Maybe we should create volunteer Garden Corps or Yard Corps efforts to help overwhelmed people care for their yards
A house on 200 South in Salt Lake City.Salt Lake has so many homeowners who go out of their way to do attractive plantings.
I don't know what their backyards look like, but some front yards are just stunning. While others are just "merely" very nice.
I do know it's a ton of work. At our DC house, for DC the backyard was big, not quite 50 feet wide and 90 feet long, with a garage.
It was pretty big for us. When we bought, the defining element were two huge trees with such a great canopy that between the two they created a "living room" that while not quite impervious to rain, provided a lot of protection.
OTOH, there was so much shade, we couldn't grow vegetables in the back, so we did in our front yard, which being smaller, was easier to maintain.We took up the Square Foot Gardening method, where you build your own growing medium, 1/3 peat, 1/3 vermiculite/perlite, 1/3 five different types of compost.
The first year we bought all the different kinds locally. And it was expensive.
Another year we found mushroom compost being sold at a farmers market in Richmond which was pretty cool. We would call Veteran Compost, but they never called back.Did you know that from yard waste, Montgomery County, technically the Maryland Environmental Service, makes a compost called LeafGro, like how Milwaukee's sewer socialists created Milorganite.
We liked to travel to places in Pennsylvania like Lancaster and rented a car to do so.
I realized if we stopped at a farm store out there and bought our year's worth of compost, the savings would pay for most of trip!
There are farm stores in the DC region, but I always liked the ones in Lancaster County.
The first year I pulled all kinds of "weeds" from the beds. At a tour of the Winterthur House and Gardens, as we were being shuttled up to the house, the driver said "And you might think that the lawn is full of weeds. No, those are native plants, flowering."I realized what I had been doing was pulling up natives.
Fortunately, the plant seeds were hardy and they came back. The beds looked a bit unruly, but were beautiful.
Over the years we added more native plants, based on the US Fish and Wildlife publication Native Plants for Wildlife Habitat and Conservation Landscaping in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.
My biggest lesson was to sit back, observe and learn from the yard, from what previous owners had done. I still had the problem of buying stuff that I wouldn't get around to planting, like dahlias, but we planted a bunch of stuff.
Another lesson. Apparently the realtor in prepping the house for sale before we bought, planted 3 azaleas on each side of the entry to the front door. One one side, two kept dying off. I replanted them twice. They died. I finally figured out I should plant something else...
Blue mistflower.We'd go to area plant sales to shop for them. But the local Ace Hardware stores in Old Town Takoma Park and Petworth were also a good source.
We added a bird bath to the back yard (we bought an older home appropriate style from the catalog at a store in Alexandria; I can't remember the name. We found it by going to a nearby French restaurant, which closed many years ago).
I learned that more than birds needed water. I failed to get the photo, but it had an inchworm walking around the base, bees drinking water, and if I remember correctly, a grasshopper or butterfly.
It made a huge difference for birds.
Sadly, the two trees, one a Willow Oak, the other a Maple, reached the end of their useful lives and died. But I let a bunch of Willow Oak seedlings grow. Because of a variety of circumstances it's been 7 years almost since I've been back and I want to see their progression. Even by the time we moved out west a number of saplings were taller than me.
Back when the Willow Oak was still alive, but the Maple had died. An easter egg hunt.
Another thing we discovered the second year is wild blackberries along the back fence. We got some yield, but after awhile, the birds and squirrels won out.
I realized it was our responsibility to recognize that fauna have a right to the food too.
We planted some blueberries but they never really took, and birds got most. We did have mint growing pretty profusely. Rosemary was off and on. The bay leaf tree was so so. We grew lemongrass one year, garlic another--it's planted in the fall, but I thought the work required was greater than the cost of buying, although if you planted exotic varieties it'd be different. We learned the best way to grow basil was in a container on the front porch, so it got some shade and didn't bolt early.
In parts of Ward 4, DC has planted serviceberry bushes in the planting strips on some streets. With the little girls next door we would pick them and make pie.It took a year or so of my talking about it, but the impetus was Suzanne and we finally built a compost bin, of pallets that we scavenged from the industrial road behind the Metropolitan Branch Trail in Takoma. (Now used pallets cost a lot.) We used plans from Montgomery County. DC didn't offer an equivalent resource.
Before we composted formally, I collected leaves with a leaf machine (electric, like our mower). We had so many, even though the recommendations today are to leave them be. The leaf sucker makes them into little bits. I just piled them against the bad soil by our garage and they made beautiful leaf mold and improved the soil.
(For the bin, I also learned to stock up on leaves in the fall, to be able to use them the rest of the year. We didn't "clean up" grass clippings, just left them. And sometimes I would snag a neighbor's bag of grass clippings to speed up the heat in the compost bin--but only later I realized they might use fertilizer, put junk in the bags too, etc.)
Our bins after I pulled out some reserved leaves.As the wood degraded over the years, we replaced it with plastic bins.
