THE SANGUINE ROOT VEGETABLE GARDEN

THE SANGUINE ROOT ADDRESSES THE ISSUE OF URBAN VACANCY AND THE NEED FOR FOOD IN THE POST-INDUSTRIAL LANDSCAPE OF WEST PHILADELPHIA

The site of the future vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia
The site of the future vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia 2007

With the census data out, it has become official: The City of Detroit  Michigan has reached an unprecedented loss of population for a major American city in the country’s history.  The economic turbulence in America has been drastic and the large and medium sized cities of the north have undergone dramatic changes. Cities such as St Louis, Buffalo, and Detroit have experienced heavy blows across wide sections of their boundaries with an unsettling level of abandonment.  Large cities with diverse economies such as Chicago, Philadelphia and New York have experienced severe dis-investment and blight in certain sections, leaving a divided and scarred urban landscape. The condition of formerly bustling industrial urban centers of America is an issue that has become unavoidable at this point in time.   We are at a turning point as a nation as to how we should accept the situation; how do we change the economy- and how do we absorb these problems in a constructive manner and not run away?

Above is a scene very typical in Philadelphia during these rough times:  An abandoned house and a vacant parcel of land immediately adjacent.  What will happen to this forgotten part of our society? Is this what America has come to?

The site of the future vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia
The site of the future vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia

The societal issues and the environmental consequences are not always combined in the standard analysis of these times.  However in urban areas, the abandoned land has been so severely disturbed that it often becomes a surreal world of invasive vegetation, crowding out native vegetation and consequently native insects that require native vegetation, and subsequently native birds and mammals.  The remaining residents of these derelict cities or parts of cities are left in an unknowable fearful state full of abandoned properties and noxious weeds.  Nature itself becomes a reflection of society’s ills for those with no choice but to stay or those who want to stay for the love of their neighborhood and community.  The invasive exotic Ailanthus altissima, the Tree-of-heaven grows rampantly and aggressively in every corner of the neighborhood, from vacant lots to back yards and out the sides of houses, rooting itself into masonry walls and stone foundations. This invasive has created an image of trees as a horror.  The Ailanthus has done much damage on the city of Philadelphia, destroying buildings and properties, as well as outcompeting native trees and creating a monolithic landscape of problematic fast-growing trees, that have easily broken branches that cause property damage, and create an unpredictable and menacing tree-scape for urban dwellers already stressed from economic changes resulting from de-industrialization.

With a long experience of all of these issues, a vacant lot in our fair city of Philadelphia was purchased at a Sheriffs sale auction for the sum of  $7, 100 dollars.  The property was thoroughly blighted. ( discarded diapers, and refuse so distasteful that we will spare you the details- along with the usual blown-in trash such as years of fast-food containers, soda receptacles, dumpings ranging from old plaster to concrete, liquor bottles, etc.  To this day, 6 years after aquiring this property, we are still removing trash that has accumulated.

This 2100 square foot property was purchased with the sole intention of helping revitalize the block.  This property was the first thing one would see when entering the block on the one-way street.  From a Feng-Shui perspective, nothing could be of utmost importance to improve.

The first order of business was to build a fence around the property.  The nice new fence created a positive mood in the neighborhood. Something constructive was happening.  The idea of a vegetable garden resonated with people, and soon there was a continual stream of positive re-enforcement that continues to this day, 4 years later.  From the above picture, the posts have been set and the fencing material awaits its installation.  All kinds of ideas for complicated  and elaborate fences  were entertained, however the reality of the situation demanded a fence that was to actually be erected within budget and now, not in five years, or even ten years when the fantasy fence could possibly materialize.

The site of the future vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia
The site of the future vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia

 

This was an introduction into the world of urban vegetable gardening.  There were so many difficulties before us: The property’s blighted state, the need for good soil, the need for raised beds.

