Sunday, March 29, 2009
The Princess and the Pea
this is after 1 week.
Friday, March 27, 2009
After School Gardening Class Starting Next Friday!
Children will learn about soil, seeds, container gardening, and composting.
Parents are welcome to stay and assist their child or drop them and leave.
Cost: $35 for 6 or 7 weeks
Location:Rose Red and Lavender on Metropolitan Avenue near Leonard
Time:3:30PM 45-1hour
Supplies to bring:
A fine tip sharpie Marker
Scissors
Pencil
Any seeds that you may want to grow (the flower shop sells many heirloom seeds)
A small notebook for keeping records of plants
please email thelovelybrenda@gmail.com to reserve a seat for your child. if you have previously emailed me i have you already on a list. :)
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Let Me Define Poison
1poi·son
Pronunciation:
\ˈpȯi-zən\
Function:noun
Etymology:Middle English, from Anglo-French poisun drink, potion, poison, from Latin potion-, potio drink — more at potion
1 a: a substance that through its chemical action usually kills, injures, or impairs an organism b (1): something destructive or harmful (2): an object of aversion or abhorrence2: a substance that inhibits the activity of another substance or the course of a reaction or process (a catalyst poison)
ARE THE FOLLOWING COMPANIES POISONING CHILDREN AND ADULTS? Do they inflict injury or impair an organism causing cancer, diabetes, obesity, ADD, or ADHD?
This is a photo shot in a local elementary school in Williamsburg. I find it totally inappropriate that schools would rather profit from poison than do whats best for a child's health. Can we please define "the best stuff on Earth"? Water, high fructose corn syrup, tea, natural flavors??? Diet Snapple contains Aspartame. Are brain tumors and brain lesions significant side effects or should they be overlooked?
"Food for the fun of it!?" In my opinion hospital visits, medication, obesity, heart disease, neurological damage is not fun!!?? Organic and local fruits and veggies are for the fun of it because many activities and adventures can be had when we are happy, healthy, energetic, and strong! :)
Monday, March 23, 2009
VERTICAL GARDENS Opening: Saturday, March 28, 6-8pm Exit Underground NYC
March 28 â€" May 23, 2009
Opening: Saturday, March 28, 6-8pm
Exit Underground
// EXHIBITION // PROJECTS // EVENTS // ABOUT CONCEPT PLUS //SUPPORT // INFORMATION //
A project of SEA (Social Environmental Aesthetics) , Vertical Gardens is an exhibition of architectural models, renderings, drawings, photographs and ephemera that depict or imagine a vertical farm, urban garden or green roof. It features over 20 projects, both imaginary and real, by artists and architects that envision solutions for building greener urban environments. The past decade has seen a greater emergence of green roofs and vertical gardens created by artists, designers, architects and urban gardeners to combat the lack of flora in the city. Buildings around the world â€" from the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris, to the Queens Botanical Garden in New York â€" have embraced green walls or roofs for all their economical, environmental, and aesthetic values. Vertical farms and gardens are also being envisioned as new ways to feed local and organic foods to city dwellers. Largely based on the principles of hydroponics, vertical gardens would also be mostly self-sustaining because they would capture large amounts of natural sunlight and water, and could use wind as an energy source. In a country where cities are suffocated by high rises, cement and industrial materials, where can green space exist? As this exhibition demonstrates, one possible answer is “up.†These and other urban parks and gardens provide areas for socialization and recreation; a location for a city farm or community land-trust; an outlet through which hundreds of people can learn about farming and agriculture; and the addition of much needed plant and animal life to the otherwise concrete jungle.
FEATURING PROJECTS BY:
Abruzzo Bodziak Architects; ATOPIA; Bob Bingham and Claire Hoch; Patrick Blanc; Bohn & Viljoen Architects; Dickson Despommier; Evo Design with Mica Gross; Todd Haiman; Haus-Rucker-Inc.; Edmundo Ortega and Dianne Rohrer; Claude Boullevraye de Passillé; Oda Projesi; Rael San Fratello Architects (Virginia San Fratello and Ronald Rael); Naomi Reis; Roomservices (Evren Uzer and Otto Von Busch); SITE (Denise MC Lee, Sara Stracey and James Wines)
Also featuring photographic documentation of existing buildings containing vertical farms, gardens or green roofs, including those by Hundertwasser; Renzo Piano with Chong Partners and Stantec; Emilio Ambasz & Associates; Humpert Wolnitzek; Chad Oppenheim Architecture and Design; Musson Cattell Mackey Partnership, Downs/Archambault & Partners, LMN Architects; Scandinavian Green Roof Institute; Conservation Design Forum of Chicago and Atelier Dreieitl of Germany; Enrique Browne and Borja Huidobro with Ricardo Judson and Rodrigo Iturriaga; and others.
PUBLIC EVENTS
2day/earthday
A FREE two-day event celebrating Earth Day 2009.
