1 / 34

The Green Power Garden Story

The Green Power Garden Story. Green Power Garden. The Mission. To compliment food programs in the Waukesha Area with fresh fruit and vegetables Promoting healthy food choices, sustainability and self sufficiency. Green Power Garden Story. Green Power Garden . The Dream.

marion
Download Presentation

The Green Power Garden Story

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Green Power Garden Story

  2. Green Power Garden The Mission • To compliment food programs in the Waukesha Area with fresh fruit and vegetables • Promoting healthy food choices, sustainability and self sufficiency Green Power Garden Story

  3. Green Power Garden The Dream • Ken Miller and Sandra Roback envision a garden that could nourish the needy and provide a place to teach youth about gardening.

  4. Green Power Garden 2010 • Ken Miller provides the land on his property on Milky Way road. • Sandra and her family and a variety of community members volunteer and the first garden is planted.

  5. Green Power Garden The garden begins

  6. Green Power Garden A true grass roots effort • Ken and Bobby Miller donated the use of their land, their tools, timber, water and use of an ATV. • Jim Porter plowed the land with a tractor loaned by Annette Larson. • The UW- Extension provided expertise and enabled Sandra Roback to enlist the help of the Master Gardeners. • John Steinke of Papa Steinke’s Greenhouse in Mukwonago donated unused plants.

  7. Green Power Garden Volunteers • Janet Manke-Fischer and Barb Havas, certified Master Gardeners, provided their help and expertise • St. Paul’s Church • Holy Apostle’s 8th grade track team • Brooklife Church in Mukwonago • Girl Scouts of Holy Apostles Church • Oakwood Church, Hartford • New Berlin Eisenhower High School Football team • Carroll University Students • UW-Waukesha Precollege Program • Waukesha North High School and Waukesha Central Middle School Precollege Participants

  8. Green Power Garden Volunteer Activities • Pick and pull rocks • Grow seedlings • Plant seedlings • Stake tomatoes • Weed • Harvest • Build compost containers • Clear after fall harvest

  9. Green Power Garden The 2010 Harvest • Nearly 2000 pounds of tomatoes, peppers, beans and squash were provided to the Hope Center and the Waukesha Food Pantry.

  10. Green Power Garden The Clients • The Hope Center is a non-profit organization that has been providing hope to those in need in Waukesha County for more than twenty years. • Provides nutritious dinners on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 5:30 p.m. Men, women, and children in need are served. • Its Day Center program serves breakfast and lunch to clients who are homeless.

  11. Green Power Garden 2011 • The Green Power Garden expanded, thanks to landowner Larry Spleas donating the use of two fields just down the hill from the original garden. • Ken and Bobby Miller again donated the use of their land, water and equipment. • Carroll University donated the use of their green house to start seedlings. • John Steinke of Papa Steinke’s Greenhouse again donated his unused onion and pepper plants.

  12. Green Power Garden Volunteers • GE employees from the GE “I care” program • Master Gardeners • Fox River Church • Whitefish Bay Key Club • River Glen Christian Church-Youth Group • Westbrook Church- Families • St. William Church- Youth Group • Carroll University First Year Students • Whitefish Bay High School Key Club

  13. Green Power Garden Without the guidance, effort and enthusiasm of the UW Extension Master Gardener Volunteers, Green Power Garden would not be successful.

  14. Volunteers Green Power Garden

  15. Volunteers Green Power Garden

  16. Green Power Garden Carroll University First Year Students

  17. Green Power Garden Volunteer Activities • Plant seeds in the Carroll Greenhouse • Plant seedlings in three gardens • Create facebook page to communicate gardening plans • Stake tomatoes • Weed gardens • Harvest • Clear the gardens for next year • Work on publicity to gather more volunteers and community help

  18. Green Power Garden

  19. Green Power Garden

  20. Green Power Garden

  21. Green Power Garden The 2011 Harvest • Over 2460 pounds of vegetables: a variety of tomatoes, four kinds of beans, summer squash, winter squash, zucchini, eggplant, kohlrabi, broccoli, and a variety of peppers • A large of garden of pumpkins, grown for cooking, remain to be harvested soon. This is not included in our total!

  22. Green Power Garden The Main Garden 4 kinds of beans planted and harvested : green, yellow, purple and heirloom

  23. Green Power Garden

  24. Green Power Garden Main Garden

  25. Green Power Garden Main Garden

  26. Green Power Garden Squash in the Main Garden

  27. Green Power Garden Planting pepper plants in the third garden

  28. Green Power Garden Pumpkins in the second garden

  29. Green Power Garden Salad Days Through the efforts of the community, the Green Power Gardens provided locally grown produce for meals at the Hope Center. One of our special joys is knowing that “Salad Days” were created for the Day Center meal program. Three days a week, salads are served with meals, featuring the fresh tomatoes from the garden.

  30. Green Power Garden Nutritious Snacks At the request of the Hope Center, yellow grape tomatoes were grown specifically to serve as nutritious snacks that clients could take with them.

  31. Green Power Garden Composting Green Power Garden has set up a compost bin at the Hope Center. The scraps from the meals become the fertilizer for the garden. Creating a cycle of sustainability.

  32. Green Power Garden Volunteers Needed throughout the year • Planting of seeds in March • Watering and growing seedlings in April • Planting in late May • Weeding, staking plants, watering in June • Weeding and bean picking in July • Harvesting in August through October • Volunteer coordination and communication- all year round

  33. Green Power Garden Our Dreams for the Future • A water source for the second and third gardens • A green house located next to the gardens • Volunteers who can teach children and adults about gardening, healthy eating choices and sustainability • More partnerships with youth organizations and those who need healthy food

  34. Green Power Garden JOIN US IN THE GARDEN!

More Related