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By Open House No Comments

You are invited!!!   The Lafayette Community Garden and Outdoor Learning Center is celebrating its 11th year with a COMMUNITY OPEN HOUSE on Sunday, August 28th from 11am to 2pm. The event is free and will feature inspirational speakers. Jim ‘Doc’ Hale will share fascinating information about the people who lived on this land for centuries before the 1800’s and a beekeeper from Mt. Diablo Beekeepers will talk about the amazing nature of bees and art of beekeeping

In addition to the speakers, there will be guided tours of the garden, information on raising chickens, master gardening, family crafts, edible treats, iced tea and lemonade, and an opportunity to walk a labyrinth and see the garden’s Miwok Village.

Garden members will be on hand to answer gardening questions and show off a variety of gardening methods and practices including hinged covers that prevent critters from eating crops, vermiculture (worm composting), mulching, a butterfly garden, deer resistant plantings and so much more.

We look forward to seeing you on August 28th!  If you have questions, you can call (925) 946-0563. For more information about our garden, please visit our website: https://lafayettecommunitygarden.org/

The Garden’s OPEN HOUSE on September 12, 2021

By Community Events No Comments

The Lafayette Community Garden and Outdoor Learning Center celebrated its 10th year with a COMMUNITY OPEN HOUSE on Sunday, September 12, 2021. The event focused on indigenous culture and featured two inspirational speakers – – Jim ‘Doc’ Hale and Kanyon Sayers-Roods. Their presentations captivated and enriched our lives.  In addition to the speakers, there were guided tours of the garden, information on raising chickens, master gardening and bee keeping, family crafts, edible treats, lavender lemonade, and an opportunity to walk a labyrinth and see the garden’s Miwok Village. Members were on hand to answer gardening questions and show off a variety of gardening methods and practices including hinged covers that prevent critters from eating crops, vermiculture (worm composting), mulching, a butterfly garden, deer resistant plantings and so much more.

Coyote Hills Regional Park Field Trip

By News & Events No Comments

Garden members were treated to a special tour of Coyote Hills Regional Park with docent Dino on Saturday, October 9, 2021.

The Visitor Center contains educational displays and exhibits that portray the Ohlone way of life and include a tule reed boat constructed by park staff and volunteers using Native American methods.

For more on the Coyote Hills Regional Park, click here.

Through the Garden gate – Presenting HarvestFest 2020

By Community Events No Comments

Get ready to go through the garden gate and celebrate this year’s Harvest Festival – virtually of course.

The Lafayette Community Garden & Outdoor Learning Center’s annual Harvest Festival was originally scheduled to happen at the garden on September 27, but the event, like so many public events impacted by the pandemic, will be celebrated virtually with a movie. The movie shows how, even with limitations placed on its members, the garden became a much needed respite during these unprecedented times.

And, now, here it is:  Harvest Fest – The Movie https://youtu.be/spHcH4Jvsjw

What’s the Buzz?

By Bees No Comments

Sage Hive

Labyrinth Hive

This spring, two honeybee colonies were welcomed into the Garden.  Both colonies are doing well.  The honeybees originated as swarms that were donated to the Garden by members of Mt Diablo Beekeepers Association. 
 
So—what exactly is a swarm and why does swarming happen?  In Lamorinda, ‘swarm season’ runs from March to early June, when food–nectar and pollen from fruit trees and flowers–is plentiful.  An overwintered colony’s hive can become so packed with larvae and food that the queen has no space to lay eggs.  She and her workers begin the swarm process:  new queen cells are built and the old queen goes on a diet so she can fly more easily. When the queen cells are ready to hatch, the old queen and about half the worker bees leave the colony to find a new home.  A new queen emerges, matures, mates with perhaps 9-13 drones and begins her career as ruler of the colony.  This is the way honeybees have reproduced for thousands of years. 
 
On March 10th, the first colony was installed in the Sage Hive near the pollinator garden by the parking lot.  The second colony, installed in the Labyrinth Hive (adjacent the labyrinth), began as two swarms.  A small swarm was installed in early April and a 2nd swarm was added several days later. 
 
Beekeepers place great value on swarms.  This is because, in the 21st century, with the extreme pressures on honeybees from non-native pests, viruses and diseases, a colony that’s healthy enough to become overcrowded and swarm possesses some hardy genes within its DNA.  Those are the honeybees we want in the Lafayette Community Garden:  bees that have adjusted to our micro climate, dealt with pests and diseases and have found a way to survive.
 
The Lafayette Community Garden provides a beautiful environment for honeybees.  Special thanks go to Jimmy Hill and Michael diPretoro for clearing weeds and laying mulch around the hives.  The Sage and Labyrinth colonies continue to build up their numbers and forage for food.  With observation, attention and intervention when needed, we hope to keep your bees thriving.  Please know that I’m happy to answer any question you may have and will respond in future editions of the Newsletter.
 
