Meet Nancy Alessi, Master Gardener Volunteer

With a new cohort of Master Gardener Volunteers beginning to serve their community, we’d like to introduce them (AND YOU!) to the group of MGVs who have sustained this program for the last several years. Meet Nancy Alessi, who hosted the MGVs for a garden tour in mid June of last year. Enjoy the photos from that inspiring visit!

What is your background and how did you become a gardener?

You might call me a ‘late bloomer’ since I didn’t begin to garden until my mid-twenties. Growing up in Philadelphia, I didn’t have the opportunity to garden, though I did have the great fortune to live across from Pennypack Park, an amazing sanctuary of towering mature forests, wildlife and wetlands in the midst of the city. A fascination with nature nurtured from a young age propelled me to study biology in college. I focused on zoology, not having yet discovered my passion for botany.

As newlyweds my late husband and I yearned to escape the city and find a refuge. Four decades ago, we purchased 50 woodland acres and an abandoned, ‘rustic’ log cabin way back in the woods in Russell, NY. With enthusiasm we set about growing our own food, raising goats to produce milk, and training 2 bull calves to become draft animals. Our enthusiasm was only exceeded by our lack of experience! And so began my gardening life in earnest. We scoured books and quizzed new friends and neighbors with our many questions. No internet back then, and there were as many different answers as there were questions, so we learned to observe and experiment on our own and seek counsel from experienced gardeners. Only once did I make the mistake of planting a massive bed of zucchini!Nancy's perennial beds

Read more Meet Nancy Alessi, Master Gardener Volunteer

Meet Matthew Carney, Master Gardener Volunteer

With a new cohort of Master Gardener Volunteers beginning to serve their community, we’d like to introduce them (AND YOU!) to the group of MGVs who have sustained this program for the last several years. Meet Matthew Carney!

What sparked your interest in gardening, and what has sustained it?

Inspired by my father, I began gardening from a very young age and continued to do so as a college student and a Peace Corp Volunteer. While agriculture was not my main focus, my vegetable garden in Tonga became a source of interest for many and an inspiration for some during my years as a Peace Corp Volunteer. My Tongan friends and neighbors were surprised that luxuries such as tomatoes, peppers and squash etc. could be grown locally.

More recently, my wife Linda and I began the Peacock & Pony Farm where we sell and share our produce and flowers. We have also created and nurtured several perennial gardens at the Baker Woods Preserve (BWP) in Natural Bridge where we are the primary stewards.

Matt at the Baker Woods Preserve
The Baker Woods Preserve includes extensive river and wetland habitats, a red pine plantation in transition, and native coniferous and hardwood forests.

What benefits do you gain from gardening?

We enjoy the fruits of our labor. Nothing tastes as satisfying as home grown veggies and nothing satisfies my sense of aesthetics and environmental ethics more than our many perennial pollinator gardens. As a Master Gardener Volunteer, I continue to learn and to share knowledge and insight with fellow gardeners and conservationists.

How do you serve as a MGV?

Most significantly, I interact almost daily with visitors to the Baker Woods Preserve and enjoy sharing my knowledge of trees, shrubs, plants and perennials, both wild and cultivated, with individuals and groups of all ages.  Read more Meet Matthew Carney, Master Gardener Volunteer

Meet Loni Recker, Master Gardener Volunteer

With a new cohort of Master Gardener Volunteers beginning to serve their community, we’d like to introduce them (AND YOU!) to the group of MGVs who have sustained this program for the last several years. Meet Loni Recker!

What is your gardening background?

I was born into a gardening family. I can still remember my great-grandmother’s beautiful gardens. My grandmother and mother carried on the tradition and my father is an amazing gardener as well. I think gardening was decided for me and I’m thankful for that.

Loni's great-grandmother and her tiger lilies
My Great-Grandma Benny

What benefits do you gain from gardening?

I love puttering, propagating, and tending so gardening is a natural avenue for all of those activities. I love meeting other gardeners and sharing plants, knowledge, and stories. I have a picket fence around a set of raised beds with paths. My garden shed door opens into the garden on the opposite side of the entrance gate. There is a string of lights surrounding that garden. When I open the gate, I feel as if I enter a special place that is separate from my realms of responsibility. I put away all thoughts of what I must do and allow myself to tend and cultivate as a form of deep relaxation.

Loni's raised bed vegetable garden
My raised bed vegetable garden

Why did you want to become a Master Gardener Volunteer?

I get asked a lot of gardening questions and I felt I should make sure the answers I give are correct. Through my Master Gardener Volunteer (MGV) training in 2013 I gained knowledge and more importantly I was introduced to a wealth of trustworthy resources. I rely on those resources, on our ongoing educational meetings, as well as the abundance of knowledge of my MGV cohort.

In what ways do you serve as a MGV?

Though I often answer questions about gardens and plant identification, my real passion is the Ogdensburg Youth Garden Club, which I have led for 26 years. I use my teaching and gardening skills to engage children in all things to do with gardening and I know our club has changed the lives and trajectories of many students. One of our graduates gained a passion for horticulture through the years of participating in our youth group. He joined us in 3rd grade and left when he went to college eventually earning his PhD in horticulture.

Ogdensburg Youth Garden Club members with bouquets they made
The Ogdensburg Youth Garden Club members are an amazingly creative bunch!

We have graduates of the club who stay in touch and continue to support the program through financial donations and through volunteering. Gardening is an activity that can be performed intergenerationally, for personal enjoyment, to beautify a community, or professionally. It truly is boundless. I want children to be aware of that and to know they can cultivate beauty in their lives. Read more Meet Loni Recker, Master Gardener Volunteer