There was in the past an auto body shop at the adjacent property. We cannot assume the soil on our property is not contaminated with carcinogenic  chemical plumes. On top of that, there used to a house on the land. No doubt it was painted with lead paint.  Being that it was demolished, it must have been in an severe state of deterioration, which means the lead paint most likely flaked off into the soil. Then soil was brought in to fill the basement hole.  Who knows where that soil came from.

This is a situation where we use bricks from nearby demolished buildings to build raised beds filled with leaf compost collected by the City Of Philadelphia. Basically the formula is thus: Build a raised bed using hard material available, often concrete or brick found on demolition sites (right on the block) .  Use this discarded material to build a wall about 15 inches tall and then fill this area with soil.  Before the market crash of 2008 this material was free from the Fairmount Park recycling center. Now it is sold at a modest charge.

Its now 2011, and we still own and garden this property purchased over one half of a decade ago. Our fence has improved the block, and our vegetable garden still gives us food and a sense of place.

While this exercise is taking place, now is the time to plant the seeds of food and cultivate the crops that feed households, neighborhoods, communities, possibly cities, during a short period of the summer months.

We are just a part of the cacophony of voices to be heard in these crucial times:  This land is ours, will we grow our food and live in freedom ? Our stewardship of the land is our true ownership. Can we grow our food here?  Will it be taken away from us? What if we want it to be a nature preserve, a natural wetland, an upland forest, an open meadow, a steep slope, a farm or garden?

Cultivation of food is the issue in the urban realm.  Massive amounts of land are  being abandoned. There are many plants willing to grow that are invasives.  We need to understand these changes on the most immediate and visceral level, and succeed at making changes  in land management.  Gardens of cultivation recognize the value of land space and the need for vegetables as well as the invaluable asset of gardening in an of itself, to the American worker, our own citizens lucky enough to have a job or creative enough to make jobs available in our country; to all of us hardworking and enduring citizens, the garden is our spot  where we can put a seed in the dirt and watch a plant grow and create a bean, a tomato, maybe even a carrot root or a beet.

It is here at this juncture, where  we not  only grow cultivated  plants but encourage them to be propagated for horticultural purposes  where we fully emphasize the American urban Garden.  Grow as much as your own food as you can. The highly disturbed urban landscape is ideal.  The more food you grow and share with your neighbors, the more you are contributing to the natural ecosystems of your home.  Using previously disturbed abandoned urban land to grow food is sustainable.  It is the recycling of land.  In the same way we recycle glass and paper, it is economical and better for the environment.  The worst case scenario is for previously undisturbed or even mildly disturbed natural land be taken for development. The best case scenario is that previously developed land that has been abandoned be recycled and used for agriculture, or even green space such as urban mini-parks that can serve the many distressed communities throughout the de-industrialized cities.

The native plants will fill in the empty spaces of your vegetable garden and  you will not mind at all.

Plants have always been an integral component to our lives. Now there is much confusion over their role.  We need  to recognize the importance of plants in our lives over everything else.

In our garden, we have fenced in and built raised beds, we have then planted tomatoes and cucumbers. We have had years of

successes and failures.

 

The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia
The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia

Now four years later, we just keep going along. Tomatoes , Peppers, Basil, Cucumbers, Green beans… We want to eat fresh food we grow ourselves.   And  this is shared in the block.  The ideal is that everyone can have this experience, imagine a world where every person has some direct control over their food source and likes that situation. Imagine a world where everyone around you for hundreds or even thousands of miles  in every direction is properly fed, satisfied with their place in life, has a positive attitude about their future and is eager to better our world in some way… This is our neighborhood.

The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia
The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia

We have been at it for 4 years now.  The  garden is a established presence on the block. We grow tomatoes, peppers and basil.

The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia
The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia

We are not expert vegetable gardeners. We do our best to get it going around May 15th.  The fact is that we usually end up buying little potted plants from the garden center and spend the next few hours tilling the soil and plopping the little plants in the dirt.  Usually that works out, and we get some product in a few months.  We’ve had some pretty pathetic results over the years though. We did grow tomatoes from seed once.  The Sanguine Root is not a vegetable gardening website, at least for now.

