From Helen Dewey of Medfield Environment Action –

From Helen Dewey of Medfield Environment Action –

Comments Off on Medfield climate goals forum at 7:30 on 8/17
Posted in Energy Committee, Environmental, Green
From Neal Sanders, co-chair of the Medfield Community Gardens, from his post on his blog, The Principal Undergardener at
https://theprincipalundergardener.blogspot.com/2020/04/garden-therapy.html
Though I was not present at the meeting, apparently sometime toward the end of March, Medfield’s Covid-19 Response Committee discussed which additional community activities (in addition to schools, libraries, restaurants, etc.) could or should be discontinued in order to discourage unnecessary public gatherings.
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| A returning gardener carries in her plot’s ‘mascot’ – a terra cotta pig |
The Community Garden was one of the ‘group activities’ up for consideration.
I would not have known this except a town employee forwarded a copy of an internal email noting the Community Garden had been spared, and permitted to go forward on schedule. A few days later, in one of my periodic ‘updates’ to the 75 families who have plots in the garden, I mentioned the decision in passing.
The response from gardeners was swift and vocal. The most memorable one came from a wonderful lady whom I think of as giving the garden a certain ‘classiness’. She is always in a good mood; she maintains a glorious garden; and she dresses better than any gardener I have ever met. Her response was as follows:
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| Betty dispenses gardening advice from a socially responsible distance |
“So help me God, if they were to close the garden I would have a HUGE problem with that. The garden is my ONLY solace from home- schooling these animals, and my escape from the “office”.
The message concluded with a number of emojis, the exact translation of them I could not ascertain, but which appeared to threaten to visit some ancient Egyptian curse upon anyone who dared to mess with the status quo.
Betty and I have spent multiple hours the past few days at the Community Garden. Betty answers questions (from a CDC-acceptable distance) about what it is safe to plant. I introduce myself to the new gardeners (signup is via email) and explain why we recommend burying the bottom six inches of fences.
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| It’s too soon to plan anything but the hardiest of crops, but everyone is getting prepped |
What we have received from gardeners is universal thanks. Back in January and February, I was having trouble getting people to sign up for plots. After the ‘shelter in place’ orders went out, demand exploded. Not only were all plots filled; I had a wait list with eight names on it. Everyone, it seems, is in need of some garden therapy.
A group of volunteers always stakes the garden at the end of March and we ask gardeners to have a fence up by the first weekend in May; a very reasonable four or five weeks to accomplish a task that provides ‘proof of gardening.’ Yet, in a ‘normal’ year, I have to don my Ogre costume to get people to meet the deadline. This year, the first half dozen fences were in place the day after I put out a memo announcing that the garden was open. Today (April 12) I counted just nine plots out of 70 that are not fenced, with the deadline still three weeks away.
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| Everyone is working on fences |
Granted, people have far more time on their hands in the spring of 2020 than in previous years, but there is also a palpable sense of pleasure on the faces of everyone I see. Moreover, there is more courtesy. For example, every year, I grit my teeth as I find many of the three-foot walkways between plots have been prepared just half the width; gardeners figured they were responsible for only ‘their’ half of the pathway. This year, whoever does the path puts down cardboard or paper plus bark mulch for the full 36 inches. Another example: we discourage gardeners who share a full plot (dividing each 20-foot-by-30-foot space into two 15-foot-by-20-foot ones) from dividing the plots with an internal fence (it wastes space and promotes weeds). Last year, perhaps four of the 15 gardens bore just a length of string or row of flowers to ‘suggest’ a demarcation. This year, I’ve seen just three plots with interior fences.
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| Four plots are prepared |
Most of all, I’ve seen gardeners luxuriating in having a legitimate and ‘responsible’ reason to be outdoors. There were 15 cars at the garden this afternoon. A few had back ends bulging with fencing or stakes, but most people were there just to find something to do in their plots. They were building raised beds, marking out rows, and creating obelisks on which peas will grow this summer. Betty warned everyone soil temperatures are still in the 40’s, meaning it is too early to plant anything except the hardiest of ‘cool weather’ vegetables (spinach, onions). Yet, people were hoeing or on their hands and knees as if a heat wave was expected, rather than the two days of cold rain forecast for early this coming week.
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| This is the earliest we’ve been busy. Usually, early April is very quiet. |
Had the garden been ‘disallowed’ because of coronavirus concerns, I could have made all the valid arguments in favor of reversing the decision (chief among them that opportunistic weeds would have swallowed the garden by the end of May), but the likelihood I would have prevailed was slim. As a nation, we are trying to flatten the curve of a pandemic.
But, for 75 Medfield families, we are providing the best kind of therapy. We’re offering hope. I suspect the bins we put out to aid the town’s Food Cupboard will overflow this season. I have a feeling disagreements will be settled amicably and (fingers crossed) vines may even stay inside fences come August.
I predict people will wave greetings to one another from their respective plots until it is once again safe to offer a hug. In short, I think it’s going to be a great season for the Community Garden.
Posted by The Principal Undergardener at 4:53 PM
Posted in Conservation Committee, Environmental, Open space, Recreation
From Neal Sanders –

