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How to manage your search for interim work

There was a time when people who lost jobs, at least in the white-collar world, were told not to work at anything “lower status” while waiting for the next professional opportunity, lest it hurt their career. The idea seemed to be that if you settled for something too “low” you’d never be taken seriously again.

Or something like that. I’ve heard so many versions of this idea over the years, my head kind of hurts. I think that most people who held this view have had to let it go during this last recession, which would be one good thing to come out of that economic freefall.

Now the issue isn’t so much whether one should take interim work, but how to manage it without wreaking havoc on the broader job search. Lining up the interim job is another puzzle for most people: The first job search is hard enough; now there should be a second search?

You’ll find it easier going if you follow some basic steps.

•Think about logistics. An interim job usually pays less than your regular work. Hence, it shouldn’t involve a long or difficult commute. Unless you live in a rural setting, consider five miles from your home to be your optimum hunting grounds.

•Consider your schedule. It doesn’t make sense to pay more money to day care than you’ll make at this job. Look for time that you can give to the job without having it cost you money elsewhere. You’ll need to allocate 15 to 20 hours a week to finding your main job. For these reasons, optimum interim job schedules often include early mornings or evenings.

•Assess your marketable skills. Are you physically fit? Good on the telephone? Knowledgeable about tools or certain processes? Familiar with your area roads and neighborhoods? Write it all down. You’re not going to do this work forever. If you can tolerate it and do it well enough to fill the bill for an employer, it goes on the list.

•Choose your interim job goal. A broad category such as customer service will work. Less helpful is a handful of ideas, such as “landscaping or call center work or night security.” Such disparate ideas make it difficult to build a credible resume and can sound unfocused in conversations.

•Make an interim job resume. This short, to-the-point document highlights what you can do for a particular group of employers and downplays everything else. So a marketing executive seeking retail work will use the top of the resume to showcase strengths in serving the public and making sales, with only a line or two toward the bottom of the page devoted to the last marketing job.

•Talk with employers. This kind of search is best done person-to-person, so start a list of potential employers and the managers to talk with. As a rule, this is more easily done with small companies or those that are locally managed than with the big-box groups that rely on electronic processes.

•Stay cheerful!

Consultants envision an improved Lexington

Downtown Lex

Downtown Lex




Posted: Friday, June 28, 2013 2:55 pm


Consultants envision an improved Lexington

by Danny Gruber
C-H staff writer

lexch.com

|
0 comments

LEXINGTON – The Lexington Planning Commission met Wednesday to conduct a public hearing on the city’s Comprehensive Plan.


The city revises its comprehensive plan every five to 10 years. The last revision was completed in 2005. With revisions to area flood maps, as well as the recently released census results, city officials thought it prudent to revise the city’s master plan, which is designed to look at community projects planned out for the next 25 to 30 years.

Members of the commission heard from Jeff Ray, of JEO Consulting of Wahoo, the firm hired to conduct a profile of Lexington and determine how its citizens wanted their city to grow.

The plan for Lexington’s future was broken down into four major phases: Profile, envision, achieve and implement. To date, JEO built a profile of Lexington and, last fall, held a series of community hall meetings in Lexington to gather citizen input on what they thought Lexington should become.

Those who could not attend one of the town meetings were invited to participate through a website, called “Think Big Lexington.”

Ray was on hand to provide planning commission members with the results of those citizen ideas.

“Housing was a component that came through loud and clear,” he said.

Ray said the infrastructure was already in place for Lexington to grow. Recent upgrades to the city’s electrical feed and area transformers as well as current plans to upgrade the city’s sewage treatment plant will serve the community for several decades to come. The next step, he said, would be adding housing and replacing existing housing.

Other items to be accomplished were all cosmetic projects that would improve Lexington’s image. One idea was to create landscaping at the I-80 exit into Lexington that would give travelers a sense of place when driving through. Ray commented the scenery along I-80 was stark.

“It’s shocking to people from the east and west coast,” he stated, citing that York was a good example of a city that is easily identified—they have a water tower painted like a hot air balloon.

Enhancements along the Plum Creek Parkway corridor, such as a landscaped median, and enhancing the look of the grain elevators at the Jackson Street overpass with color-changing LED projection lights was another concept Ray offered.

One of the more grandiose visions presented by Ray was a “market plaza” on Adams Street by Vazquez Market, with space for several food trucks and an area for people to eat and congregate.

