Susan Harris
All about gardening the eco-friendly way, by Susan Harris and 22 other garden writers and experts.

Career – 1st, 2nd

Ever prepare and then give a talk to an audience that doesn’t exactly overwhelm you with its size?  That’s how I felt in Chicago, where the four GardenRanters spoke to just 25 people.  But hey, that’s a lot compared to the other talks I attended there (only seven to hear Mary Ann Newcomer? Come on!)  I’m told the attendees at the Independent Garden Center Show are too busy taking care of business, and that makes sense.  But now, with this 7.5-minute video, I bet I can reach more than 25 people, with no travel required.

A technical note.  You may recall my blogging about taking video production workshop, buying cameras and video editing software – I was gung-ho yet frustrated.  So, I’ve given up on all that, except for the super-easy-yet- limited Flip camera that I use to capture my kittens at their cutest.  (While eating, sleeping – really, when aren’t they cute?)

But for this video I used a program that’s every bit as easy as the Flip to use – Photo Story 3, free from Microsoft.   For the narration I used a $8 microphone, and PowerPoint for compiling the images, which I then saved in jpeg and uploaded into Photo Story 3.    The program automatically inserts transitions (as you see here) and pans and zooms (which I disabled for this video).  And it’s easy to add music – instead of or over the narration.  The result is YouTube-compatible.

I’ve done one other Photo Story video, this time using music instead of narration, and keeping those pans and zooms.  It’s the National Arboretum in Winter.

Big news on the work front, about that second career as a garden writer I’ve been plugging away at since my last employer went belly-up in 2006.

Last winter I was hired by Mahoney’s, the Boston-based independent garden center, to help them set up, edit, write and launch a blog.  I flew up there to meet the team in February, and we decided to bring on the wonderful Layanee DeMerchant as the local blogger.  Layanee’s super-qualified – with a degree in landscape architecture, a great blog and a weekly radio show out of Boston.  She even knows the Mahoney’s gang because she represented a line of organic garden products for years, so she knows the plants and the garden center business in that whole region.  On top of which, she’s lovable and easy to get along with.  That’ll be a big help in her new role as online and in-person ambassador for the company – their Networker-in-Chief.

So Layanee and I have watched in anticipation as Mahoney’s whole website was moved, and last week the blog went live!

So, what’s there?  Two posts every week by yours truly and at least one a week by Layanee, plus all sorts of contributions by their in-house experts.  We’re trying to make it as easy as humanly possible for people who already have full workloads to also contribute to the blog – they just send us an email and we do the rest.

And this next part is particularly fun:  Once a month we’ll have a “special guest blogger” – usually a gardening expert/writer there in New England -  and it’s been fun soliciting them via the garden writers email group and personal contacts.  We’ve gotten definite yesses so far from these New Englanders:  Dominique Browning, the last editor-in-chief of House and Garden Magazine, and a hot author.  Tovah Martin and Karen Davis Cutler, both well known authors of book and magazine fame.  And Carol Stocker, the garden writer for the Boston Globe.  People seem eager to be a part of this!  Publishers have contacted me to offer posts by their garden-book authors, and free books for us to give away to readers.

Readers may notice a pattern here – of networking like crazy – and this is another example. (See Lawn Reform, DC Urban Gardeners, etc.)  This time it actually pays, and that’s progress.

Next, the Big Promotion
We’re already promoting the blog in “beta” or “soft launch”, but the real hoopla will start next week, with an official-looking press release and emails to everyone on our blogroll and list of websites.  (Who dat?  All the gardening bloggers in the region.  The best sources of regional gardening info online.  All the gardening and greening groups in Eastern Mass and beyond. (Mahoney’s customer region.) And of course public gardens in the region; ditto local food websites.  And anything else we find out our new readers want to know about.

Also, a Facebook “Like” page and Twitter account are being set up as I type.  We don’t plan to Tweet or update throughout the day, there being no evidence that that kind of social media involvement is needed, but we’ll do it enough.  (Events in the region, in-store events and specials, all new blog posts and longer articles for the website.)

