July 16th, 2022 – workday

Hi all,

REMINDER: Our next workday is Saturday at 10am. 

Here is our agenda:

Here are tasks we have scheduled for the workday:

  • clean out the cistern on the east side
  • work on refurbishing the wooden structure that holds up the water pails on the west side 
  • clean out the temporary cat houses
  • clean the sidewalk and pick up litter
  • fill the water barrels
  • get rid of rat habitats

Thank you!
🌹🌶🌻🐝🌱🍅🌼🌸☀🍆🐞🐀

Workday Raindate and Other News

Workdate on the 12th was cancelled, we plan on gathering on the 18th instead:

Due to pending rain, today’s meeting/workday has been cancelled.  Our pre scheduled rain date is  next Saturday, June 18.  A reminder notice will go out later in the week.

If you still care to be in the garden today and want to do some work, weeding around the OUTSIDE of all raised beds is always needed.  Remember to NEVER pull weeds from the inside of someone’s bed or communal bed.  You never know what unique or desired plant is growing there.  We have lost several special plants this way recently and the disappointment is deeply felt.

Thank you and have a beautiful day!

The West 104 Garden Steering Committee

Agenda for the Meeting

1.  Dirt Delivery-Volunteers needed for June 17 between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m.

2.  Flea Market-New format this year

3.  Updates to Monitoring Sign-up and Website

  • Sign up for On Call shifts

4.  Make Music NY

  • volunteers needed?
  • Should the garden sell refreshments to raise some money?

5.  Compost Distribution Event

  • Suggested Dates
  • Explanation of Event

6,  Umbrella-new location?

7.  Announcements:

  • Weeding in communal beds or other people’s  beds
  • Member announcements

8.  Tasks:

  • Weed around the beds
  • Rubble removal
  • Painting shed roof (postponed because we need two days of no rain after painting)
  • TBA

Misc/Announcements

One of the Garden members Jean also pointed out that NY Philharmonic in the Park has returned this year! (thanks, Jean!) So we will be posting external events to the calendar.

See you on Saturday!

Open Garden Day – 2022

Open garden day was quite a success! We had a wonderful relaxing day with current members and introduced a few new ones to our garden community 🙂

Our events committee chair Donna says:

Thank you!

To Suzanne & Victoria who got the supplies, Nicole for making the flyer, Victoria who hung the banners & prepped both days, Nushin for the Scavenger Hunt clues, Suzanne/Victoria/Nicole&Zack/Layah/Roberta who staffed each day, VictoriaAndrew/Abby who helped take the banners down and Andrea who put all the supplies back in the shed!

While there no crowds clamoring to get in everyone who came had a great experience & walked away with a very chill vibe! We got two new members to join today & one of them who signed up to take out the trash came BACK to put it out! 

Thank you for your contributions 

We’ll meet on Sunday during the Workday to talk about the Make Music New York event on Tuesday, June 21. Nicole has already offered to make the flyer! See you all on Sunday 

🌻
🐝

Open Garden Day – June 4th and 5th

Open Garden Day NYC is a GreenThumb Event.

Get your hands dirty at the West 104th Street Community Garden! Join us on June 4 & 5 for seed planting, painting flower pots, maze walk, and scavenger hunt. No RSVPs needed and all are welcome! 

Join the West 104th Street Community Garden on June 4 and 5 for fun with the whole family! Maze walks, seed planting, flower pot painting, and a scavenger hunt – all while getting to know your neighbors. 

Happening this week! Join your neighbors on June 4 and 5 at the West 104th Street Community Garden for activities for the whole family. No RSVP needed! 

December Rat Academy

From NYC Health:

Please join us in December for a Rat Academy virtual training to learn about rat prevention methods.

Free, virtual training for:
• Building supers and staff
• Homeowners and tenants
• Managing companies

To pre-register, please click on the dates available and download calendar when prompted.