“Make it a destination area,” he said, adding the park was conveniently located nearby.

After Ray’s presentation, there were no questions or comments from the public or the commissioners.

The plan was approved by the planning commission and forwarded to Lexington City Council members who are expected to consider the plan at their July 23 meeting.

on

Friday, June 28, 2013 2:55 pm.

Consultants envision an improved Lexington

Downtown Lex

Downtown Lex




Posted: Friday, June 28, 2013 2:55 pm


Consultants envision an improved Lexington

by Danny Gruber
C-H staff writer

lexch.com

|
0 comments

LEXINGTON – The Lexington Planning Commission met Wednesday to conduct a public hearing on the city’s Comprehensive Plan.


The city revises its comprehensive plan every five to 10 years. The last revision was completed in 2005. With revisions to area flood maps, as well as the recently released census results, city officials thought it prudent to revise the city’s master plan, which is designed to look at community projects planned out for the next 25 to 30 years.

Members of the commission heard from Jeff Ray, of JEO Consulting of Wahoo, the firm hired to conduct a profile of Lexington and determine how its citizens wanted their city to grow.

The plan for Lexington’s future was broken down into four major phases: Profile, envision, achieve and implement. To date, JEO built a profile of Lexington and, last fall, held a series of community hall meetings in Lexington to gather citizen input on what they thought Lexington should become.

Those who could not attend one of the town meetings were invited to participate through a website, called “Think Big Lexington.”

Ray was on hand to provide planning commission members with the results of those citizen ideas.

“Housing was a component that came through loud and clear,” he said.

Ray said the infrastructure was already in place for Lexington to grow. Recent upgrades to the city’s electrical feed and area transformers as well as current plans to upgrade the city’s sewage treatment plant will serve the community for several decades to come. The next step, he said, would be adding housing and replacing existing housing.

Other items to be accomplished were all cosmetic projects that would improve Lexington’s image. One idea was to create landscaping at the I-80 exit into Lexington that would give travelers a sense of place when driving through. Ray commented the scenery along I-80 was stark.

“It’s shocking to people from the east and west coast,” he stated, citing that York was a good example of a city that is easily identified—they have a water tower painted like a hot air balloon.

Enhancements along the Plum Creek Parkway corridor, such as a landscaped median, and enhancing the look of the grain elevators at the Jackson Street overpass with color-changing LED projection lights was another concept Ray offered.

One of the more grandiose visions presented by Ray was a “market plaza” on Adams Street by Vazquez Market, with space for several food trucks and an area for people to eat and congregate.

“Make it a destination area,” he said, adding the park was conveniently located nearby.

After Ray’s presentation, there were no questions or comments from the public or the commissioners.

The plan was approved by the planning commission and forwarded to Lexington City Council members who are expected to consider the plan at their July 23 meeting.

on

Friday, June 28, 2013 2:55 pm.

Consultants envision an improved Lexington

Downtown Lex

Downtown Lex




Posted: Friday, June 28, 2013 2:55 pm


Consultants envision an improved Lexington

by Danny Gruber
C-H staff writer

lexch.com

|
0 comments

LEXINGTON – The Lexington Planning Commission met Wednesday to conduct a public hearing on the city’s Comprehensive Plan.


The city revises its comprehensive plan every five to 10 years. The last revision was completed in 2005. With revisions to area flood maps, as well as the recently released census results, city officials thought it prudent to revise the city’s master plan, which is designed to look at community projects planned out for the next 25 to 30 years.

Members of the commission heard from Jeff Ray, of JEO Consulting of Wahoo, the firm hired to conduct a profile of Lexington and determine how its citizens wanted their city to grow.

The plan for Lexington’s future was broken down into four major phases: Profile, envision, achieve and implement. To date, JEO built a profile of Lexington and, last fall, held a series of community hall meetings in Lexington to gather citizen input on what they thought Lexington should become.

Those who could not attend one of the town meetings were invited to participate through a website, called “Think Big Lexington.”

Ray was on hand to provide planning commission members with the results of those citizen ideas.

“Housing was a component that came through loud and clear,” he said.

Ray said the infrastructure was already in place for Lexington to grow. Recent upgrades to the city’s electrical feed and area transformers as well as current plans to upgrade the city’s sewage treatment plant will serve the community for several decades to come. The next step, he said, would be adding housing and replacing existing housing.