The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia
The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia

We are still enthusiastic about the subject, and we encourage everyone to try a hand at gardening a vegetable.  Buy that little tomato plant at the supermarket or home center and stick it in a bucket or in a piece of dirt you may have control over, water it and see what happens.  If you have been gardening over the years and this year you are overwhelmed with work , and the yard has a million overwhelming weeds, and you never started your tomatoes from seed, and you are so behind…. we say forget about your troubles.  Go out and buy a few little plants, cheat a little, as we like to say and get those little guys in the ground.   In August you can go out and pick tomatoes and peppers and make  a nice sauce.  It is worth it. It doesnt have to be perfect.

The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia
The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia

There is something to be said for an afternoon of poking the dirt with a stick and putting little green things in the dirt.

The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia
The vegetable garden of the Sanguine Root, Viola Street Philadelphia

Down the road a bit, the Sanguine Root Vegetable Garden has come a long way.  After the fence was constructed and the garden became established, the dilapidated abandoned structure next door was purchased by an enterprising developer and renovated, with a  new roof and a new coat of paint, windows and stucco.  Occupied.  Two once abandoned properties side by side are now recycled and productive.

Our 1956 Chevrolet has proven ever so useful in our gardening efforts.

LONICERA SEMPERVIRENS BLOOMS IN MORRIS PARK

AN AREA ONCE TROUBLED WITH INVASIVES HAS BEEN GIVEN A CHANCE TO RE-FOREST ITSELF. THE SANGUINE ROOT RESTORATION TEAM HAS INITIATED AN INVASIVE CONTROL EFFORT IN THE FALL OF 2010 IN AN AREA WHERE THE NATIVE LONICERA SEMPERVIRENS VINE GROWS.

Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia
Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia

 

 

 

 

THIS HAS BEEN A SUCCESSFUL OPERATION, AND THE INVASIVE LONICERA JAPONICA VINE HAS BEEN CONTROLLED AND THE NATIVE SEMPERVIRENS VINE IS NOW BLOOMING IN ABUNDANCE.

Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia
Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia

Commonly called the trumpet honeysuckle or the coral honeysuckle this is our native honeysuckle, and it has a woodland edge habit, requiring sun. Its establishment in this location may have to do with the disturbance in the forest that has led to the canopy loss in this area.

The location is on the Morris Park Road path on the south side of the two grand logs, just after you pass between them, the flowers can be viewed on both sides of the path.

Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia
Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia

This flower attracts hummingbirds.  We have the Lonicera sempervirens growing in our yard, and we saw a hummingbird visiting the flowers last weekend.

Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia
Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia

The restoration initiative in Morris Park involved an extensive and often tedious process of separating the native Lonicera sempervirens from the invasive exotic Lonicera japonica, which were often twining up the same trees. This task demanded observational skills of the highest order, being that these vines look very similar when not in bloom.

The Japonica’s bloom is white and fragrant.  The sempervirens unfortunately is not  fragrant.

There are many subtle differences between the two vines that could be discerned after about 20 hours of volunteer service.

Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia
Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia

The sempervirens has a fused leaf at the end of the vine (perfoliate), just below the flower and the japonica does not. The leaves of the sempervirens are bluer and thicker with a waxy layer (glaucous)  and without hairs (glabrous), whereas the japonica is greener with more tiny hairs on the leaf (downy).  The japonica has an oak shaped leaf, usually at the lower portions of the vine. The vine of the sempervirens is darker in color and the outer layer is less flakey than that of the japonica.

Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia
Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia

After so many hours of carefully clipping off the invasive Japanese honeysuckle from the native trumpet honeysuckle, these differences became more and more obvious.  There was a learning curve and there were a few miss-steps taken.  However, the wrongly clipped native vines have recovered and are now flowering vigorously.