Medfield Community Garden’s 2020 Registration Now Open
Is growing fresh vegetables something you would like to do? Have you tried to grow them in your back yard, but found you had too much shade? Do you live in a condo or apartment that has no space for gardens? If you answer ‘yes’ to any of these questions, the town of Medfield has a possible solution for you: the Medfield Community Garden.
Registration for spaces at the garden located on Plain Street off Route 27 is now open for the 2020 season, and ends when the last space is filled. Plots are available on a first-request basis and usually go quickly. A 300-square-foot plot provides ample room for a variety of different vegetables for most families. Approximately 12 plots are available for this season.
Both novice or experienced gardeners will find the Community Garden offers a great opportunity to learn and grow. The Garden is located on Conservation Commission land at the former Holmquist Farm on the south side of town. The site provides all-day sun, a scarce commodity for many Medfield residents.
Never had a vegetable garden, or feel you’d like a refresher course, or more information on growing in this area? Master Gardener and lecturer Betty Sanders will offer a freshly updated program on planning, planting and growing a garden in this area. The presentation will be held on Saturday, March 14, at 10:30 a.m. in the Medfield Library.
Gardeners provide their own seeds or seedlings, agree to fence their plot, and keep it weed-free throughout the season. The town provides a ready-to-plant site, wood chips for paths, and on-site-water. Because the Community garden is on town-owned Conservation land, gardeners are not allowed to use any herbicides or inorganic insecticides.
The Community Garden has now been on Plain Street for more than fifteen years. As a result of good gardening practices, the site is rich in organic nutrients, eliminating the need for almost all fertilizers and additives.
Residents can apply for a plot by contacting garden co-manager Neal Sanders at 508-359-9453 or n_h_sanders@yahoo.com. Plots measuring 15 feet by 20 feet are $18, plus a one-time fee for joining the garden of $20.

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Posted in Entertainment, Environmental, Events, Green, Information, Nature, Open space, Recreation
Fred Davis chairs the Medfield Energy Committee and his “guest column” that follows appeared in the Medfield Press –

