Friday, January 3, 2014

Convergence: 2013 Year End Report



This fall we found the papilio polyxenes that becomes the Black Swallowtail Butterfly.
Converge: to move toward one point and join together: to come together and meet. [www.merriam-webster.com]

What do you call it when things come together?  What makes a garden work and prosper?  These are questions I’m dwelling on as I reflect on our Environmental Affairs Club and activities surrounding The Clinton Garden in this year-end report.  We’ve been able to meet many of our ambitious goals announced this past summer.  But how can I explain how we were able to do this?  

Convergence is a term that comes to mind when I need to explain that magical feeling of being in the right place at the right time with others there to help.  It is this joining together in a united cause that has thrilled me since I can remember.  As I think back to the numerous activities and events that have happened this past fall the term reminds me that success is always a combined effort.  And while it is essential that people come together to make a school garden happen, the coming together must also happen at the right time.  Success is therefore a coordinated effort!  I hope that the following examples illustrate how we managed to converge this past year to help improve the soil, the health, the nutrition, and the appearance of DeWitt Clinton Campus! 


Convergence # 1 The Clinton Garden becomes an Official Compost Demonstration Site

The sign makes it official! Left to right Richard Perez, Shahana Suma, Junior Shouten of New York City Compost Project, Hirra Zafar, Maribel Vitagliani, Ray Pultinas, Ngoc Tran, Francisco Pizarro, Myranda Ramos, Ghislain Cohen and Mike Zamm of Grow NYC.  
On September 26, 2013, The Clinton Garden was honored to become an official demonstration site through the New York City Compost Project. Our first demonstration was a Compost Made Easy Workshop. Twenty-six students and community members, New York Compost Project in the Bronx team leaders Jodie Colon and Junior Schouten along with several Master Composters in training and The Riverdale Press converged in the garden to see how our compost operation is maintained and to educate each other about the basic fundamentals of composting.

After some tool safety instructions from Ray Pultinas, Tiffany was ready to use loppers to cut up and break down some of the bigger sticks to enable faster decomposition.  
From a sustainability perspective, composting redistributes organic waste into essential nourishment for the landscape and the human body and spirit.  It is a recycling of the material upon which our living bodies function that would otherwise be wasted in putrid landfills. Because it involves a process of decomposition in which countless macro and microorganisms, fungi, and bacteria are invited to participate, it is a communal digestion of discarded organic matter for the sake of our mutual well-being. There is no future without composting.  We can only improve our methods and our outreach so that no organic waste is wasted. 

Hirra and Mr. Pultinas demonstrate what to do when you have compost - sift it!
Composting happens naturally.  Throw an apple core into the bushes and it will be broken down by a variety of organisms and reenter the soil.  Some of it will be picked at by birds and insects, some of it will be overtaken by the bacteria on the apple itself and some of it will interact with the organisms present in the soil.  Some of it may dry up and be blown by the wind, but inevitably it will be broken down into increasingly smaller pieces containing nutrients that will become available to plants. 
Our Compost Made Easy Workshop included work with our worm bins.  Worms are fascinating!
Humans can augment this natural process by creating the conditions whereby decomposition occurs more rapidly. We're fortunate to be able to compost at DeWitt Clinton High School and contribute to this vital and basic natural process. 

Convergence # 2 Fall Harvest Events

Richard Perez, Ngoc Tran, Hirra Zafar, Maribel Vitagliani, Ghislain Cohen and Shahana Suma bask in the sun that helped make food for all of us!  
We named October Harvest Celebration Month with good reason.  The Environmental Affairs Club had events happening throughout the month and extending into November. 



We harvested a record amount of produce.  In total we harvested at least 155.5 lbs. of food during this second part of our growing season from July through November.  Our highest yielding crops were tomatoes (52 lbs.), kale (48 lbs.), cucumbers (17 lbs.) and parsley (16.5 lbs.).   



We collaborated with GrowNYC’s Greenmarket to host two harvest sales.  During our sales in October and again in November we sold $1,430 of fresh local vegetables to the DeWitt Clinton community.  Some of it was grown in our own garden!  We made close to $600 profit on these sales that will go towards our annual overnight trip.  





We partnered with Grow to Learn's Garden to CafĂ© to help prepare two meals served in our school cafeteria.  


Garden to Cafe Chef George Edward's created kale chips with pesto dipping sauce and Roasted  Eggplant Salad from our own veggies.  In November, his sweet potato fries were also a hit! 
We also set up a sample display of our harvest and gave out recruitment forms and kale chips out during Teacher Parent Conferences. We participated in the Big Apple Crunch (see Convergence # 3). Finally, we hosted a Bronx Green-Up event to divide our native plants and extend our native plant garden. 
Hirra, Jasely and Ghislain brave the chill of early November to divide native perennials and help prepare our raised beds for winter.
Andrew helped plant winter rye as a cover crop to keep beds happy.

Sara Katz of Bronx Green Up made plant dividing seen very easy.
In each of these events our EAC students converged and planned and enacted the kind of leadership at just the right time in order to help grow, harvest, and distribute food for our community and take care of The Clinton Garden.  

