gardening/farming

Soil superheroes at Blue Lake

Friday, July 20, 2012 - 1:00pm to 5:00pm
Metro
Address: 
20500 NE Marine Drive
Fairview, OR 97024
United States

Discover how worms help plants, beetles beat bad bugs, fungi fertilize soil and how other wild creatures can help your garden grow. Dig in to an active worm bin, find “fossils” in the ground, make clay beads or create other cool soil crafts. Ages three and up. Adult supervision required.

 

 

Contact Name: 
Recycling Information Hotline
Contact Phone: 
503-234-3000
Contact Email: 
Sabrina.gogol@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Blue Lake Regional Park
Cost: 
Free program. Parking $5 for cars, $7 for busses and free for bicycles and pedestrians.

Soil superheroes at Blue Lake

Saturday, July 21, 2012 - 1:00pm to 5:00pm
Metro
Address: 
20500 NE Marine Drive
Fairview, OR 97024
United States

Discover how worms help plants, beetles beat bad bugs, fungi fertilize soil and how other wild creatures can help your garden grow. Dig in to an active worm bin, find “fossils” in the ground, make clay beads or create other cool soil crafts. Ages three and up. Adult supervision required.

 

 

Contact Name: 
Recycling Information Hotline
Contact Phone: 
503-234-3000
Contact Email: 
Sabrina.gogol@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Blue Lake Regional Park
Cost: 
Free program. Parking $5 for cars, $7 for busses and free for bicycles and pedestrians.

Soil superheroes at Blue Lake

Sunday, August 19, 2012 - 1:00pm to 5:00pm
Metro
Address: 
20500 NE Marine Drive
Fairview, OR 97024
United States

Discover how worms help plants, beetles beat bad bugs, fungi fertilize soil and how other wild creatures can help your garden grow. Dig in to an active worm bin, find “fossils” in the ground, make clay beads or create other cool soil crafts. Ages three and up. Adult supervision required.

 

 

Contact Name: 
Recycling Information Hotline
Contact Phone: 
503-234-3000
Contact Email: 
Sabrina.gogol@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Blue Lake Regional Park
Cost: 
Free program. Parking $5 for cars, $7 for busses and free for bicycles and pedestrians.

Soil superheroes at Blue Lake

Saturday, August 18, 2012 - 1:00pm to 5:00pm
Metro
Address: 
20500 NE Marine Drive
Fairview, OR 97024
United States

Discover how worms help plants, beetles beat bad bugs, fungi fertilize soil and how other wild creatures can help your garden grow. Dig in to an active worm bin, find “fossils” in the ground, make clay beads or create other cool soil crafts. Ages three and up. Adult supervision required.

 

 

Contact Name: 
Recycling Information Hotline
Contact Phone: 
503-234-3000
Contact Email: 
Sabrina.gogol@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Blue Lake Regional Park
Cost: 
Free program. Parking $5 for cars, $7 for busses and free for bicycles and pedestrians.

Soil superheroes at Blue Lake

Friday, August 17, 2012 - 1:00pm to 5:00pm
Metro
Address: 
20500 NE Marine Drive
Fairview, OR 97024
United States

Discover how worms help plants, beetles beat bad bugs, fungi fertilize soil and how other wild creatures can help your garden grow. Dig in to an active worm bin, find “fossils” in the ground, make clay beads or create other cool soil crafts. Ages three and up. Adult supervision required.

 

 

Contact Name: 
Recycling Information Hotline
Contact Phone: 
503-234-3000
Contact Email: 
Sabrina.gogol@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Blue Lake Regional Park
Cost: 
Free program. Parking $5 for cars, $7 for busses and free for bicycles and pedestrians.

Your Land, My Land: Using and Preserving Oregon's Natural Resources

Saturday, September 22, 2012 - 1:00pm to 2:30pm
Metro
Address: 
SW Wilsonville Road
Wilsonville, OR
United States

Oregonians are known for fierce independence and rugged individuality, as well as progressive environmental policies – a dynamic combination. Veronica Dujon, sociology professor at Portland State University, invites you to consider how attachments to places shape our desire to both use and preserve natural resources. There’s much to discuss at Graham Oaks, an important Native American site and historic farm that was once considered for a landfill or women’s prison. This discussion continues a special series of The Conversation Project, with Oregon Humanities and Metro unplugging this summer to bring some of Oregon’s most fascinating thinkers to voter-protected natural areas. Bring a picnic lunch to enjoy; Metro will bring the pie. Conversation is free, no registration required.

