Monday, June 20, 2011

Preview of Garden Delights

In alphabetical order, two peeks at at each garden on the Gateway to Hope tour:
Anna's cat enjoys the shade of the grapevines in the Burg garden.

Potatoes decided to grow from discarded peels on the Burg compost pile.

Mushroom-and-butterfly art is available for purchase at Faith Community Gardens...

Leaf-and-butterfly combinations are available at Faith Church Community Gardens also.

A clematis blooms brightly at the Groendyk garden.

A coffeepot makes a delightful planter at the Gronendyk garden.

A profusion of blooms graces the Kreykes Garden. 
In the Kreykes Garden, a weather vane reaches for the clouds.

Rock edging unifies the backyard beds of the Kuyers Garden.

In the Kuyers Garden, oriental lilies bloom alongside the walkway to the garage.

The Klompenburg's blueberry bushes are laden with berries, protected from birds.

Oriental lilies are a bright spot in the Van Klompenburg roadside bed.

In the Vue Garden, acres of vegetables stand in neat, immaculate rows.

Some vegetables have lots of room for growth later this summer in the Vue Garden.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

How to Conquer Weeds: New Display Added to Kuyers Garden

How do I conquer weeds?

A display that will help gardeners answer this question has just been added to Gateway to Hope Garden Tour. When master gardener David Pealer heard about the upcoming tour on June 25 and 26, he offered to place a display, “Weeds in Your Garden, Identification and Control.”

The garden tour team gratefully accepted his offer. The display, at the Kuyers Gardens, 506 Liberty,  includes research material and a continuously running Powerpoint, covers the weeds most common in central Iowa gardens. 

Also included in the display will be information about the Master Gardeners program and its upcoming classes.

Thanks, David, for your generous offer!

Monday, June 13, 2011

June 25-26 Garden Tour Goal: Inspire Hope in Nicaraguan Children

A young Nicaraguan enjoys mixing paint 
at a week-long Chinandega arts camp. 
A June 25-26 garden tour in Pella is raising funds 
so other Nicaraguan children can experience 
the same joy and learning.

A Gateway to Hope: the name of the June 25 and 26 Pella garden tour says it all. Offering that gateway for the poorest-of-the-poor Nicaraguan children through week-long arts camps is the reason members of Friends of Chinandega (FOC) are sponsoring the seven-garden tour which offers events for children, for flower gardeners, and for vegetable gardeners.

Seven members of the FOC steering team saw the need—and the dramatic results of arts camp—during a trip to Chinandega this past February representing Faith Christian Reformed Church of Pella.

Coordinators of the week-long camps of the previous two years told them of the camp goals: building skills, character, and self-esteem through arts training. In a song repeated each day, the children were asked, “Who is special?” The song response is “I am! I am special.” The first days the children were afraid to raise their hands and sing that they were special. By the end of the week, they were shouting it.
Team members then walked house-to-house in Bayardo Arce,  meeting residents and learning about the impact of the 2010 camp training in music, movement, and visual arts.

They heard stories of transformation. One boy, for example, told the team he not only learned to draw; he also made new friends. His mother verified that prior to arts camp, he was withdrawn and said little, either to her or to neighborhood children. After the camps, he became much more verbal.

Pastor Gary Hanson, an FOC team member, recalled, “I was amazed. How overwhelming it must have been for him to speak to seven North Americans who appeared in his neighborhood. In his shoes, I would have been scared out of my mind. He talked to us with poise and dignity.”

Some families proudly showed guests their children’s work from the arts camp. Several apologized for not being able to show the FOC team samples of their children’s work: it had been proudly shared with relatives living elsewhere.  The arts are not part of public school curriculum in Nicaragua; those who wish to learn music, drawing, dance, etc. must pay tutors, and that is unimaginable for residents who subsist in these one- or two-room homes with dirt floors and tin roofs.

Hanson said he had started the day skeptical about the need for arts camp training. “I wondered whether it was worth the effort. Perhaps they needed something more practical in order to improve their lives.”
But the walk through Bayardo Arce changed his mind. “At each home, I heard a story of emerging hope. And I realized that you can have all the practical skills in the world, but if you have no hope, they will do you no good. And, for me, hope underlies the Christian message. We are bearers of hope!”