Rat Academy for Community Gardeners:

Access the Rat Information Portal here
For information on how to sponsor a virtual Rat Academy, contact ratportal@health.nyc.gov

May Events from GreenThumb

Hi all — Please see below for information and events from Greenthumb.

GreenThumb Gardeners’ Handbook 2021

The 2021 Edition of the GreenThumb Gardeners’ Handbookis a resource for community gardeners and the general public that covers a variety of topics, including event planning, construction work, accepting donations, selling garden produce, tree pruning, garden bylaws, and much more. The handbook includes many, but not all, GreenThumb, NYC Parks, New York City, and New York State best practices, policies, and laws that pertain to community gardens in the GreenThumb network. Gathering these topics and policies in one place helps gardeners in creating and sustaining these thriving public spaces. Gardeners have informed policies, guidelines, and protocols included in this Handbook, and GreenThumb is grateful for the immense time and grassroot effort community gardeners put into making gardens beautiful, productive, and community-centric for more than 40 years.

The Handbook is available to all garden members and members of the public in digital form here on our website and will soon be available at the same link in multiple languages.

GreenThumb Programming Updates

Open Garden Day 2021 – Sign up to Participate!

Saturday, June 5, 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.

We are seeking community gardens across the city that want to participate in our fourth annual Open Garden Day NYC. During this day, gardens open their gates on the same day to invite the general public to explore these local jewels. This year we are celebrating Open Garden Day NYC on Saturday, June 5th (World Environment Day) from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. (rain or shine). 

We are asking all gardens who are taking part in Open Garden Day NYC to schedule a free activity or event for the public to enjoy, along with some of our city’s finest community garden spaces. Activities can include tours, arts and crafts, music performances, workshops, or feel free to suggest your own activity. Please note that all gardeners must follow thecurrent health and safety guidelinesfor all activities. 

If you would like to participate, please fill out the form at bit.ly/OGDNYC2021.  Open Garden Day event submissions will be accepted on a rolling basis until May 26th.The first 50 gardens that sign up will receive a banner for their garden gate. 

Please see the attached tipsheet for suggestions on how to host an event or activity during Open Garden Day 2021!

May is Bike Month – Community Garden Bike Tours!

NYC Parks GreenThumb is partnering with the NYC Department of Transportation to celebrate May being Bike Month with a series of socially distanced community garden bike tours, along with the release of a number of self-guided bike tour maps available for download and use. 

To learn more about the NYC Department of Transportation’s bike programming, safe cycling resources, and more check out their website

Read on for more details about our upcoming community garden bike tours. These tours are specifically geared towards people interested in community gardens but are not current members. Please share this information with friends, family, neighbors, anyone interested in joining a garden!

South Bronx Community Garden Bike Tour 

Saturday, May 15 1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. 

Please register here. 

South Bronx has always been the hotbed for urban expression and innovation. The community gardens highlight this legacy by providing the visitor a glimpse of South Bronx’s unique take on eco-sustainability, community needs provision, youth and senior involvement, entrepreneurship, indigenous spirituality, animal husbandry, and cultural inclusivity. Prepare yourself for a warm South Bronx welcome!  

Central Brooklyn Community Garden Bike Tour 

Saturday, May 22 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. 

Please register here. 

This tour will take you through Brooklyn neighborhoods which collectively include almost sixty percent of Brooklyn’s GreenThumb gardens. We will start the bike tour at Garden of Life garden in the Bedford Stuyvesant neighborhood. This neighborhood includes 53 GreenThumb gardens. We will then cycle through Brownsville (26 gardens), ending up in East New York (56 gardens). While the predominant use of these gardens is food production, you will be sure to see the beauty of Spring flowers in almost every garden. 

Harlem Community Garden Bike Tour 

Saturday, June 5 12:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. 

Please register here. 

This historic Harlem bike tour explores the neighborhood’s rich community garden legacy. Along the ride, participants will see diverse food production practices honoring Black southern roots, horticultural beacons, and outdoor educational spaces that are woven into the fabric of Central Harlem. 