Website Content, Too

Oh, speaking of which!  I spent all day yesterday reviewing the long, researched articles on this very website to find the best ones to offer Mahoneys and Homestead Gardens for free to put on their own websites.   I selected 26 articles covering topics like low-maintenance gardening, lawn care, and compost.  I think garden centers need to provide really helpful content like this on their websites and blogs, but who’s supposed to write it for them?  They sure don’t have garden writers on staff to do it and it’s no wonder they sometimes just use the marketing pieces offered to them by the industry (Scotts-MiracleGro, but others, too).   It’s hard to win reader confidence that way, (understatement alert), so I’m happy I have an alternative to offer.

Then What?
Well, we provide gardening and plant information and on the local scene, we cover the gardening and greening community, profiling and promoting, say, the Master Gardeners, public gardens, community gardens, and farmers’ markets in the area.  Those are the kinds of people-packed stories that can go viral, spreading link love across the Internets.   We promote everything via Facebook and Twitter, and who-knows-what-else.  (Youtube?  Oh, I hope so.)

But you know, this is pretty new territory.  I follow corporate social marketing closely and can find lots of big national corporations that blog, and I see blogs touted as the “hub” of a company’s social networking strategy and I totally agree.  But just try to find examples of local retailers doing it, much less doing it well.  And no surprise – the local dry cleaner, accountant and dentist can just have a 3-page website and be done with it but garden centers?  They have a whole lotta teaching to do.  Garden centers sell products that the public doesn’t even know how to keep alive, much less look good over time.  Customers want to start growing food, they want to learn how to do right by the environment, and they need help sifting through all the controversy surrounding every single plant they grow or product or practice they employ.   This ain’t consumer electronics.

And for real teaching, no 140-character Tweet or even longer Facebook updates will do.  This kind of social media campaign needs that hub – the blog.

What Other Local Retailers Need to Teach?

Now I’m wondering what other companies need to teach as well as sell products – craft and yarn stores maybe?  Indie hardware stores, definitely.  But what else?

I came to the Senate in 1971, right out of college, working for myriad committees as their “Official Reporter” - the person who creates the official verbatim record for their hearings and executive sessions.  So over years of working for the Judiciary Committee and especially the HELP Committee that he chaired for so long, I had a front seat – actually closer than the front seat – to maybe hundreds of meetings where Ted Kennedy either presided, questioned as a member or even appeared as a witness.  He was a HUGE presence, as the talking heads are all saying, and I won’t go near his accomplishments or legacy.  I just offer some personal memories, the ones that come to mind today as we’re absorbing the inevitable loss of a great senator.

The Brother. My earliest memories are from the early ’70s, not really that long after his brothers were assassinated, after all.  In crowded elevators he always seemed – at least to me – nervous.  And once when he appeared as a witness before a committee that was assembled around a conference table, he was instructed to sit next to yours truly and seemed really  uncomfortable about it.  Despite my harmless appearance and committee staffers telling him I was “okay”.   I felt so sad for him.

The Chairman. He was the best chairman I ever saw in action because he got things done while being friendly and respectful to everyone, even the famous bastards.  One famous bully I watched him interact with was Tom Delay, toward whom he showed amazing civility and warmth.  Unfortunately, some of the bullies chair their own committees, and what a difference they make. I’m glad I’m not working there anymore, overall.

The Cigar-smoker. Oh, those were the bad old days – the ’70s and even the ’80s when there were NO smoking regulations in the workplace.  Then even after most workplaces had gone smoke-free, Congress maintained its lovefest with Big Tobacco, and committee rooms were still smoke-filled.  My absolute worst memory of that era – of a work assignment that brought me so close to puking as to bring back a mild sense of revulsion even today at the memory of it – is of Kennedy arriving at another small committee room for a closed-door business meeting and passing out cigars to everyone there.  Which cigars were all duly lit.

The Dog-lover. For years, Kennedy’s Portuguese water dog had the run of the place (rules be damned; who’s going to say  no to Chairman Kennedy?)  Even in the middle of a hearing – in a BIG, public hearing room – Kennedy’s beloved would run around freely, stopping to sniff me and everyone else, and generally living the good life.  That is, until he bit someone.  (Hope the one he gave the Obamas is better mannered!)

