July 17th, 2009 By Paula Crossfield
This post is part of a series called Roof Garden Rookies, which explores my attempt, as an amateur gardener, to grow a garden on the rooftop of my building in lower Manhattan. Check out my roof garden in a recent feature in the New York Times.
Cukes are twisting and turning their way up the stakes as I’m training them to, and green tomatoes and baby eggplants abound. With nearly three weeks of rain behind us (which made the broccoli and the beans happy, but not so much the squash) the garden is verdant and overflowing its boxes.
And six weeks after planting, the garden is sharing more and more of her bounty. Read More
Tags: Gardening, growing, harvest, recipe, roof garden, sorrel, urban gardening
June 8th, 2009 By Paula Crossfield
This post is part of a series called Roof Garden Rookies, which explores my attempt, as an amateur gardener, to grow a garden on the rooftop of my building in lower Manhattan.
For the past two weeks, some of the building’s residents and myself have been on the roof non-stop, getting the garden ready for its debut this weekend at our annual shareholder’s meeting. We hauled lumber, soil, plants and other materials, up 6 flights of stairs (no elevator!), to create a living space on our brand-spanking new roof. First thing was first, we needed to build the raised beds. Read More
Tags: building, cedar, diy, how-to, raised beds, recycled materials, roof garden
March 25th, 2009 By Paula Crossfield
Starting a rooftop garden requires tenacity and a good plan. Tenacity because there are more hurdles to climb in order to plant your roof, including assessing weight limits and reading the fine print of tax abatements. If you are like me and live in a multiple-resident building, you’ve also got to present your neighbors with the pros and cons, and hope they’ll be so excited by the former that they agree about allocation of funds for your project. Meanwhile, you have to devise a plan. Read More
Tags: Build It Green, irrigation, Lower East Side Ecology Center, plan, Retrovore, roof garden, soil, tax abatement, urban gardening
February 16th, 2009 By Paula Crossfield
Growing up in suburban Oklahoma in the 1980s, I was three generations away from my farming ancestors but ate more prepackaged food than greens. Having spent the last decade improving my diet, I can now say I am ready to try my hand at growing some of my own food – on my rooftop in Manhattan. Read More
Tags: city gardening, Gardening, home gardening, how-to, local food, Manhattan, roof garden