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A beautiful crop of raspberries... |
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...but you have to work for them! |
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Keeping the raised beds watered... |
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Mmm... |
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One of our grazing animals... |
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Our new compost bins get their first turn! |
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A beautiful crop of raspberries... |
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...but you have to work for them! |
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Keeping the raised beds watered... |
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Mmm... |
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One of our grazing animals... |
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Our new compost bins get their first turn! |
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What better way to spend the 4th of July than in the garden eating fresh picked strawberries? Locally grown food is real independence. |
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A couple of the Keweenaw Community Drum Project folks stopped by and gave us a little rhythm to work to. |
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Freshly seeded rows...grow, grow, grow! |
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Beth brought a tasty bean salad to share made from her showy broad beans she grew and dried last season (click her to see a picture of her beans in flower last summer). |
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Great weather and a great turnout (over 20 people) for opening day of the garden season. |
The Ryan Street Community Garden provides Hancock residents the opportunity to grow healthy, affordable, fresh vegetables, fruits, flowers and herbs for their households. It also serves as a place for social interaction and creates a beautiful and educational landmark in the community demonstrating ecologically-sound and climate appropriate practices.The main event activity was building a community composting system for the garden. A big thank you to Rick Loduha for helping with the design and construction.
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Preparing the site for the new compost bins. |
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Assembling the cedar frame for the 3-bin system. |
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Many hands move the assembled bins in to place. |
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In place and ready to put the removable front slats in. |
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Fully assembled and in operation. |
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The Free Little Library returned to its summer location. |
The Co-op and the Portage Lake District Library are collaborating again
to bring the day long conference TEDx Manhattan, "Changing the Way We
Eat" on Saturday, March 7. "Free access to some of the most exciting ideas happening in sustainable food and farming."
Click here for more info and the list of speakers > ![]() |
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Nothing beats a good pair of gloves and a bucket for loading woodchips. |
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The same view today (2014) with The Ryan House (Nissen House) in the foreground next to the garden. |
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Hancock/Houghton is one of 30 satellite cities helping to raise
awareness, and encourage support of the People’s Climate March taking
place 9/21 in NYC. Poster designed by Justseeds. |
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Blanching the stalks of our cardoon plant (Cynara cardunculus), one of our experimental crops. |
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Joyce's plot sign looking right at home amongst the sunflowers. |
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The flower stalks of our oregano creating a really beautiful texture that none of us have seen the like of before. Now where did we write down what variety that was? |
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Our last garden day with Kris and Kate. They're pulling up roots and moving to Boulder, Colorado. We'll miss you! |
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Speaking of pulling up roots...look at that daikon! |
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She's got a true heart of comfrey! (Yes, we rent her out for birthday parties.) |
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Beth's showy beans...ooh la la! |
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Digger Don doing his thing! |
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Look close...our first ripe tomatoes of the year. We're keeping our fingers crossed. |
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The Ryan Street Community Garden is now host to a LITTLE FREE LIBRARY. Thank you to Finlandia University faculty Bill Knoblauch, Rick Loduha, and Art & Design student James Mars for coordinating, building, and installing the project. |
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Our strawberry pickers. |
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The wall mosaic is growing... |
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A special visitor in the garden, a Monarch Butterfly caterpillar perched on top of a dill plant. |
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What a lovely weeding crew. The front border plants are really taking off. |
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Susan practices Tai Chi while slashing the grass. |
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Dave breaking it down with our new loppers! |
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Mark joins in, one-handed...what dedication. |
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Jennifer wrestles the downed limbs and brush piles to clear the way for our shady sit spot. |
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Joyce at work painting our plot markers. |
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Our mural inspection team. |
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Strawberry blossoms—a promise of harvest for next garden day (we hope). |
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It was a rough winter for fruit trees. Mother Nature did some harsh pruning of our apple tree. Here's Don, caught in action, cutting up the downed limbs. |
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One of our two plum trees damaged by the glacier, this one saw the worst of it. Time for a tough love prune. |
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Our strawberry plants buried in glacial till (road sand deposited from the parking lot glacier). What a mess. |
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Our trusty garden crew to the rescue... |
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Our perennial area looking much happier after a little damage control. |
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Let the planting begin! Joyce is the early bird this year. |
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One of our newest garden members, Eric, takes on the job of turning last year's compost piles. Black gold! |