TUESDAY, APRIL 21
5 â€" 6:30pm:
Dickson D. Despommier, Professor of Public Health in Environmental Health Sciences and Microbiology at Columbia University, will talk about his work as the Founder and Director of the Vertical Farm Project, looking at how agriculture can be adapted and integrated into city living.
7-9pm:
James Wines, Founder/President of SITE, Environmental Design, gives a talk on the “Economy of Means†, which looks at ways to meet the demands of economic crisis, energy efficiency and sustainable design, without a loss of aesthetic quality. It credits some of the most revolutionary triumphs of the 20th century â€" including Picasso’s collage, Duchamp’s conceptual art, Le Corbusier’s “machines for living in†and Frank Lloyd Wright’s Usonion houses â€" which confirm that big ideas can frequently be realized through a great economy of means. The information also covers a selection of materially and environmentally prudent contributions to the Radical Architecture movement of the 70s and 80s. The program concludes with a range of innovative proposals for the present era; including buildings and public spaces that use frugality itself as an inspirational raw material.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22
5-6:30pm:
The Lower East Side Ecology Center hosts a FREE indoor composting workshop. Learn how to set up and maintain a worm bin in your apartment. Full compost bin setups will be available at $55 each, on a first-come, first-serve basis. Registration recommended. To register, please call 212-477-3155 or email info@lesecologycenter.org.
7-9pm:
SEA Poetry Series, No. 1
Kicking off our SEA Poetry Series, poet Jonathan Skinner will read a selection of his poems and present a talk on “third landscapes,†entropoetics, and the coming planetary Pangea-garden on invasive futures. Q & A and reception to follow. Conceived and organized by E.J. McAdams, poet and Associate Director of Philanthropy at The Nature Conservancy, New York City. Free. Cash bar.
Jonathan Skinner’s poetry collections include With Naked Foot (Little Scratchpad, 2008) and Political Cactus Poems (Palm Press, 2005). Recent poetry has appeared in onedit #12. Skinner edits the journal ecopoetics (vols. 1-5, 2001-2005), which features creative-critical intersections between writing and ecology. He also writes ecocriticism on contemporary poetry and poetics. His essays on the poets Ronald Johnson and Lorine Niedecker appeared recently in volumes published by the National Poetry Foundation and by University of Iowa Press, respectively. His essay on “Boundary Work in Mei-mei Berssenbrugge's Pollen†can be read in the online journal How2 and his essay on Bernadette Mayer's Studying Hunger can be read on ThoughtMesh. The piece “Ethno Plunderphonics: On Some Mockingbird Transcriptions†was included in the journal Intervalles. Skinner's hybrid Poetry Animal is forthcoming in boundary 2 â€" a feature on 21st century poetics edited by Charles Bernstein. Skinner teaches in the Environmental Studies Program, at Bates College in Central Maine, where he makes his home.
UPCOMING
Wednesday, June 10, 7-9pm
Poet Marcella Durand reads her work. Concurrent with the second SEA exhibition of 2009, End of Oil.
CONCEPTPLUS
Exit Art currently works with a curatorial model called ConceptPlus, which begins with a theme or concept that is then publicized through a call for proposals. For each ConceptPlus idea, the curators first chose a group of artists that form the base of the exhibition. Then Exit Art issues an international call for artists to propose new or newly-contextualized work in response to a given theme or cultural condition. The exhibition is then curated by Exit Art’s curatorial staff, who view all the proposals for new work and work samples submitted by artists and select projects to be presented and/or commissioned for the exhibition. Every artist who submits a proposal has equal access to the curators, regardless of their previous experience, making ConceptPlus a highly democratic curatorial model. Recent ConceptPlus exhibitions at Exit Art have addressed ideas ranging from the reconstruction of global cities (Exit Biennial: Reconstruction, 2003) to the image of America's highest office (The Presidency, 2004), to contemporary Latino icons (L-Factor, 2005) to neuroscience innovations (BrainWave: Common Senses, 2008). A fundamental precept of the ConceptPlus model is to remove barriers to cultural participation by creating exhibition opportunities limited only by the artistic idea itself. As we have implemented this model over the past five years, Exit Art has seen a dramatic rise in both the number and geographic diversity of artists submitting proposals in response to our open calls. ConceptPlus also enables us to directly support the production of new work, as an increasing proportion of artists propose new projects that are commissioned exclusively for Exit Art exhibitions.
EXHIBITION SUPPORT
This exhibition is supported by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Bloomberg LP, Carnegie Corporation, Jerome Foundation, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn, O'Grady Foundation, Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Public Funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, a State Agency, Starry Night Fund at The Tides Foundation, Exit Art’s Board of Directors and our members.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Exit Art is located at 475 Tenth Avenue, corner of 36th Street. Hours at Exit Art are Tuesday â€" Thursday, 10am â€" 6pm; Friday, 10am â€" 8pm; and Saturday, noon â€" 8pm. Closed Sunday and Monday. There is a suggested donation of $5.
