“Green Stuff”

Video

Each day of the online voting campaign for the Health Justice CT Challenge, Summer of Solutions Hartford is posting new videos to show voters what our work is all about and why we should win $10,000.

You can vote for “Health Justice in the Garden” every day until March 16th: http://www.healthjusticect.org/challenge-voting

Today’s video is a series of clips from Kids’ Week- a free summer camp that our team ran last August.
 We had 18 campers ages 3-13, which is quite a task! We had a ton of fun doing arts and crafts, playing on the playground, cooking, and learning in the garden. My favorite part was a series of activities we did with plant botany. First, Joe taught the kids about plant structure and function. Then, each kid did a drawing of a plant and showed how it ate, drank, and soaked up sun. That afternoon, we got out the chalk and decorated the driveway of the community center with an imaginary garden.
The next day, Claudine taught our campers about nutrition and healthy eating. Then she lead them through the garden on a nutrition scavenger hunt to find all the ingredients for a healthy meal.
On the last day, we painted a big mural with room for each kid to paint their own plant.

Photos from Kids’ Week:
http://soshartford.wordpress.com/2012/03/13/kids-week-photos/

I’ll let some of our campers tell you the rest.

You can vote for “Health Justice in the Garden” every day until March 16th: http://www.healthjusticect.org/challenge-voting

Health Justice CT Challenge Update

Click Here to Vote Now.  Click the “Click here to vote” link and Vote for “Health Justice in the Garden.”

Click Here to Sign up to Vote Daily.  Click continue to agree, fill in your email and get started!

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Voting Results: At the end of the fourth day of voting, Summer of Solutions Hartford remains in close second place.  Voting results have shown that our supporters have been the most consistent in voting daily, but we have not yet achieved the number of voters reached by other organizations.  Reflecting this trend, we won the most votes on days 2 and 4 of voting, while the organization in first place won the most votes on days 1 and 3.

What does this mean? : We will continue to rely on our core of daily voters to support us by voting every day.    We are confident that by continuing our daily voting campaign, we can continue to pull in a steady number of votes.  We also plan to make a special effort this weekend, when we believe we will be able to reach more voters than a larger organization.

At the same time, we need to reach out to a larger audience.  We will continue our efforts to reach as many voters as possible, and we ask for your help.  If you are reading this and have not yet signed up to vote daily, there is still one week of voting left.  We also depend on your support to reach new voters.  While you can make a big impact for our campaign by enlisting others to sign up, you can also have a large effect by sending the voting link — healthjusticect.org/challenge-voting — to as many people as possible and encouraging them to vote for “Health Justice in the Garden.”

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What we could do with $10,000:

1) Provide stipends to Program Leaders and Participants working Full-Time to bring community gardens and community programs to the Frog Hollow and surrounding neighborhoods.

2) Cover the construction costs of over over 60 raised wooden beds and over 2,000 Square Feet of Growing Space.

Grand Aspirations Launches Webinars

Grand Aspirations has just officially launched a webinar series for this May. This will be an opportunity for people interested in building a just, sustainable, community-based economy and doing it effectively to share and gain skills and insights they’ve gained through their experience. The Webinars Team is currently seeking proposals for this initial series of webinars. If you have an idea, please send in your proposal using this form by March 23. Webinar facilitators will receive up to 60% of the revenue from these webinars, so it’s a great strategy for personal resource generation as well as a way to get your ideas out there.

We are looking for people within the Grand Aspirations network and for people who have never heard of Grand Aspirations, and everyone in between, to offer webinars. If you know someone who might be interested, please pass on the opportunity! We are looking for people to present on the topics that interest them, but we have heard some particular interest in trainings on being an effective ally (particularly along race and class lines), tactics for de-escalating conflict, and fundraising. Is there anything you’d like to attend a webinar on? Let us know in the comments!

The Health Justice CT Challenge

We are happy to announce that Summer of Solutions Hartford is a finalist in The  Health Justice CT Challenge.  The winner will be decided through an online vote and will receive a $10,000 grant from the CT Health Foundation to work towards establishing “equal opportunities for health to all Connecticut residents.”