Other items to be accomplished were all cosmetic projects that would improve Lexington’s image. One idea was to create landscaping at the I-80 exit into Lexington that would give travelers a sense of place when driving through. Ray commented the scenery along I-80 was stark.

“It’s shocking to people from the east and west coast,” he stated, citing that York was a good example of a city that is easily identified—they have a water tower painted like a hot air balloon.

Enhancements along the Plum Creek Parkway corridor, such as a landscaped median, and enhancing the look of the grain elevators at the Jackson Street overpass with color-changing LED projection lights was another concept Ray offered.

One of the more grandiose visions presented by Ray was a “market plaza” on Adams Street by Vazquez Market, with space for several food trucks and an area for people to eat and congregate.

“Make it a destination area,” he said, adding the park was conveniently located nearby.

After Ray’s presentation, there were no questions or comments from the public or the commissioners.

The plan was approved by the planning commission and forwarded to Lexington City Council members who are expected to consider the plan at their July 23 meeting.

on

Friday, June 28, 2013 2:55 pm.

White House Down a dumbed-down invasion: review

Other such films have various combinations of accidental heroes, determined villains, endangered kids, global nuclear threats, stock market panic, airborne and ground assaults, impromptu urban renewal, constitutional crises and exceedingly high renovation and landscaping bills. White House Down has all these things going on, some of them in multiples.

Landscaper Alastair Boase helps bring an Altadena dream garden come to life – Long Beach Press

Many of us spend hours thinking about the kind of garden we would like to have, but few of us make it happen. Susann Edmonds of Altadena did — and in a big way.

Thirteen years ago, she moved into a 1908 farmhouse on a big sandy lot.

“I lived here a week before I decided to landscape,” said Edmonds, a hairstylist and chef, and the current queen of the Occasional Pasadena Doo Dah Parade.

One problem: “I just didn’t have the money.”

So she asked an artist friend to make simple watercolor paintings of what she would like to do with the garden in the future. In the meantime, she took advantage of her large yard by stabling pet llamas and using their dung to amend the ground’s sandy soil.

One day, Edmonds was walking her llamas through her neighborhood and noticed Alastair Boase working on a front garden. He was creating a natural-looking stream with rocks.

“It was that one element, I thought when (my landscaping is) going to happen, it’s going to be you who does it,” Edmonds said.

She didn’t tell Boase at the time, but a few years later, she made the call to Alastair Boase Landscape Design in Sherman Oaks. Edmonds showed Boase her friend’s watercolors and added that she wanted a fire feature and an outdoor kitchen, but something that didn’t look like a kit or a fire pit. Boase suggested a fireplace.

“My expertise is in the area of making ideas work,” Boase said. “I have design abilities, but I love machines and systems and garden features that have moving parts, be it water or fire.”

Boase likes features that add drama and create an indoor feel outdoors.

The fireplace in Edmonds’ yard has a barbecue grill and a cast iron stove with two burners.

There is also an alcove that is designated to become a warming oven that will work with the heat produced from the firebox of the grill.

Across the patio from the fireplace is a rock edging that provides a table-type space for a champagne fountain. A hidden ice bucket is built into it with a bottom plug that drains into the flower bed below. The edging also has an electrical outlet.

The garden already had a pool, but it was painted with house paint, had no stairs and was beset with other problems. Boase added stairs, a skimmer and a new filter. He also added a fountain on the wall between Edmonds and her neighbor’s yard that flows into the pool.

“As you walk out the house’s side door, you look at the interesting rusty ceiling panel background with water falling from a great height,” Boase said. It has a “pitter-patter noise and the strong visual effects of water falling and shimmering. It’s actually illuminated from above so at night, it’s quite light.”

The pool is bounded on two sides by a low wall made from river rock that has been cut into angular shapes for a more natural appearance, as well as structural integrity. Many of the rocks are from Edmonds’ garden.

“I wanted to give Susann a lot for her money,” Boase said.

Edmonds requested the wall to be at hip height, but Boase’s crew made it shorter. She showed him that it wasn’t right because if the average woman sits on a low bench her tummy pooches out, whereas if she sits on a high bench, her tummy looks flat.

“I think he was a little stunned when I did that,” Edmonds said. “Part of it is what I do, I want people to feel beautiful. I want women to feel beautiful and I don’t care if it’s in my salon chair or if it’s sitting by my pool.”

Boase added the additional foot seamlessly to the wall.