Gateway to Hope tour visitors can also be bearers of hope through their donations in the receptacles provided at each tour site. The tour goal is $3,000, which will enable 100 Nicaraguan children to attend the week-long camps. Receptacles for tour donations will be available at each garden.

Using a curriculum from Build-a-Bridge, arts camps are coordinated by The Nehemiah Center, an interdenominational Christian center of collaboration and transformation supported by several Pella-area congregations.

All seven gardens are open to visitors 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 25 and 1 to 4 p.m. on Sunday, June 26 are:
Van Klompenburg Gardens. 599 228th Place. An engineer’s vegetable garden with raised beds, irrigation, and row covers. Also a flower-lover’s perennial garden.
Vue Garden. 2209 West Washington Street. A huge Hmong vegetable garden, known for its immaculate upkeep and Asian vegetables.
Burg Garden. 509 Liberty. A veteran gardener’s vegetable garden featuring heirloom tomatoes and traditional North American vegetables.
Kuyers Garden. 506 Liberty. A gracious backyard garden with a patio, flowering shrubs, iris, peonies, and more.
Groenenboom & Kreykes Gardens. 1115 East Seventh Street & 17 Jackson.  A two-for-one tour of adjacent gardens, each with a water feature.
Faith Church Community Gardens. Corner of University and E. 12th Street. A flower garden maintained by church members and individual vegetable garden plots for interested Pella residents. On Saturday, a garden tour tea, a retail shop, information about the Nicaraguan children’s arts camps, and supervised children’s lawn games are also offered here. Retail shop products include plants, Nicaraguan/U.S. garden art, cookbooks, Nicaraguan handcrafts, and almond tea rings.

Visitors may begin the tour at any garden. Tour guides with maps and a schedule of Saturday sessions will be available at each site.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

June 25-26 Pella Garden Tour to Benefit Nicaraguan Children

The Van Klompenburg vegetable garden, 
part of the Gateway to Hope Garden Tour, 
features raised beds, a drip irrigation system, 
and arches for mounting bird netting and row covers.

A June 25 and 26 Pella garden tour offers a wider range of attractions for visitors than a typical walk-through garden tour. With scheduled events for kids, for flower gardeners, and for vegetable gardeners, it has a little something for everyone. Gardens are open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 25, with many scheduled events throughout the day. They are also open from 1 to 4 p.m. on Sunday afternoon for a beautiful afternoon stroll.


Called “Gateway to Hope Garden Tour,” it offers that gateway—attendance at a week-long arts camp—to children from the poorest-of-the-poor neighborhoods near Chinandega, Nicaragua. The tour is sponsored by Friends of Chinandega, a ministry of Faith Christian Reformed Church of Pella.
Featured gardens are:

 


  • Van Klompenburg Gardens. 599 228th Place. An engineer’s vegetable garden with raised beds, irrigation, and row covers. Also a flower-lover’s perennial garden.
  • Vue Garden. 2209 West Washington Street. A huge Hmong vegetable garden, known for its immaculate upkeep and Asian vegetables.
  • Burg Garden. 509 Liberty. A veteran gardener’s vegetable garden featuring heirloom tomatoes and traditional North American vegetables.
  • Kuyers Garden. 506 Liberty. A gracious backyard garden with a patio, flowering shrubs, iris, peonies, and more.
  • Groenenboom & Kreykes Gardens. 1115 East Seventh Street & 17 Jackson.  A two-for-one tour of adjacent gardens, each with a water feature.
  • Faith Church Community Gardens. Corner of University and E. 12th Street. A flower garden maintained by church members and individual vegetable garden plots for interested Pella residents. On Saturday, a garden tour tea, a retail shop, information about the Nicaraguan children’s arts camps, and supervised children’s lawn games are also offered here. Retail shop products include plants, Nicaraguan/U.S. garden art, cookbooks, Nicaraguan handcrafts, and almond tea rings. Joel Huyser, missionary in Nicaragua, will be available here for conversation with adults and children about Nicaragua, the arts camps, and creating cross-cultural relationships like the Friends of Chinandega.
Visitors may tour the gardens in any order from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 25, or they may choose to follow a sequence of scheduled events. In the event of rain, all scheduled events will be available under shelter at the scheduled time and place.
Children’s events include painting a planter between 10 and 11 a.m. at the Burg Garden, 509 Liberty, and potting a plant in this container at the Kuyers Garden, 506 Liberty between 11 a.m. and noon. Sessions are led and plants provided by De Bloemenhof staff. Pots are donated by R-Del Distributing of Pella. In addition, each garden will have a Kids Corner open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

