Berkeley Daily Planet

Spiral Gardens Sets Down Roots on Sacramento Street

By RON SULLIVAN Special to the Planet (06-29-04)

 Spiral Gardens Community Food Security Project's Urban Garden Center opened 
grandly on Sunday, June 27, at 2 p.m., with a stageful of song, rap, and 
inspirational speech, and food and plants for sale and for free.The garden is 
on 
Sacramento Street at Oregon-a conspicuous half out on Sacramento and a hidden 
half across Oregon behind the storefronts. The front half is what you've been 
wondering about for the last several months as you drive by: What's he building 
in there?

It is nursery tables, rigged up for potting and maintaining seedlings and 
aimed southward for solar gain. These are filling with plants for sale, herb 
and 
veggie starts including unusual stuff like oca and cardoon. There's a garden 
shed and a spot sheltered by a trellis for gathering or just enjoying the 
green. The hidden section is beds in the ground with assorted useful plants, 
and 
some potted ornamentals being groomed for sale there and at the Berkeley 
Farmers' Market. One of the storefronts housed Spiral Gardens' office, as full 
of 
plants as it is of papers.

Spiral Gardens has been around for years, starting as a guerrilla gardening 
movement to grow produce in community gardens on vacant lots. It allied with 
BOSS (Berkeley Oakland Support Services/Building Opportunities for 
Self-Sufficiency) as the BOSS Urban Gardening Institute (BUGI-aren't acronyms 
fun?) 
and-with recent shifts in fundraising-is Spiral Gardens again. Daniel Miller 
and his 
allies plan to make the Sacramento Street complex serve its neighborhood in 
several ways.

The back lot is being set up as a collective garden-not a traditional 
community garden with individuals' plots, but a teaching and production spot 
where 
half of the harvest is divided among the gardeners who work it and half goes to 
the homeless and elderly, via several local facilities.

The street-front nursery will specialize in "useful plants"-food, medicinals, 
and native plants for restoration sites. These sales will support the 
project. At the nursery gate, another part of the project happens on Tuesdays: 
a 
market for low-cost organic produce from local farmers. The neighborhood, like 
many urban places, lacks fresh produce stores. Miller and company surveyed the 
neighborhood door-to-door to find out what residents wanted most, and this is 
Spiral Gardens' response.

Plans for next steps include free classes in gardening, good eating, and 
community-building; and eventually, maybe, a well for irrigation. Miller says 
the 
site lies on ground with good water quality and a decently high water table.

Volunteers are welcome; call or just drop by whenever you see anyone working 
in the garden.

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