Contact Name: 
Metro parks
Contact Phone: 
503-797-1850
Contact Email: 
metroparks@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Graham Oaks Nature Park
Venue Details: 
Explore trails, restored oak woodlands, a conifer forest and rich wildlife at Metro's new Graham Oaks Nature Park in Wilsonville. Ride your bike on the Tonquin Trail, stroll through a conifer forest or spot birds from a wetland overlook at Metro's Graham Oaks Nature Park in Wilsonville. This 250-acre destination is a playground not just for people, but also for wildlife. With restored oak woodlands growing bigger every year, Graham Oaks provides important habitat for native birds and mammals. Bring your family, bring your camera, bring a picnic to the sustainable new picnic shelter. Bring your curiosity, and learn how voters helped renew this special landscape. Park highlights Three miles of trails traverse Graham Oaks, allowing visitors to explore several habitats in a single park. Cyclists and joggers can take the paved Tonquin Trail, which eventually will connect Wilsonville, Tualatin and Sherwood. A spur trail leads to a wetland overlook, perfect for bird-watchers; Coyote Way meanders through young oak woodlands. For a bit of shade, follow the Legacy Creek Trail through a rich conifer forest where thousands of species thrive. Be sure to visit Graham Oaks’ five plazas – perfect spots to rest, reflect and learn about the park. Be on the lookout for native wildlife such as white-breasted nuthatch, Western bluebird, orange-crowned warbler and Western gray squirrels. A historical landscape Graham Oaks has a long and storied history, from the Kalapuyan tribes who gathered food here to the family that farmed the land – and the voters who helped purchase the site, restore its habitat and open it as a nature park. Learn more Greening Graham Oaks Did you know Graham Oaks is one of the region’s greenest parks? At Graham Oaks, pervious pavement in the parking lot manages stormwater and removes pollutants. Solar panels on the restroom feed into the City of Wilsonville’s electric grid, and the beautiful stonework at the plazas and overlooks is Columbia River Gorge basalt stone. Find out about sustainable strategies used in the design, materials and construction. Learn more A living laboratory Graham Oaks serves as an outdoor classroom for Inza Wood Middle School, Boones Ferry Primary School and CREST, the environmental education center operated by the West Linn-Wilsonville School District. Students study the rich wildlife, habitat and cultural history of Graham Oaks – an undertaking that helped create artwork and books showcased at the grand opening. Access Graham Oaks Nature Park is free and open from 6:30 a.m. to legal sunset. Many of the park features are wheelchair accessible, although some trails offer a higher level of challenge. There is limited parking at the park entrance. Parking is not allowed at any of the schools. There is a permanent bike parking structure at the entrance of the park, accommodating a total of six bikes. Bikes are permitted only on the Tonquin Trail.
Cost: 
Free

A City’s Center: Rethinking Downtown

Saturday, July 21, 2012 - 1:00pm to 2:30pm
Metro
Address: 
1700 SE Jefferson St.
Milwaukie, OR
United States

Nan Laurence, a senior planner for Eugene, explores how downtowns can represent a community’s ideals and aspirations. Join her at Milwaukie’s Riverfront Park – where a Metro nature grant is helping launch a major transformation – to talk about the changing character of downtown activities, urban forms and public spaces. This program kicks off a special series of The Conversation Project, with Oregon Humanities and Metro unplugging this summer to bring some of Oregon’s most fascinating thinkers to voter-protected natural areas. Bring a picnic lunch to enjoy; Metro will bring the pie. Conversation is free, no registration required. Co-hosted by the City of Milwaukie.

Contact Name: 
Metro parks
Contact Phone: 
503-797-1850
Contact Email: 
metroparks@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Milwaukie Riverfront Park
Venue Details: 
North Clackamas Parks & Recreation District (NCPRD) includes the North Clackamas Aquatic Park, the Milwaukie Center, Milwaukie Riverfront Park and over 60 parks and open spaces, that offer a wide range of recreation and educational offerings. Also found within NCPRD is the Mt. Talbert Nature Park, Hood View Park and the Trolley Trail.
Cost: 
Free

The Art of the Possible: Jazz and Community Building

Saturday, August 11, 2012 - 1:00pm to 2:30pm
Metro
Address: 
18892 SW Kemmer Road
Beaverton, OR
United States

At the juncture of suburban neighborhoods and rolling farmland, Metro's Cooper Mountain Nature Park isn't a typical jazz venue - but it's the perfect place to discuss the value of risk, collaboration and individual voice in this highly democratic art form. Scholar and musician Tim DuRoche will look at the literature, economics and history of jazz. This discussion continues a special series of The Conversation Project, with Oregon Humanities and Metro unplugging this summer to bring some of Oregon's most fascinating thinkers to voter-protected natural areas. Bring a picnic lunch to enjoy; Metro will bring the pie. Conversation is free, no registration required.