By Fred Davis
Medfielders can appreciate the difficult questions young people here and everywhere are asking: Why aren’t adults responding adequately to the climate emergency?
On Friday, Sept. 20, the Global Strike will involve millions of people worldwide; perhaps you or your child will be walking out of school or work.
For decades to come, there will be no answers that can entirely satisfy the accusations. But right now, a starting point should be an honest recognition that all carbon pollution in the world is an accumulation of all individual carbon footprints. Virtually every person in Medfield shares a significant responsibility in the cause, and therefore, also in the cure.
“Inconvenient” was how Al Gore shrewdly characterized this problem 13 years ago. Developments since then have made de-carbonizing more and more achievable, especially here in Massachusetts, the number one state in the country in energy efficiency (for eight years running, ACEEE).
A consensus has now crystallized among professionals as to what the necessary path looks like. Most if not all steps on the path are available right now, and are usually profitable. Drivers must drive electric. Available roofs must be solarized. Building owners must seal/insulate (to “passive house” standards), and upgrade lighting (to highest efficiency LED with controls). These steps are a whole lot less inconvenient than even a couple of years ago.
Most impactful is to “electrify” existing heating systems: replacing gas and oil boilers and furnaces with high-efficiency electric heat-pumps. Also, any new construction / rehab today must have a carbon footprint that is at least net-zero.
The bottom line is that steps necessary on the path to respond adequately to the climate crisis are, here and now, the responsibility of everyone who drives or lives or works in our town.
Davis is a 40-year veteran of the energy efficiency field. He is the new chairman of the Medfield Energy Committee, which over 10 years had reduced municipal energy use by 44 percent. All views are his own.
Posted in Energy Committee, Environmental
From the San Francisco chronicle –
Berkeley has become the first city in the nation to ban the installation of natural gas lines in new homes.
The City Council on Tuesday night unanimously voted to ban gas from new low-rise residential buildings starting Jan. 1.
It’s not the first time Berkeley has passed pioneering health or environmental legislation. In 1977, Berkeley was the first in the country to ban smoking in restaurants and bars. In January the city banned single-use disposables, requiring restaurants to use to-go foodware that is compostable.
The natural gas ordinance, introduced by Councilwoman Kate Harrison, requires all new single-family homes, town homes and small apartment buildings to have electric infrastructure. After its passage, Harrison thanked the community and her colleagues “for making Berkeley the first city in California and the United States to prohibit natural gas infrastructure in new buildings.”
“It’s an enormous issue,” Harrison told The Chronicle. “We need to really tackle this. When we think about pollution and climate-change issues, we tend to think about factories and cars, but all buildings are producing greenhouse gas.”
The city will include commercial buildings and larger residential structures as the state moves to develop regulations for those, officials said.
The ordinance allocates $273,341 per year for a two-year staff position in the Building and Safety Division within the city’s Department of Planning and Development. The employee will be responsible for implementing the ban.
Mayor Jesse Arreguín called the ordinance innovative and groundbreaking.
“I’m really proud to be on this City Council to adopt this groundbreaking ordinance. … We know that the climate crisis is deepening and is having cataclysmic impacts,” he said at the meeting. “Warmer temperatures and the year-round fire season … the melting of the polar ice caps, growing sea level rise, all these conditions prove that we are in real trouble and that we have to take bold action now.”
“That is how change happens,” Hochschild said at the meeting. “Right now, in California, we have a big focus on cleaning up the building sector because there are more emissions coming from combustion natural gas in our buildings than our entire state power plant fleet.”
Posted in Environmental
From my daily e-newsletter from the American Association for Justice (attorneys representing injured people) –

The Detroit Free Press (5/9, Matheny, 1.52M) reports that in a “scathing resignation letter,” a former 3M environmental specialist “accused company officials of being ‘unethical’ and more ‘concerned with markets, legal defensibility and image over environmental safety’ when it came to PFAS.” In a 1999 resignation letter, Richard Burdy called PFOS, one of 3M’s chief PFAS products, “the most insidious pollutant since PCB.” Purdy said, “It is probably more damaging than PCB because it does not degrade, whereas PCB does; it is more toxic to wildlife,” adding, “I have worked within the system to learn more about this chemical and to make the company aware of the dangers associated with its continued use…but I have continually met roadblocks, delays, and indecision. For weeks on end, I have received assurances that my samples would be analyzed soon – never to see results. There are always excuses and little is accomplished.” The Detroit Free Press says that the letter “is just one of a large cache of internal 3M memos and documents obtained by the Free Press through public records law from the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office.”
Posted in Environmental, Legal
Full article is available here –
https://www.uuworld.org/articles/climate-change-work-honored
Comments Off on FPUU wins climate change award
Posted in Environmental, Volunteers
Email today from Savey Women’s Alliance, whose Medfield chapter is its “Chapter of the Year” – Congratulations!
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Posted in Environmental, Green, Information
From the Neponset Stormwater Partnership –
Protect your water! Keep leaves away from streams, pavement and storm drains. Learn more https://bit.ly/2xFmu0W

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Posted in Environmental


Comments Off on Mosquito aerial larvicide application 4/19 – 4/27
Posted in Environmental, Information