Roosevelt Island Garden Community
  • Home
    • About RIGC
    • FAQs
  • How to Join
  • Garden Blog
  • Local News
    • Garden Photos
    • News Archive
  • Outdoors on R Island
  • Resources
    • Weeds & Invasives to Remove
    • Healthy Soil
    • General Gardening Tips
    • Go Green!

Participate in Community Plan for Southpoint Open Space

8/9/2016

 
Picture

Couldn't make it to the Planning & Design Charrette Workshop 
for Southpoint Open Space? 


YOU CAN STILL PARTICIPATE!
​Click here to visit the VIRTUAL Planning & Design Charrette Workshop! 


From Erica Spencer-El at RIOC: 

Thank you to all who attended the Planning and Design Workshop for Southpoint Open Space on Saturday, July 23rd!  We all worked together to brainstorm ideas and came up with some exciting potential concepts to progress the development of this Community Plan.

If you couldn't attend in person or want to view the ideas we heard on Saturday, July 23rd, click here to visit the VIRTUAL Planning and Design Charrette Workshop. We've posted all the meeting material so you can review the information we shared, see what others think, and submit your own ideas. 

We'll keep the meeting open to receive input through Wednesday, August 31st.  But remember, time flies (especially in the summer) so don't wait -PARTICIPATE TODAY!


Visit the project website to learn more about how you can get involved: 
www.SouthpointCommunityPlan.com

Have a comment or suggestion?  Email SouthpointOpenSpace@gmail.com 

RIOC is looking forward to hearing from you!


​

Garden History Spotlight:  Marc Atkins

8/5/2016

 
Picture
Marc Atkins was a young adult, turning 18 on Roosevelt Island in 1992. Persons with disabilities were regularly part of his life. His pediatrician, Dr. Sudzin was learning to live after a stroke and another friend, Sam Brown, who was wheelchair bound, had often taken him fishing when he was younger. Marc noticed that hospitals like Goldwater were using gardening for rehabilitation. 

​As he approached his Eagle Scout project, Marc was working with Scoutmasters like John Dougherty and Geoff Kerr who are still garden members today. He was also learning blueprints and drafting in classes at Brooklyn Tech High School. And the Roosevelt Island Garden Club had just moved to a new location at Octagon Park.
 
After looking at the new space that was just flat earth lined by small trees, Marc came up with an idea to build raised planters.  So he made a proposal to the RIGC Board for the creation of garden spaces for persons with disabilities, now known as H plots from the former term « handicapped. »
 
When Marc went to the Rusk Institute to do research, he was asked to spend an afternoon in a wheelchair to see first hand what it is like to have some movement restrictions. He realized that he would need varied heights for the beds for some tall folks and some shorter folks.  He wanted to create spaces that could be approached like a desk and originally imagined two gardeners sharing each H plot bed.
 
The design was drawn up and approved. The space would need to be bulldozed and then leveled in order to create steps in increments and different heights. Construction took a month or more and Mark’s mom, Marilyn Atkins recalls a day or two when she had to call his school to excuse him as he waited for the contractor with the bulldozer and the contractor for the cement and drainage pipes. Marc remembers using cinder blocks to build the beds and teaching younger scouts to spread the cement mix over them. 
 
« Then Dr. Sudzin was one of the first gardeners to take an H plot. » Marc recalled with satisfaction. Diversity of many sorts is one of the best parts of Roosevelt Island. Remembering this story reminds one of all the individual and group volunteer hours that have been and still are spent creating and maintaining our beautiful garden spaces.
 
Marc Atkins, LMT is still making people’s lives better today as he does massage therapy and energy work and can be contacted at marc.the.atkins@gmail.com.

Garden History Spotlight: Dr. Ali Schwayri

8/4/2016

 
PictureGeof Kerr, Marjorie Marcallino, and Ali Schwayri at a garden community potluck in 2014.
by Jennifer Dunning, July 2016
 
To garden is to have hope, they say. Looking out over the riot of colors, textures and plantings that is the Roosevelt Island Garden Club, it is hard to remember the cold, hard earth of winter from which it all sprang. As it does every year, witnessed by Islanders and visitors of all ages, from the connoisseurs of roses to children absorbed by slugs and snails and the first carrots to sprout from mud.

Presiding over all this is Ali Schwayri, longtime and indefatigable president of the Club, whose familiar presence owes something to both the Wizard of Oz and a five-star general. But hope is the main ingredient, disguised though it is by a respect for the rules that may make order out of chaos.  "You will be growing them in your garden," he told a neophyte who arrived at a Club potluck years ago bearing supermarket boxes of beloved Concord grapes. 