Contact Name: 
Metro parks
Contact Phone: 
503-797-1850
Contact Email: 
metroparks@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Cooper Mountain Nature Park
Venue Details: 
Explore the trails, natural garden and visitor facilities and enjoy the views and rare habitats at the new Cooper Mountain Nature Park near Beaverton.
 
 Overlooking the Tualatin River Valley, the new Cooper Mountain Nature Park sits on the southern edge of Beaverton, shouldered by dense urban development to the north and open agricultural lands to the south. The 231-acre park offers visitors 3 1/2 miles of gravel trails traversing the park's rare habitats and natural features. Cooper Mountain Nature Park is operated through a partnership between Metro and the Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District.
 
 Discover Cooper Mountain with bird walks, guided hikes and more
 Naturalists from Metro and the Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District – as well as other experts – offer classes and tours for all ages at Cooper Mountain. Register for classes by calling 503-629-6350 or visiting Metro's calendar at www.oregonmetro.gov/calendar.
Cost: 
Free

Growing Gardens' Advanced Soil Health workshop

Tuesday, July 31, 2012 - 6:00pm to 8:00pm
Growing Gardens
Address: 
5431 NE 20th Ave.
Portland, OR 97211
United States
Categories: 

Advanced Soil Health

Tuesday, July 31 - 6-8pm

Cost: $5-20 sliding scale donation

Location: Redeemer Lutheran Church - 5431 NE 20th Ave. (advanced sign up required)

Sign up here:

https://growinggardens.ejoinme.org/?tabid=388671

This workshop is for the gardener who has a basic understanding of maintaining soil for ongoing health and would like to take it to the next level. We will talk about how one can use a professional soil test and one's own deductive powers to figure out what your soils need, and don't need. You will learn how to save money, produce more crops, and take better care of your soil.

Presenter Information: Heather Havens is General Manager of Concentrates, Inc. since 1997. Concentrates is a 70 yr. old regional, national, and international agricultural product distributor, specializing in natural fertilizers and feeds. Heather has a BS in Ag from OSU and has been working with and advising Oregon agriculturalists since 1994 to interpret soil tests and help develop a soil fertility plan that works for each clients crops, livestock, soil, land, and budget. In addition, Heather teaches workshops to the OSU Master Gardeners, Organic Master Gardeners, OSU Extension, and other Gardening and Community groups about natural fertilizers, how they work, and how to use them. Growing Gardens digs at the root of hunger by making sure Portlanders have the resources and education to grow their own food, in their own yards. We believe the seeds of a healthier world are planted in our own yards. For more information about Growing Gardens visit us at www.growing-gardens.org

Contact Name: 
Rodney Bender
Contact Phone: 
503-284-8420
Contact Email: 
rodney@growing-gardens.org
Venue: 
Redeemer Lutheran Church
Venue Details: 
Corner of NE 20th & Killingsworth
Cost: 
$5-20 sliding scale donation

Growing Gardens' Planning & Planting for a Winter Harvest workshop

Monday, July 16, 2012 - 6:00pm to 8:00pm
Growing Gardens
Address: 
5431 NE 20th Ave.
Portland, OR 97211
United States
Categories: 

Monday, July 16, 6:00pm-8:00pm

Cost: $5-20 sliding scale donation

Location: Redeemer Lutheran Church - 5431 NE 20th Ave. (Sign up required)

Sign up here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?fromEmail=true&formkey=dERT...

If you are interested in harvesting fresh vegetables every month of the year, this class is for you! Learn great planning and planting techniques for growing food year round. This workshop will cover making a planting plan, timing your plantings, succession planting, fall and winter growing techniques, and how to maximize your harvest without a greenhouse. Presenter Information: Tim Lanfri is a Washington Co. Master Gardener and graduate of the OSU Organic Gardening Certificate Program. In addition to being a lifelong backyard food gardener, Tim is the founder of Community Garden Creators, a non-profit dedicated to increasing the food gardening opportunities in the Portland Metro area by working with land owners to develop their unused land into community gardens. Growing Gardens digs at the root of hunger by making sure Portlanders have the resources to grow their own food, in their own yards. We believe the seeds of a healthier world are planted in our own back yards. For more information about Growing Gardens visit us at www.growing-gardens.org

Contact Name: 
Rodney Bender
Contact Phone: 
503-284-8420
Contact Email: 
rodney@growing-gardens.org
Venue: 
Redeemer Lutheran Church
Venue Details: 
The corner of NE 20th & Killingsworth
Cost: 
$5-20 sliding scale donation

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