Seattle Weekly, Seattle, Washington
Jan. 3, 07

http://www.seattleweekly.com/news/0701/ppatch.php

Pea-O'd

This land is your land? Not when pitted against the
squatter's rights of a rogue garden.

By John Metcalfe

About a month ago, while packing my bags to leave
Washington, D.C., my future Seattle roommate called to
report a nice Craigslist find in Capitol Hill. It was
a bungalow squeezed among the neighborhood's mansions,
with a hidden entrance, hardwood floors, and?marking a
first in my career as a renter?a garage.

One problem: When I got to town and tried to get my
ride out of the rain and into that garage, I found
that somebody, somehow, had managed to sneak a garden
directly in front of it.

Our block, at 19th Avenue and East Roy Street, has
alleyways crisscrossing through it, one of which leads
to my carport. But not a foot from its entrance is a
mound of wet dirt topped with a moth-eaten carpet.
Compost, I guess, or maybe topsoil. I don't know?my
typical interaction with dirt involves a vacuum
cleaner.

Next to the mound is a wooden growing box. Next to
that is a thicket of shoulder-height brown stalks
dripping spiny pods, like cattails with maces. Next to
that are three elevated planting areas, each propped
up with bricks and featuring a crop of hardy winter
plants: lettuce, heather, "magic orange." Beyond these
planters, I could finally glimpse the pavement of the
alleyway that used to lead to my garage.

It dawned on me that there were people creating a farm
in my driveway, and though I hadn't seen a trace of
them, they were evidently back there all the time . .
. growing stuff. From an East Coast perspective, the
establishment of an industrious agrarian society in a
public right-of-way was vexing.

The District of Columbia has some of the worst traffic
in the nation. I enjoyed being part of that traffic.
Engine hum helps me think, and I figure I listen to
enough NPR to make the practice environmentally sound.
I was looking forward to cruising Capitol Hill in one
of our household's two vehicles, as I'd come to think
of the neighborhood as an extension of home, what with
its ultradense population of people and cars.

But the garden suggested that I'd be spending much of
my wheel time searching for parking instead. And
without a vehicle in the garage, I was in danger of
becoming one of those vaguely creepy guys who build
collections of useless stuff in their carports. It's
already happening: There are milk crates, Christmas
lights, a bag of hardened cement, a vintage vinyl
stool, and stacks of yellowing newspapers tied with
twine. The other day, I caught myself thinking about
sorting screws on its cement floor.

But in this Man vs. Nature conflict, the sprouts had
the upper hand. The garden, it turns out, has
squatter's rights.

When I called the city to inquire about land permits,
Sandy Pernitz, a community garden coordinator in the
Department of Neighborhoods, let me know that what was
in my backyard is properly called a "P-Patch"?the "P"
standing for pesky, I presume. There are more than 50
P-Patches in Seattle, manned by volunteer gardeners
and managed by Pernitz's department. The city's oldest
P-Patch, Wedgwood's Picardo Farm, dates from the early
'70s and consumes 98,000 square feet.

"We are always trying to get new garden space on
Capitol Hill because garden space is so scarce and
demand is so high," says Pernitz, who lays out the
stats on my P-Patch, dubbed Pelican Tea Garden.

All told, Pelican Tea occupies around 1,200 square
feet, which means my garage is blocked by the city's
puniest P-Patch. It's also pretty old, dating from the
Civil Rights era when a group of artists from a nearby
commune tilled its soil and put in stepping-stones
decorated with gimcracks and pottery shards.

Later, green thumbs transformed Pelican Tea into its
tiny yet potent form. Linda Moore, a 47-year-old yoga
instructor and self-described anarchist, started
building up the garden in the '90s. "We used brick and
stone and stuff to make pathways," she says. "Whatever
we could find, wherever we could find it." So obsessed
was Moore that she used to eat breakfast in the
garden.

Gardening on city property isn't unheard of in
Seattle: Several P-Patches squat on land owned by the
transportation, park, and public-utility departments.
The city often overlooks these renegade plots because
they're replacing blight. The Courtland P-Patch in
South Seattle used to be a vacant lot populated with
drug dealers, for instance.

The Pelican Tea property, however, wasn't riddled with
crack. It was just in my alley, which happens to be
little used because a Dumpster protrudes into it at
the street entrance. In other words, it was perfect
for clandestine growing. "We pretty much did guerrilla
gardening for a couple years without anyone's
consent," says Moore. "We knew it was city property,
so it was pretty safe."

Moore and her crew kept the gardening relatively
contained between two fences. When they left, in the
late '90s, a more provincially ambitious group took
over. These folks got the city to adopt the land as a
P-Patch in 2001, which gave them a funding source and
a dedicated water tap. They exiled a woman who
cluttered up the garden with trash, cats, and a guinea
pig. And they made vast infrastructure improvements.

"The trellis looks like an anti-infantry device that
might be found on the beaches of Normandy!" wrote one
gardener on the Pelican Tea Garden listserv. The same
person also dreamed about tool acquisitions: "Chinese
cleaver, cultivator, manure fork, hedge clippers, hoe,
hori hori knife, hose, soaker hose, loppers, machete,
mattock, nozzle, pruner, leaf rake. . . . " Wrote
another gardener: "I developed carpal tunnel syndrome,
thanks to my gardening zeal!"

I guess the subsequent annexing of my garage was
inevitable. About a year ago, somebody delivered a
huge load of compost. It went into the sunniest part
of the alleyway?the space in front of the garage?to
create the elevated planting beds.

"It's been a little bit of manifest destiny," says
Eliza Truitt, a former associate publisher of Slate
who now does wedding photography and helps maintain
Pelican Tea. "Most people love it." But some people
also love a covered carport.

Last week, I went out and measured the alley. There're
only 2 inches of clearance at the entrance for our
Subaru. As a person who will execute 200 wheel spins
to parallel into a good parking space, I will take
those 2 inches and fucking make them work. To reach
the garage, however, I'd have to perform the
equivalent of a Ford pickup commercial, jumping the
brick planters and plowing through the mystery mound.
Add to that all the cash I'd be paying to wash the mud
and seedlings off the car, and it's an untenable
strategy.

Asking the city to perform a paving job is also out of
the question. "Unless people complained," says
Transportation Department spokesperson Gregg Hirakawa,
"we wouldn't have any inclination to do anything other
than leave it as it is." As I am just one "person,"
that leaves me waiting for the next Dustbowl or, as
Pernitz suggested, negotiating with the P-Patchers.
"Maybe they'd build you a shed. It'd be a small and
simple grant."

Staring at that garden through my back window, I can
envision how it'll be lovely in the spring, with
daffodils and tulips limning rows of tasty organic
produce. But I can't help also envisioning deep tire
tracks leading through the dirt to the garage.

"You're full of shit. I don't think it's going to
happen," says Moore, suggesting that I do what she
just did: sell the car and buy an umbrella. "They're
much easier to park."

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