For more information please call 212-966-7745
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Hauling Compost from Hollenback Garden in Clinton Hill to PS84 in Williamsburg
Loading up the bean bags donated from Buffalo Cantina with compost.
This is 1 of hundreds of red wiggler composting worms I dug thru today. Sorry to all the little its who got chopped in half by my shovel.
Hayden found a centipede "100 foot". According to Wikipedia these little arthopod bites can be life threatening similar to a bee sting.
Hayden was a great help!
Next I need some top soil and sand to mix with this and it will be ready for gardening in front of PS84.
Thanks to Cara and Mark for being so helpful and for sharing compost with the kids of 11211! :)
Cara Montague & Mark Trushkowsky
Co-Coordinators
Hollenback Community Garden
Brooklyn, NY
Hollenback.pbwiki.com
Today Hayden and I Got to Play With Animals at the 25th Annual Green Thumb Grow Together Event!
Hayden made friends with a parrot.
If you grab a lizard by his tail it will fall off.
Millipede "1000 foot" are arthopods.
Friday, March 20, 2009
Happy Earth Day, Spring Equinox, and Rosicrucian New Year 3359!!!
Green Thumb's 25th Annual Grow Together Conference!
Saturday March 21st 2009
" Celebrate with us at GreenThumb's 25th Annual GrowTogether Conference! The theme this year is "30 Years and Still Growing." Every year hundreds of New York City gardeners gather in the beginning of spring to kick off the gardening season with flair by participating in dynamic training, workshops and community building.
The day will be jam-packed with over 50 workshops, many new this year, more hands on training and loads of opportunities to network and rub shoulders with all the greening groups represented in the tabling foyer. Offering lots of kids and teen programming, this conference promises to be fun for the whole family, and is an excellent educational resource for the city's many teachers.
Check-in will begin at 9:00am and a free continental breakfast is provided from 9:00 to 9:45am.
Participants may also register on the day of the conference, but we will not guarantee a lunch box, and t-shirts will be $5.00 each.
Join us at Hostos Community College at 149th Street in the Bronx.
Subway - Hostos is practically on top of the 149th Street and Grand Concourse stop. The 2, 4, 5 trains will take you right there.
Buses - Take the Bx19 or Bx1 bus to 149th Street Grand Concourse."
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Air Quality in Schools
PS84 on Berry and Grand in Williamsburg rated 38th % meaning 48,790 of 127,809 schools have worse air.
PS132 on Manhattan Ave. rated 33rd %, 41,477 of 127,809 schools have worse air.
The Earth School in the East Village ranked 38th%, 48,611 of 127,809 schools have worse air.
Peshtigo Elementary School that I went to growing up to ranked 59%, 76,270 of 127,809 schools have worse air.
St Mary's Catholic School that I also attended ranked 60%, 76,496 of 127,809 schools have worse air.
Notre Dame Catholic School where Hayden's grandma is the art teacher in Green Bay, Wisconsin ranked 3%, 2,723 of 127,809 schools have worse air.
I wonder if Green Bay, WI has as bad of asthma rates as Brooklyn. I would think they would be much worse by the air quality test. Asthma is heavily promoted in Brooklyn Schools so their rates are probably higher because of the recruitment process that's done. Schools/doctors should teach/practice the Buteyko Breathing Method instead of promoting disease and pushing the use of pharmaceutical drugs for larger profits. If I remember correctly I read an article in the past where the US did a study on asthma patients using this method and 97% of the asthma patients didn't need their medication after holding their breath and breathing slower. The body/blood wants more CO2 and less Oxygen!! :)
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Seperating Worms From Their Castings(Poop)
When people move, settle, or trade to different parts of the world they spread their native plants, animals, insects, customs, religions, affecting the habitats by invading environmentally, ecologically, economically, or traditionally. One example is American food culture such as McDonalds bringing the obesity epidemic to Japan and other countries. A recent invasive species to New York City is longhorn beetles that came in with products from China. This insect tunnels the tree destroying the vascular system leading to the death of the tree. Sounds similar to McDonalds. ;) Another is earthworms brought by Europeans to America. They are now destroying the floors of the forests making ferns, wildflowers, and other plants unable to grow. Composting worms are an invasive species that needs to be contained and not let out into nature.
These worms eat soy based newspaper, veggie scrap, fruit scrap, and coffee grounds.
This is going to make my plants so :). Vermipost adds micro-organisms to the soil that make enzymes and plant hormones all while helping soil retain moisture.
Relabeling Soup Cans
Cleaning Out Under My Sink/Bag Counter
Buffalo Cantina and I are trading bags these days. They save me rice, bean, and potato bags in exchange for my used grocery/bodega bags.
Friday's News In The Sunday Trashed Gutter
Good thing The New York Times is printed on soy based ink that is biodegradable. A good compare/contrast would be "Bringing America Obese Lacking Nutrition into Focus". We can all thank bitotech corporations for solving the food crisis with their GMO seeds. Did they get let off the hook for the 100,000 suicides in India?...