Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Flower Man and Sassy Get Mulch, Reject Bags of "Natural" Amendments

Love roses? Then love earthworms, bacteria, nematodes, and springtails.


Sassy and I wanted to take advantage of the Labor Day sale on mulch, so we got ready for another trip to Lowe's. First I delivered the altar flowers to our gardening neighbor next door. He answered the doorbell and spoke to his family, grinning, "It's the flower man." His wife is crazy about roses, so I bring over an arrangement each week.

Likewise, at the college where I teach, roses routinely land in the registrar's office, where a student staffer said the group has their favorite roses - pink and bi-color and fragrant. They have no idea what next year will be like.

Lowe's was almost empty at 4 PM, probably because more rain seemed ready to fall. An executive at Scott's Lawn and Garden once said sales were always off when it rained on weekends. Most people make their gardening decisions at the last minute. Perhaps many wish for rain - for nefarious reasons. "I was going to garden all weekend, but that would be dangerous in the storm. I will pick up some things at Drive-Thru Liquor instead."

Sassy came in with her happy barks, so the clerk said, "Were you at the Walmart Supercenter opening?" Sassy's bark was that distinctive. We woke up the crowd, then sat in the Ichaboat for the ceremonies.

We checked out the alleged Epson salt for sale. Lowe's had an entire section of organic amendments for sale, but they were bagged so pretty and priced so high that I had the vapors about buying any of it. Similarly, on Amazon, Epson is priced like gold when I can buy it at Walmart for about $1 a pound.

The idea of buying high-priced "organics" - which have been boosted by various additives - strikes me as paradoxical, like women who apply makeup that cannot be seen - but certainly felt in the budget.

We have four neighbors involved in donating newspapers to Wormhaven IV, and I can probably enlist the fifth. The gardening neighbor contributes to the newspaper collection and the compost pile.

Before I read the two books on Teaming with Microbes and Nutrients, I thought in terms of the number and quality of the earthworm population. The general background was obvious, that the earthworm represented the entire decomposition process. The power of the tiniest creatures was lost on me.

Like the veterans who wrote the two recent books, I now realize that much of the value of organic gardening starts at the microscopic level, where bacteria, protozoa, nematodes, and springtails work.

Here is a list of the myriad creatures in compost.

Some creatures shred organic matter - and earthworms are the champion shredders. Bacteria, nematodes, and protozoa break the bonds of organic matter to make the shredded components usable for plant roots. When earthworms, springtails, and sowbugs shred the autumn leaves, the remains are easier for the bacteria and fungus to attack and decompose. Sycamore leaves will last intact all winter unless they are initially damaged by a lawnmower. The initial man-made shredding will initiate creature-shedding and eventual disappearance of all leaf residue.

Earthworms help with the initial shredding, since they pull down leaf fragments into the soil. But they also concentrate and move bacteria through the digestive process. This also concentrates beneficial elements in the castings, which are prized as the best possible soil amendment.


Jeske Chose To Live Away from St. Marcus - In Another Neighborhood

Mark-and-Avoid Jeske had a sudden urge to pay his taxes,
since people ask why he is building his school empire on their taxes.


Michael Horne

Rev. Mark Jeske’s Lutheran Parsonage

By  - Aug 28th, 2014 01:46 pm

The televangelist's classic 1892 Italianate town home near Brady St. is hardly staid, what with its backyard hot tub.



