Thanks for the rerun of Lili Singer's March 3, 2005, article highlighting
our program!  Nice to have newer folks to the listserve know what our
gardeners are doing!

Please note that our URL has changed to:
http://celosangeles.ucdavis.edu/Common_Ground_Garden_Program/
and our menu now has separate pages for community gardening and school
gardening.

A reminder to everyone interested in community gardening or school gardening
of my elists to which anyone can join by emailing me at ydsavio at ucdavis.edu:

1.      Ag Issues-local (general Los Angeles County area)
I forward items of local interest regarding food security, community
gardening, etc.)
2.      Ag Issues-far (everyone outside local LA County area)
I forward items of general interest regarding food security, community
gardening, etc.)
3.      School Gardening-local (general Los Angeles County area)
I forward items of local interest regarding gardening on school sites.
4.      School Gardening-far (everyone outside local LA County area)
I forward items of general interest regarding gardening on school sites.

Ciao for now.
 
Yvonne Savio
Common Ground Garden Program Manager
University of California Cooperative Extension, Los Angeles County
PO Box 22255
4800 E. Cesar E. Chavez Avenue
Los Angeles CA 90022
Phone:    323-260-3407
Fax:      323-881-0067
Email:    ydsavio at ucdavis.edu
Website:  http://celosangeles.ucdavis.edu/Common_Ground_Garden_Program/
Master Gardener Email Gardening Helpline:  mglosangeleshelpline at ucdavis.edu
Master Gardener Phone Gardening Helpline:  323-260-3238
 
2004 Winner, "Feeding the Hungry," Garden Crusader Award, National Gardening
Association
 
Volunteers of the Common Ground Garden Program help low-income and
limited-resource residents of Los Angeles County  to grow and eat more
nutritious vegetables and fruits.  Programs include Master Gardeners
(seasonal gardening presentations) and Fresh From The Garden (simple
nutrition recipe demonstrations).  We work primarily with community gardens,
school gardens, seniors, and homeless and battered women's shelters.
 
------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Fri, 26 Jan 2007 06:45:37 -0800 (PST)
From: Don Boekelheide <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Community_garden] Community gardens about more than
        vegetables -    Los Angeles
To: community_garden at list.communitygarden.org
Message-ID: <20070126144537.38742.qmail at web34207.mail.mud.yahoo.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

The Los Angeles Times
reprint - March 3, 2005

THE CALIFORNIA GARDEN

By Lili Singer 
Special to The Times 

March 3, 2005 

Some gardeners want fresh, pesticide-free harvests.
Some want their children to know how it feels to work
the soil. Some simply lack a yard where they live. 

But if there's one thing that the boosters of
community gardens do share, it's common ground. 

"You come here to forget all your problems and to be
with other gardeners," says Ed Mosman, a retired
electrical engineer who joined a Mar Vista community
garden called Ocean View Farms in 1982. "We've had
people meet here and get married." 

Adds Susan Dworski, a graphic artist, freelance writer
and six-year regular at the same garden: "It's my gym
and my church." 

Community gardens usually have rules: Straight-sided
beds, tended by one or more individuals, are standard,
as are annual fees, required work hours, strict
organic practices and restrictions on fruit trees,
tall plants or structures that cast shade. But they
are also places of kinship and cooperation, as diverse
as the neighborhoods they occupy and the gardeners who
tend them. 

"Each community garden is its own entity," says Yvonne
Savio, head of the University of California
Cooperative Extension's Common Ground Garden Program,
an umbrella organization that oversees and assists
community gardens in Los Angeles County. 

The Francis Avenue community garden occupies a tiny
lot in the Westlake neighborhood. Alhambra's plots sit
on a leach field, so no manures can be used. The
garden at North Hollywood High School straddles campus
and an adjacent property that includes an orchard. 

Manzanita in Silver Lake may be the smallest. Its
10-foot-wide plots run down both sides of a public
staircase. The Long Beach garden, by contrast, is so
huge that an entire section is devoted to growing
tomatoes for a food bank. Savio says the Crenshaw
garden is wonderful for its breadth of ethnicities and
languages. 

All offer the chance to bond with others in the
community, often by tackling common challenges:
foraging rodents, heavy clay soil or perhaps an
infestation of late blight on tomatoes. Despite these
and other frustrations ? finding and keeping a site,
scrounging for material donations, resolving disputes
? the movement is thriving. 

Although the number of gardens is in flux, more exist
now than at any time since the victory garden era of
World War II, according to the American Community
Gardening Assn. Most in Southern California have
waiting lists; Ocean View Farms, one of L.A.'s oldest
and largest, with 500 plots worked by 300 gardeners,
has a waiting list of more than 100 people and an
average wait of 12 to 18 months. 