This event is part of NYC Parks GreenThumb’s Open Garden Day 2021, a day where we celebrate community gardens and where many are open to the public at the same time. This year, Open Garden Day is taking place on World Environment Day

GreenThumb Webinars

Join us for an ongoing series of online workshops to dig in, grow food, and keep your community garden going while following health and safety protocols.

Did you miss the 2021 GreenThumb GrowTogether Conference? Are you looking for past workshops, and other tutorials from GreenThumb? They are all available on our new NYC Parks GreenThumb YouTube channel! Click here for all the videos.  Please subscribe to our channel to be notified of new videos and stay up to date.

Upcoming webinars include:

Please click the link to RSVP and receive information on how to join the webinar.

Saving Seeds in NYC: Local Seed Keeping Initiatives Panel

Tuesday, May 11, 5:30 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.

Keeping seeds connects us to our past and to our collective future. This virtual panel will highlight the various ongoing seed keeping initiatives in and around New York City that community gardeners can get involved with. Learn how to connect with larger ongoing efforts to save and share seeds for food and herbs in our region.

They Only Come Out at Night: Inviting Bats to your Garden

Wednesday, May 12, 12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.

Bats love eating mosquitoes, so we love bats! Join NYC Urban Park Ranger Dan Tainow for a workshop on how to create bat habitat in your garden. We’ll discuss bat house design and installation. Co-presented with GrowNYC Education.

Open Orchard School: Heirloom Apples and Pears

Thursday, May 13, 12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.

The Open Orchard School series gives participants a hands-on, behind-the-scenes view of the creation of The Open Orchard, a future public orchard containing 100 trees and hundreds of rare and heirloom varieties once grown in the NYC region, but which have disappeared due to climate change and industrial agriculture. In this webinar, artist and orchardist Sam Van Aken will share the often lost or forgotten stories of these rare fruits—stories that are woven into the story of NYC itself. Learn about his decades-long project of collecting these varieties and grafting them onto living trees in order to preserve them, the process that will bring The Open Orchard to life.Facilitated by Sam Van Aken, The Open Orchard.

Planning a Zero Waste Garden Event (Part 1 – virtual)

Thursday, May 20, 12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.

Join Earth Matter NY to learn how to plan a zero waste garden event. As stewards of our earth, we should be mindful of the types and amount of resources we consume and strive to reduce the amount of waste we produce. During this workshop, we will introduce the concept of zero waste and teach you what goes into planning and hosting a zero waste event in your garden.

Open Orchard School: Heirloom Stonefruit

Friday, May 21, 12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.

The Open Orchard School series gives participants a hands-on, behind-the-scenes view of the creation of The Open Orchard, a future public orchard containing 100 trees and hundreds of rare and heirloom varieties once grown in the NYC region, but which have disappeared due to climate change and industrial agriculture. In this webinar, artist and orchardist Sam Van Aken will share the often lost or forgotten stories of these rare stonefruits (such as peaches, plums, apricots, nectarines, and cherries)—stories that are woven into the story of NYC itself. Learn about his decades-long project of collecting these varieties and grafting them onto living trees in order to preserve them, the process that will bring The Open Orchard to life. Facilitated by Sam Van Aken, The Open Orchard.

Planning a Zero Waste Garden Event (Part 2 – in person)

Monday, May 24, 12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.

Governor’s Island

This workshop will go over the basics composting your garden waste and paper products from events to turn into black gold to apply on your garden beds to promote soil health and vibrant plants. We will take you on a tour of our space on Governors Island and dive into the various components of our Zero Waste Island Initiative, a partnership between Earth Matter NY and the Trust for Governors Island. Space is very limited, and masks will be required. We will be managing a waitlist, so if you register for a ticket and no longer plan to attend, please cancel your ticket or let us know. Participants will be invited to take the 11am or 11:30am ferry to Governor’s Island. Full details will be shared with registrants as the date gets closer.

Saving Seeds in NYC: Basics of Saving Dry and Wet Seeds

Thursday, June 3, 12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.