The result is Edmonds has a lot of additional living and entertaining space. The garden contains a wealth of other features, including a pond with a bridge that serves as a pathway from the house to the patio, an iron pergola graced by foliage that leads to vegetable beds, a folly (an irregular circle of rock) that makes the pergola by the patio look as if its sitting on top of a fallen tower, and a mound in the backyard topped with three tall stones for a Stonehenge effect. There is also a time capsule hidden in fireplace containing house blueprints, garden plans, magazine articles that inspired the garden’s design and other items. Integral to the design is a look of ancient fallen ruins, with pieces that are purposely unfinished or broken.

The llamas are gone now, so their old barn has been temporarily converted into the Llama Lounge, another space for entertaining. Nothing has been done to the existing stable structure and the dirt floor remains intact. But there is a bar with stools and the walls have new paint, a few framed photographs and a fake fireplace front.

“We unleashed our own sense of freedom to do whatever we wanted, starting with a plan and refining it, incorporating new ideas along the way,” Boase said.

It took six and a half months to complete the garden, and Edmonds and Boase are still adding to it and changing it here and there.

Boase grew up on a farm in the West Highlands of Scotland. There, he often visited botanical gardens with his mother and grandparents. He came to the United States in 1987, where he learned his current trade, and has been a landscaper for 25 years.

“I consider myself to be the antithesis of that (negative) contractor personality and that’s why Susann and I have bonded. It’s really a mutual desire to create something beautiful and be creative together with the garden,” Boase said. “I was very motivated to take her ideas and make them work. And that’s really the way I’ve been in my career all along as a landscaper. I can take the idea and develop the idea, modify it, and cut back.”

Boase said his speciality is taking on jobs that other landscapers might refuse; he thrives on the challenge of working out ways to do unusual things.

“I haven’t always made a lot of money because I’ve done it for the love and the opportunity to be creative and the desire to make people happy,” Boase said.

Boase is currently building a structure for his wife, Jennifer Febre Boase, and his next business venture, the McLeod Ale Brewing Co. in Van Nuys. He’d like to plant a hops orchard to supply it.

As for Edmonds’ garden, there are plans to build a broch (a round tower of stone) as a little secret getaway spot in the back of the garden. It will be big enough for two people to relax in and have small windows and a gothic arched doorway.

So what part of the gardens is Edmonds’ favorite?

“It depends on what day it is,” she said.

Landscaper Alastair Boase helps bring an Altadena dream garden come to life – Long Beach Press

Many of us spend hours thinking about the kind of garden we would like to have, but few of us make it happen. Susann Edmonds of Altadena did — and in a big way.

Thirteen years ago, she moved into a 1908 farmhouse on a big sandy lot.

“I lived here a week before I decided to landscape,” said Edmonds, a hairstylist and chef, and the current queen of the Occasional Pasadena Doo Dah Parade.

One problem: “I just didn’t have the money.”

So she asked an artist friend to make simple watercolor paintings of what she would like to do with the garden in the future. In the meantime, she took advantage of her large yard by stabling pet llamas and using their dung to amend the ground’s sandy soil.

One day, Edmonds was walking her llamas through her neighborhood and noticed Alastair Boase working on a front garden. He was creating a natural-looking stream with rocks.

“It was that one element, I thought when (my landscaping is) going to happen, it’s going to be you who does it,” Edmonds said.

She didn’t tell Boase at the time, but a few years later, she made the call to Alastair Boase Landscape Design in Sherman Oaks. Edmonds showed Boase her friend’s watercolors and added that she wanted a fire feature and an outdoor kitchen, but something that didn’t look like a kit or a fire pit. Boase suggested a fireplace.

“My expertise is in the area of making ideas work,” Boase said. “I have design abilities, but I love machines and systems and garden features that have moving parts, be it water or fire.”

Boase likes features that add drama and create an indoor feel outdoors.

The fireplace in Edmonds’ yard has a barbecue grill and a cast iron stove with two burners.

There is also an alcove that is designated to become a warming oven that will work with the heat produced from the firebox of the grill.

Across the patio from the fireplace is a rock edging that provides a table-type space for a champagne fountain. A hidden ice bucket is built into it with a bottom plug that drains into the flower bed below. The edging also has an electrical outlet.

The garden already had a pool, but it was painted with house paint, had no stairs and was beset with other problems. Boase added stairs, a skimmer and a new filter. He also added a fountain on the wall between Edmonds and her neighbor’s yard that flows into the pool.