St. Marcus Evangelical Lutheran Church has been in the news quite a bit, as it has attempted to purchase a former Milwaukee Public School building, only to find resistance from MPS, which has angered those who favor charter and choice schools, while public school supporters opposed the sale. Meantime, the church’s parsonage has a curious historylong exempt from property taxes, it has recently come back on the City of Milwaukee tax rolls. Yet it has had the same occupant, Rev. Mark Jeske, for decades.
Until recently, the home was owned by Jeske’s employer, St. Marcus church, which had bought the N. Astor St. home for $72,000 in 1987. As a church-owned parsonage for the Jeske family, it qualified for exemption from property taxes.
But Jeske, and his wife Carol Jeske, bought the home back from the church for the same sum on July 26th, 2013.
When word of the sale reached the assessor’s office, Mary Reavey’s staff was ready to spring into action. “When we receive transfer information for a property we have classified as exempt we immediately check to see if the status should be changed to taxable,” she tells House Confidential. That’s what happened in this case.
Upon review, the 2-story, 1,960 square foot 1892 Cream City Brick-veneered home was given an assessment of $42,800 for the 4,224 square foot lot [$10.13 / s.f.] and $255,300 for the improvements for a total assessed valuation of $298,100. This is considerably more than the $72,000 purchase price, which was clearly not an arms-length transaction. It is also more than the assessor’s 2013 calculation of the then-exempt property’s valuation of just $10,300 for the land and $123,600 for the improvements.
The Jeske Residence
The Jeske Residence
The new assessment should yield an annual combined property tax bill of about $9,000. About $6,800 of that would go to the City of Milwaukee and the Milwaukee Public Schools. Some of those funds may ultimately go to repair the sidewalk in front of the residence, just steps south of busy E. Brady St.
The home was designed in 1892 by Milwaukee architect W. A. Holbrook, who built the 24 ft by 54 ft. home on ten foot 2” x 12” studs on 16“ centers on a dressed limestone foundation for original owner W. W. Wallisat a cost of $5,000. Wallis was a pawnbroker, and the home’s old address was 831 Astor St.
Holbrook was the successor to Edward Townsend Mix, the most prominent of Milwaukee’s early architects, and took over the firm upon the principal’s death in 1880.
The home then dropped from history until 1957 when Theresa Jakusz installed a conversion gas furnace, and said goodbye to the coal man forever. In 1967 Louis Jakuszinstalled a gas dryer in the basement. Owner Gary Persinger paid $560 to install a 591 ft. perimeter, four-foot high chain link fence around the yard in 1972. It survives. In 1999 pastor Jeske installed air conditioning.
The home is among the loveliest and most substantial along this stretch of the Lower East Side. It has four bedrooms and two baths, and fine detailing throughout. The landscape is a bit over-mature, and some clumsy handling can be seen with the Pfitzer Juniper that dominates the front yard. An assertive city-owned basswood tree is pushing up the sidewalk somewhat precipitously. This is a concern in a neighborhood with many pedestrians and many elderly residents.
Surprisingly, the property has an outdoor hot tub and deck in the sheltered back yard, which lacks an alley and adjoins neighboring properties. This may force some to reevaluate the Wisconsin Lutheran Synod, which this writer had always associated with fire and brimstone tempered by cold showers, and not a nice, warm soak under the stars.

About Mark Jeske

Rev. Mark Jeske has a long affiliation to St. Marcus Lutheran Church, 2215 N. Palmer St., as he was baptised there in 1952 while his father served as associate pastor. After completing his studies at the Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary in Mequon and engaging in teaching and missionary work for two years, Jeske was assigned to St. Marcus in 1980, and has remained there ever since.
According to his parish biography:
“The church and school are located in a neighborhood that, at that time, was failing. Abandoned houses, graffiti, broken glass, and very low rates of home ownership caused many who could get out to flee. But Pastor Jeske’s vision was to reinvigorate St. Marcus to be a Gospel-centered worship and education ministry that would bring people together: young and old, well-to-do and poor, black and white, well-educated and little-educated.”
Jeske also engaged in a program of rehabilitating the century-old school at the church, completing an ambitious remodeling and expansion of the original facility in 2003, and announcing further plans this year.
Jeske is also a televangelist, hosting the weekly Time of Grace half-hour television show since 2001. He is also the author of numerous books and pamphlets, and maintains arobust internet presence.
As to the recent politics involving St. Marcus, a month ago, Mayor Tom Barrett countered an $880,000 offer by the church to purchase the unused Lee School, 921 W. Meinecke Ave., to expand its successful charter school program. (The church had been rebuffed in an earlier attempt to purchase the shuttered Malcolm X Academy.)
The mayor said, “fine,” provided the school pay $1.3 million over the course of a decade to compensate city taxpayers for their share of the cost of educating the voucher students.
St. Marcus rejected this request.
Meanwhile, Jeske’s decision to buy the parsonage will gain the city some revenue. The addition of the minister’s home to the tax rolls of the city is the sort of thing that rarely occurs: “There are probably some other instances where pastors buy property and the property becomes taxable but it would be difficult to find them,” Reavey says.
As it stands, some 25 percent of property in the city is exempt from taxation at a time when residential taxpayers shoulder some 75 percent of the property tax burden, up from 50 percent twenty years ago.

The Rundown

  • Location: City of Milwaukee
  • Neighborhood: Lower East Side
  • Subdivision: Too old for that
  • Year Built: 1892
  • Style: Classic Italianate late 19th century formal town home.
  • Size: 1,960 square feet
  • Fireplaces: Apparently no longer
  • Air Conditioning: Central
  • Rec Room: 0
  • Assessment: Land $42,800 ($10.13 / s.f.), Improvements $255,300 Total $298,100.
  • Taxes: New to the tax rolls. Estimated at about $9,000
  • Walk Score: 88 out of 100. “Very Walkable”
  • Transit Score: 54 out of 100 “Good Transit”
  • Street Smart Walk Score: 92 out of 100 “Walker’s Paradise” I should say. Glorioso’s is right across the street; you can see Regano’s Roman Coin from the front door. Brady Streetis at your feet!
How Milwaukee Is It? The residence is about 1.2 miles from City Hall and a mile from St. Marcus Church.