Thursday, February 10, 2011

Medical Breakthrough for dreaded intestateitis

For generations men and women of a certain age have developed sickening symptoms from self-neglect of the malady of remaining chronically intestate. Morbidity is common for stricken adults who do not seek professional advice and attention. To continue living with intestateitis is painful and shameful because the inevitable outcome has significantly deleterious effects on their issue per stirpes.

For a limited time, John Draper, Philanthropy Advisor, will reveal the secret to arresting the nagging symptoms of intestateitis and bring instant relief to the patient.

jdraper@csus.org

Philanthropy advisor

Crystal Springs Uplands School

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Vertical Gardens on Campus



And above the first Wolly Pockets garden installed on the western wall of the Science Building.









Marian and the beginning of vertical gardens

The concept of growing a vertical garden at CSUS was inspired by the enormous vertical garden across the street from the BHV department store in Paris. Check the link below to see other examples in Paris.

gridskipper.com/archives/entries/201/201671.php

Our beautiful campus boasts lots of vertical, white outside wall space, and I began to think we could build one of our own. Fast forward to Ian Rosenfield's '10 senior project on possible architectural visions for the new middle school and his mention of the inclusion of vertical gardens. Marian Pearcy '10, who was in attendance at Ian's fantastic talk, shared an interest in the hanging gardens, and we converged on Ian after the talk. Within minutes we decided to build a beta as an experiment, and I set out to get help from Mr. P and Chris Read in our science department. Since Chris is in charge of the horizontal garden, she jumped on board immediately.

But it was Marian who took the lead and the call for action. She and I visited local nurseries for help, and we developed a plan to build a small vertical garden to be about 2.5' by 2.5'. The "we" part of the equation vanished when Marian told me that she would build one at home over a weekend. She produced our first garden using a plastic flower box framed with wood, filled with dirt and moss and covered with screen mesh. Success!!!

With the successful creation of Marian's garden, Chris Read and I went into high gear with the idea of a larger hanging garden along the wall of the Uplands science wing. The key to the larger garden is a commercial product called wolly pockets.

www.woollypocket.com/?gclid=CL_I47KL_KYCFQqAgwod4yEpGg

We plan future installations of vertical gardens as cover for the black chain link fences along the entrance driveway of campus.