cords from the Dial house.

Speaking of crops. If you go back to the photo of the greenhouse, you will see a white barrel I cut in half as I needed more places to plant. On the one on the left I have several green bell peppers growing and on the right several flowers ( forgot what kind...cannot wait to I see a flower)  I also built a small flower box in front of the greenhouse right above the peppers. Here I have some more flowers.

I purchased some trays of flowers from a lady in Kershaw who just grows veggies from seeds and sells flats at farmer's markets in Camden. She gave me some extras as it was a church project. So we had many tomatoes and marigolds ( these help with bad bugs). So I built an extra raised garden along the fence of the ELC and the kids come and talk about the daily progress. It is 3 feet wide and as soon as I cut some branches off a nearby tree, and allow some more sunshine, I will add some more squash. I mostly have Marion tomatoes in this garden, some basil and cukes. The cukes have grown up above the top of the fence and the kid love them. I am afraid they may pull the ones off within their reach once they start producing.


          In the foreground of the photo on the left is a pallet that I am building a vertical garden that disabled folks can take care of from walkers and wheel chairs.  I have some zucchini and basil growing in these and will add some more herbs soon.  I have collected about 20 more pallets for our team to use for their own gardens. I recently tied up all the tomatoes seen here. It is so damn hot that it took me four mornings to get them done. I have found a velcro tape for tomato tying that works great. I just have run strings from poles to the fence. I hope rodents do not attack these tomatoes when they burst foward.

Now in the green house, I have Celebrity on the left and Roma on the right. They are on the tables and on the floor. They grow so fast that daily I am tying them to string and my velcro strips. I should have purchased small bush tomatoes, but I am still learning.

                                            
These are full of small tomatoes drink a lot daily. Tomatoes have both the male and female in each flower and bees usually brush the pollen from one to the other in the flower. I have learned that a child's electric toothbrush, vibrating at the base of the stem to the flowers does the same as the bees. So I have been doing this fertilization each time I visit. Before I go the toothbrush, I just flicked with my finger under each one and it has been working. I would like your input to learn how to distribute the crops!  I have been thinking about our shut ins, Harvest Hope, homeless and just a bunch on the counter. I would love to have some of them canned for future spaghetti supper use or even Sunday Breakfasts.

Recycle, Reuse and Reduce

We recently had the gutters replaced on Sturdevant Hall. I asked Hugh to save them so we could sell the copper they are made of and I also wanted to make some planters. I had planned to attach them to the fence near the greenhouse, but decided to make a stand and put them next to the greenhouse. I found three decent ones, cut them to size and removed some of the hardware. I made a stair step stand and screwed them on. I filled them with some potting soil and transplanted some of the flowers I had been growing from seed and some herbs. I also had some cukes too for it too. This is Reusing something that might have been thrown away. We will recycle the rest and get about $3.00 per pound for the copper.


I also have been collecting some white plastic barrels for us to make some rain barrels. As you can see in the photo below, I have 4 at the church and have 5 in another location. The Clemson Ext person has promised to come and do a free workshop for us. Well, almost free, as participants will have to pay twelve dollars for pieces and parts.

Some of the kids ( and we have so few) have been putting together bird houses and painting them. I still have three for them to do and hope in the next two weeks they will be complete. Three have been painted and are in the woods. This is good and they look great.
Before Pentecost Sunday, several of us led by Hugh Wilson and his big Backhoe, prepared the outdoor chapel for the service. After Hugh and I tore up the area looking for the water line, he then moved all the dirt left over from cemetery digging to the bigger driveway to make better parking for our older and disabled.Not some machinery that he uses daily, he spent the week making the small path into a 20 ft wide road and leveled it out. Richard Vandiver used a big ground cutter and cleaned out areas around the greenhouse, outdoor chapel and Bridgewood. Chris Beis came down the day before Pentecost and worked for hours with the rest of us spreading pine straw, removing rubbish, filling in holes and assembling the tent. Jim Lawler also came and helped with the tent and some other work. I used my riding lawn mower to cut many areas around the greenhouse, outdoor chapel and roadside. I also cut down some small trees that were in the way and hauled branches away.  It was great on Pentecost to have the service in the clean outdoor chapel, a semi finished greenhouse and gardens and a big parking area for those who needed it. We had 74 people there, the largest crowd we have had in months!

