May the Fourth be in the garden

Community Garden workshop to help gardeners get ready for the season

 Tuesday, May 4, at 5:30 p.m.—RUTLAND—Learn how to set your garden up for success this growing season at Make Your Bed: Starting Your Garden,  a beginner/intermediate gardening workshop held Tuesday, May 4, at 5:30 p.m. at the Northeast Community Gardens off Woodstock Ave. in Rutland. This is a workshop for those interested in trying their hand at a vegetable garden for the first time or intermediate gardeners wanting to gain valuable knowledge from a professional farmer.

Shrewsbury Agricultural Education and Arts Foundation (SAGE) and Rutland Recreation and Parks Community Gardens will offer a beginner/intermediate gardening workshop to help gardeners prepare for the season. Topics covered in the workshop will be:

  • Sheet mulching and garden bed building.
  • Amending your soil for maximum fertility.
  • Seedling care and how to select plants for your garden.

The workshop will be led by professional farmer Scott Courcelle of Alchemy Gardens. Attendees are encouraged to bring their own questions and hear answers from an experienced vegetable farmer!

April Cioffi of the Rutland Recreation Dept. saw the 2019 workshops empower backyard and community gardeners.

“Scott is extremely knowledgeable in his field and a valuable asset for gardener education in our area,” she said. “When this workshop was offered in 2019 many participants took what they learned and put it to work for them in their gardens. The emphasis on treating each season as a learning experience takes the pressure off, coupled with what Scott teaches new gardeners to set themselves up for the season it is a win-win.”

Workshop attendees have a chance to win plant starts from Alchemy Gardens that will be raffled off at the end of the workshop.

For more information or to register for the workshop visit rutlandrec.com/gardens.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Plant a tree and make a difference

April 23, 2025
By Melinda Myers Trees provide many benefits to the environment and our health and wellbeing. These long-lived members of our landscapes and communities provide shade, help reduce energy costs, clean the air we breathe, prevent soil erosion and stormwater runoff, and attract and provide homes for birds and pollinators. National Arbor Day, celebrated on the…

Carl Linnaeus: Father of taxonomy

March 26, 2025
By Andrea Knepper / Extension Master Gardener / University of Vermont Rudbeckia hirta. Solanum lycopersicum. Acer saccharum. Have you ever seen these names on plant tags or seed packets and wondered where they came from? We can thank Carl Linnaeus for taxonomy, the study of categorizing and naming organisms, and binomial nomenclature, the precise, two-termed…

Using plant stands for indoor gardening 

March 19, 2025
By Deborah J. Benoit Gardeners bid farewell to their outdoor growing spaces each winter and turn their attention to other ways to occupy their days. Magazines and seed catalogs provide inspiration, but there’s nothing like gardening indoors to satisfy your inner gardener.  Plant stands with grow lights are a convenient way to bring your garden…

The state of real estate

February 12, 2025
  By Katy Savage   The local housing market picked up considerably after a slow start to 2024. Limited inventory remained a major driving factor with the total number of units sold up slightly by 1.9% across Rutland County and slightly down in the Upper Valley -3.5%, according to a regional analysis by Sotheby’s International Realty.…