-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: community_garden.list at communitygarden.org
Cc: NYC-GardensCoalition at yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 10:56 AM
Subject: [NYC-GardensCoalition] There Will Aways Be an England - but fewer 
allotments


 Engangered London Gardens, Please Help if you can. 
 
Adam Honigman
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: adam36055 at aol.com
Sent: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 5:48 AM
Subject: Re: London Community Gardeners endangered by London Olympic 
Constructions


Hi Adam 


It's a growing story this one.  I was at a birthday on Friday with one of the 
allotment gardens in the Newham plot who said their patch is also threatened.  
I'd been there earlier in the summer helping restore what had become very over 
grown gardens (very unusual in London given the huge demand).  There's a new 
wave of younger keen allotment gardeners and it has been a devastating blow to 
them that they might have to be moved.


I've posted your story on the London Community board of the website.


Today I also received a note from Jenny (123) who pointed out a petition on the 
Downing Street website for the government to set aside more land for 
allotments.  It's something only British Citizens (including the Pitcairn 
Islands) can sign, but if you know any British passport holders do pass on the 
link!


http://guerrillagardening.org/community/index.php?topic=278.0


Richard




On 27 Jan 2007, at 03:45, adam36055 at aol.com wrote:


Friends, 
 
Allotment gardeners, are community gardeners, are "guerilla gardeners," despite 
the class and age differences that some of these titles imply. "They," are 
"us," and vice versa. Let's see what we can do to support these English folks 
in danger of losing their gardens/ 
 
All the best, 
 
Adam Honigman
American Community, "Guerilla," and Allotment gardener from NYC.  
 
Guardian (series)
Wanstead and Woodford, UK

24th January 2007
www.wansteadandwoodfordguardian.co.uk/display.var.1144131.0.gardeners_come_out_blazing.php

By Carl Brown

Gardeners come out blazing

ALLOTMENT holders angry at being turfed off their
plots to make way for the 2012 Olympic Games held an
evening of protests.

More than 80 plots, at Manor Gardens, off Waterden
Road, in Stratford, will be bulldozed to make way for
a concrete walkway and a big screen.

The controversial plan is to relocate them at the
Marsh Lane fields in Leyton.

Many of the gardeners have had their plots for decades
and many of these have been handed down from their
parents.

Last week more than 100 people attended a New Year
feast and bonfire at the allotments to bring attention
to the gardeners' plight.

The Manor Gardening Society acting secretary Julie
Sumner said: "We have got a fantastic resource here
and if we can get more than 100 people out on a cold
Tuesday night, then it shows how many people want to
keep the allotments.

"Allotments are something people all over the world
recognise and they are also a genuine British
institution."

The Manor Gardening Society believes that keeping the
allotments on the Olympic site will also benefit the
Games themselves.

It is currently developing a plan, along with Tak
Hoshino from the University of East London, to retain
the allotments in the Olympic park.

Ms Sumner said: "This diverse community of Turks,
Cypriots, Greeks, Jamaicans, Africans and Brits
welcomes the potential for regeneration brought by the
Olympic development.

"Rather than being moved out of the way, they want to
offer their contribution which seems to be entirely
consistent with the Olympic and Government ambitions."

Albert Dickinson, 79, has gardened his plot at Manor
Gardens for more than 40 years.

He said: "There is a community spirit down here, we
all make an effort. If someone is on holiday we will
help them with the plot.

"And we are being forced to give all this up just for
a fortnight's Olympic Games."

The Manor Gardening Society is now intending to get an
ecological survey carried out on the site to assess
the environmental effects of moving the allotments.

The London Development Agency (LDA) has submitted a
planning application to the council to move the
allotment holders to a site south of Marsh Lane
temporarily.

But this has caused controversy among campaigners,
including the New Lammas Land Defence Committee, who
believe the Marsh Lane site is protected, a claim the
LDA disputes.

An LDA spokesman said that the allotments cannot be
retained at the Waterden Road site because the land
will have to be lowered by six metres as part of the
Olympic building work.




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