Showing posts with label Detroit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit. Show all posts

Thursday, June 7, 2012

May Garden Update

As we get into the rhythm of the season it is easy for us to quickly post images and announcements to our facebook page, so be sure to check us out there and to like us so we show up in your feed. Of course we will continue to update this page as well.


Since our April post much has happened at the DHC. Shortly after the last post we completed our brick paver path, and began stock piling materials to build our raised beds. 



After we completed the brick paver path, we began to stockpile broken concrete and compost, which can be seen here.

Building our tiered raised beds involved moving the massive amount of earth which was originally excavated from our amphitheater hole. This earth was used to fill in a large depression in a lot adjacent to us, the result of a demolition cap that had settled over time. We are planning to turn the filled hole into a grain patch in the coming weeks. A similar sink hole existed across the street and was threatening to destabilize  our neighbor's house. He took a large amount of earth to fill in his hole as well.  



Simeon talking animatedly, as our neighbor Kelly moves dirt excavated from our future amphitheater. We moved about fifty cubic yards of earth in order to prepare our raised beds.

Moving the broken concrete blocks was no walk in the park. Moving 20 – 80 pound objects for several hours was back breaking work, especially during the unseasonably hot weather we had in mid to late May. There was certainly something satisfying about fitting the blocks together though. 


Here are the tiered raised beds before putting the front wall on. Half of them have been tilled with compost and fertilizer (manure).  In the background is the crushed limestone which will eventually be used for the floor of the amphitheater.

On May 13th we started Volunteer Days, our weekly garden volunteer meeting. We have had about 10 volunteers come out and help us so far. Thanks to Greg Baise, Matt Lambert and Chloe, Alissa Lamarre, Jesse Soltis, Bryan Baker and Carrie Walker who have all helped out.


Alissa Lamarre, our May Volunteer of the month, helped us construct a bed adjacent to our brick paver path. Note the curved concrete pieces she used around our potted sage. Nice touch. The bed now has red cabbage, chinese eggplant, thai basil and four varieties of peppers.

Now that the crops are in for the most part we have been turning our attention back to the amphitheater and other infrastructure projects. Our water catchment system will be a sub-layer underneath the amphitheater floor and so we are now grading the hole and digging a trench for the plumbing. Any water that falls into the amphitheater basin will run off into a pipe, then two holding tanks, which will be connected to a hand pump, from which we can draw water for the garden. There is still about ten hours worth of earth moving and grading to do before we can put in the plumbing, but we are getting close!


After all the hard labor building the concrete planter boxes, we were able to plant 48 tomato seedlings the last week in May.

So far the real pay off has been seeing the crops take off. The tomato seeds we saved from last season seem to be performing extremely well as they have adapted to the climate here (about 6 varieties), but the other 14 varieties of heirloom tomato seeds we ordered seem to be doing just fine. 


Chard is a biennial, which takes two years to flower and produce seed and our 2nd year rainbow and swiss chard are flowering. We plan to take seeds from them which will likely be cross pollinated between the two varieties. We'll let you know next year what the resulting variety looks and tastes like. The strawberry patch is bearing fruit, but in all likelihood will do much better next year as the plants suffered quite a bit of transplant shock in the May heatwave.


The payoff: A Beam's Yellow Pear already has fruit growing. Tomato season is upon us!


We would be remiss not to mention the incredible progress of our apiary, but we are going to dedicate an entirely separate post to the bees.


We hope to see you down at the DHC on Sunday. 


More soon,
-The DHC Crew

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Garden Progress Update April 7th

Our Sign looks much better with a planter full of strawberries and flanked by a stone wall

Well we have been making steady progress on the garden over the past couple weeks. Support from the North Corktown community has been overwhelming and we would like to thank all of our neighbors for their encouragement.

