Monarchs and other insects late in October

On the last Saturday of October, it still did not feel like fall. Only the honey locusts were dropping their golden leaves, and it was so warm that working in the garden in a T-shirt felt just right.

Insects were out and about.

A hover fly, masquerading as honey bee.

A queen bumble bee (or so I think) looking for a place to spend the winter.

The milkweed bugs moved to the salvia in large groups. I wish I knew why.

Most notably, we are still visited by many monarch butterflies, who refuel on the nectar of milkweed, zinnias and sunflowers.

Overnight, a storm moved in and it is now windy and wet. The garden needs the rain. I hope that the butterflies found good shelter until the storm is over and they can continue their journey south.

Compost

I wanted to write about compost for quite a while. Compost is important, it is what keeps a garden growing. Our garden is getting compost from GreenThumb (the NYC community garden umbrella organization) and from the city’s sanitation department. We are also making some compost ourselves in a tumbler composter. We started this only a few years ago, and we are still learning how to do it best. (We also have a worm composter).

Critical eyes on our tumbler

Last year, we experimented with adding lots of coffee grounds from a local coffee shop to our compost bin. This kicked the decomposition into overdrive. The material in the bin got so hot that steam emerged on a pretty warm morning in May. At other times, some material did not seem to decompose at all.

Steaming compost, enhanced with a lot of coffee ground.

This summer, we invited Master Composter Sashti Balasundaram of the NYC Compost Project to teach a workshop about composting. During this workshop, we learned not only what compost actually is and how it is created, but also how New York City is trying to compost more of the organic waste that residents produce every day, and why this is important.

Sashti Balasundaram teaches about compost

So what is compost? Sashti told us: “Compost is decomposed organic matter through human intervention.” Humans collect the organic matter, combine it, pile it up, turn it and sift it. But the main work in composting is done by others: by bacteria and fungi and by invertebrates like insects, mites, millipedes, nematodes earthworms, snails, among others. These organisms work in succession: bacteria and fungi begin the decomposition process. Through their activity, the material can get quite hot: 150ºF is not unusual. This is too hot for the macroorganisms, who will colonize the compost a little later. They turn it over and aerate it. This is important since composting requires oxygen as well.

Decomposers in compost (from the Compost Project’s tip sheet)

After it is finished, the perfect compost should have a fine, crumbly consistency and smell earthy. To get this outcome, the right stuff has to go in. We are advised to put ½ greens and ½ browns into our bin. “Greens” is plant material that has still some life in it, e.g. leaves and flowers and fruit- and vegetable scraps. These are rich in nitrogen. “Greens” do not have to be green. The coffee ground, which we used so abundantly last year, has lots of nitrogen and qualifies as Greens. “Browns” are rich in carbon, for instance dry stems and leaves, straw, wood shavings and paper. Sashti confirmed what we already learned from experience: what goes into the composter should be bigger than a finger and smaller than a hand. Otherwise, the compost becomes either too dense or it takes too long to break down.

Barbara sifts our compost. The result is pretty good, but some sticks did not break down.

Why composting? Clearly, compost is the best fertilizer for a garden. But there is another advantage of composting: all organic material that is recycled this way does not end up in a landfill, where it would turn into the powerful greenhouse gas methane. In the short and long run, composting is cheaper than trucking organic waste to a landfill. The NYC sanitation department has only recently begun to collect organics from households in some parts of the city, but almost all schools recycle organic waste, and they are even using compostable plates and cutlery. Elsewhere, residents can bring food and kitchen scraps (sans meat) to numerous drop-off sites. There are more than twenty in Manhattan alone.

Organics bins in front of a school in Manhattan (left) and at the drop-off site on Union Square (right).

What we drop off will be taken to composting facilities. One of them is on Governor’s Island. It is a surprisingly pleasant place with a flock of happy chickens and mounds of brown material that does not smell of anything bad at all. Here, all organic waste from the restaurants on the island is processed, too. Some of the finished compost is used at an urban farm, some of it is redistributed to residents.

Our little garden will always need to get compost from one of these facilities to fertilize our plants. But we are thinking of getting a second tumbler to increase our own production as well.

Even with a second composter, we will not have the capacity to process kitchen scraps from all of our members and friends. But there are many collection sites in New York City. The two closest are at the Union Square Farmers Market (Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays) and on Hudson Square (Tuesdays and Thursdays 8am-11am). We encourage everybody in the city to take their kitchen scraps to one of these sites. They will be put to good use and will not end up in a landfill!

The composting facility on Governor’s Island.

 

Plant Profile: Milkweed

Some of our beloved summer flowers are those from the milkweed family. We like them for their pretty flowers and because they are the exclusive food for America’s most popular butterfly, the monarch. We grow a couple of native species and the tropical Asclepias curassavica, which dies in New York as soon as it gets cold, but can be easily grown from seeds.

Butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa) on the left and the tropical milkweed (A. curassavica) on the right.

Milkweed has its name from a white latex-containing sap that also contains toxic heart glycosides. This poison protects the plants against herbivores. Some insects, however, are adapted to eating milkweed and don’t get sick.

One of them is, of course, the monarch butterfly, whose larvae eat nothing but milkweed. But there are also aphids and the milkweed bugs (Oncopeltus fasciatus) who live on the sap of milkweed plants. These insects do not only thrive on the poisonous milkweed, they also store the toxin and are thus becoming poisonous themselves.

Aphids on our butterfly weed (left) and a monarch larva (right).

Large milkweed bugs are found on the seed pods of our tropical milkweed plant. The photo on the left shows nymphs of different sizes, the photo on the right an adult.

Different from many other insects that are green or brown and blend in with their environment, the milkweed specialists are quite conspicuous with their bright red or yellow colors and black patterns. These colors says clearly: “Don’t eat me! I will make you sick!” Birds that have tasted one of these insects remember the experience very well and do not make the same mistake again.

A honey bee enjoys the nectar of our tropical milkweed (left). The flowers are also visited by tiny wild bees (right).

The nectar of the milkweed plants is not poisonous and is collected by our honeybees and by several species of wild bees. Monarch butterflies like it, too.

LaGuardia Corner Gardens is currently visited by many monarchs who are migrating from Canada to Mexico. This is clear sign that summer is over and fall has arrived.

A migrating monarch had stopped in the garden to refuel for the long flight south.

Mosaic workshop

On Sunday September 24, Barbara taught the second workshop for making mosaic stepping stones. Below, you can see what we set out to make.

Stepping stone from the first workshop.

The colorful tiles on this stepping stone are shards from flawed ceramic plates and bowls that Barbara and other potters from our garden had discarded. After Barbara moved her studio, we got several buckets full of these rejects, which are nevertheless very beautiful.

The first step to make a mosaic stepping stone is to break the ceramics up into smaller pieces.

Tanking a hammer to the ceramics. This is weirdly satisfying.

Next comes the assembly of the mosaic. As molds, we used plastic containers that fruit and salads are being sold in. The colorful tiles go on the bottom of the mold, which is then filled with fine cement. Of course, the pattern has to be upside down, which is difficult to do without perfect memory. Therefore, we first assembled the mosaic on a piece of paper cut to the shape of the mold and used school glue to stick a second sheet of paper on top of the tiles. Once the glue had hardened, we could turn the mosaic over and place it upside down into the mold.

Making the mosaic.

After we had assembled 12 mosaics, it was time to mix the cement and scoop it into the molds.

Adding the cement. The backs of the mosaic tiles are visible in the plastic molds.

The cement had to be tamped down carefully to fill all spaces between the tiles. Then it was time to wait and let the cement set.

I got curious and un-molded some of our new stepping stones the next day. Below is how they looked after I had peeled off the paper that was glued onto the surface of the tiles. Pretty neat, right?

The finished product. The right stone features shards of Barbara’s signature two-layered ceramics inspired by stained-glass windows.

Volunteers

Some of the plants in our garden grow exactly where we want them to, for instance those that we plant into pots.

Pots on the patio in summer 2014 (photo by Hubert Steed)

However, others grow best (or even only) where they want to. We call them volunteers. The most reliable volunteers are hollyhocks and the annual delphinium Consolida ajacis. Both self-seed readily. Hollyhock seedlings seem to prefer narrow cracks and the poorest soil. This is how these plants appears right at the fence or in the path. What conditions the delphiniums like is still a mystery. A small plant appeared last year in the part-shade under our apple tree. This year, an entire family of delphiniums germinated there.

Annual delphiniums Consolida ajacis and hollyhocks, here peeking through the fence, are reliable volunteers (photo on the right by Hubert Steed).

Some of our volunteers choose dangerous spots. A pretty sunflower grew outside of the fence. Soon after its flower opened, some passerby picked it; apparently, the temptation was just too great. Growing between the gravel of the main path is not especially safe either. A little petunia tries this right now. It is still doing fine, but someone may step on it any day.

A sunflower dared to grow on the outside of the garden.

The volunteer petunia in the path

A fertile (pun intended) source of many volunteers is compost. Tomato and pepper seeds, as well as seeds of melons and pumpkins survive the composting process mostly unharmed. Thus, we will find seedlings of these plants soon after we spread compost into our flower beds and pots.

A tomato came up in a planter on the patio. The plant on the left appeared “suddenly”. We don’t know whether it is a melon or a pumpkin. We decided to let it grow to find out.

Talking about volunteers: We are also looking for volunteer gardeners who can help us with some of the work in the garden!