I have no photos of the newest compost bin. Pie Sharp has donated two that we will use when we do a compost workshop sometime this summer. The cooking teams were great this spring saving their usable scraps for composting. They used the bin I built and put outside the kitchen. I have been trying to weekly empty it in the big bin. I cover the new composting material with new loose dirt. The guys who planted the flowers and rocks at the front of the sanctuary, put their left over dirt across from the compost bin and I use some on top of the compost every time. Marion Salter has donated one of Bill's old pitchforks for me to turn the compost and this will be great. I have not done it yet! Marion is also using some old flowers from Sturdevant Hall in our kitchen compost. I have used some old flowers from the churchyard too in the compost. Some folks like Cathy Cook are bringing compost from home and adding to our kitchen bin. Any of it is welcomed. I am also getting some green clippings from the landscape team. The nitrogen is great!

Monthly I take a truck load of electronic and electrical materials to the county's recycling area. SMAA is so good about bringing these things in for recycling. We take anything that has a cord on it and I can also recycle flash light batteries too.  I think we might as a church do more than other houses of prayer in the Columbia area.

The three bins that Margaret Todd negotiated with Sonoco for recycling are being used well. They take plastic, newsprint, cardboard and magazine print. These bins below are in the trash bin area off the kitchen. We hope to have new bins in the church for these products soon. We do have a plastic bottle basket in the kitchen for recycling, behind the freezers.


Whew... that is a lot to talk about. I would like to thank Kim my wife who has helped me organize much of the "stuff" I have in the greenhouse to make things work. She also has helped me water the tomatoes several times. I will be happy to get the water connected as I will have a timer on it and will put drip lines to all plants. This will take some time to do this. The electricity will allow me to hang a florescent light which may allow me to work in the dark and cooler times.

Mark Thomas is going to be helping me as a part of an IB program of his at AC Flora. He needs a leadership project for the next two years, and I am really looking forward to working with him. I had him in Sunday School a few years ago and he was so bright and helpful.  We need now to be planting seeds for fall and winter gardens. Yes... this is a year round greenhouse. We also want to do more with the outdoor chapel and related grounds. Our Green Team can help with this!

GREEN  is more that Greenhouse... lets all get involved!




Monday, January 20, 2014

Jan 21 More update

Green Team update
          Jan 20

Folks
One of the things I forgot in the blog yesterday was us transforming old plastic barrels into rain barrels. These can be used if you have gutters to gather good rain water for your plants or just collect rain without gutters for the same purpose.  I have been to a Clemson ext course on building one and it was easy. If I get 10 people to come to a session, the Clemson person will come to our church and give us a hour's worth of in class learning and then we go outside and build our barrels.  She brings all the tools we need and parts for the barrels like faucets and drains. I think we paid her $10. each for the parts and class.  If we do not get 10 people, then I can do a much shorter version, but will probably need $10 each for the supplies and barrel.  I have found five of the barrels for $5. each and am looking for more. Below is what my barrel looks like.
 I installed a faucet below and it has a overflow near the top with the blue flat hose.  Mine is topless as I already have one at home for my gutter.  Let us see  if we can do this in February. It would be great to have them ready for March when all the rain comes. They can easily be painted, although not mine yet!

Greenhouse

       I did not mention in the last blog the nightmare I have been having bending the hoops for the greenhouse. I purchased a hoop bender from Johnny Seeds company.  I affixed it to a sturdy dining maple table that has been in my family for 62 years but has been a work table for last 10 years.  I pounded metal spikes into the ground for greater stability.   Well, it lasted three and a half poles to bend and broke.
So today, I purchased two heavy duty landscape logs and cut them into 4' lengths. I then used a post hole digger and dug 18" holes and dropped the four in and tamped the dirt down. I had an old piece of 1/2 plywood a 4'x8' piece and screwed them to the four logs.   This ain't going anywhere.  I would have worked on some more today but while getting up from securing the bending apparatus to the table I lost my balance and fell into some leaves.  240 pounds down on my sore arm ended my day.... tomorrow, Jon Stafford is coming to help me in the afternoon.  We hope to get all the hoops bent tomorrow and get them all secured.
Wednesday we may build the table for inside the total length of one side of the greenhouse.

