Inside The New York Botanical Garden

Plan Your Weekend: Family Garden Wakes Up!

Posted in Programs and Events on April 3 2009, by Plant Talk

Gardening and Crafts Welcome the New Season
Annie Novak is coordinator of the Children’s Gardening Program in the Ruth Rea Howell Family Garden.

Spring is a waking season. Several days ago the staff and volunteers of the Howell Family Garden gathered for breakfast to welcome the start of 2009 and swap stories of our winters. Our true “new year” starts in March. Fueled by a little food and conversation, we set to work hauling compost, trimming back leaves, and assisting Dave Vetter, our head gardener, in his mighty task of starting several hundred vegetable seedlings.

Although in nature it’s usually the fall we think of as a time of great transformation, spring surprised us this year by giving the Family Garden a bit of a facelift. Three years ago we built a Lenape wigwam, last year we built a green-roofed rabbit hutch, and this year Dave Vetter, Family Garden Assistant, and Han Yu Hung, Children’s Gardening Program Garden Coordinator, are humming happily inside our new greenhouse. The Family Garden’s newly built “hoop house” was designed over the winter by Toby Adams, Family Garden Manager. Admiring it for the first time, staff and volunteers ooh’d and aah’d and promised not to accidentally tear open its double-plastic sidewalls with a careless pass of a garden fork. As the day grew cooler with sharp winds, we huddled inside, where the air was warm and soil-scented. Maybe next spring our new building will be an apiary, where thousands of friendly bees can pollinate our vegetables, as they do all over the cities of Chicago, Toronto, and Seattle.

Watching the garden awaken is, to me, the best part of a temperate climate. I admire the flourish of a season like the fall, which gives way to winter with dramatic color. But I’m happier in the springtime when the warmth sneaks up on you, with delicate splashes of color in our green garlic shoots or the swollen buds of tulips and magnolia trees. We have robins all over the garden now, too, as the worms begin to move again through the gradually warming soil. And hurrah: Last Saturday, our visitors and families were back! The Children’s Gardening Program begins with new lessons on green living and healthy eating and old favorites celebrating the harvest and learning more about springtime birds and bulbs. Our afternoon programming, Family Garden Adventures, begins tomorrow, April 4, with the aptly named theme “Wake up, Garden!” Families are welcome to join us for gardening and craft activities from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m.

Recently, we read that the White House is building an organic vegetable garden on its South Lawn. Several of our staff and volunteers had clipped the article from the newspaper, and over our breakfast at our garden cleanup, we studied the garden plans. Would it be possible, I asked, to dedicate one of the children’s plots to mirror that of the Obama family’s? Toby agreed. (Although wouldn’t it be great if Michelle Obama’s plans emulated ours?) But truthfully, the best part of the Family Garden is how many hands go into helping us grow. Even a full White House staff can’t hope to compete with that!

Comments

RJ Ryan said:

Welcome back wonderful gardeners! Do you have photos to share? Everything sounds so wonderful and- FUN.
Why not email the “right people” at the White House offering your garden idea(s). Maybe they would be interested in a “family” garden that their girls could work with. Do it quick before tehy have adog to walk….

BgMurlich said:

This is great! Hopefully with progress and publicity the patriotic garden will receive a visit from Mrs. Obama!

Ida Cohen said:

Hy Sonia and or wwhoever is in charge.
I am an old gardener, in my 80s but healthy even if maybe a little weaker than I once was, who would like to work with you in the children’s garden. Could you use me, maybe in the greenhouse watering or elsewhere watering. I know a bit about gardening and I love children. They seem to get along with me too.
I await your reply. I have asked Jackie, volunteer coordinator to assign me tasks but she hasn’t this year. I think she doesn’t believe I am able. You can judge when you see me work. I hope you think I can be of use.
Love Ida