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Sand And Soil Garden Club

Contact: 2010-2011 President,
Marian Fry (253) 905-2697
About Sand & Soil
2010-11 Calendar of Events
The "Dirt" on Sand & Soil Projects
Sand & Soil Seasonal Musings

The Sand & Soil Garden Club meets the second Thursday of the month at 11:00 AM at the Chapel on Echo Bay. Pot luck luncheon follows each meeting.

Membership fee is $10.00. We welcome and invite all people interested in gardening regardless of ability or lack of a green thumb.

Membership is not limited to Fox Island residents. We welcome and invite all people interested in gardening, regardless of your address, ability, garden or no garden, or the status of your green thumb :). Our stated purpose is "To stimulate and share the love and knowledge of gardening among members, friends, and neighbors."

Call the number above with any questions, or just attend one of our meetings... and bring a friend!
Our members currently volunteer their efforts toward our "perennial" projects, which include:

bulletFox Island Cemetery flag pole and garden, and Memorial Day wreath: Planning, planting, and helping to maintain the site.
bulletGardens at the Chapel on Echo Bay: Assisting with planting and maintaining.
bulletAnnual Fox Island Plant Sale held at the Nichols Community Center the first Saturday in May: Participating in the planning and work effort with FICRA and the Fox Island Garden Club.

And there’s so much more to discover about our activities. Come join us in our efforts to learn all we can from one another, share plants, have fun, and just do our small part to help keep Fox Island beautiful!

For any questions please contact: Marian Fry (253) 905-2697

Sand & Soil Garden Club Plants Daffodils
One weekend last November in 2006, the members of the Sand & Soil Garden Club planted over 100 daffodil bulbs at the Fox Island Nature Center.  Spring is nearly here, and the bulbs have begun to come up.  Stop by the Nature Center soon, and enjoy all of the springtime color.

Thank you Sand & Soil!

Below: March 17th, the daffodils are blooming!

Above: Sand & Soil members including Sheila Spinn, Margaret Wickline-Peters, and Marian Fry and many others at the Nature Center.

The Sand & Soil Garden Club
Established in 1979
Meetings 2nd Thursday of each month
September thru June
11 a.m.
Chapel on Echo Bay
400 6th Avenue
Fox Island, WA 98333
Pot luck luncheon following each meeting
Membership fee: $10.00/yr

 

CALENDAR OF EVENTS 2010-2011

Sept. 9 - Propagating Worms - Speaker: Ryan Misely, Pierce County
Oct. 14 - Controlling Noxious Weeds - Speaker: Jeanne Ring, Pierce County
Nov. 11 - Field Trip - Washington Park Arboretum
Dec. 9 - Holiday Activities/Gift Exchange
Jan. 13 - Hardy Ferns
Speaker: Kate Burki, Gardens Manager, Lakewold Gardens; Member Hardy Fern Foundation
Joint Meeting w/Fox Island Garden Club at Fox Island Yacht Club
Feb. 10 - Garden Pest Control - Speaker: TBA
Mar. 10 - Tomatoes - Speaker: Hal Goodell, tomato gardener par excellence
Apr. 14 - Field Trip - Three Stops in Puyallup
May 12 - Peonies - Speaker: Sue Goetz, Entrepreneur, The Creative Gardener
Jun 9 - The Cottage Garden - Speaker: Sally Cross, Sally Cross Landscape Designs

$10.00 Membership fee.
Contact: Marian Fry 549-2616

Anyone with an interest in gardening is welcome.

The Dirt on Sand & Soil Projects
Sand & Soil Garden Club gives the Fox Island cemetery a new face.
In June 2010, the club members completed their revision of the front garden of the Fox Island cemetery. The club voted in late 2008 to propose to the cemetery board that it be allowed to take on the project. Permission was granted, and planning started in 2009 to correct a visual traffic hazard for persons entering and leaving the cemetery driveway, and to beautify the site. The berm was regraded and newly planted with low bushes and perennials to enable drivers to watch for approaching traffic. Members of the club, and teen volunteers from our island churches are volunteering to help the cemetery board keep the site weed free.

SAND & SOIL SEASONAL MUSINGS
If you are a gardener of any kind or extent, have you spent any time thinking of WHY you are a gardener? Do the "roots" of your gardening reach way back in time, perhaps to your childhood, maybe when you accompanied a grandparent to the back yard to pick some ripened fruit or veggies, and were impressed by some part of that experience? Or has your gardening arisen out of a need to supplement grocery buying with some home-grown produce? Maybe you just want to "connect with the earth" in some way, or smell one of your own flowers that you have nurtured.

I often think about my initial gardening experience in 1997 at the ripe old age of 67 - truly! At first, I remember, months after moving to a new house in a new section of the country, broke, and suffering from major depression, I just looked at an empty, brown yard with thatched grass and hundreds of dandelions and other weeds, and thought "I can probably do something with that." Honestly! I didn’t have a hoe, a spade, or any other garden tool that I likely would have known how to use well, anyway. If you think I’m making it sound too elementary, you don’t know me. I had never even mowed a lawn since I was a teenager, and hated it then.

I started with a butcher knife. I am blessed with a poor back, so I got down on my hands and knees, neither of which were too friendly with the ground, and started chopping at weeds. I pulled up large areas of thatched grass, then chopped and smoothed the soil in the areas I had devastated. Over the weeks, I acquired a few hand tools, a couple of books, and began to feel that I was making a difference. I believe that was what really brought me around. I was making a quantitative difference, one that I could see at the end of a day’s work. I began to plant sections with grass, and watered; planted a couple of plants that were interesting to me, and watered; did more things, and watered, watered, watered. At that point, I didn’t know you had to do special things with terrain that was nothing but sand and rocks, to make it hold water.

All this time, I was becoming acquainted with a Turkish neighbor, whose main joy in life was deriding me for watering so much, and laughing at the fact that I did most of my gardening on my hands and knees. As it turns out, however, I’ve had the last laugh. He’s long gone, moved away, so he doesn’t hear my inner laughter, but our specimen garden now is filled with trees, bushes, and hundreds of flowering plants, flowers, and ferns. There was something about the fact that I was making a difference, a beautiful difference, that made me want to persevere.

What’s your story?  More later.
Warmly,
Miriam Fury

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