      I often follow this guy from southern Virginia, maybe near VA Beach. He has tons of You Tubes up and I am learning much from him. Recently he has gone Hyroponic with great success. We should try some of this too.    http://www.youtube.com/user/mhpgardener?feature=watch
Green Team Update  
Jan 20, 2014

Many things are underway since we had our first organizational meeting. I think we should plan to have one every two months and perhaps one the first week of Feb. I will send out a schedule.

We have added Joyce Pundt to our team as I have learned that in 2011 she trained to become a Clemson Master Gardener.
 This is great for us. Her responsibility with her gardeners is to set up gardening presentations with  non profit groups like libraries, schools and churches. These are powerpoint programs with their gardeners offering their expertise.  We are trying to set up some for February and March for everyone at SMAA. We never know how many closet Green Folks are members of our church.

Last meeting and our blog, I forgot to mention that we now have some recycling bins for SMAA. Deacon Margaret arranged for Sonoco, who handles much of the recycling for schools and non profits, to provide us with three rolling bins that we are keeping next to our fenced in trash bin behind the kitchen.  This photo shows the three bins,
one for plastics and cans, one for office paper and one for magazines and newspaper.

We are building a bin for the front of Sturdevant Hall that will collect plastic bottles, cans office paper and maybe compost. We will have a small bin in the kitchen for compost, but most of this is collected from the cooking teams on Sunday and Wednesday. It is also available for any other eating event we have at church.
 We are going to model it after the one at Whole Foods that shows what an go in each bin. Their's is bigger than our will be. The container will be emptied weekly. We hope that folks will also put in their coffee grinds and filters.

While we are speaking of the kitchen, member Marion Salter really wants us to be green in our eating habits at SMAA. Already with her help and Deacon Margaret's we are using recyclable cups, plates and napkins. This is a great move as we used Styrofoam  for so long. We would like to make sure that all our cups and plates can be recycled.
They do this at Whole Foods.  Marion is also pushing cooking teams to use the flatware we have in our drawers instead of the plastic forks and spoons. They have to be washed, but it is not a big deal.  She is helping us figure out how to collect these after eating.

The Greenhouse is coming along and may be finished by the end of this week. Well, built but not finished in that we will not have any plants inside yet. Last week I cleared out the area by removing some trees and limbs. I have cut tons of Wisteria vines from the ground and raked barrels of leaves.
I pounded eight pipes about 2' into the ground for the hoops for the greenhouse. Below is what it looks like now.

This week I will bend the hoops and have the full frame up by Thursday.  Perhaps we will get the plastic up by the weekend.  I have been able to purchase some discard wood from Home Depot for 70% off that we can build a table on one side of the greenhouse that will be covered with chicken coop wire.  The other side will be reserved for some 4'x4' square foot gardens so we can try and grow veggies like this one here.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9bKasAQQuk
This is what the company that we are following for our design came up with in Maine.  Looks great to me. I have bought seeds from this group and other greenhouse folks have recommended their product. By Thursday our greenhouse should look like this.

By Sunday, it should look like this, we hope.
     Here is where the Green Team is going to have to make some decisions on what to grow, how to staff it, how to plant, transplant and everything else.  Some of the presentation by Joyce will be helpful. Many of you are better gardeners that I am and have never had a chance to do gardening from a green house. There are tons of You Tubes on how to do all this... please look!

    We are still finding out ways to bring electricity and water to the greenhouse. Hugh Wilson and I have found a water supply about 15' from the greenhouse for our watering. We will run the line to the outside square foot gardens as well for drip lines. Electricity is harder. We think the best bet is to rent a trencher and run a line from the outdoor chapel,
which has 4 outlets.  It is about 130' from there. I will rent a trencher and will make a 8" trench. We will run cable in a plastic conduit from the chapel to the greenhouse. In the greenhouse we will have lights and some outlets for things like small heaters if needed.  This will be done by next week.

HELP
Up until this point I have been doing all the work by myself, I guess to prove it can be done. I am open to help to finish building the greenhouse.  Here are some Flicker photos of a church in Minnesota building a greenhouse.    I do not expect all of you to show up. But I am usually out there from noonish to 5 pm.

I have promised Joyce a comprehensive plan on how we are going to run the greenhouse and square foot gardens.  I will put something out tonight for us to discuss.  I am going to follow the Green Congregations plan for Richland Counties churches. Plus we will do our own as well.

Next post we will have more photos and will talk about a plan to plant some cherry laurel trees around the outdoor chapel to diminish the Trenholm Rd noise and give the chapel some privacy.
  Bob