Community garden to celebrate harvest on Oct. 12

PORT ANGELES — Gardeners will celebrate the harvest at Fifth Street Community Garden on Saturday, Oct. 12.

The celebration will be from noon to 2 p.m. at the garden at 328 E. Fifth St., Port Angeles.

The 5th Street Community Garden Harvest Celebration is free and open to the public. Participants are encouraged to bring their own eating utensils, a lawn chair and food to share.

Rain location will be the First Step Family Support Center at 325 E. Sixth St.

The event is the last of the 2013 “Lunch in the Garden” monthly educational series sponsored by Washington State University Clallam County Master Gardeners.

The October “Lunch in the Garden,” cosponsored by Port Angeles Victory Gardens, is a harvest celebration.

It will include a walk through the garden, a potluck, demonstrations on seed saving and tool sharpening, and a pressure cooker check.

Because of the bounty experienced in many Clallam County gardens this year, organizers are planning a produce exchange.

Local gardeners are encouraged to bring excess produce from their gardens to share with others; leftovers will be donated to the Port Angeles Food Bank.

Veteran Master Gardeners Laurel Moulton, Bob Cain and Jeanette Stehr-Green will discuss ways to keep vegetable garden producing into the fall curing winter squash and onions, and putting the garden to bed.

Moulton has been a Master Gardener since 2006 and is the Master Gardener program coordinator.

Cain joined Master Gardeners in 2009 and is president of the Master Gardener Foundation of Clallam County.

Stehr-Green has been a Master Gardener since 2003 and was the 2012 Veteran Clallam County Master Gardener of the Year.

All three have been growing vegetable and herb gardens for many years.

The Fifth Street Community Garden, located just off Peabody and across from City Hall, includes more than 50 individuals plots that are 9-feet-by-12-feet each.

The garden was developed on city property in 2011 to connect people to the Earth and their community through growing food.

For more information, phone 360-565-2679.

More in News

A lab mix waits in the rain for the start of the 90th Rhody Festival Pet Parade in Uptown Port Townsend on Thursday. The festival’s main parade, from Uptown to downtown, is scheduled for 1 p.m. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Pet parade

A lab mix waits in the rain for the start of the… Continue reading

Casandra Bruner.
Neah Bay hires new chief of police

Bruner is first woman for top public safety role

Port Townsend publisher prints sci-fi writer’s work

Winter Texts’ sixth poetry collection of Ursula K. Le Guin

Time bank concept comes to Peninsula

Members can trade hours of skills in two counties

Peninsula Home Fund grants open for applications

Nonprofits can apply online until May 31

Honors symposium set for Monday at Peninsula College

The public is invited to the Peninsula College Honors… Continue reading

Bliss Morris of Chimacum, a float builder and driver of the Rhody float, sits in the driver’s seat on Thursday as he checks out sight lines in the 60-foot float he will be piloting in the streets of Port Townsend during the upcoming 90th Rhody Parade on Saturday. Rhody volunteer Mike Ridgway of Port Townsend looks on. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Final touches

Bliss Morris of Chimacum, a float builder and driver of the Rhody… Continue reading

Fireworks not likely for Port Angeles on Fourth

Development at port bars launch from land

Jefferson County, YMCA partner with volunteers to build skate park

Agencies could break ground this summer in Quilcene

Peninsula Behavioral Health is bracing for Medicaid cuts

CEO: Program funds 85 percent of costs

Port of Port Angeles is seeking grant dollars for airport

Funding would support hangars, taxiway repair