We are asking you to support our efforts by voting for Summer of Solutions Hartford once a day between March 5 and March 16, when the challenge ends.

You can watch our grant application video here.

Here’s how you can get involved:

1) Sign up for our voting campaign to receive reminders and links to the voting website by email

2) Follow our campaign efforts on our twitter feed

3) Tell your friends, organizations and networks about our organization and about our voting campaign by sending them links to our website and the short-cut link to the vote sign-up: bit.ly/A2R7hK

4) Follow the daily video updates on our youtube channel.

“What I Really Do”

It’s springtime in Connecticut, though the calendar insists it’s February. Summer of Solutions Hartford is planning our second summer of food justice work in Frog Hollow, Hartford. We have an excellent summer behind us and a million plans in the works for the next, but in the meantime I’ve been spending a lot of time at my kitchen table on this computer.

This image has been floating around Facebook for the past few weeks. I had to laugh when I saw it, because I had been sitting for 6 hours with a laptop, my phone, and a notepad- “organizing.” This particular day I was scheduling meetings with partners, emailing our participant application to community members, and fixing up our website- soshartford.wordpress.com. On days like this, it appears my “community organizing” is lacking some community.

When I’ve been working at my kitchen table so long that I don’t realize the sun has set- only that my papers have been getting harder to see- it is memories of that community and enthusiasm for our future work together that inspire me.

Memories like:

-Meeting our team of 2011 program participants for the first time at La Paloma Sabanera coffee shop in Hartford.

– Getting to the register to buy a cart full of seedlings and hearing “oh, you’re starting the garden in Hartford? We’re giving you all of this for free”

– The first time Nino, a five year old boy who lives next to el Jardín de Zion Street, came out to the garden to work with us and ran around with a wheelbarrow, which he called his “truck,” helping us fill raised beds.

– When Climate Summer visited and we ate home-cooked picnics on the front yard.

– Planting squash in a tire with Ramón who lived down the street, “it will be beautiful.”

– Wes teaching me how to maximize all the space in a 4×8 bed, and that your tomatoes won’t grow if you don’t talk to them enough.

– Playing Power Rangers with the kids during the summer camp we ran, and not knowing how to properly represent the yellow one.

– Holding a meeting of organizers and activists in our basement on a particularly hot day.

– A Hartford Courant photographer showing up at the garden during the heat wave “looking for people crazy enough to be outside.”

– During “Graffiti Day” of Art Week, when Javier showed Nino how to paint the Puerto Rican flag on their raised bed.

– Witnessing the secret musical talent of our garden neighbors at our open-mic potluck picnic.

– Drawing a “magical chalk garden” at the playground- featuring a bean stalk, jack, the giant, heart flowers, purple strawberries, and “car plants” during summer camp

– Playing Seedling Scavenger Hunt with neighborhood kids (celery is deceiving!)

– Talking to strangers on the sidewalk about our kale harvest and signing them up for plots on the spot.

– The last night of our summer, when everyone came out to eat dinner together in the garden at Alice-in-Wonderland-esque tables and our neighbor called the garden “a wonderland.”

So thanks, clever graphic, but I think what we do has a lot more community in it than you think. Sure, I have my fair share of desk hours, but it’s all to make those moments possible. As I plan for next summer, meet with potential partners, and talk up the program to applicants, I am encouraged by the potential of Summer of Solutions Hartford to bring people together, makeover vacant lots into flourishing gardens, and turn the tides of food justice in Hartford.

If you’re wondering, “say, what might the magical moments of SoS Hartford 2012 entail?” You should check out What’s New 2012: http://soshartford.wordpress.com/2012/02/15/whats-new-2012/ and apply to join us at http://grandaspirations.org/summer-of-solutions/apply2012/

LETS GO Chicago – Round 2!

After a successful first year, the Chicago Summer of Solutions team is back and ready for more. In fact, we have been plotting it ever since we put our gardens to bed last October!

