Manna Meal

Charleston, WV

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The Battle of the Beans Continues

The battle of the beans continues and the garden is still classified as organic as far as I am concerned. There are a lot of plants that are just sticks with beans hanging off them and about one third of the plants still have foliage. I have been spraying soap twice a week and I do see bug carcasses laying on the ground.

Saturday Aug 21st and last night Wednesday Aug 25th we picked bugs & beans. The average weight of beans picked was 26 pounds that average weight of bugs was 100 pounds….. I am kidding but it sure feels like 100 pounds. Tom stands there and shakes his head.

I was told that the farmer’s market beans have now sky rocketed to $ 2.39 per pound this week, so that shows we are not in this battle alone.

Thanks to all the BUG PICKERS…..we are serving garden fresh beans at MANNA MEAL.

James, Martha, Judy, Donna, Jim, & Leila

James, Martha, Judy, Donna, Jim, & LeilaKay, Kania, Rusmeenee, Jean, Mimi, Leila, BobKay, Kania, Rusmeenee, Jean, Mimi, Leila, BobKay, Kania, Rusmeenee, Jean, Mimi, Leila, Bob

Rusmeenee & Kania
Rusmeenee & Kania

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August Bounty – 3000 servings

As of August 14th, the grand total weight of produce from the Manna Meal garden has been 1,154 pounds. I know to a real farmer that does not seem like much, but to us it means 3000 serving at 17 meals of fresh vegetable from our garden to the dining table. WOW! And the growing season is not even over.

 It really makes me proud of all the people that have unselfishly given their time, strength and energy to produce such wonderful bounty.

Stripping the bean plants James, Myra & Judy

Stripping the bean plants James, Myra & Judy

The beauty never stops

The beauty never stops

And a blessing that the help keeps coming.

And a blessing that the help keeps coming.

And coming.

And coming.

The Garlic Crop yield was 16 pounds

The Garlic Crop yield was 16 pounds

Kathy found a garden gnome disguised as santa.

Kathy found a garden gnome disguised as santa.

    

Saturday, July 24 whew it’s hot

Angela Rexroad with cabbage plants

Angela Rexroad with cabbage plants

The early 8:30 AM gardening hour was planned to allow work to be done in the cool of the morning…there was plenty of dew on the garden….or maybe all the plants were just sweating. It didn’t take long for everyone to join the ranks of the perspiration-drenched workers in the great out of doors today. Spirits were not dampened however. Mike Green of Green’s Feed Store gave us 3 trays of late flat dutch cabbage this morning, and we got busy and planted the stunted, hole-riddled plants with the prayer they would be blessed to produce heads. We filled one entire raised bed with them…tucking each into a hole with rich mulch and a little drink of fish emulsion and spritz of bT to deter the cabbage moths. More could not have been done to give them a happy home. Empty sections of garden–here a little, there a little–were tilled and cabbage plants lovingly were tucked into new homes to grow….some lucky ones got to go under the shade of the sunflowers that towered overhead. There was minimal harvesting this morning but a lot of hard work rendered. What a great sweaty team we had today! The team: Eleanor Spohr, Judy Darr, Angela Rexroad, Jay Rexroad, Martha Mallan, Liz Hereford, B. Peyton Forbes, Nancy Broyles, Tom and Myra. Jean was excused today.

Eleanor Spohr planted cabbage today

Eleanor Spohr planted cabbage today

Nancy Broyles helping with the cabbage planting

Nancy Broyles helping with the cabbage planting

Jay & Angela Rexroad, Nancy Broyles, Martha Mallan, Judy Darr

Jay & Angela Rexroad, Nancy Broyles, Martha Mallan, Judy Darr

July 22 Tater Tots and friends

We agree with you Abbie....it has been a long evening and everyone is tired

We agree with you Abbie....it has been a long evening and everyone is tired

The youngest workers select a tomato to take home
The youngest workers select a tomato to take home

On Thursday evening, July 22, the heaven’s smiled. The heavy downpours that had been predicted to continue the entire week ceased and the ground dried to make this session possible. Little children and students were invited to come out and work alongside gardening regulars and to help with the first potato harvest. Two and a half rows of Yukon Gold potatoes were uncovered, pulled up and collected by the young first-time volunteers–one volunteer was only two years old. Children a bit older also helped plant peppers after the harvested  potatoes freed up some space. All children selected a tomato to take home. One young man hoed and helped with many more difficult chores. Mom and daughter helped carry vines to the compost pile! Adults harvested peppers, weeded and planted new sweet bell pepper plants in the fenced garden. Adults hoed, weeded and harvested herbs, flowers and all ripe tomatoes. The humidity and temperature were high but it didn’t dampen enthusiasm a bit. A reporter and photographer from the Charleston Gazette came out and took a photo of two of the children harvesters at the event. Their photo appeared in The Charleston

Abby and Grace Plants

Abby and Grace Plants

 Gazette Friday morning and was titled “One Potato…Two Potato.” The crew for the session was: Angela Rexroad with niece and nephew Abbie and Rocky Davis, Betsy and Shike Keene with granddaughters Abby and Grace Plants, Mom and daughter team Teresa Westfall and Tessa Dillon, Deb Mattingly and son Nathan Parsons, Danita Nellhaus, Scott W. Mansour, Bob Lockhart, Peyton Forbes, Jean Simpson, Tom and Myra. Gazette reps were Julie Robinson and photographer Lawrence Pierce.

Rocky Davis finds potatoes

Rocky Davis finds potatoes

Abby Plants shows off a grand potato that she found

Abby Plants shows off a grand potato that she found

Teresa Westfall and her daughter Tessa Dillon helped harvest many potatoes

Teresa Westfall and her daughter Tessa Dillon helped harvest many potatoes

Abbie Davis says she LOVES gardening and wants to come back to help plant next year

Abbie Davis says she LOVES gardening and wants to come back to help plant next year

Abbie and Rocky Davis work tirelessly to plant peppers where potatoes used to be-yes they are wearing gloves

Abbie and Rocky Davis work tirelessly to plant peppers where potatoes used to be-yes they are wearing gloves

Peepaw Shike Keene helps Grace Plants with the harvest

Peepaw Shike Keene helps Grace Plants with the harvest

Nathan Parsons helped glean the potato patch by moving some of the leaf covering

Nathan Parsons helped glean the potato patch by moving some of the leaf covering

Abbie Davis is going to be a Master Gardener

Abbie Davis is going to be a Master Gardener

Grace helps Peepaw with potato gathering

Grace helps Peepaw with potato gathering

Capitol Conservation District Awards 1st Place to Garden photo

Manna Meal Community Garden submitted photos of several types to the Capitol Conservation District photo contest in July. A photo of the recent FFA student volunteers won 1st place in the adult division (their mission is aligned with that of the Capitol Conservation District we discovered) and two more photos won honorable mention. The $95 prize money will be put in the gardening account. The photos will go to the State level next.

First Place photo of FFA students July 8

First Place photo of FFA students July 8

Honorable Mention - harvest 2009

Honorable Mention - harvest 2009

Honorable Mention photo of cabbage in the raised bed June 2, 2010

Honorable Mention photo of cabbage in the raised bed June 2, 2010

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