Progress on our programming area excavation as of mid-March

After breaking ground on March 10th, we have been putting in some serious hours shoveling dirt! We are nearly complete in excavating the first part of our amphitheater. In the next week or two we will be ready to begin installing our retaining wall, digging our teared seating area and grading the programming area. A couple weeks back we had the idea of grading the programming area so as to collect rainwater in a buried 55 gallon drum. A pipe will run from the bottom of the drum to a hand pump. Thus we will have a great water catchment system and reservoir.

a group of volunteers enjoying the beautiful day

Today we hosted 25 volunteers at the DHC. A coalition of Michigan State University Medical Students worked with local high school students to move excavated dirt, clean trash and prepare and lay a brick paver path. The volunteers were facilitated by Greening of Detroit. We also had a number of volunteers from the ranks of the DHC faithful. A huge thanks to everyone who came out today. We will announce our next volunteer day on our facebook page.

The programming area excavation in early April. It's much further along now!

As always we are looking for people who would like to get involved in the garden. In May we will start planting. Our 25 varieties of tomato seedlings are already 4 inches tall, but we need to make sure we have everything prepared for them. Please email us at DetroitHeirloomConservatory@gmail.com if you would like to help in our upcoming construction projects, or visit our volunteer page to get involved.

Volunteer Jesse Soltis helping to prepare our brick paver path


Best from NoCo (North Corktown)
-The Detroit Heirloom Conservatory Team

Tuesday, January 17, 2012




Our first post...Welcome! We thought we might start out with a bit of background information about who we are and what the Conservatory is all about.


The Detroit Heirloom Conservatory began in 2011 as a collaborative venture between Simeon Heyer, Amy Weiks and Gabriel Craig. As craftspeople by trade, Amy and Gabriel have always been interested in the self-sufficiency and empowerment offered by handwork, and in recent years this led to an interest in organic heirloom gardening. Of course craft is also the province of connoisseurship and, as practiced today, a certain amount of romantic preservationism. This interest developed into the fledgling project, Detroit Heirloom Conservatory. When Amy and Gabriel met Simeon Heyer in 2010, and realized there was a shared a passion for historical preservation, urban gardening and bio-diversity the project began to take on a life of its own.


In the 2011 Wayne County tax auction we bought a plot of land in North Corktown, just North of I-75 on Harrison St. Currently, we are developing a design for the garden in collaboration with local lanscape architect Erin Kelly. In our first year we plan to exclusively grow tomatoes, this being a manageable starting point from which to expand. Our goal is to create a dynamic space that serves both seasoned urban farmers and novice growers by providing resources to facilitate heirloom vegetable cultivation in the city and beyond. To that end the Detroit Heirloom Conservatory is service oriented garden centered around heirloom vegetable cultivation, preservation and seed dissemination. It is also our goal to be inviting to the immediate neighborhood community. Community gardens need to serve community to be effective and relavent. 


We hope to empower people through food production, while also promoting connoisseurship, which we see a natural outgrowth of the self-sufficiency that making and growing things provides. We believe an empowered self-sufficient urban farmer or gardener should have the freedom to cultivate whatever vegetables they choose. However, their choices are often dictated by commercial seed companies rather than personal preference. The Detroit Heirloom Conservatory seeks to facilitate an agricultural diversity that reflects the ethnic and cultural diversity of the city of Detroit. We also want to contribute to the resistance of mono-culture farming in a mono-industry city.




That is our premise. We are quite aware that we aim to serve a niche market, but with so many gardens and farms in the city we want to contribute to an already existing network and facilitate the amazing work of others. We are very open at this point in the project. We are taking volunteers and invite anyone who is interested to become involved. If you are interested please email gabriel.craig@gmail.com


Our immediate plans are to design and build the garden for the 2012 growing season. We have plans to conduct stakeholder analysis by surveying and canvasing other gardens and farms in the city to determine how we can shape our programming to fit their needs. If you are a garden/farm owner/worker please contact simeonheyer@gmail.com with your suggestions. 


Right now we are building our website and online presence, this website being a central component. We also have a facebook page which you can view here. We are working on a twitter feeds. There will be links in the sidebar shortly if there are not there already. We are working with acclaimed graphic designer Joshua Levi on our identity and branding, and hope to be a well designed venture in the not too distant future. 


We currently are considering how to construct and implement seed shares and memberships to the Conservatory as well as when, where and how to sell the tomatoes we grow. If you have thoughts or suggestions email us or comment below.


That's all for now. Check out these pictures of the garden site. It overlooks the Depot, The Bridge, and Downtown. 


More soon,
-The Detroit Heirloom Conservatory Team