Convergence # 3 Big Apple Crunch


 Apples for the taking at Big Apple Crunch.
October ended with a crunch!  A Big Apple Crunch that is. Back in September we had been invited by Mike Zamm to participate in the Grow NYC sponsored city-wide event called The Big Apple Crunch as part of our Fall Harvest Celebration month of October.  The idea was to get millions of New Yorkers to bite into an apple at the very same time.


Our Principal, Santi, brought his considerable presence to the event.
Less than 24 hours before the designated 12 o'clock noon bite-time on October 24 I was in my weekly meeting with Susanna Banks, the new Montefiore Medical Center's Community Health Organizer. I finally shared the idea of Big Apple Crunch and Susanna suggested that we just try it.  We marched down to Santi's office and he happened to be available and we pitched the idea to him.  He gave a tentative agreement to come down the next day to lend his support even though it was during a cabinet meeting.  But our minds were already “made up.” We would do our Big Apple Crunch ceremony after all in the student cafeteria!
The moment finally arrives!
The next day when 5th period rolled around Susanna and I got right to work. We secured the loudspeaker from Mr. Dubin's office, wheeled it past Mr. Jackson's office to enlist his help setting up this formidable transformer-like microphone and speaker system. We were to meet up at 11:50 with EAC President Marii Vitagliani who had just persuaded Andrew, a bass player, to play the marching drums!  This is what I mean about convergence.  Think about it; Ms. Banks, Mr. Jackson, Mr. Dubin, Mr. Zamm, Santi, Marii, Andrew and still others came together at the right time to make something happen.

We checked in the kitchen and saw that Ms. Peterkin and Chef Larry had already set out five trays of delicious looking apples on a cart. We pushed them to the spot where Chris Jackson had finished assembling the loudspeaker just as Marii and Andrew arrived.   Andrew started to bang away and I got on the mike to encourage students to grab an apple, and sure enough, about 3 minutes before noon, in comes Santi with the entire cabinet of assistant principals.  The moment, 12 o’clock nears and there is genuine excitement and I'm especially happy that everything just fell into place.  Convergence!


Where there's a crowd, there's a way!
As Andrew set the beat and the students chewed down their apples we were treated to an unplanned, spontaneous and fully improvised apple dance performance. 
Nothing could beat the Apple Dance!
Convergence doesn't just invite participation!  Convergence is participation!

Convergence # 4 The Osborne Association donates and installs a new green house for The Clinton Garden.

Some of the crew from Osborne Association that built our new greenhouse in just two days.
Ursula Chance and Sara Katz, the horticulturalists at Bronx Green-Up, first contacted me about the possibility of our garden receiving a green house for free. This was easy, I thought to myself, all I have to do is nothing!  

I have learned that once a garden is started, the rest comes easy and things start to happen even if we do nothing.  Let me try to explain. First, we succeeded in setting aside a disregarded piece of land and began to grow and nurture plants.  Sure, we invested some hard labor and good intentions but over time we began to establish a successful garden.  For the birds, the squirrels, and the butterflies and countless other creatures, of course, the garden became an opportunity from the very start.  And just as birds, and bees, and plants - wild and the domesticated - have converged on our garden so too have opportunities arrived to keep our garden growing as a resource for our community and our school.  And here is where the Osborne Association fits in. 

Our new greenhouse promises to extend our growing season by allowing us to get started earlier in the spring and keep going later into the autumn.  
The Osborne Association is a non-profit organization that offers young people who have had conflict with the law opportunities and programs to help transform their lives. Sara and Ursula recommended us and The Clinton Garden as a site for a community benefit project that would also provide on the job skills training for its members.  We were delighted to be chosen and working with Team Leader Barbara Marengo, Instructor Alvin Banks, community volunteers like Mike Young and the entire crew of young people who converged on our garden for two days this fall. 

One young man told me he was a former student of mine who I could not remember because he was a truant and said he would get into trouble rather than go to class. The Osborne Association provided him the opportunity to return to his community for a second chance, a chance to be positive and help give back to a place he knew and I believe still cherishes. 

Convergence # 5 Beginning our Recycling Campaign


Our Green Team assembled, ready for action, poised to be Champions!  From left to right: Teacher and EAC advisor Ray Pultinas, Shahana Suma, Edison Sanchez, Ghislain Cohen, Catherine Cabrera, Cristeen Sathu, EAC Vice-President Hirra Zafar, Theodore Silver, EAC President Maribel Vitagliani, Deborah Agosto, Myranda Ramos, Francisco Pizarro, Grow NYC Environmental Educator and EAC Advisor Mike Zamm.  

Now to work towards the next and biggest convergence of all – improving recycling in our school! We are planning to make DeWitt Clinton a school that cares enough about the environment and the planet to become Bronx Recycling Champions.  We need to do a much better job than we presently do at recycling. Our goal is to double our recycling of paper waste for the entire building and begin recycling in our school's cafeteria.  Perhaps we can place some faith in the fact that we have already accomplished so much and a new year is just beginning.  


And while our garden quietly fills up with snow...
We know that the Black Swallowtail Butterfly will return in the Spring!

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