
Taking up the asphalt

Volunteers from Epoch Church spreading dirt
Last weekend, a generous and stalwart group of volunteers from Epoch Church (Main St. btw Community Bakery and Juanita’s) joined us for two days of landscaping work. In the photo to the left, a bulldozer is taking up asphalt from the lot. We got several dumptruck loads of dirt brought to the site, and the volunteers spent much of Friday afternoon spreading the huge piles into beds. In the photo on the right several volunteers are leveling the dirt pile, while others are planting 4×4 posts for a surrounding fence. This area will eventually become a courtyard between the cafe building and 15th Street. In the picture are Kim, Rachel, Joey, Kara, and Devon, all volunteers from Epoch.
The picture below shows the finished fence, followed by another photo showing the central landscaped area of the courtyard. At this point we’ve sown the courtyard with clover and wildflower seeds, and also planted pole beans, a rose bush, a hops vine, and several other native and/or edible plant varieties.

Fence built by the Epoch Church volunteers

Plants in pots in the courtyard
Saturday was a wet, misty day, but the volunteers came back despite the weather conditions and helped get several plants in the ground and also assembled a retaining wall and landscape edging around several beds. In the next photo you can see Daniel and Jacob from Epoch digging holes, while Eric Sundell, botanist, taxonomist, and professor emeritus from University of Arkansas at Monticello plants blueberry bushes and a bay laurel tree in one of the corner beds.

Eric Sundell and gang planting blueberries

Rosemary and lavender bushes

Retaining wall and fig trees in the SE bed
In the photo above right and the one below it, you can see two other corner beds. One is planted with rosemary and lavender plants, and also has several native perennials planted in it as well (later additions than the photo). The second photo shows a retaining wall in the SE corner of the lot next to the Stage Works building on Main Street. This bed has two fig trees planted in it, as well as a few other native perennials. Most of the plants on the lot came from ABC Nursery and Mary Ann King’s Native Plant Nursery, both in London, AR.