What we learned in 2011 will help us build up 2012 into an experience you won’t want to miss. In 2012, we will engage in projects such as:

  • Expanding our urban yard share to include 3-5 additional vegetable gardens for use by low-income families
  • Growing our children’s garden program and bringing the food into the kitchen for our first ever summer cooking classes
  • Launching a worker-owned green infrastructure business to install rain gardens and other storm-water management features on public and private properties
With such big hopes ahead, we knew we had to build our team to have the right group for the job. At the beginning of January, we welcomed 3 new Program Leaders: Nell Seggerson, Gabriel Solis, and Benson Tucker to the team. All three bring new skills and vision to the group that we know will push the program beyond our wildest expectations. We are excited to be working alongside these new solutionaries and cannot wait to report on all we can accomplish!
To follow our work more closely, you can:

About our team

Molly Costello is a second year Program Leader for LETS GO Chicago. As an artist, organizer, and a lover of the outdoors, she usually has her hand dirty in one project or another.

Peter Hoy has spent the last three years honing his skills as an environmental educator in the Chicago area. When he’s not in a garden, he is usually counting down the days until the last frost so he can resume outdoor activities.

Nell Seggerson is a first year program leader with Summer of Solutions. She is in her third year at Loyola University, where she is studying to be a high school history teacher. She is also involved in Rogers Park Food Not Bombs and Loyola Anti-War Network. Nell is originally from Columbus, OH.

Ben Tucker grew up in Indianapolis, where he was involved with Keep Indianapolis Beautiful and Improving Kids’ Environment. He’s interested in music, comics, and urban history.

Gabriel Solis is a 21 yr. old History major, currently wrapping up his final semester at Loyola University Chicago.  Gabriel grew up in El Paso, Texas–a city on the US-Mexico border, which due to its desert ecology, is continually affilicted by drought and water issues.  These issues led him to become more interested in systemic-water conservation; a subject he hopes to explore through the “solutionary” method.  Gabriel is also a member of Food Not Bombs, a firm socialist and a silly human being.


Hello to Solutionaries from the Twin Cities!

Welcome to TC SoS!

Hi all! Allow me to introduce myself, my name is Courtney Dowell, and I am one of the new program leaders in the Twin Cities team. I am very excited to be a part of Summer of Solutions for the first time and get our programs planned and underway. I wanted to give everyone an update of what we are doing here in Minneapolis and introduce our new 2012 Program Leader Team to Solutionaries.

Courtney (L) and Libby (R). Twin Cities New Program Leaders.

This year we have two new program leaders, Libby London and me. Libby and I are both seniors at the U of M and excited to be planning and leading our Urban Agriculture program. Also, on our program leader team, are veterans Ruby Levine and Daria Kieffer. Together, we are heading up four programs this summer. First, we are starting a community garden for our participants to plant, grow, and learn with the community. Second, we are partnering with other Minneapolis organizations to pilot a bike caravan to get youth to summer programs. And, in addition, we are continuing to work the Minneapolis Hubs or ARISE and Our Power. Continue reading

From Bennies & Johnnies to Solutionaries

First, let me introduce myself. My name is Maddy Dragich and I am currently teaching 10th grade geometry in Stuttgart, Arkansas. I am originally from Arden Hills, MN, and I just graduated in May 2011 from the College of St. Benedict/St. John’s University (CSB/SJU). In college, I majored in Peace Studies and French. People are often confused by what it means to major in Peace Studies.. Well, let me give you a quick summary. To me and many of my peers, the field of Peace Studies is an in-depth exploration of the history of war and how our past can help us to prepare for peace in our future.

Now that I re-read that last sentence, I realize that you might be thinking that it sounds a bit idealistic… well in many respects you might be right. However, I would argue that without a bit of idealism, how could we attain the vision we want for the world? This question brings to mind a project that all senior Peace Studies majors were required to complete at CSB/SJU: a future studies project. Our task for our senior seminar was to identify a current issue/challenge/problem in the world and then write a paper from the year 2041 outlining how we spent the past 30 years addressing the challenge and ultimately created a more peaceful and just world.

After participating in brainstorm sessions, guided meditations, and reading about the invention of future studies projects, I came to the conclusion that I was going to create peace in the future through the implementation of backyard mini farms. Each household across the U.S. would attain 60% of their food from their own backyard or a community garden located in a 2 mile radius of their house. I will spare you the 20 page paper details of how this was accomplished (for the time being), but the entire process led to many sleepless nights and even more arguments with my roommates about whether or not it was a good idea for each household to have 4 hens in a small coop in their backyard.