“As you walk out the house’s side door, you look at the interesting rusty ceiling panel background with water falling from a great height,” Boase said. It has a “pitter-patter noise and the strong visual effects of water falling and shimmering. It’s actually illuminated from above so at night, it’s quite light.”

The pool is bounded on two sides by a low wall made from river rock that has been cut into angular shapes for a more natural appearance, as well as structural integrity. Many of the rocks are from Edmonds’ garden.

“I wanted to give Susann a lot for her money,” Boase said.

Edmonds requested the wall to be at hip height, but Boase’s crew made it shorter. She showed him that it wasn’t right because if the average woman sits on a low bench her tummy pooches out, whereas if she sits on a high bench, her tummy looks flat.

“I think he was a little stunned when I did that,” Edmonds said. “Part of it is what I do, I want people to feel beautiful. I want women to feel beautiful and I don’t care if it’s in my salon chair or if it’s sitting by my pool.”

Boase added the additional foot seamlessly to the wall.

The result is Edmonds has a lot of additional living and entertaining space. The garden contains a wealth of other features, including a pond with a bridge that serves as a pathway from the house to the patio, an iron pergola graced by foliage that leads to vegetable beds, a folly (an irregular circle of rock) that makes the pergola by the patio look as if its sitting on top of a fallen tower, and a mound in the backyard topped with three tall stones for a Stonehenge effect. There is also a time capsule hidden in fireplace containing house blueprints, garden plans, magazine articles that inspired the garden’s design and other items. Integral to the design is a look of ancient fallen ruins, with pieces that are purposely unfinished or broken.

The llamas are gone now, so their old barn has been temporarily converted into the Llama Lounge, another space for entertaining. Nothing has been done to the existing stable structure and the dirt floor remains intact. But there is a bar with stools and the walls have new paint, a few framed photographs and a fake fireplace front.

“We unleashed our own sense of freedom to do whatever we wanted, starting with a plan and refining it, incorporating new ideas along the way,” Boase said.

It took six and a half months to complete the garden, and Edmonds and Boase are still adding to it and changing it here and there.

Boase grew up on a farm in the West Highlands of Scotland. There, he often visited botanical gardens with his mother and grandparents. He came to the United States in 1987, where he learned his current trade, and has been a landscaper for 25 years.

“I consider myself to be the antithesis of that (negative) contractor personality and that’s why Susann and I have bonded. It’s really a mutual desire to create something beautiful and be creative together with the garden,” Boase said. “I was very motivated to take her ideas and make them work. And that’s really the way I’ve been in my career all along as a landscaper. I can take the idea and develop the idea, modify it, and cut back.”

Boase said his speciality is taking on jobs that other landscapers might refuse; he thrives on the challenge of working out ways to do unusual things.

“I haven’t always made a lot of money because I’ve done it for the love and the opportunity to be creative and the desire to make people happy,” Boase said.

Boase is currently building a structure for his wife, Jennifer Febre Boase, and his next business venture, the McLeod Ale Brewing Co. in Van Nuys. He’d like to plant a hops orchard to supply it.

As for Edmonds’ garden, there are plans to build a broch (a round tower of stone) as a little secret getaway spot in the back of the garden. It will be big enough for two people to relax in and have small windows and a gothic arched doorway.

So what part of the gardens is Edmonds’ favorite?

“It depends on what day it is,” she said.

York County couple creates dream backyard

About 10 years ago, the in-ground pool that filled Bob Lopez’s yard started to leak.

Before long, the pool’s wooden walls gave way and collapsed, leaving the Shrewsbury man with an expensive mess.

Rather than replace his backyard staple, Lopez removed what remained of the large pool and excavated the land.

At the point, Bob Lopez and his wife knew they wanted to convert their half-acre yard into something that they could enjoy. They started small by first focusing on the lawn and by removing half-a-dozen trees.

A decade later, the couple has spent nearly $10,000 to develop their backyard, complete with multiple gardens, a play area for their grandchildren and a gazebo.

“We wanted to put in $10,000 all at once, but we knew that we didn’t have the money or the expertise,” Lopez said. “And, I’m glad we didn’t because our ideas have changed over the years.”

Here’s how Lopez, 63, built his backyard getaway:

Q: How did you keep costs low while developing your yard?

A: “We look for bargains and sales. We didn’t spend thousands of dollars. Usually, shrubs are $15 to $20 a piece and the same for trees, with just a few exceptions.”

Q: Where did you start?

