New Beginnings project wins a 2023 David Gibby Search for Excellence Award

New Beginnings project wins a 2023 David Gibby Search for Excellence Award

New Beginnings project wins a 2023 David Gibby Search for Excellence Award

2023 David Gibby Search for Excellence Award for New Beginnings Garden

2023 David Gibby Search for Excellence Award for New Beginnings Garden

Co-chaired by Veteran Sandoval County Master Gardeners and Placitas residents Sandy Liakus and Sheila Conneen, the ‘New Beginnings’ Garden in Bernalillo has won a 2023 David Gibby Search for Excellence Award at the International Master Gardener conference held in Overland Park, Kansas June 18 -21, 2023. This volunteer garden project placed second in the Special Needs Audience category.

The New Beginnings Garden is a joint garden project initiated in 2011 between the Sandoval County Extension Master Gardeners and the Valle del Sol Adult PSR Program. The Master Gardener volunteers are currently working with the TeamBuilders Behavioral Health PSR program at the Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church grounds.. Other veteran Master Gardener volunteers who helped build and provide educational guidance in the garden include Lynette Fields, Jim Peters, Marylee Moen, and Tracy Bogard.”

Ginger Golden and Sandy Liakus accepting New Beginnings award

Ginger Golden and Sandy Liakus accepting New Beginnings award

The New Beginnings Garden Project poster was presented at the 2023 International Master Gardener Conference and featured in NMSU Newsroom.

The Storybook Garden at the Corrales Library

The Storybook Garden at the Corrales Library

The Storybook Garden at the Corrales Library

The Corrales Community Library was built by Village volunteers in 1957 and sixty-six years later that tradition is alive and well.  The latest edition to the library is the Storybook Garden, a garden of delight and food, for children of all ages.

Shortly after completing the Pollinator Garden on the east side of the Library, the Sandoval Extension Master Gardeners were asked by Library Staff to consider taking on the long-neglected area on the southside of the Library, known as the Children’s Garden.  It was a big task, but it gave the Master Gardeners a blank slate to create a new space for community youth.

The Sandoval Extension Master Gardeners’ vision for this garden is to educate our youth about local produce and inspire their imaginations.  Lifetime Master Gardener Judy Jacobs created a design using raised beds and a creative hardworking team adapted the landscape, installed drip irrigation, and constructed the raised beds. We also wanted to bring art into the garden space to inspire.  Fortunately for us, Jenn Noel, current President of Corrales Society of Artists, stepped forward to collaborate.  A skilled and creative ceramist, Jenn has brought in many different artists to lend their talents to the garden.  With the help of some talented local artists, our vision is becoming a reality!

You enter the garden through a beautiful handmade arbor created and donated by Zia Woodworks.  Master Gardeners built redwood raised beds that feature seasonal vegetables planted by local kids at the beginning of the growing seasons.  Jessi Penrod of Hanselman Pottery and Jenn Noel created ceramic mushroom-shaped plant markers that local kids of all ages were invited to paint with images and names of vegetables. The plant markers are a wonderful, whimsical feature in the garden beds.

For many years there were a few brave strawberry plants that continued to survive and produce in the previously neglected garden space.  Prior to construction of the Storybook Garden, those plants were removed and tended by a Master Gardener until their new home was completed.  Those original strawberry plants are now prospering, along with some new plants, in their own strawberry bed.  This special bed features a strawberry red headboard.  Since strawberries appreciate a bit of sun protection, a bed canopy was constructed with red and white gingham curtains.  The strawberries now have a very special place along with fanciful red and white toadstools created by Carlo De Vargas.  Adjacent to the bed is the Four Seasons art piece by Red Dog Yard Art that was paid for by Corrales Main Street.

The narrow, southwest area of the garden contains our fruit trees.  Master Gardeners selected dwarf fruit trees that are trained with the technique called espalier, an ancient practice to control vertical and horizontal growth to make fruit easily accessible. Three of the trees have been grafted to contain a number of different varieties of fruit on a single tree. The fruit trees are pruned and tied to the fence each year so that growth is along the fence line rather than vertical or into the pathway.  One of the benefits of the espalier technique is that fruit is at an easy harvesting height for the kids.

True to the collaborative nature of this space, some of our local young artists are already making contributions to the garden by making plant markers, designing fanciful creatures for a ceramic art piece, and painting rocks with cheerful messages.  During a recent work session, the Master Gardeners discovered several of these painted rocks left around the garden as a thank you for creating the garden. The arbor entrance has a box for “take one, leave one” painted rocks for visitors to the garden.

The Storybook Garden will be formally dedicated July 8.  At that time, the community art piece Creatures, from Nature, Literature or Your Imagination will be unveiled.  This 4’x5’ ceramic mosaic features creatures created by local youth at Corrales Elementary School and during the recent Viva Corrales event. Jessi Penrod, Jenn Noel, and Maggie Robinson have worked tirelessly to create this permanent installation for the garden.  But the mosaic was really made possible by the incredibly creative youth of this community whose talent will be on permanent display in the fanciful garden space called the Storybook Garden*.

Please visit the garden and join in the celebration July 8 at 10am.

*Sneak preview of the mural created by the children:

A Little Winter Cheer

A Little Winter Cheer

A Little Winter Cheer

by Dave Pojmann, SCMG

The holidays are over, and the poinsettias are losing their leaves; it’s too cold outside to do much in the garden, and you’ve already memorized the seed catalogs.

If you want a way to use what hard work and nature has provided in your garden. even in winter, and you want to replace those poinsettias with some color, here’s an idea.  My wife wanted a way to add color to our décor as an interim between the holiday trimmings and spring, so we toured our garden to look for ideas.  We noticed seed pods on the trumpet vines, dead flowers on the garlic chive and leeks, dried up yarrow blossoms, and came up with some ideas.  She has a favorite Talavera vase, so we cut the dead flowers and sprayed them and twigs from our New Mexico olives with paint to match the vase.

Voila!  In less than an hour, and at minimal cost, we had  a colorful display for the kitchen counter.  She also placed garlic chive flowers in a vase without painting them.  As you can see in the pictures, the displays are colorful and attractive.  You too, may have plants in your garden that can be used in a similar manner.  All it takes is a little imagination and some spray paint.

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