Regardless of address, the County sanitation and recycling booth at the Montgomery County Agriculture Fair gives them out for free, and that's where we got them. Going to the Ag Fair is fun regardless--sometimes we'd take the neighbor kids who loved the circus rides.
Arlington has one too, but it's fun in a different way. We never managed to go to the Maryland State Fair.
Separately, we had a pile for twigs and such. We had tons but I never wanted to pay to compost them at the place in Montgomery County that will take them. We just let them degrade, and they did.
I always meant to get a chipper but we wanted an electric one and at the time they weren't robust enough. One of my recommendations years ago on the DC Sustainability Plan was for the creation of a community chipper (and log splitting) program. But they'd degrade.
Our house has a walkout basement, which is a super cool feature. While this is big for DC, as you go west, those houses and yards are even bigger. But I do know of a house within easy walking distance of Takoma Metrorail Station that is one acre!We had butternut squash grow out of the compost pile one year (I wasn't too religious about turning) and tomatoes another.
When we lost our front tree due to waterlogged roots and it came down, after weeks of heavy rain, I took out all the compost and put it in there. More than 30 tomato and cilantro plants took root.
I still regret not getting off my ass and planting asparagus. Once it takes it grows for decades.
The worst thing of all was dealing with plants that were out of control. We never could get out all the ivy that had been planted years ago, and Virginia creeper. We had a Rose of Sharon tree that probably grew from seed, and Suzanne realized it was enveloped by vines, and I had to go in and delicately take them all out.
We also solved an interesting mystery. One bluestone paver at the bottom of the stairs to the back from the front. And another by the rear patio entry. She figured out that the other stones must have been buried by subsequent growth. They were. I had a terrible backache that day, but we started digging out and raising the stones, some of which were quite heavy. And later I realized my back pain was gone, from the work of digging and stretching.
Oops, the Takoma Park House Tour was last weekend. They are fun to go on, also to volunteer, and then you get to go see the houses for free.I called our yard rustic.
But the amazing thing was how important that rusticity was to attracting fauna. We had birds of various types, insects including butterflies and fireflies. And yes, raccoons from time to time.
Once a champagne colored (beige) skunk walked through the back yard. Other neighbors experienced deer which fortunately never happened to us. (Over the years I rescued raccoons from our garage and a neighbor's waste bin.)
My final lesson was rustic versus manicured made a huge difference.
When we would go on the Takoma Historic House Tour the super manicured yards were always barren of birds and insects (fauna). I'd take rustic over manicured any day.
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Sharon Schueler (left), Leif Dormsjo and Al Foxx clear weeds, dirt and grass in a courtyard at Calverton Middle School in Baltimore. (Baltime Sun photo by Kim Hairston). This photo is from 2005. Ironically, a decade later, Mr. Dormsjo served as the director of the DC Department of Transportation.Volunteerism. So how does all this relate to the Garden Corps idea? Also see with out of date links, "National Volunteer Week: April 16th-22nd," from 2023.
I saw that yard while taking photos yesterday, and it made me realize that like programs that help seniors and others with housing maintenance and repair ("A case in Gloucester, Massachusetts as an illustration of the need for systematic neighborhood monitoring and stabilization initiatives: Part 4 (the Curcuru Family)"), sometimes people just need help with their yards.
Photo from AthensNow, "My Neighbor’s Yard Is Overgrown/Unkempt/Has Junk Piled Up. What Can I Do?."There are some programs where people will let others garden in their yards. Or glean fruit from trees. There is the Master Gardener training program sponsored by the Agricultural Extension Service in every state. Some counties have urban oriented MG programs.
Montgomery County's program often has people tabling at libraries and other places for advice and workshops. Some places offer a Master Composter training program. Arlington County, Virginia has EcoAmbassadors focused on climate change issues.
Many parks agencies sponsor weed pulling of invasives and planting natives in their place.
Technically illegal, I would do guerilla tree branch trimming on the route to and from the bus stop closest to our house.
What about extending these kinds of program to yard help?
The Brookland neighborhood has the Greater Brookland Garden Club, and has for many years. Members have monthly "parties" at houses and often are called upon to give advice.The group sponsors a Welcome to Brookland gateway sign with a planting bed.
Decades ago, Savannah had a small block grants program that people could use for neighborhood projects like greenspace ("Enabling Productive Neighborhoods: The Role of a New Kind of Leader").
Asset-Based Community Development Manuals:
-- Leading by Stepping Back: A Guide for City Officials on Building Neighborhood Capacity,
-- City-Sponsored Community Building: Savannah’s Grants for Blocks Story,
H&R Block sponsors a similar program available nationwide.
San Francisco has created a variation of a neighborhood service district--they have those too, but unlike a business improvement district, it includes residential property as payers into the district--called a Green Benefits District (something that I will write a separate entry about).
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But it's an idea. I don't have the capacity or physicality to create it myself. However, it could be a program of a revitalized Garden Center at Sugar House Park.
Labels: civic engagement, gard maintenance, neighborhood stabilization, participatory democracy and empowered participation, public service/volunteering/donations, self-help/DIY, urban design/placemaking














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