On the day that our seminar presented our projects to one another, I discovered that my project idea was almost identical to two of my peers, Casey Wojtalewicz and Chris Morgan. After we all finished presenting, I remember talking with the two of them and agreeing how powerful of a team we could be in the future when our projects and ideas cross paths. 

Fast forward to January 2012: I was teaching high school geometry in Stuttgart, Arkansas, Chris Morgan was volunteering with the Vincentian Volunteer Corps in Denver, and Casey Wojtalewicz was working as an intern for the Sierra Club in LA. On January 5th the three of us were reunited at the Grand Aspirations / Summer of Solutions winter training session for program leaders who are going to lead Summer of Solutions programs in various cities around the country this summer. Throughout the training, Chris, Casey and I developed our plans to work with a group of young Solutionaries (teams of individuals who focus on creating holistic solutions to local economic, environmental and social challenges) this summer to raise awareness about and create positive change in our communities concerning environmental justice. All three of our projects will address small scale agriculture and energy usage in our communities. We suddenly came to the realization that we were taking the first step towards accomplishing our Peace Studies project goals that we had written about only seven months before.

At the training it became clear to me that idealism is really only something that exists in the minds of the unimaginative. Sure, when we wrote our project ideas, the future seemed somewhat idealistic. However, when you commit yourself to a future goal and have peers to support you in this goal, the sky is truly the limit. I look forward to writing future blog posts about the progress of our Summer of Solutions project in Stuttgart and to hear more about the other projects around the country!

Peace and Love to the Dreamers.

Expanding Team, Expanding Solutionary Vision

This month has truly been one of expansion!  The network of people working together to make Growing Food and Sustainability a reality is growing everyday, as is our vision for a youth-led, community-based sustainability program.  We are reaching out to our neighbors, engaging high school Ecology Club students, and exploring the idea of adding a third garden site at the Middleton Alternative Senior High (MASH).  In the process of planning our Summer Program for middle and high school youth, we are finding ways to incorporate a wide variety of sustainability topics, including composting, water conservation, reuse of resources, and people-powered transportation.  With spring right around the corner, it’s an exciting time in Wisconsin!

Expanding Team

In this early phase of our organization’s development, we are using door-to-door canvassing as a primary tool for local outreach, community feedback, and resource generation.  We set aside a few hours every weekend to walk around Middleton and engage our neighbors in a conversation about our project.  The response has been incredibly motivating!  We’ve met master gardeners, teachers, community activists, parents, and even a dietician.  We’ve compiled an email list of 149 people.  AND we’ve raised over $600 to support our work this spring!

Middleton’s Program Leaders, Gabrielle and Natalie, both served as president of the Middleton High School Ecology Clubwhen they were in high school, so it only makes sense that we would collaborate with this group of students!  The Ecology Club decided to dedicate their spring semester weekly meetings to help us design the gardens, start seeds and take care of baby plants in the greenhouse, recruit more high school participants, and plan an event at the high school to highlight our program.  What a great group of students to be working with!

Presenting to the MHS Ecology Club

We’re exploring a possible expansion of our program to a third garden site at MASH, the Middleton Alternative High School.  Since this school has more available land, we’re hoping to site our “farm-style” garden here so we can grow a wide variety of annuals in a row crop layout.  We think that this new location will be a huge asset to our program and to the students attending MASH.  It will provide easier access to our program for at-risk students and will tie-in perfectly with MASH’s upcoming transition to a project-based model of education.  Incorporating the gardens into this style of learning will keep them in use throughout the school year and will give students a hands-on opportunity to learn about sustainability and agriculture.

Expanding Solutionary Vision

We are expanding the idea of a “school garden program” to incorporate a wide variety of sustainability initiatives and opportunities for green business ventures.

We are building compost containers out of reused shipping pallets to compost all of the refuse from the garden and from all meals that we host in the garden.  We are also partnering with Bloom Bake Shop, a local bakery, to pilot a bike-powered compost service.  Starting in March, we will pick up their used coffee grounds and vegetable waste once per week, compost it at our garden site, and use the finished compost to organically fertilize the gardens.  If this project is a success this summer, we will expand our composting operation to include food waste from the school cafeterias and other local businesses.

