OREGON

Sat. Feb. 11, 2006.

Vegetable Gardening Symposium

Clackmas Community College, Gregory Forum
8 am to 4 pm

This event includes a selection of wonderful speakers on varied topics related to growing food [See link above for full listing]

I will be giving a presentation called, “Gardening with Limited Resources and Challenging Spaces” (Pretty self-explanatory) at Noon followed by a Panel Discussion/ Q & A with other speakers at 3:00pm.

Registration includes lunch and refreshments. See here for details.

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Sunday Feb. 12, 2006

Book Signing & Seed-Starting Workshop
3:30-5pm
PISTILS Nursery
3811 N. Mississippi Ave. Portland, Oregon. (503) 288-4889

Learn the ins and outs of starting veggies and flowers from seed. Thrifty hints and tips for beginners, apartment dwellers and small space gardeners. I’ll be signing books and answering gardening questions.

Admission is FREE!

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Visiting the Book

I know it’s geeky but I like to stop in bookstores to check for the book. If I’m in a new city I’ll check in stores I pass on the street, and in my own city I’ll check in stores I know carry it just to see it on the shelf. It’s still a huge thrill almost a year later. One time my brother was with me and he yelled out, “This is my sister’s book!”

Here I am in the Chapters in Ottawa:

Here it is in a store window:

Book City on Yonge

And taken with a really bad camera phone:

Visiting My Book

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Associated Press – You Grow Girl

From: Associated Press (ASAP)

You Grow Girl
December 7, 2005
“Gayla Trail became hooked during her second year of college, when she and several housemates took their “crappy little backyard” and turned it into a vegetable garden that quickly became her responsibility.

She really didn’t know much about planting and caring for vegetables, but with a little luck — and some really good weather — Trail was rewarded with a bounty that made being a broke student a little easier.

Moving into a small apartment with a tiny terrace didn’t stop her burgeoning obsession, it just spun it in a different direction. She abandoned the traditional garden and got creative, cultivating her own “punk rock” style of urban gardening that suited her sensibilities as a young artist.

That led first to a Web site (http://www.yougrowgirl.com ) then a book, “You Grow Girl: The Groundbreaking Guide to Gardening” — and contrasted with the stuffy how-to books geared toward the affluent suburbanite. You won’t find a section titled “guerrilla gardening” in the “New Complete Guide to Gardening.”

Trail came up with an approach that is as refreshing and quirky as are her reasons for an all-consuming interest in plants.

“Plants are bizarre. Plants are really strange; they fascinate me. They’re like aliens,” she said. “I like the experimentation of it. I like the fact that it’s always changing.”

Urban gardening is all about finding the space to plant, adapting the garden to your artificial constraints. It could be on a rooftop, a windowsill or fire escape. Take it one step further and you’re a guerrilla gardener.

With guerrilla gardening I think of graffiti with plants,” Trail said. “It is about transforming space that is wasted space, spaces where nothing is growing in the city — dead lots or alleyways.”

As a beginner you might not be ready to go out and tag the town with pansies, but clearing space for a few containers on a fire escape or a ledge is good way to get your hands dirty.

While every garden is different, there is one universal in urban gardening: you have to know your environment. How hot is your fire escape, how much sun does the window box get? Having a coveted view facing south might have cost you a few extra hundred dollars a month, but it also could be a killer depending on how hot the area gets.

A good plant to start with is spinach. It’s a late-season plant that grows quickly in containers and isn’t very temperamental.

Trail gave a demonstration recently in New York as part of Turning Leaf Vineyard’s urban gardening series that will travel to several major U.S. cities in 2006. Watch the accompanying video for the quick how-to guide to planting spinach.

asap reporter Howie Rumberg planted a lawn this year in the patch of dirt behind his apartment. “- Howie Rumberg

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Chatelaine: Fall Splendour

Chatelaine magazine online has a fall gardening feature that includes some of my tips on preparing your garden for winter.

Note: click “Show me my fall garden!” to launch.

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Ladyfest Guelph

I’ve been busy over the last few months with a number of workshops and projects but thought I would take a moment to document some of that here before the experiences escape me.

I did a workshop called “Grocery Store Gardening” at Ladyfest Guelph back in Sept. Here’s the promo:

Turn the waste from tonight’s meal into totally free, yet extraordinary houseplants. In this workshop you will learn how to grow unusual fruit trees, groovy houseplants, and edible herbs from the stuff that is normally thrown into the compost bin. Participants will take plants home with them at the end of the workshop. Please bring along any of the following items, if you�ve got them: empty margarine containers or old plant pots, left-over fruit seeds: mango pits, pineapple tops, avocado pits.

The prep work for the workshop was a bit more intense than usual as I had to make a few shopping trips for supplies and prepare some of the plant matter ahead of time but the overall experience was a lot of fun. It was just fun watching reactions to some of the unusual fruits I brought along.

I had to carry my materials on the Greyhound to Guelph which was an experience in itself. I took large cuttings of several pungent herbs including African blue basil minutes before I left and the smell emminating from my person was quite intense.

There was a Bonsai show taking place in the University Centre at the same time as Ladyfest and I must confess that I couldn’t resist and bought a Boweia aka False Sea Onion. It was too crazy to pass up and I’m too much of a succulent addict. Can’t stop the plant mania! Thankfully (or sadly) the Cactus and Succulent Society show & sale was not on. I’ve heard they tag-team it with the Orchid Society show & sale. Temptation like that would have meant sudden death to my bank account.

Unfortunately, I did not take any photos (kind of hard to do in the middle of giving a workshop). However, if you’d like to try your hand at growing your own grocery store plants, I have posted a few articles on this site over the years that delve into the subject. See:

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