Monday, August 25, 2014

Let's get composting

Thanks to Katelin & Andrew Ryan, we now have a compost tumbler for the pocket park community garden!  I tied a chain around its leg and locked it to the fence to make sure it stays put. The bin is located on the inside of the fence at the very back of the lot.

If you're new to composting like me, check out this link to a "how to compost" DIY guide.  There are lots of resources out there.  Anyone from the surrounding neighborhood is welcome to start saving their food scraps and yard waste (take it easy on the yard waste as this bin is relatively small). It might help to start by getting a gallon sized container with an air tight lid.  Whenever it fills up in your kitchen, bring it over to the lot, dump it in the compost bin and give her a few spins.  There is a locking pin that needs to be disengaged in order to spin the tumbler.  Once turned, the pin should be re-engaged.  I think there is a balance to the types of waste that should be added to the tumbler, but for now we just need to get it started with a good mix of browns and greens.


Special thanks to whoever mowed the lot too (above)! Looks like one of the watermelons has already been harvested.  Whoever it was, please let us all know how it tasted in the comments!  The strawberries are looking GREAT as well (below).  I planted some arugula in furrows between the strawberries. Arugula is a peppery leafy green that grows best in cool weather.  It should be ready to harvest in 30 - 45 days.



The black-eyed susans that Karen planted are proliferating and creating a great balance of color with the pink roses (below).  It is so nice to see a tidy garden with such potential.  Thanks for supporting this endeavor!




Thursday, August 7, 2014

Summer Progress

Thanks to yesterday's efforts of many Indiana University School of Medicine volunteers, the pocket park is looking better than ever!  THANK YOU IUMS VOLUNTEERS!!!

Panorama of Olive Street Pocket Park

Not only do we have our first few watermelons (play "Where's Waldo" with the watermelon below), but the generous volunteers led by second year med student, Jose Pena, performed outstanding work to cut beds, mulch, weed and maintain the lot, which was looking pretty raggedy late into the summer.  Here are a few before pictures:




 Half finished bed cutting and planting needed to be tidied up (above), and the beds needed to be weeded a bit before plating a fall garden (great idea, Jack Graves!).  And the transformation continues with enlarged perennial beds (below):



The cantaloupe and watermelon bed (below) looks fantastic for having been planted fairly late in the season.  Behind this is the strawberry bed with a few starts getting their roots on.


Four unused garden beds are clean from weeds and ready to become something great (below).  Fall planting might include arugula, spinach, asparagus, broccoli, cauliflower, and butternut squash.  What a bountiful harvest THAT would become!



The IU volunteer team even built a large sandbox frame for the park area in the back of the lot (above).  We just need to find some sand!  That shouldn't be hard with all the gravel and sand pits on the SW side of town!  And to top off the day, the team mulched our back fence line (below).  This multi-purpose public space is really beginning to shape up!


Thanks again to the IUMS Team from the Neighbors of 1401 Olive.  We look forward to building this relationship moving forward.

Monday, May 12, 2014

Has it been that long?

Here we are on May 12th, well into the Spring, and so little has been done!  What can be said is that we have a bunch of GREAT new neighbors in the area, hopefully willing to share in the work load that will result in the beautification of 1401 Olive Street.  Based on some discussion had by neighbors after the Great Indy Clean-up a couple weeks ago, we saw a few projects that need immediate attention:
·        Mulch Installation & bed cutting
At our last pow wow (during the neighborhood clean-up), we discussed adding mulch to the existing bed along the west, and cutting additional soil out to install mulch also behind the fencing (enlarging the mulch bed essentially).  Scott and I will plan to provide enough bulk mulch for the pocket park front fence line at a minimum.
·         Landscaping
There seem to be plenty of opportunities locally to cull plants from overgrown yards and gardens and to transplant them over to our park area.  We can use lilies, lambs ear, daisies, black eyed susans, periwinkle, clematis – basically ANY type of perennial that isn’t invasive and would complement the idyllic park setting.  There is no landscape plan, alas there is no landscape planner.  Karen Dunivan has suggested that she would transplant a few natives, but she’s the only one who has really indicated intent to act.
·         Water service installation
I believe there is an opportunity to connect to a nearby water meter.  We’ve had brief discussions with the new owners and desire to create a win-win whereby the park can access their water line and pay them for the usage.  We’d just need a valve installed with some kind of metering device and a yard hydrant to which we could connect near the fence.  It would be nice to have someone who could investigate this as a package deal.
·         Raised Bed Gardens
I’ve kept my eyes out for old pressure treated framing lumber, but I haven’t come across any recently.  I’d rather not buy lumber for the raised beds, although it wouldn’t take much to create a few to get started.  We could also try to get some donated stock from a local lumber yard, perhaps warped stuff that would otherwise be scrap.  We really just need someone to cold call local dealers of lumber to see if we can get enough lumber to build about six short raised beds (for now we could even just do three).  I don’t have a source for soil yet either, although there is a heap behind my house at 1342 Linden Street as well as a heaping mound of soil from a sanitary line installation behind a house just north on the 1300 block in the alley.  It’s not great soil, but it would be a good start, and we could potentially top off with compost from the City of Indianapolis compost pile at the Kentucky Avenue landfill.
·         Fence maintenance (painting / latch repair)
The fencing needs minor maintenance including additional stain and fixing of the latch mechanism for the back alley fence.
·         Grass maintenance
The grass installation seems to have fizzled out this year.  Scott dumped some grass clippings that we can use as straw.  I’m going to contact the guy who reseeded the lawn to see if he will provide additional coverage.  We may have to wait until the fall to see how it fills in and how much is left over the summer.  The last time we seeded, the Summer pretty well delayed seed sprouts for three months.  The yard area will most certainly need some general weeding, although we should probably try to perform regular broad leaf weed control and fertilizer as time and money permits.
 These are just a few of the items we need to think about for the 1401 Olive Pocket Park.  If you have a special interest, please let us know.  Don’t let the lack of a formal meeting out there stop anyone from organizing their own effort to address any of the above-mentioned items.  In due time it will pay off.