Home

Gardening: Immaculate Heart of Mary

IHMGREEN10p-St-Mary-Organic-Farm-butterflies

St. Mary Organic Farm, established in 1998, has 24 community-garden plots and a flower patch that is a certified monarch butterfly waystation. From 1920 to 1976, the IHM sisters operated St. Mary Farm with a wide range of crops, poultry, and dairy and beef cattle.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-Sharon-McNeil-1

As ecology director, Sharon McNeil runs the garden and its programs for parolees and people who have disabilities.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-Sister-Ann-Currier-1

Sister Ann Currier reads a poem in front of the photos she's taken of her flowers at the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-recycled-widows

Old windows recycled into art at the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-hallway

A hallway at the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Monroe, Mich.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-alexis-and-caleb-Keister

Alexis Keister, 10, and her brother Caleb of Monroe play "Go Fish" in the gazebo at the garden at the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-carbon-footprint

The Immaculate Heart of Mary sisters chose to keep their 1932 motherhouse but to shrink its carbon footprint.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-motherhouse-windows

Danielle Conroyd, director in the sustainable campus planning office, walks by a window at the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The motherhouse has 1,500 windows.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-Danielle-Conroyd-garden

Danielle Conroyd, director in the sustainable campus planning office, talks about the courtyards located at the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Monroe, Mich.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-plains-grass

The Immaculate Heart of Mary has areas of uncut grass in order to cut down on the use of fuel to cut it.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-pond

The scenic ‘gray water’ pond, left, is part of a constructed wetland that filters used water from sinks and showers and returns it for use in toilets.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-windmill

A windmill at the grey water wetland. The wetland helps filer water from the sinks and showers to be reused.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-Danielle-Conroyd-energy-display

Danielle Conroyd, director in the sustainable campus planning office, shows an interactive showing how much solar energy is being collected at the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-pole-barn-artwork-1

The larger of two pole barns, brightened with nature paintings, at the edge of the two-acre garden.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-barn-artwork

The larger of two pole barns, brightened with nature paintings, at the edge of the two-acre garden.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-bench

Artwork at the garden at the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

IHMGREEN10p-Jalapenos

Jalapenos grow at the garden.

The Blade/Julia Nagy
Buy This Image

Click to comment