Keeping seeds connects us to our past and to our collective future. Learn the basics of how to save both dry and wet seeds of common garden veggie crops and herbs. Saving the seeds from the crops you grow can help save money, preserve heirloom varieties, and more. Facilitated by Owen Taylor and Zainab Muhammad, Truelove Seeds.

Updates and Resources from Partners

Working with NYC Parks: How to Build Relationships 

Wednesday, May 12, 6:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m

Community groups who support neighborhood parks and green spaces are most effective when they understand how NYC Parks operates and develop relationships with staff. NYC Parks can be a challenging system to navigate; this webinar will help lay the groundwork for a mutually beneficial relationship so you can best advocate for projects in your community. If you have any questions, contactacademy@cityparksfoundation.org.Join us to learn:

  • Examples of successful community group relationships with NYC Parks staff.
  • How NYC Parks is structured, centrally and in each borough.
  • Tips on how to build successful working relationships.
  • Relevant COVID-19 updates to NYC Parks policies.

Is 501(c)(3) for Me? For Community Groups Interested in Becoming a Nonprofit

Tuesday, May 25, 6:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m

The rewards of starting a nonprofit are enticing: tax-exempt status, expanded grant opportunities, and tax-deductible contributions. Beneath these advantages are complicated logistics and costs which often beg the question—does incorporation make sense at this time? This webinar, facilitated by Partnerships for Parks and the Lawyers Alliance for New York, will go step-by-step through the process of incorporation and tax exemption, leaving you with a better picture of whether or not 501(c)(3) is right for you. We will also discuss alternatives to starting a nonprofit, such as seeking fiscal sponsorship.

CitizensNYC All In Neighborhood Grants Available

Grassroots organizations responding to the immediate needs of struggling New Yorkers will receive unrestricted grants of up to $10,000 to open food pantries, distribute surgical masks, arrange elderly check-ins, or design other projects to meet their neighborhoods’ urgent needs amid the COVID-19 crisis. This grant program is a renaming of our keystone Neighborhood Grants program, which for decades has been awarding micro-grants to resident-led groups to improve the quality of life in their neighborhoods. Grants supported projects in arts, health, environmental justice, beautification, tenants’ rights, and more. Groups do not need 501c3 status to apply and receive the funding. CitizensNYC quickly shifted the focus of this program after findings of a survey we conducted of our extensive grassroots network highlighted five urgent priorities across the city: financial assistance, food, care for older adults, mental health care, and physical health care.

Applications are accepted on a rolling basis. You can learn more about the grant, sign up for an info session and apply here

High Tunnels for NYC Gardeners, Growers, & Farmers

If you’ve ever thought about incorporating high tunnels or hoop houses into your garden or farm to extend the growing season, or if you’re curious to learn more about these structures, take five minutes to fill out a short survey from Farm School NYC. Your responses will help inform New York City-wide interest in high tunnels for growing more food and developing a roadmap for urban farmer mentoring and training. With help from the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and Farm Service Agency (FSA), technical support and grant opportunities will be available for planning and funding of materials and labor. 

New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets Community Growers Grant

The New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets is now accepting proposals for projects of up to $50,000 for their 2021 Community Growers Grant Program. For program overview, proposal format and a budget template, please visit here. Applications should be received no later than July 1st. For any questions about this funding, please contact: Kimberly J. Vallejo, Director – New York City, NYS Department of Agriculture and Markets at 718-722-2668 /kim.vallejo@agriculture.ny.gov.

Green Guerillas is seeking gardeners for their Council of Gardeners

All community gardeners and allies of open spaces are invited to join the Council of Gardeners, an inclusive, cross-borough group of community gardeners coming together to voice their needs, initiate collective action, seek funding opportunities and to build social capital.  More information about getting involved and upcoming meetings is available here.

Gowanus Canal Conservancy’s Weekend Plant Sales & Compost Givebacks 

Saturday, May 8, 10:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.

Saturday, May 22, 2:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.