Water conservation will be incorporated into the garden through daily water use practices (such as not watering the gardens during the middle of the day) and through the use of rain barrels.  A number of our workshop topics specifically relate to water conservation, such as how to conserve water at home and rain garden design and installation.

Growing Food and Sustainability incorporates art and creative expression through engaging projects and workshops, all of which focus on reused materials.  For example, we will teach students how to weave coasters out of old magazines and how to create beautiful mosaic frames using old CDs.  The coasters are also for sale on our website, with all proceeds supporting our program!  $12 for a set of 4.

The program’s reliance on bikes as our primary form of transportation guarantees that students will be involved with people-powered transportation on a regular basis.  We will transport all of the tools and supplies between our three garden sites by bike trailer, with students either walking or biking with us.  We will also deliver produce to the local food pantry once per week by bike trailer, and students will be invited to join us for this group bike outing.  These opportunities encourage individual use of people-powered transportation while simultaneously exposing our participants to the network of bike paths available within Middleton.

This summer we plan to pilot a raised bed home vegetable garden installation business at a local residence.  Community members who purchase this service will be provided with a custom-designed vegetable garden based on their needs, complete sourcing of materials and plants, installation, and instructions on plant care and harvesting.  We may also provide weekly maintenance for an additional fee.  The ultimate goal of this project is to train and employ local youth in work that benefits their community while simultaneously increasing local food production in Middleton.

Expanding into the Future

Last week we received three part-time participant applications!  We are looking forward to engaging these new team members in our work and to hearing their new insights and ideas for Growing Food and Sustainability.  Our goal for the summer is to involve 5 full-time participants, 5 part-time participants, and 5 high school interns.  If you are interested in joining our team, please apply online Applications are accepted on a rolling basis and stipends for full-time participation are available!

What’s New: Hartford 2012

Happy new year from Hartford, CT.

Before I start, I’d like to thank everyone who supported our 2011 program. You can read about what we did last year in our Recap page.  Without the help of many, many people, we wouldn’t have had a successful summer.

We are very happy to announce that Kevin Rodriguez has joined the Program Leader team for the 2012 season.  We’re really excited that Kevin has started to work with us, and are looking forward to spring planning and to summer working.

Second, if you haven’t already seen it, we recently began a Twitter page for Summer of Solutions Hartford.  Despite not knowing what we were doing when we began, we’ve had a lot of fun using twitter as a way to spread information about our program and activities.  It has been especially helpful in linking to other organizations.

Another big change, for us at least, is that we are opening up our own local bank account.  After a long training on accounting and keeping track of finances, we are prepared to start managing our own funds.  There are several benefits to this: in addition to keeping the money in a local institution, we will be more knowledgeable about our financial support , and will also save the cost of the accounting fee.  We’ll be starting our bank account in the next month.

We are in the thick of planning for the 2012 summer program.  We have already received a grant from the New England Grassroots Environment Fund , and have submitted more grants to other foundations.  We have several application deadlines still coming up.  We are also in the process of reaching out to city and nationwide individuals, organizations and groups to share applications to the 2012 summer program.  Applications opened in February and will go through until April, if not longer.  Our goal is to have a 10 person team this summer.

As for programming, we are hoping to continue and expand on our activities from last summer.  We will have a full growing season at the Zion St Garden, and are looking into organizing the construction of a second community garden in the Frog Hollow neighborhood of Hartford.  We are also in conversations with Billings Forge and other community organizations in Hartford to create new partnerships that could involve a children’s camp, other community garden sites, and new community programs.

Looking forward to the 2012 growing season and summer program, we are very excited for what the new year will bring.  We hope that you continue to follow our activities and projects, and welcome any and all forms of help and support.  If you’re interested in volunteering or working with the 2012 program, or in supporting the program financially, you can find all of the necessary information here.  Please also feel free to share information about our project with anyone you know who might be interested.

in thanks,

Summer of Solutions Hartford 2012