Friends of Ravenna Ravine Work Party TOMORROW

This Saturday is shaping up to be a busy one, if you’re into gardens and parks. There’s the community garden work party at the Ravenna-Eckstein Community Center, you can Spring Into Bed all around the city, you can get some community service hours in at the Picardo P-Patch (if you have a plot there [EDIT: This is happening MONDAY, from 6:30-8:30pm]), and, heck, maybe your own yard could use some work.

However, every second Saturday of the month, the Friends of Ravenna Ravine gather to do battle against invasives like nightshade, bindweed and jewelweed (all co-starring this month).

Know thy enemy - jewelweed, in this case

George Macomber of the FRR sends out an email the week of the work party, detailing the work to be done that Saturday. This week’s agenda:

We will be starting near the Kiosk removing nightshade along the creek, looking for jewel weed (not as good as it sounds) and other bad things. We also have a few trees to plant. The bindweed is getting started ( it emerges on tax day so it has a 3 week head start.)

This month’s email also included the following tidbit about a future project in the park:

Beginning in late June the county will be starting a project to insure that sewage does not mix with the creek on its way to the Lk. Washington during rain storms. They will block the trail between the 55th and the ball field, and dig down to reach the point where the creek enters a ‘Box Culvert’ that runs under the field. They will not be digging upstream from the drain. They will be treating thistle and removing yellow iris in the daylight area, probably in May and June and replacing dead trees in the fall.

I’m definitely FOR keeping sewage out of EVERYTHING, except the sewer.

FRR meets at the lower playfield at the kiosk in SE Ravenna Park, north of NE 55th St. and north of the ballfield. Check the Friends of Ravenna Ravine homepage for more information on these work parties.

Twas the Night Before the Garden Work Party

[Clement Clarke Moore I am not.]

farewell to sod

soil delivery!

That’s what the garden site looks like as of 5:30 pm.

The material for the raised bed sides is currently being cut as I type this. The material is called Trex, and it’s a composite material (combination of wood and plastic) that will stand up to the elements for MANY years to come (a prerequisite for building the garden on city property).

good thing Dunn Lumber delivers

a up-close of the tag

If you’d like to read more about Trex, here’s the What is Trex? page of the company’s website.  But the short version is: It’s made of recycled waste materials and no toxic chemicals or preservatives, is easy to clean, AND you can use it around your hot tub.

Don’t forget: The work party is from 9-3 tomorrow, at the north end of the big green field behind the Ravenna-Eckstein Community Center (6535 Ravenna Ave NE).

Community Garden Plan!

First, though, a few shots of the SOD BUSTIN’:

the long view

the view from the west

BUSTED

Now here’s some good stuff: THE PLANS. Design by Susan Gregory of the community garden group (who does this sort of thing for a living, if you’re in the market for your own garden plans).

the whole plan, posing with donated veg

west side

close up of east side "pinwheel"

I will not be in town on Saturday during the bed building work party, but would love to post any pictures and/or comments that are passed on! Just send them my way (rebecca at ravennablog.com).

More on the Rav-Eck Community Garden

Like I said in the previous post, the Ravenna Eckstein Community Center Community Garden is a GO. Sod-busting should be happening as I speak, and a raised bed building work party is happening this Saturday.

I received an email this morning from the group who made this project come to life, and it includes descriptions of the work party this Saturday AND the project as a whole (bolded parts by moi):

After many months of planning and dreaming, we are finally ready to start work on the Ravenna Eckstein Community Center Community Garden!! We have permission to construct raised beds and a path, and we will be having the very first work party on Saturday May 8 from 9:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. to get started. Please invite any and all to come down and lend a hand, even if only for an hour or two, or just stroll by and take a look at the garden taking shape! The garden site is at the north end of the little park behind the Community Center [6535 Ravenna Ave. NE], and it is quite a large space. We’ll provide bagels in the AM and Pizza in the PM for hungry workers. Bring a cordless drill and a shovel or wheelbarrow for moving dirt if you can, or just bring your work gloves and your imagination! Also, if you have extra bedding plants we may actually get to putting in some green stuff!!

On Thursday May 6 from 4:00 until 6:00 we’ll be cutting sod and getting ready for Saturday. Come down then if that time works best for you.

A community garden is different than a p-patch, since it is truly a shared endeavor. All of you who are interested in building a stronger sense of community, learning about sustainable gardening, or just enjoying a beautiful growing space to bring your families, please come and join us. We’ll be having work parties all summer, too, if you miss this one.

A HUGE Thank YOU to everyone at the Parks Department and especially to Trevor [Gregg] for all the work done to make this project a reality!

Debra Morrison

Hard work, sunshine, pizza, and a opportunity to share in future community-grown tomatoes? THAT’S a good Saturday.

Community Garden is a GO

Sprout!There have been plans for some time now for a community garden at the north end of the big field at the Ravenna-Eckstein Community Center. There have also been meetings. And one pancake breakfast in a downpour. But no ground breaking and no planting.

That is, until next week. IT’S FINALLY HAPPENING!

Seattle Parks and Recreation has given the project a green light for sod busting (Thursday, May 5) and raised bed building (Saturday, May 8).

The approval coming this week allows the raised bed building party to take place on Saturday, May 8, the same day as the city-wide SPRING INTO BED celebration. Find out more about SPRING INTO BED here.

For more information on how to participate in your (yes, YOUR) community garden, contact me (rebecca [at] ravennablog.com) and I’ll pass along the contact information.

Busy Weekend – Athletic Edition

UWA few UW events in the area you might be interested in/affected by, traffic-wise and Dawg fan-wise:

Friday, April 30 – Friday Night Lights, the first spring night game for the Husky football team starts at 6:30pm. And it’s free!