For spring 2021, the Gowanus Canal Conservancy is thrilled to be holding 3 weekend public plant sales and beginning in April a weekly pick-up day for online orders, on Wednesdays 11am-1pm. Native and urban-adapted plants grown in Gowanus, Brooklyn will be available. All proceeds support Gowanus Canal Conservancy’s mission-based programs. If you are ordering online, at check-out please select a date to retrieve your order using the date picker so that we will have it ready for you. During the weekend plant sales, you can browse the nursery, purchase plants + soil and pick-up limited quantities of free compost from Big Reuse! 

Plant sales and pickups are located at our nursery, located at the Salt Lot in Gowanus at 2 Second Avenue, 11215. For more information, please visit the Gowanus Canal Conservancywebsite or email plants@gowanuscanalconservancy.org

LES Ecology Center has Compost Available

The LES Ecology Center has free compost available for community gardens! Delivery options are available to sites in the Lower East Side. All other gardens would need to coordinate a pick-up from the Ecology Center’s compost site in East River Park in the Lower East Side. Fill out their Compost Request Form to request compost and learn more.

GreenThumb Events for September

COMPLETE THE 2020 CENSUS NOW 

Dear all — please see below for the latest greenthumb announcements. In particular, I encourage everyone to sign up for the Rat Academy! It is more fun than you think to learn about preventing rats in our garden. 🙂 — Bethany  

The 2020 Census is critical to the future of New York City. If we don’t complete the census, New York City will lose billions of dollars distributed by the federal government every year for schools, hospitals, health clinics, affordable housing, public transit, and much more. We will also lose up to two seats in Congress and representation in Albany. 

The census is easy, safe, and confidential. It can be completed online or by phone, and is just 10 simple questions that can be answered in under 10 minutes. By law, your responses are completely confidential and cannot be shared with anyone — not immigration, not the police, not tax authorities; not even your landlord. There are no questions about immigration, citizenship, criminal history, or income. 

All you need is your address – no special code required. Visit my2020census.gov or call 844-330-2020 to complete your census form today.

Invasive Pest Sightings – Spotted Lantern Fly

The Spotted Lantern Fly (SLF) is an invasive pest that was first found in the northeast in 2014 and was confirmed as found in NYC in Manhattan in the latter half of 2019. Since that initial sighting they have been found in many places in Manhattan and other boroughs, unfortunately. The Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and the state Department of Agriculture & Markets are conducting surveys currently via inspections. It is important that people report sightings of the SLF as well as their egg masses to  spottedlanternfly@agriculture.ny.gov or here https://survey123.arcgis.com/share/a08d60f6522043f5bd04229e00acdd63  

The fact sheet attached to this email can help you identify the Spotted Lantern Fly and its egg cases. All sightings should be reported, and the insects themselves should be placed in a baggie or jar to be suffocated so that a DEC or NYSDAM representative can collect it after you report it through the above survey or email address. For egg masses, a small sample should be scraped into a zip-lock bag and sealed. The remainder of the egg mass should be put in a baggie and doused with alcohol or hand sanitizer and then discarded.

GreenThumb Programming Updates

Special Webinar with International Partners

Food for Resilience: Transatlantic Lessons from Community Gardens and Farms
Friday, September 18, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.  

This webinar will share lessons from across the pond on how community food growing is building resilience in cities, how they have responded to Covid-19 and reflect on what we can learn for the future beyond Covid-19, for challenges that lie ahead.

Organized by Capital Growth in London, NYC Parks GreenThumb in New York City and Toronto Urban Growers, it will provide a context for how the cities are supporting and organising their networks, and share valuable insights from the gardens.  

Harvest Fair Goes Virtual

Saturday, September 26th, 10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.

GreenThumb’s annual Harvest Fair celebrates the ongoing efforts of GreenThumb community gardeners who have continued growing and producing during these uncertain times. Join us for a day filled with workshops, a virtual tabling with our greening partners, and the announcement of this year’s winning harvest from community gardeners. Stay tuned for the schedule for the day! 