A: “We started off small with a few shrubs, a few trees and started from there. Over the years, we’ve been to home and garden shows, read books and developed ideas. It took some trial and error. Some areas may have had too much shade or too much sun and we had to eliminate some trees. It took years to develop.”

Q: What part of your yard is the most satisfying?

A: “I’ve loved landscaping since I was a child. The gazebo and our fountains are our most satisfying projects.”

Lopez said that the path that leads to his gazebo is lined with a mix of perennials and shrubs including hostas, a rhododendron, yuccas, a red twin dogwood tree and a red bud tree.

Q: What major challenge did you have to overcome when putting

together your yard?

A: Ten years ago, we had six trees that were providing too much shade in the backyard. Hardly anything grew in that area except for moss and weeds. We decided to cut down all 6 trees. The biggest challenge was to stay within our budget and find a way to get the right mix of sun and shade.

Q: What advice can you offer people who want to tackle a large yard project?

A: Think big, but start small. They should buy some books and visit some home and garden shows. You just need the basic gardening tools. Be willing to get dirty and invest a lot of time. Look for bargains.

Tell us about your do-it-yourself projects

Have you recently tackled a do-it-yourself project at home? Renovated your kitchen? Tackled a major gardening or outdoor project? Built an addition onto your home?

Want to share your work? We are looking for do-it-yourself stories to tell our readers, share tips for the work, and, yes brag a little. (You worked hard, you deserve it.)

Contact reporter Sean Adkins with your news: sadkins@ydr.com or 771-2047

Also of interest

Yeah, I’ll take a fire pit shaped like the Death Star

I know how much your neighbors paid for their home

Walking away from a mortgage? You might want to rethink your next step

Does a gun protect your valuables?

The Garden Club of Hyannis

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GARDEN GIRLS – Karen Knaub, Dolores Ahern, Sandy Greene, Irene Lupo and Deborah Faulconer, members of the Garden Club of Hyannis, share a moment amid the flora and fauna of the Cobb Astro Park at Barnstable High School, one of their many civic projects.

When many people hear the term “garden club” they often conjure forth an image of well-dressed women discussing different types of roses during a lunch of watercress sandwiches with the crusts cut off.

Those people definitely aren’t familiar with the Garden Club of Hyannis, where, at the February meeting a diminutive lady with snowy hair hoisted aloft a small chainsaw, proclaiming it her favorite garden tool.

“We are no longer ladies in white gloves and big hats,” said club member Deborah Faulconer. “We don’t just go to tea and make flower arrangements.”

In reality the club’s civic projects comprise a long list and include landscape design and maintenance of the flowers at the Hyannis Public Library and the Cobb Astro Park at Barnstable High School, providing and decorating Christmas trees to Cape Cod Hospital, donating to the Heritage Museum and Gardens Intern Program and donating to Habitat for Humanity landscape projects.

Fundraising events include an annual plant and bake sale, raffles at the Rotary Home and Garden Show and triennial appearances at the Holiday Showcase event.

The group also presents scholarships each year to local high school graduates pursuing a career in horticulture, environmental studies or related fields, and toolships, special “get started” gifts of equipment and such that are given to graduates of Cape Cod Tech pursuing careers in landscaping.

“We’re a very busy garden club,” said longtime member Irene Lupo.

It was Lupo’s idea to contribute to the raised garden beds in the Astro Park that were the culmination of a Boy Scout Eagle Project for Barnstable graduate Ralph Bousquet. Since the club’s first planting of flowers in the original bed, the group has returned regularly to maintain their flowers and plant more in the newly completed beds.

Taking part in the Holiday Showcase at the Cultural Center of Cape Cod is also a highlight of Garden Club activities and allows members to truly show off their talents. The club creates a number of differently themed “rooms,” all spectacularly decorated in anticipation of the holidays.

The event also serves as an important fundraiser for the Club and the Cultural Center, while also encouraging visitors to get inspired by the clever and creative decorating ideas.

Garden Club members, meanwhile, draw much inspiration from each other.

“When I joined, my thought was that I wanted to make new friends and learn about horticulture,” said Faulconer. “I’ve learned so much.”

“I’ve been in the Garden Club longer than anybody and I don’t know what I’d do without it,” said Dolores Ahern.

Club members eagerly look forward to Tuesdays in the Garden when they visit the gardens of various members.

“You get ideas and you get to know each other better,” said club president Sandy Greene.

