The following
article appeared in The Oak Leaf, the program guide for the Wood
County Park District, Vol. VIII, Issue 4, October/November/December 2012
It is reprinted
here with permission from the Wood County Park District.
VOLUNTEER SPOTLIGHT
Volunteering, doing something you love already, can give purpose because it becomes an outlet that enriches others, but ends up coming back to you in manifold ways you’d never guess until you decide to give of yourself.
Ruth Steele
This month, the Wood County Park District Volunteer Program would like to shine the spotlight on Ruth Steele of Weston, Ohio. Ruth began donating
her time and talents with the Wood County Park District/Wood County Historical Museum in 1996.
The Herb Garden at the Wood County Historical Center was created in 1992 by the Black Swamp Herb Society led by Jean Gamble. The garden originally included an area for medicinal, culinary, fragrant and everlasting plantings in a formal setting. It has grown to include a children’s, butterfly and grandmother’s gardens as well as several roses. The Herb Garden is frequently used for picnics, meetings and weddings.
A retiree from Century Marketing, Ruth is now President of the Black Swamp Herb Society and is also a Wood County Master Gardener. In addition to volunteering at the Herb Garden, Ruth has also helped in our greenhouse as well as special events. She is an active volunteer at the Wood County Historical Museum helping with teas and Christmas tours. Additionally, Ruth teaches Sunday School at Grace Brethren Church.
When asked what advice she would give someone considering volunteering for the Park District, Ruth stated “Our Wood County Parks are so varied in their beauty and atmosphere, it is fun to find out where you fit, to take part in nourishing them, and reaping the rewards… You will be surprised how you are drawn in by the friends you make while you’re kneeling on the grass working in the soil…”
The WCPD would
like to express our appreciation to Ruth Steele and the Black Swamp Herb
Society for their hard work and dedication.
Women keep gardens growing at county museum y Stepha Poulin
(This article appeared in the Sentinel-Tribune Home & Garden 2019 magazine, April 2019. It is reprinted here with permission of the Sentinel-Tribune.
Special to the Sentinel-Tribune
Jean Gamble donates much of her time to the garden at the
Wood County Historical Center and Museum. She h, create the original for the
garden and has experienced its beauty during 26 years of volunteer work.
In 1993, Gamble and fellow members of the Black Swamp Herb
Society decided to propose a garden at the museum. The group decided to enhance
a small garden next to the Pestilence (Pest) House, a former living space for men
with communicable diseases.
Gamble said the original plans for the garden were the
group’s “own design.”
“We’re just trying to keep the garden open to the public. It’s a great place to meditate, picnic and enjoy the fragrance of herbs.”
Jean Gamble, Volunteer for Wood County Historical Center and Museum
“We thought they had an herb garden by the pest and we
wanted a garden for people to learn about herbs,” Gamble said. “We thought
the best way for people to learn about herbs was to have a garden.”
The herb-enthusiasts started polling the community. and most
people seemed to support the idea of the garden. Residents and businesses donated
money and supplies. The group also worked with the museum to acquire supplies
for the garden.
“At the start. people were good to us. But some people
thought we were going to be growing marijuana,” Gamble said with laugh.
Any Concerns were short-lived. Once the gardeners had enough
supplies, they put their hands in the dirt.
A year late, the museum held a ribbon-cutting ceremony and
dedicated the garden to the public. The American Herb Society visited the
garden and was surprised with how excellent the garden looked in such a short
amount of time, Gamble said.
At one point, the volunteers sold handmade items, such as
dried flowers and potpourri, crafted with materials from the gardens. “We
became our own best customers when we sold things in the museum gift
shop,” so they decided to halt sales, Gamble said.
Gamble said the garden has gone through many changes since
its beginnings. Members of the Black Swamp Herb Society have grown older over
the years, so most of the original volunteers aren’t working in the garden
anymore.
Yet Gamble still finds pleasure in working there.
Although she has stepped down from her position as garden
chair, she still plays a pivotal role in the garden, assisting garden chair
Ruth Steele.
“I’m Ruth’s right-hand man,” she said. “It’s been a hobby;
I’m not a master gardener, but I know a lot about plants and spent time with
the earth. I know what the plants need.”
Nothing lasts forever, but I hope the garden lasts.
Jean Gamble, Volunteer for Wood County Historical Center and Museum
Gamble currently manages the Medicinal Garden and tends the
rose bushes. Her sister, Dorothy Golden, manages the Culinary Garden.
If the weather permits, the sisters and other volunteers
head out to the garden in early spring to prune leaves, divide perennials, add
compost to soil and check plants for diseases.
“We have a lot of chores in the spring,” Gamble said.
During growing season, more intensive work begins. But
thanks to a new sprinkler system, the volunteers have a little less labor to
complete when they tend to the garden, usually on Thursday afternoons.
They work against nature itself to help the plants survive.
Last year, heavy rains packed down the clay soil, lowering its oxygenation.
Volunteers had to rotate the soil so the plants would survive.
“We try very hard to please the plants, but sometimes they
don’t please us,” Gamble said.
The garden has always been home to an abundance of herbs,
such as basil, lemongrass, rosemary and tarragon, found in the Culinary Garden.
Lavender and germander hedges divide sections of the garden.
But sections of the garden have changed through the years.
The Children’s Garden was removed and replaced with the Grandmother’s Garden.
There was a native garden, “but that didn’t last,” Gamble said.
“There was a time I was there all day until dark,” she said.
“We’re just trying to keep the garden open to the public. It’s a great place to
meditate, picnic and enjoy the fragrance of the herbs.”
Gamble hopes new visitors and volunteers can experience the
garden’s beauty. Some volunteer work isn’t very physically demanding, so nearly
anyone can help.
“Nothing lasts forever, but I hope the garden lasts,” Gamble
said.