If you are a GreenThumb gardener and think you’ve grown an award-winning vegetable or flower, please enter the 2020 Harvest Fair competition! Submit up to 10 photos in total of your best vegetables and flowers. Winners will be announced on Saturday, September 26th during our virtual recording. Winners will receive a virtual certificate or a ribbon for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place. Entries will be judged on condition, quality, uniformity of size, and color.

For more information visit www.greenthumbnyc.org and to enter the competition, please fill out the Harvest Fair Submission Form by Friday, September 16th.

What’s Wrong With My Vegetable Plant? Office Hours with Cornell Cooperative Extension

Thursday, September 17, 12 p.m. – 1 p.m.

What are these spots on my tomatoes? What is this bug, and is it eating or helping my crops? GreenThumb is thrilled to continue our partnership with Cornell Cooperative Extension (CCE) this fall to help GreenThumb community gardeners have a successful growing season. Please submit your photos and questions in advance (photos from past seasons are welcome if you anticipate recurring issues this season). During the virtual office hours, CCE Urban Agriculture Specialists Yolanda Gonzalez and Sam Anderson, together with GreenThumb staff, will do our best to provide answers, tips, and suggestions! Register to attend the virtual office hours at cce_officehours_sept.eventbrite.com. These sessions are reserved for members of GreenThumb community gardens in good standing. Please submit your photos and questions in advance, by Monday, September 14 at noon

GreenThumb Growing Food Toolkit

GreenThumb supports community gardeners in growing food through educational workshops and materials. In the GreenThumb Growing Food Toolkit, you will find most of our workshop handouts and webinar recordings, as well as many resources from partnering organizations, on topics related to food production. We will continue to add to this page and update our educational resources as time and capacity allows.

GreenThumb Webinars

Join us for an ongoing series of online workshops to dig in, grow food, and keep your community garden going while following health and safety protocols.

Did you miss some of our past webinars and are interested in learning more about that topic?  Did you miss our great keynote speakers on Earth Day?  They are now available to watch online here: bit.ly/GreenThumbWebinars 

Upcoming webinars include:

Please click the link to RSVP and receive information on how to join the webinar.

Conflict Transformation Circles: Orientation
Wednesday, September 9, 5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.

How can we hold space for and resolve conflict within our groups? In these monthly sessions, mediators Skye Roper-Moses and Michelle Jackson will facilitate discussion circles for community gardeners to bring their challenges to the group and collectively generate solutions.  This one hour orientation is important to attend for all future sessions.

Conflict Transformation Circles for Community Gardeners
Wednesday, September 23, 5:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.

How can we hold space for and resolve conflict within our groups? In these monthly sessions, mediators Skye Roper-Moses and Michelle Jackson will facilitate discussion circles for community gardeners to bring their challenges to the group and collectively generate solutions.

Demystifying Mental Health Care with ThriveNYC and the Department for the Aging
Thursday, September 24, 12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.

Tune in for a discussion on ThriveNYC and NYC Dept. for the Aging’s services and resources, and how they can support community gardens across the city. Come with your questions!

Organizing for Garden Success: Group Structure
Wednesday, October 7, 5:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.

This two-part workshop series is designed to help your garden group build a strong foundation for your group’s leadership and decision-making structures. 

Updates and Resources from Partners

Department of Health & Mental Hygiene Rat Academies

Rat Academies have gone Virtual!  Attend a session to learn more about safe and effective rat prevention techniques. Upcoming sessions require RSVP here:

Partnerships for Parks Webinars

Partnership for Parks provides support to neighborhood volunteers to advocate and care for parks and green spaces. They are offering a variety of webinars that may be of interest to community gardeners.  Details about upcoming webinars are available here. 

Distance Learning from our Partners

GrowNYC’s Education programs are providing weekly reads and activities using upcycled, easy-to-access materials for children and adults at home. Learn how to build your own tiny greenhouse in your apartment, a tasty recipe for mugwort, and more by visiting: https://www.grownycdistancelearning.org/

New York Restoration Project is also posting webinars on their YouTube page on different topics including climate change, green infrastructure and soil health.