"We've been doing this for more than a century," says
landscape architect Laura J. Lawson. "It's always been
hard and always been loved." 

Lawson, a Glendale native and former coordinator of
Berkeley Youth Alternatives' Community Garden Patch,
visited more than 100 spots while researching her
book, "City Bountiful: A Century of Community
Gardening in America," to be published in May by
University of California Press. 

She found that interest in community gardens surges
during wartime and when populations change because of
immigration or de-urbanization ? in essence,
"anchoring communities with gaps," she says. In the
1890s the gardens were planted for sustenance, but
over time they became recreational, social and
educational. 

"Community gardens are models of empowerment,
self-sufficiency and social ideals," Lawson says. "And
the people are so wonderful ? the organizers and the
gardeners." 

Frank Harris got hooked on heirloom tomatoes and Blue
Lake string beans while working at the Los Angeles
restaurant Campanile. He joined Ocean View Farms to
grow items he couldn't find at conventional markets.
He's now the garden's president. 

Dworski, the graphic artist and writer, says gardeners
use their spaces in different ways and, in the
process, learn from one another. She mixes roses,
annuals, perennials, bulbs and edibles in a series of
terraced beds but says her garden neighbor "really
knows what she's doing." 

The Oak Park Community Garden in eastern Ventura
County was founded on a formerly undeveloped corner
lot in May. Caterer Bobby Weisman has enjoyed bumper
crops of tomatoes and lettuce there after only two
seasons. He says newcomers don't realize how much they
can grow. 

"A 10-by-20-foot plot can produce a lot of food for a
family of four," he says. "I tell my kids: The only
thing it doesn't make is ice cream sundaes."

Weisman visits four or five times each week and never
brings his cellphone into the garden. "I stop by for
five minutes and leave three hours later," he says.
"It's such a reprieve from the world outside." 

Next to Weisman's plot is Kate Frankson's, a miniature
English garden in which bands of dianthus and Dusty
Miller contain vegetables and herbs. She attributes
the abundance to good soil, organic fertilizer and
guidance from another Oak Park regular, Jeanne Cope, a
hospice social worker who started gardening at her
grandmother's knee. 

Cope raises flowers, bulbs and berries, and she
expands her "vegetable repertoire" with crops she has
not eaten before. This year, she grew ? and liked ?
kohlrabi, a cabbage relative. 

"Gardening makes you less afraid," she says. "It
reminds you that 'there is a season,' and that things
will be OK. Making plants grow brings you peace." 

Education is part of the goal at the Learning Garden
at Venice High School. Students from its horticulture
classes and volunteers from the community tend to the
plantings. 

Surrounding the students' rectangular plots,
designated "garden master" David King has planted a
geometric patchwork of mounded beds with unusual
plants, cultivated communally under his tutelage ?
"things you won't find in a store," he says. 

On any given visit, gardeners may find themselves
working with Chinese, ayurvedic or Native American
herbs; California native, succulent or aquatic plants;
heirloom apples, garlic and roses; or Florence fennel,
fava beans, strawberries or kale. Crops sales
subsidize the garden, and the excess harvest goes to
the homeless. 

The Learning Garden also has a compost coordinator,
Brian Bailey, who manages a demonstration site funded
with an Environmental Protection Agency grant. The
garden's recycling efforts also include lining walking
paths with old newspapers topped with chippings, to
smother weeds. 

Some locals gather on weekends for tai chi
instruction, and King says gardeners often hang out on
a patio and talk between shifts. 

"It feels like I work in someone's kitchen," he says.
"The sense of community is really profound." 

* 
INFOBOX

How to start up 

The urban landscape is dotted with thriving community
gardens, and new ones are sprouting up regularly. 

For information on gardens in Los Angeles County, call
the Common Ground Garden Program at (323) 260-3348. A
downloadable start-up guide and a roster of gardens is
at celosangeles.ucdavis.edu/Common_Ground_Garden_Program/School_Gardens.htm.


The website of the American Community Gardening Assn.
provides publications, monthly tips and networking
opportunities for garden professionals and volunteers
at http://www.communitygarden.org . 

Some community gardens operate their own websites,
providing more insights into how the organizations
operate. Examples include Oak Park Community Garden
(www.oakparkgardeners.com) and the Learning Garden
(www.thelearninggarden.org).

------------------------------
_______________________________________________
The American Community Gardening Association listserve is only one of ACGA's
services to community gardeners. To learn more about the ACGA and to find
out how to join, please go to http://www.communitygarden.org

To post an e-mail to the list:  community_garden at list.communitygarden.org
To subscribe, unsubscribe or change your subscription:
http://list.communitygarden.org/mailman/listinfo/community_garden_list.commu
nitygarden.org

End of Community_garden Digest, Vol 84, Issue 1
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