“I don’t think I could have the garden I have if I wasn’t associated with the Garden Club,” said member Karen Knaub.

Knowing that what they do ultimately makes their community more beautiful is also powerful motivation to keep the club active. Greene recalled a special moment when taking down a tree at the hospital after the holiday season ended.

“We had a breast cancer tree,” Greene said. “Someone taped a note to it thanking us. When we’re down there working people are constantly thanking us.”

“We’re in the community doing things that maybe aren’t visible but are very helpful,” Faulconer said.

Knaub said that beautifying the community often involves club members willingly digging in the dirt.

“They really get down and dirty and do a lot for the community,” Knaub said. “We’re a wonderful club.”

The Garden Club of Hyannis meets the third Tuesday of every month at the Community Building on Route 149 in West Barnstable and they are seeking new members. For more information email Nancy Bailey at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or Jane Kennedy at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it


The Garden Club of Hyannis

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GARDEN GIRLS – Karen Knaub, Dolores Ahern, Sandy Greene, Irene Lupo and Deborah Faulconer, members of the Garden Club of Hyannis, share a moment amid the flora and fauna of the Cobb Astro Park at Barnstable High School, one of their many civic projects.

When many people hear the term “garden club” they often conjure forth an image of well-dressed women discussing different types of roses during a lunch of watercress sandwiches with the crusts cut off.

Those people definitely aren’t familiar with the Garden Club of Hyannis, where, at the February meeting a diminutive lady with snowy hair hoisted aloft a small chainsaw, proclaiming it her favorite garden tool.

“We are no longer ladies in white gloves and big hats,” said club member Deborah Faulconer. “We don’t just go to tea and make flower arrangements.”

In reality the club’s civic projects comprise a long list and include landscape design and maintenance of the flowers at the Hyannis Public Library and the Cobb Astro Park at Barnstable High School, providing and decorating Christmas trees to Cape Cod Hospital, donating to the Heritage Museum and Gardens Intern Program and donating to Habitat for Humanity landscape projects.

Fundraising events include an annual plant and bake sale, raffles at the Rotary Home and Garden Show and triennial appearances at the Holiday Showcase event.

The group also presents scholarships each year to local high school graduates pursuing a career in horticulture, environmental studies or related fields, and toolships, special “get started” gifts of equipment and such that are given to graduates of Cape Cod Tech pursuing careers in landscaping.

“We’re a very busy garden club,” said longtime member Irene Lupo.

It was Lupo’s idea to contribute to the raised garden beds in the Astro Park that were the culmination of a Boy Scout Eagle Project for Barnstable graduate Ralph Bousquet. Since the club’s first planting of flowers in the original bed, the group has returned regularly to maintain their flowers and plant more in the newly completed beds.

Taking part in the Holiday Showcase at the Cultural Center of Cape Cod is also a highlight of Garden Club activities and allows members to truly show off their talents. The club creates a number of differently themed “rooms,” all spectacularly decorated in anticipation of the holidays.

The event also serves as an important fundraiser for the Club and the Cultural Center, while also encouraging visitors to get inspired by the clever and creative decorating ideas.

Garden Club members, meanwhile, draw much inspiration from each other.

“When I joined, my thought was that I wanted to make new friends and learn about horticulture,” said Faulconer. “I’ve learned so much.”

“I’ve been in the Garden Club longer than anybody and I don’t know what I’d do without it,” said Dolores Ahern.

Club members eagerly look forward to Tuesdays in the Garden when they visit the gardens of various members.

“You get ideas and you get to know each other better,” said club president Sandy Greene.

“I don’t think I could have the garden I have if I wasn’t associated with the Garden Club,” said member Karen Knaub.

Knowing that what they do ultimately makes their community more beautiful is also powerful motivation to keep the club active. Greene recalled a special moment when taking down a tree at the hospital after the holiday season ended.

“We had a breast cancer tree,” Greene said. “Someone taped a note to it thanking us. When we’re down there working people are constantly thanking us.”

“We’re in the community doing things that maybe aren’t visible but are very helpful,” Faulconer said.

Knaub said that beautifying the community often involves club members willingly digging in the dirt.

“They really get down and dirty and do a lot for the community,” Knaub said. “We’re a wonderful club.”

The Garden Club of Hyannis meets the third Tuesday of every month at the Community Building on Route 149 in West Barnstable and they are seeking new members. For more information email Nancy Bailey at
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or Jane Kennedy at
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