For flower garden enthusiasts, at 10 a.m., Carol Van Klompenburg leads a walk through her perennial beds (599 228th Place), talking about steps in transitioning them from flower gardens to landscaped design. At 11 a.m., John Kuyers hosts a session at 506 Liberty on choosing perennials and flowering shrubs for a full season of color.

At noon Nadine Rozenboom teaches visitors to create a bouquet in a teacup at the Groenenboom gardens (1115 East 7th Street). Cut flowers are provided for the bouquets. Visitors may provide their own cup or mug, or purchase one on site.
At 1 p.m., Loren Kreykes and Larry Groenenboom explain how to build an outdoor water feature. Their back to back gardens at 1115 East 7th Street and 17 Jackson Street both have water features. Loren will also demonstrate how to braid a tree, as he has done with an ornamental tree in his yard.

Vegetable gardeners can learn about raised beds, plastic mulch, and drip irrigation from  gardening engineer Marlo Van Klompenburg (noon, 599 228th Place); about raising tomatoes from veteran vegetable gardeners Mike Burg and Bill Kimble (1:00 p.m., 509 Liberty); and about raising south-east Asian vegetables from professional Hmong gardener May Vue, assisted by horticulturalist Neal Van Veen,  (2 p.m., 2209 Washington.) They can conclude their day with a seminar by cookbook author and health consultant Sheryl Ellinwood on easy ways to add greens to your diet (3 p.m., 2209 Washington).

Suggested minimum donation for the tour is $10, and donation boxes will be available at each site. For a tax-deductible donation, checks may be written to Faith Christian Reformed Church: Gateway to Hope Tour. Tour guides and maps will be available at each location, along with tour discount coupons for purchases at both Pella Nursery and Dutch Meadows Landscaping.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Saturday Special Events Schedule

Gateway to Hope Garden tour is open from 10:00 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday June 25 and 1:00 to 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, June 26. 

Visitors can begin at any garden, pick up a tour guide with a map, and visit the gardens in any order they wish.

The schedule of special  Saturday events for each garden is below:





















Children’s Events (for kids age 5 through 10)

  •  10:00 to 11 a.m. (Come-and-go during this hour). Create a Pretty Planter (Burg
  • 12:00 noon. To 1 p.m. (Come-and-go during this hour) Plant a Flower; Then Watch it Grow! (Kuyers)
  •  1:00 to 2:00 (For both adults and children) Joel Huyser, a co-founder of the Nehemiah Center which sponsors the children’s arts camps in Nicaragua, will be present at the arts camp display conversation and questions. (Faith Church)
   Note: In addition, there is a 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.  Kids Corner attraction at each garden.


Flower Garden Events


  • 10:00 a.m. In Transition: From Flower Gardens to Landscaped Design (Van Klompenburg)   
  • 11:00 a.m. Choosing Perennials and Flowering Shrubs for a Full Season of Color (Kuyers)
  • 12:00 noon. How to Create a Bouquet in a Teacup. (Groenenboom-Kreykes)
  • 1:00 p.m. How to Build a Water Feature (Groenenboom-Kreykes)

Vegetable Garden Events

  • 12:00 noon: Engineering a Garden (Van Klompenburg)
  • 1:00 p.m. Growing Tomatoes: Pros and cons of Heirlooms and Hybrids (Burg)
  • 2:00 p.m. Introduction to Asian Vegetables and How to Grow Them. (Vue)
  • 3:00 p.m. Easy Ways to Use Greens in Your Diet. Sheryl Ellinwood
For addresses of all gardens see previous post.