Soul Fire Farm is hosting Black womxn farmers every Friday on Facebook Live to discuss gardening, livestock, agroforestry, plant medicine, and food preservation. Anyone is welcome to join, but please create space for centered folks to speak and ask questions. Learn more.

Food Resource Guides: 

In this difficult time, we understand that food insecurity is a growing concern. Please see these food access resource guides from partner organizations. 

Coronavirus NYC Neighborhood Food Resource Guides: To help connect community members in need with food resources during this challenging time, the Hunter College NYC Food Policy Center is constantly updating Coronavirus NYC Food Resource Guides for each NYC neighborhood. Each resource guide includes information related to food access within the community, such as meals for students and seniors during this time, delivery services for people with disabilities, and resources for immigrants. Resource guides will be published and updated as rapidly as possible, in order of the NYC neighborhoods most impacted by poverty and food insecurity. For more information, visit: https://www.nycfoodpolicy.org/coronavirus-nyc-food-reports/

GrowNYC COVID-19 Schedule Changes & Resources: Most Greenmarkets and some Farmstand locations are open and operating on schedule, changes to the schedule are listed here. In addition, many Greenmarket producers are offering a variety of ways to purchase their products, from allowing customers to pre-order and pick up at a market, to direct home delivery and shipping products from their online stores. All of that information is available in one place at GrowNYC Greenmarket Alternative Sales Directory 2020. For more information, visit: https://www.grownyc.org/blog/schedule-changes

Cooperative Extension Survey about Urban Agriculture

The survey available at this link will help Extension educators and researchers at your local land grant university better serve urban farmers and gardeners. NYC Parks GreenThumb is not affiliated with this research. We are sharing it in case gardeners want to get involved.

Food and Agriculture Anti-Racism Resources

FoodTech Connect compiled this list of resources to help with better understanding systemic racism in the food system. They also included Black-owned farms, businesses and organizations to support. Learn more.

LES Ecology Center has Compost Available

The LES Ecology Center has free compost available for community gardens! Delivery options are available to sites in the Lower East Side. All other gardens would need to coordinate a pick-up from the Ecology Center’s compost site in East River Park in the Lower East Side. Fill out their Compost Request Form to request compost and learn more.

Happy Fourth of July!

As a reminder of upcoming events:
July 4th  – 4th of July Potluck at the garden (If it doesn’t rain) starting at 1pm. Bring something and share with your fellow gardeners.
July 11th (Next Wednesday) Working day 6pm to 8pm.
July 14th  Join us! 2nd Flea Market of the Season. Please find attached the promo in two versions. Feel free to help us spread the word by printing a copy and post it in a visible area of your building. Thank you!
Have a Happy and Safe Holiday!
Dinorah
(Membership Coordinator)

Harvest Festival is Sunday, October 28

Our harvest festival is going to be celebrated this Sunday, Oct. 28th. From 1 to 4 pm. We will have games, food, music and prizes. We count with you and your family presence to make of this event a successful one.

Also, the organizers will appreciate any generous contribution to the event…We welcome pies (food in general), drinks, prizes, and your time to help supervising one of the multiple activities we are planning. If anything else comes to your mind that you think might be good for the event, and was not mentioned, please contact Dinorah Matias-Melendez at: dinotias@rocketmail.com. Subject title: Harvest Festival.

Thanks, and hope to see you all on Sunday!

west 104garden harvest festival October 28, 2012
Download the flyer to post on your building bulletin board

Summer Flea Market

Our second Flea Market will be held on July 14th from 11am-6pm in the West 104th Street Community Garden. The flea market features a great bazaar of vintage clothing, toys, bric-a-brac, and whatever else your imagination brings.

Vendors please inquire with Julia at 646-363-4513. Table space is $10, but you must provide your own table.

Download the flyer to post on your community bulletin board.