The Bad Dresser. The last memory I have of Senator Kennedy is almost intimate, it’s so up-close-and-personal.  We were all crammed into yet another small room for another conference committee (where a handful of Senators and Reps meet to hammer out the differences in the bills they passed in their respective bodies).  I was jammed between Kennedy and some staffers, holding my breath and trying to function just inches from the Chairman, where I got a very close look at his suit, and what a sorry sight it was.  This man of privilege I’ve been hearing about all morning on MSNBC was wearing the most frayed and darned old clothes I’d ever seen on a fully employed person.  No kidding – you could see the very amateurish stiching-up of some tears in his suit coat.  He clearly didn’t care (man after my own heart on that score, even though in my income bracket it’s less of a surprise).

That’s all.  It’s not as though he ever shared his lunch with me, but just watching such a masterful, compassionate and personable leader in action and making such a difference in the world was a great privilege.

Published on the day that Biden was announced as Obama’s running mate.
Can you tell something about a politician by the way he treats the little people?  Sometimes.  And in the case of Joe Biden, I think so.  He arrived in the Senate just a year after I began working as a “court” reporter for their committees, sitting just below the dais at hearings or alongside the senators at their business sessions, traveling with them to field hearings.

Still, senators talking to me directly was a rare occurrence, and in their defense, their schedules are crazy and these meetings aren’t exactly social events.  (Traveling offers much more contact, of course, like the time I was introduced to a Wisconsin senator in his living room, him standing there in his bathrobe, then barnstormed across the state in a tiny plane with him and 2 staffers.)  Occasionally someone would ask me about a book I was reading, and Dale Bumpers always did that, and he clearly enjoyed book talk.  Others would comment on what I was reading with undisguised surprise that it was more challenging reading than a Danielle Steele paperback.

And the mean old racist warrior Jesse Helms surprised the hell out of me with his courtly jumping up to pull out my chair, every single time.  I’d rather have equal rights anytime, but it’s cool seeing a politician pay a little attention when there’s no political gain in doing so, right?

My Worst Behavior Toward the Help Award goes not to any senator but to the young staffers handling the details of committee hearings – the self-important but well-dressed keepers of the realm that I had to interact with the most.  Ugh.  And through my 30+ years working for Senate and House  committees, as a group the most courteous people and winning my Best Behavior Award are members of the military – all branches, all levels, from the Joint Chiefs on down.

But what about Joe Biden, Obama’s pick for Veep?  His committee assignments and mine always seemed in sync, so I’ve seen a whole lot of him in action, and he was my top choice among the many Democratic contenders this year – because of his impressive performance as a lawmaker.  That’s what my head tells me; my gut remembers him as the least imperious, friendliest politician I’ve ever had the pleasure to chat with.  And those bagels he was giving out to the media throngs outside his house all week?  They reminded me of the time he and I were chatting, waiting for his subcommittee hearing to start, when he pulled his lunch out of a brown bag and offered me half.  I’ve always been a sucker for people who feed me.

Related story:  Memories of Working with Senator Kennedy.

SenateThat used to be me sitting at the table in the upper right of this photo.  The woman being jostled by photographers is the official Senate court reporter assigned to this hearing, and that’s what I did 3 days a week for most of my adult life.  When Congress wasn’t working – which is a lot of the time, ya know – I’d work in the federal courts or really anywhere a transcript was needed, but the halls of the Senate and House  were where I spent waaay too much time, and I’m happy to report that that chapter of my life is over, finished, kaput.

Kaput?  Yes, unfortunately the company I worked for went belly-up last month, which was a very sad thing for its other employees and I hate to seem callous but personally I just feel FREE AT LAST.  Yeah, instead of taking jobs with other court reporting agencies I’m making the break to get my second career off the ground – in gardening.  Isn’t that the dream, to turn your passion into a career?  Well, I’d never dreamed I could do it but it’s looking awfully promising, thanks to this blog.

This humble blog, you see, resulted in my being offered the 4-month contract I now have to write for and organize the DC Master Gardeners. (I’d written several posts about the program and it turns out the powers that be saw them and liked what they saw.)  And the first thing I did for DC Master Gardeners was to create a website, which also serves as a newsletter, and because I’m being paid to write the site and it uses a blog program, I guess that makes me a professional blogger! Take that, you ignorant blog-bashers.

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