With the help of our Michigan friends, we completed a healthy list of projects for “Lakeshore Gardens” last week. We mulched the bananas at the Rebuild Lakeshore Bunk House, assembled and painted the bee hives, built a rabbit fence around the vegetable garden, double dug the raised beds, laid wood chips in the walking paths, sifted a years worth of worm castings, propagated longevity spinach, planted Mexican sunflowers, and began constructing a new chicken run.
My good friend pastor Bryan Schindel of Cross and Resurrection Church, Ypsilanti, MI, has made numerous mission trips over the years to Lakeshore. This year he made it a family trip, along with two other home school families in their church. What a treat it was to work with these energetic kids and their parrents. We had a great time of work and fellowship.
On Saturday, Brian Beech of Pass Isles Honey Company, gave us a talk on the fascinating world of beekepping. We learned some of the basics of how to care for these amazing creatures as well as some of their benefits, including honey and the pollination of our garden. The kids were full of questions and enjoyed the hands on experience of assembling the boxes and frames. We look forward to colonizing these hives in the spring.
I was also able to teach the kids about another fascinating creature that benefits the garden; the humble worm. I’ve been raising red wigglers for years. Worm bins take most of our kitchen scraps, coffee grounds, egg shells, apple cores, wilted lettuce, etc and the worms transform it into beautiful black worm castings. Separating the good stuff from the yet to be consumed material requires sifting through a homemade screen. Some of the kids enjoyed it so much they spent nearly 2 hours, producing enough to fill three 5 gallon buckets that will go into the this years garden as rich, organic, homemade fertilizer.
The big idea behind “Lakeshore Gardens” is to promote gardening in our community, especially for food production. I need to make a full post here on the blog about the ministry vision, but I shared it with our Michigan friends and they caught it. I can’t thank them enough for pushing the project to the next level. This gives me hope that the endeavor will take root and bear fruit for the glory of God. To keep up with future progress, you can like our Facebook page, “Lakeshore Gardens.”