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Urban Gardening: Dimitri Gatanas - Gardening in the shadow of the city.

M etropolitangardening.com interviews the Chief Designer of Urban Garden Center , Dimitri Gatanas. Urban Garden Center in East Harlem NYC is located below a train trestle. The area is super noisy and faces challenges that would bury even the most seasoned.

Rooftop Farming: Jerry Caldari of Bromley Caldari Architects PC

J erry Caldari of Bromley Caldari Architects PC located in Manhattan discusses the development of green roofs in his practice.  Bromley Caldari are the architects of record for the Brooklyn Grange a renowned rooftop farm  in the Long Island City neighborhood of Queens, New York City.

URBAN VEGGIES: North Dumpling

O h man! - Veggie Dumplings at North Dumpling in Chinatown! Inexpensive and tasty??? $2.50  gets you a steamed plate of 8 hand rolled mixed greens (spinich, bok choy some chive with a little fresh chopped ginger is what I taste). The front window has 50# bags of flour piled up so you know that the dumplings are from scratch.

Rooftop Farming: Farmingup.org Alec Baxt on soil amendments for rooftop veggies.

  A lec Baxt discusses soil amendments for growing vegetables in the rooftop environment. Particularly we explore his experimental use of "Bio-Char" which may be a ground breaking idea for mixing with roof light to potentially create a nutritious and fertile growing medium. Alec is the Founding Farmer of Farming up.org in Brooklyn, NYC There is another longer video of this interview forthcoming that delves deeper into the details of the subject.

Garden Humor: Personal plant vocabulary.

E veryone has a plant vocabulary. We all have favorite plants that linger in our ears, eyes and on our tongues and lips. What plants are on your mind? These are some for designing, for eating, for removing, for climbing, for just looking at to enjoy. Most on this list tumbled out in this order-  then some grew in that were on the tip of the tongue. Making a plant list can get you thinking in new ways about the plants you want to focus on - sort of a internal plant inventory. It's fun to think how they might be personally organized or related.

Metropolitan Gardening is Approved as a Green Maven Website

M etropolitan Gardening has received approval for inclusion in this reputable and extremely useful listing of green websites. Green Maven is a green search engine that requires a submission procedure and human approval to become a part of. Take a look at our new listing there and be sure to browse the amazing company we have been included in. Finding a cache of green information like this on the web makes everything else in life seem a little easier.

Urban Greening: How to Instantly Plant a Spring Window Box

T here's nothing like planting a spring vegetable window box - here's four easy steps. 1) This is the secret : Choose seedlings for immediate reinforcement. Planting from seeds is awesome - but it takes a few weeks - buying new plants from a nursery or local garden center gets them a good solid start and feels great right from the get go. They have had a head start in a green house in optimum conditions. Urban window sills are full of dangers to young seeds finding a solid germination. So for an instant garden try this to make your hard work easy. 2)  Measure the space in your window box - then pick a planting container to fit it. Getting a planter box that is too big for your window will create frustration and a return trip.Make sure your containers have holes in the bottom . If you are above the first floor make sure no one can get water on them from below - if so make sure you have a drainage plate under your planter and be careful when you water not to "pee on you