None of this should be surprising given Ali's past. He developed an intense love of nature as a child growing up on a brightly painted tobacco farm in northeast Lebanon to which he returns annually, with a distant view of cedars and the Mediterranean.

He came to New York in 1969 to finish his training in pulmonary medicine at New York University and Bellevue Hospital. He went on to work at Con Edison, where he became the company physician, retiring in 2000. Ali moved to Roosevelt Island in February, 1977.

It was a natural for Ali, a then-green and leafy sliver of countryside in the heart of the city. He soon became president of the Garden Club, a position he has held three times, serving for 11 years.  He helped to create the first garden in the late 1970's in a small patch of land where Manhattan Park stands now across from Gristedes, created with Ann Hallowell, Nancy Cruickshank, Martha Kraut, Marjorie Marcallino and other committed gardeners like Henry and Ericka Tamao. Ali and Vinny Russo, a friend and an even more avid gardener, burrowed into the heart of tangled undergrowth and bushes opposite the Post Office to create a magical clearing, invisible from the street.
 
Teasingly nicknamed Schwayri Park by those in the know, the clearing was a simple matter of a few log seats and sky.  It was the best of secrets, of serendipity, reminding someone who discovered it accidentally of the poet Wallace Stevens' notion of "out of nothing to have come on major weather." 

The Club's next site was as magical a place, sprawling out over the land that now covers the subway station, and in 1988 won the "Dress up your Neighborhood Award" from Citizens Committee NYC.  Workers clearing the land years after the garden's closing were surprised to come across watermelons and strawberries growing wild there. Old trees fringed the east end of the site, their branches stirring mysteriously at dusk. Everyone seemed to know everyone else, with old-hands offering gentle advice to new gardeners. 
​A small tumbledown shed was a kind of ad hoc clubhouse, packed with the old-hands smoking and gossiping their way cheerily through sudden thunderstorms. 

Nine years later the Club was evicted as the subway was developed. Volunteers formed a chain to pass all the garden accoutrements north up Main Street, with a fleet of cars transporting the larger things. Petitioned for a new space, RIOC provided about an acre of land in Octagon Park. Designed by John Dodge and built by John Richards and a core of longtime, experienced gardeners, the new space was laid out like the spokes in a wheel and opened in 1992.  

Sounding a little sad, Ali talks of how the Club has grown and of necessity became a more formal institution, working more closely with RIOC, with new regulations replacing the old laissez-faire spirit of gardening.  But it is still a place where everyone "can grow everything they want," he said.  He himself has grown tomatoes, string beans, cucumbers, Swiss chard, peas, varieties of lettuce and okra, as well as herbs for cooking and a fig tree.  There is a great satisfaction in growing one's own food, he finds.

Among the flowers he plants are prized foxgloves, begonias, impatiens, hostas, Dusty Miller, petunias, Black-Eyed Susans,  and salvia. "All annuals," Ali said. "Annuals give you color and they're not difficult to grow."

Ali has also served as president of the Roosevelt Island Tree Board since 1985, fighting hard though sometimes unsuccessfully to save the Island's old trees from the savage depredations of construction. The Tree Board has invited park rangers and given tours of Island trees. Ali also oversees the planting of new trees, some of them memorials, though space is harder to come by these days. And in 2015, Ali and the Tree Board are responsible for the placing of small identifying plaques on trees throughout the Island.

But it is clear his heart is with the gardens.  He is not out to save the planet, but the Roosevelt Island gardens are a start. "It's the pleasure of working with nature, with plants and soil, of meeting friends and neighbors and making new friends," he says contemplatively. "Developing a sense of community. For me, that's what it is about." 

    Categories

    All
    Accessibility
    Art
    Birds
    Children
    Composting
    Education
    Gardeners
    History
    Horticulture
    Infrastructure Upkeep
    Nature
    Outreach
    Poetry
    Pollinators
    Pond
    Roses
    Safety
    Service
    Social Events
    Standards
    Sustainability
    Visitor Appreciation

    Archives by date

    March 2023
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    January 2022
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    March 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    January 2016
    November 2015
    October 2015
    July 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    May 2014

    RSS Feed

Picture
Email for website submissions 
or comments: 
rigardencluboutreach@gmail.com

Email for general 
concerns:
rigardenclub@gmail.com
Write to us:
RIGC
PO Box 127
NY, NY 10044
Proudly powered by Weebly