Jan Pinkerton-Spieth
Mt Diablo Beekeepers Association

Precautions during the Coronavirus Situation

By Open House No Comments

Lafayette Community Garden and Outdoor Learning Center is diligently monitoring the coronavirus situation and following the protocols of the CDC, the State of California and Contra Costa County. At this time we are taking recommended precautions while continuing operations for members. In view of the shelter in place policy for Contra Costa County that begins at midnight tonight, the Garden will not be open to non members. Thanks for your understanding. And please check back for updates.

Coming This Summer – Experiencing Native Ways – An Online Morning Camp – July 20-23

By California Natives, Community Events No Comments

Buffalo Calf Road Woman

Greta Thunberg

 

 

 

 

 

Original Native cultures, and children, inherently know life supportive values.  With that, this online camp offers your child an immersion in the Native traditions of personal naming, dwellings and diet adaptive to regional resources, tool making and the arts, accompanied by Native music and story telling.

Because of the Corona Virus, this camp will take place online using zoom.

To register or for more information, click here.

 

 

Annual Review – Season 8

By About

WE ARE CLOSED FOR NORMAL OPERATIONS FROM OCTOBER 26, 2019 – MARCH 16, 2020. Please come visit during the 2020 season.

Growing Tomatoes on May 7 | 3:00 – 4:30PM

LCG and OLC ANNUAL REVIEW for the 2019 year (our eight season):

The Lafayette Community Garden and Outdoor Learning Center is located at 3932 Mt. Diablo Boulevard on land owned by EBMUD and leased to the City of Lafayette. Rent for the land is paid annually to the City by the garden through a sub-license agreement with Sustainable Lafayette, our 501C3 fiscal sponsor. From January through October 2019, the Community Garden and Outdoor Learning Center served the community by improving the health and aesthetic quality of the land, growing organic food and educating garden members and the public about many aspects of the natural environment.

The following improvements were made to the property from January – October 2019:

  • We planted ten native, perennial, drought tolerant plants along the street and within the garden and propagated and planted an additional thirty native seedlings in the oak area.
  • We brought in five cubic yards of compost and other organic amendments for preparation of beds each time a new crop was planted. This was used in addition to compost created on site.
  • We cleared and amended an area five feet by twenty feet on the northwest corner of the parking lot and established a butterfly and pollinator habitat. We planted milkweed and other flowering plants and then added mulch. We established drip watering to that area.
  • We created a labyrinth from natural materials found within the garden.
  • We brought in two cubic yards of gravel to add to the surface of the labyrinth and to improve the surface and integrity of the new pollinator area walkway and parking lot.
  • We covered the garden walking surfaces with “urban walk-on” mulch from Ecomulch.
  • We continued to weed extensively and removed poison oak from numerous areas.
  • We hired Traverso Tree Service to both remove dead and dying branches from 3 oak trees.

In addition, we continued to do the following:

  • We maintained community garden membership of eighty families, or about 120 people, and opened the garden to community visitors during our work hours.
  • We used bio-intensive methods to grow thirty-five beds of vegetables. We used compost to amend our soil. We rotated crops, planted densely to optimize resources and used companion plants and flowers to enhance growing.       We shared over 3000 pounds of harvest among garden members, with excess taken to Belle Terre Senior Housing.
  • We propagated most of our plants. In the greenhouse we used heating pads and a swamp cooler to modify the temperature. Excess seedlings were donated to schools and community members.
  • We maintained a large, redwood worm bin, from which we gathered amendment “castings”.
  • We continued to improve the organization and communication among propagation, crop teams and the membership. Schedules for both planting and harvest were shared by teams with the garden director and members and work tasks were organized accordingly. A weekly email was sent to all garden members describing weekly events and tasks.
  • We continued to offer classes and workshops to community members of all ages through our education program. We held a series of monthly adult courses covering a variety of topics. We also held interactive intergenerational workshops.
  • We nurtured a new brood of 16 hens and established them in our state of the art chicken coop to replace our aging chickens.
  • We continued to use less water than many single use homes in Lamorinda, taking advantage of state of the art drip irrigation and mulching practices.
  • We maintained our partnership with Contra Costa Master Gardeners. The Master Gardeners did a “grand rounds” of the garden during their monthly visit. On three occasions they gave workshops to the community and garden members.
  • We began utilizing our redwood seed lending library.
  • We offered Boy and Girl Scouts Eagle and Gold Scout opportunities. Scouts built new garden benches and a viewing area around the chicken coop.
  • We gave tours to school and community groups, hosted our 8th annual Harvest Festival and advertised our open community hours with signage on the street.

The Lafayette Community Garden and Outdoor Learning Center – Board of Directors

Janet Thomas, John Eaton, Kim Overaa, Susan Dannenfelser, Michael DiPretoro and Jenny Ayers

“IN NATURE, NOTHING EXISTS ALONE.” Rachel Carson