The format (out just a coupla hours ago) will be the one offense and two defense against the one defense and two offense. This should make sense to those of you who know about such things.

There’s also some stuff for kids (13 and under) on the East Practice Field, adjacent to the stadium. The Husky Kids’ Zone opens at 5:30 with free food and beverages and “a number of football-related activities.”


Saturday, May 1 – The Opening Day of Boating and the 2010 Windermere Cup

If you want to see the racing, be at the Montlake Cut by 10:05, the start of the Dragon Boat Exhibition Race.

He won, OF COURSE.If you’re just in it for the parade, line the cut by 11:45 to see the crews make their way back through, followed by the decorated boats.  The theme this year is Out of This World, which might not stop the Bremerton Yacht Club from busting out Elvis again. Elvis is good with everything.

More info about the parade than you’d ever be able to read available in pdf form at the Seattle Yacht Club website, HERE.


TRAFFIC TRAFFIC TRAFFIC

Friday: More than usual in the Husky Stadium area in the PM. Nothing on the scale of a regular Saturday game in the fall.

Saturday: Oy. Montlake Bridge CLOSED from 10am-4pm.  Also, the 520 ramps in the Montlake Bridge vicinity also CLOSED at those times. And if you are visiting friends in the area, good luck finding street parking!


EXTRA: I also want to mention that the Husky Baseball team is playing Stanford at Safeco Field on Saturday, May 1 at 6:30pm. Home plate gates open at 5:00pm, free trading cards for first 1,000 kids AND kids get to race around the bases after the game. You do need to purchase tickets for this one, though.

Thank you to Katie Silva at UW Intercollegiate Athletics for the baseball and tackleball info. And to the WSDOT for the traffic stuff.

Feels Like Ravenna To Me

Ahhh, that's my neighborhood.

Some neighborhoods in Seattle have a very strong sense of place.  I say FREMONT, and you may think of trolls and Lenin statues. I say U-DISTRICT, and you think of 27 Thai restaurants next to 75 Indian restaurants and lots of college students. PIONEER SQUARE = Pergola, Elliott Bay Book Company and panhandlers.

But when I say RAVENNA, what do you think of?

Today, I’m standing in my parking strip, tearing out ivy, making room for sunflowers and corn, when my across-the-street neighbor walks over. She offers up her extra composted cow manure and her wheelbarrow to cart it over with, and I hand over a jar of icky crawly grubs my son and I have collected as treats for her chickens.

My Ravenna: Cow manure and squirming grubs. And good neighbors.

What’s your RAVENNA?

Mission Statements

ARRRRRRROne of my goals with the Ravenna Blog is to keep things as local to Ravenna as possible.

[However, if I see President Obama walking down 15th Avenue NE eating frozen custard from Peaks, and I’m across the street (hopefully with my camera), heck YES, I’m going to write a post about that.]

There are a number of other NE Seattle blogs that can keep you and yours updated on the doings and transpirings of the greater NE Seattle area. Most of them also have Facebook and Twitter accounts, too.

The Seattle P-I has a reader blog for North Seattle that anyone can write posts for.

KOMO TV has started their own “communities” pages. Northeast Seattle is currently represented by Green Lake KOMO, Lake City KOMO, North Seattle KOMO, University District KOMO, and View Ridge KOMO. And, apparently, they’re all on Facebook AND Twitter, too. Gotta hand it to that Kathi Goertzen for putting all that together. [I kid. It was really Dan Lewis.]

The Seattle Times has partnered with various blogs across the city to create the Seattle Networked News Initiative. I really like the Team Effort Journalism idea, but Northeast Seattle has no coverage in it whatsoever. Here’s a link to the description of the project, which also includes contact information.

I’m sure I’ve missed stuff (Crosscut?). Do let me know what it was, and I’ll update my list and blogroll.

I’m also not going to post something every day.  For one, this ain’t Capitol Hill, or the U District. Things are a little quieter up here. For two, I want to stay excited about this little project and focus on churning out quality interesting stuff. I’m sure you want that, too. And, for three, it’s just me typing this thing. I’ve only got so many hands!

Lastly — for SURELY, this post has gone on long enough — I can only find so much fuel for this blog with my own eyes and ears. Ravenna Blog needs YOU.

Please contact me (rebecca [at] ravennablog.com) if you have news to share, neighborhood questions to ask, events to take part in, plants you’ve dug up and don’t want anymore,…whatever.

I look forward to serving you, dear reader, and the rest of Ravenna as best I can.

All a twitter

Yes, yes, we’re on twitter now, too.

twitter.com/RavennaBlog

Don’t ever worry about us cloggin’ up yer feed. I’m thinking three tweets a day, TOPS, and usually to just plug a new post on the site.

Now, are there any other social networking and/or microblogging media we’re missing?

2010 Husky Football Schedule (home games)

No times listed yet, but you still might want to get the home game days on your calendar: Who doesn’t love Husky game traffic?!

UW

  • September 11 – SYRACUSE
  • September 18 – NEBRASKA
  • October 9 – ARIZONA STATE
  • October 16 – OREGON STATE
  • October 30 – STANFORD
  • November 13 – UCLA

Full schedule here.

And, if you happen to be new ’round these parts, the City of Seattle has a Husky Stadium Football Game Day Traffic Information page. But I would say that the biggest effect on our local traffic is the last point:

  • At the conclusion of the game, NE 25th Street between Montlake Blvd NE and NE 75th Street becomes one-way northbound for approximately two hours.

Well, that and all the people sneaking up the side streets trying to get to 75th.

Anyway.  GO DAWGS.