Lesson learned, if you are going to remove an invasive, try to make sure you know for sure it is that plant indeed.

Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia
Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia

 

The Japanese honeysuckle is overwhelmingly widespread throughout Morris Park and in many woodlands throughout the area. It is an endless presence along roadsides.  The late fall and winter is the best time to remove it.  However, always try to check and make sure it is not the native vine.

Japanese Honeysuckle, Lewden Green Park, Delaware
Japanese Honeysuckle, Lewden Green Park, Delaware

Lately it has been hard to find blooming Japanese Honeysuckle in our area of Morris Park.  Not  a bad problem to have.

Japanese Honeysuckle, Lewden Green Park, Delaware
Japanese Honeysuckle, Lewden Green Park, Delaware

Note the leaves of Lonicera japonica have fine hairs on them, and that the leaves are more green, and thinner.  The flower is very different.

Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia
Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in Morris Park, Philadelphia

The colors are spectacular, ranging from yellowish to orange and a rich red.  The vines do not choke the  young host trees the way the non-native Japanese honeysuckle does.

Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in the garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia
Lonicera sempervirens vine blooms in the garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia

As a garden specimen, the Lonicera sempervirens is a product available at nurseries, and will satisfy the customer.  Plant in a sunny to a partly sunny location, and water well after planting until established, and you will have blooms and hummingbirds. Our specimen is brightening up that old 1960s era fence in the backyard.

GERANIUM MACULATUM BLOOMS IN MORRIS PARK

The Geranium maculatum blooms!  This native woodland wildflower grows frequently in Morris Park.  In some areas it grows in abundance and the purple flowers cover sections of the forest floor.

Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park.  Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

In early May in Morris Park, the blooming Geranium flowers display a range of colors from blueish- purple to pink.

The invasive exotic Alliaria petiolata, the Garlic mustard,  has become dominant in some areas, crowding out the Geranium plants. The crowding invasive often results in the flowers being hidden from sight, and we have overlooked whole patches of them in bloom.  However, since we have undertaken the task of eradicating (or at least controlling) the Garlic mustard, we have been seeing more and more blooming Geranium maculatum.

Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park.  Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

While removing the Garlic mustard, we have found hundreds of blooming Geranium flowers.  The Garlic Mustard is so dense that sometimes we pull up the Geranuim plants when we uproot the Garlic mustard. Of course we very carefully re-plant the native Geraniums in their exact location. Care is taken to make sure the soil is re-consolidated around the uprooted roots, and that the ground looks the same with decomposing leaves as if the Garlic mustard was never there.

  Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park.  Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

 

Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park.  Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

This flower grows with enough frequency in Morris Park, that it seeded itself in our yard, which borders the park. Pleased with finding Geranium growing, we have since included it in our native woodland wildflower garden, having divided the volunteer population and used it as a border flower in our garden design.

 Geranium maculatum Blooms in the Garden of The Sanguine Root. Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in the Garden of The Sanguine Root. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

We recommend using Geranium maculatum in your native plant garden. It is available at nurseries.  It offers a beautiful splash of pastel color and it requires no maintainance.  It will grow year after year and develop a bigger colony and produce an abundance of flowers.

Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park.  Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Keep your eye out for this one in your woodland area.

Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park.  Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Like many native flowers in Morris Park, the Geranium maculatum has a high degree of variation. Flowers vary in size and shape as well as color.

 

Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park.  Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

This insect was found on the leaf.  Perhaps there is some sort of natural relationship?

Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park.  Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

We have noticed how some flowers, like the one pictured above is lacking in the male parts, such as stamens and anthers, which are very noticeable dark colored features found in some of the previous photos.  We figured that perhaps the plant is dioecious, meaning there are male  plants and female plants.  However it turns out there are female flowers and flowers with both sexual parts, hermaphrodites.  The Geranium maculatum is thus considered gyndioecious.

 

Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park.  Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Geranium maculatum Blooms in Morris Park. Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Note how pretty and interesting the palmately lobed leaf is.