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Common Ground Garden formed in the fall of 2008 to increase access to fresh vegetables and fruits for Saranac Lake area residents, and to explore sustainable growing practices through education and hands-on experimentation.

Potluck Dinner

Families in the garden
Common Ground Garden invites the public to a potluck and get-together Sunday, March 4th at 5:00 pm, at Heaven Hill Farm on Bear Cub Lane, Lake Placid. Members of community gardens in Saranac Lake, Paul Smiths, and Lake Placid will present an update on the past year’s activities and a look forward to this year’s plans, with information on how to sign up for garden plots. After dinner, gardeners can test their “garden IQs” in an interactive quiz game lead by Cornell Cooperative Extension Horticulturalist Amy Ivy. Anyone attending will be eligible for door prizes.  Free and open to the public; bring a dish to share.

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Sign Up Now!

Common Ground is accepting registration now for the 2012 season in the garden.

Plots are available in each of our two locations - behind Adirondack Health on Old Lake Colby Road, and Goose Hill next to Pine View Village Apartments off McKenzie Pond Road. Gardeners may sign up for a year's lease with a $25 donation (and a $15 cleanup deposit.) Both sites are surrounded by deer fencing; access to water is provided. To read the garden guidelines and to download a registration form, click here.

Tomato Container Perfected

As profiled by Farhad Manjoo in Slate, Ray Newstead has spent the past few years developing the EarthTainer(TM), a self-watering container made from cheap, easily available components to grow the tomatoes you crave. This seemingly simple design incorporates elements such as a larger  reservoir, built-in trellis, and flag indicating the water level that bring it to a higher level than most other plant containers.

The EarthTainer is not difficult to build once the parts have been collected. Manjoo, in his Slate article, estimates a cost of $150 and an afternoon to build three containers, which should last for 7 or 8 years. Newstead offers the plans for free, saying, “(w)ith the global food crisis escalating, I believe that spreading knowledge worldwide of how to build EarthTainer growing systems could help feed hungry people in impoverished areas around the world.  Not just heirloom tomatoes, but corn, soybeans, and other high-nutrient crops can be grown.”

Plans for the EarthTainer can be downloaded here or found on the Resources page of this site.







































Subpages (2): Donors Spring 2011

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