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Riley Park Community Garden

50 East 30th Avenue
Vancouver, BC, V5V 2T9
7789983471
A food security project of Little Mountain Neighbourhood House

Riley Park Community Garden

  • About the Garden
  • Our Food Hub
  • News
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Are you eating wasabi or horseradish? November 20 Guided Work Party

November 24, 2022 Dhira Khewsubtrakool
 Most of the vegetable beds are covered warmly and protectively in a generous coat of mulch. Now they are ready for the winter!

Most of the vegetable beds are covered warmly and protectively in a generous coat of mulch. Now they are ready for the winter!

 Gardeners in cold November

Gardeners in cold November

 Nootka rose plant, a very hardy and fragrant native rose.

Nootka rose plant, a very hardy and fragrant native rose.

 Goldenrod, a native perennial plant that is great for attracting pollinators and butterflies

Goldenrod, a native perennial plant that is great for attracting pollinators and butterflies

 Wapato plant, also known as duck potato, is a native plant that grows in soil beside streams and is harvested for its bulbs, which look like potatoes

Wapato plant, also known as duck potato, is a native plant that grows in soil beside streams and is harvested for its bulbs, which look like potatoes

 Transplanting wapato plant and covering the bed with straw

Transplanting wapato plant and covering the bed with straw

 Volunteers working on reshaping the end vegetable bed

Volunteers working on reshaping the end vegetable bed

 After the reshaping! Looking much better

After the reshaping! Looking much better

 Border project

Border project

 Spreading the fall leaves

Spreading the fall leaves

 Transplanting the raspberry plants

Transplanting the raspberry plants

 Horseradish roots

Horseradish roots

 Most of the vegetable beds are covered warmly and protectively in a generous coat of mulch. Now they are ready for the winter!  Gardeners in cold November  Nootka rose plant, a very hardy and fragrant native rose.  Goldenrod, a native perennial plant that is great for attracting pollinators and butterflies  Wapato plant, also known as duck potato, is a native plant that grows in soil beside streams and is harvested for its bulbs, which look like potatoes  Transplanting wapato plant and covering the bed with straw  Volunteers working on reshaping the end vegetable bed  After the reshaping! Looking much better  Border project  Spreading the fall leaves  Transplanting the raspberry plants  Horseradish roots

By Jasmine Shi

It’s great to see a fair number of people showing up for gardening even at the tail end of the season, in cold November! Today was the second-to-last week for gardening at Riley Park, and there were still surprisingly many tasks to be done. 

We received some indigenous plants, including Nootka rose, goldenrod, and wapato. Some were transplanted to the garden beds while others were shared among the volunteers to be taken home. 

A few volunteers took big forks and helped to reshape the last vegetable bed in the garden, which was starting to look wild. They did a very neat job.

Our elderberry shrub tree was pruned and the leftover branches were used to make a cute-looking border at the end of our edible food forest.

We received a few bags of fall leaves and they were sprinkled on top of the shrubs in the food forest to act as mulch over the winter.

We transplanted a few raspberry plants that had been living in pots to sit beside the already-existing raspberries. Apparently these are a more voraciously growing variety 🤔

Lastly, we harvested the horseradish plant from the herb bed by digging up its roots. Something interesting that Amy, who is Japanese, shared is that the wasabi paste bought in stores is essentially 90% horseradish and only 10% wasabi. This is because it is so hard to grow wasabi, and horseradish thrives much better in our soil.

← Join us for the last work party of the year!Soaking in the fall sun - November 13 Guided Work Party →
 

Where to find us

50 E 30th Ave
Vancouver, BC V5V 2T9

Riley Park Community Garden is a food security project of Little Mountain Neighbourhood House (102-1193 Kingsway)

 

We acknowledge that the land on which we garden and gather is the unceded, ancestral, and traditional territories belonging to the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Funded in part by the Government of Canada's New Horizon for Seniors Program
 
 

Charity Registration Number: 107629925RR0001
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