Friday, January 27, 2006

Sharing seeds, weeds and information
By Libba Wolfe
Down to Earth


Our son Rob and his wife, Judy, are our urban children. They live in a condo in 
Washington, D.C. They have the bus and metro schedules memorized. They know the 
secret parking spaces and when to switch lanes to speed through Georgetown. 
They are also farmers.
Rob and Judy pay $10 a year for a 20-by-20-foot plot in the community garden 
across the street from their building. Last summer, like all backyard farmers, 
they ate tomatoes three times a day, froze some, gave tomatoes as gifts and 
wondered if it would ever end.
There are 220 plots in the 4-acre project. It's full of flowers, herbs and 
vegetables. One woman has a tiny terrace of concrete blocks and one comfy chair 
where she reads her paper on sunny mornings. There are trellises covered in 
flowering vines or beans, stone paths, fences of every variety. When I visited 
it, there was a hum of gardening conversation -- questions, advice and lots of 
bragging.
Rob and Judy made new friends, learned which tomatoes they really love and that 
they didn't have to plant quite so many for a bountiful harvest. They had a 
grand time becoming part of a gardening village.
"Village" is a word that came up often when I met earlier this week with Pete 
Johnson and Sean Jordan of Grandin Gardens. They have big plans for the big 
blue house next door to the Grandin Road Post Office.
Pete and Sean believe in the value of a village and in community gardening. 
They believe in starting from the ground up (pun intended) to build community 
pride and unity. They have twelve garden plots leased and a waiting list for 
more. They believe that getting folks in contact with their neighbors and with 
nature is a transformative experience. Who can eat a pale, rock-hard tomato 
picked a month ago in South America and argue with them about the superiority 
of fresh, seasonal, backyard food?
Their plans include gardening education and demonstrations. Later this spring 
they'll have classes on how to grow food in containers on your porch or in the 
weedy square foot at the end of the driveway.
I've got friends who are members of worldwide seed exchanges. It's fun to try 
new things but some of these seeds are very finicky. Eight days at one 
temperature, six at another, high light, semidarkness -- and that's all before 
germination. They take more tending than a new baby.
Pete and Sean have a simpler plan. Plant seeds. Harvest the seeds from the very 
best plants. Share them. Next year do the same. Back and forth for a few 
seasons, and we can develop what Sean calls "our own land race" -- vegetables 
and flowers that are perfectly suited for Roanoke.
Until their seed bank is in full swing, we'll have to stick to the catalogs. At 
2 p.m. Sunday, there'll be a seed meeting at Grandin Gardens and you're 
invited. They'll be ordering seeds in bulk and you can save some bucks. But the 
best part will be the conversation, questions and advice. Maybe some bragging. 
It never hurts to find out what works for your neighbors. Go to 
grandingardens.com for details.
The idea of community gardening and gardening communities is exciting. There 
are thousands of ways -- 42,900 when I Googled it -- to run one. It all comes 
down to sharing some dirt, some knowledge and some fun. I hadn't realized my 
Dad was a community garden pioneer when he gave a neighbor a piece of our back 
yard. They tilled and planted, weeded and harvested on the weekends. It was a 
village of two kicking back with a cold one and arguing about whose tomatoes 
were better.


(C)2006 The Roanoke Times



 
-----Original Message-----
From: Google Alerts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Fri, 27 Jan 2006 00:38:41 -0800 (PST)
Subject: Google Alert - community gardening


Google Alert for: community gardening 
Sharing seeds, weeds and information
Roanoke Times - Roanoke,VA,USA
... Pete and Sean believe in the value of a village and in community gardening. 
... The idea of community gardening and gardening communities is exciting. ... 

Gardening Notes |
Philadelphia Inquirer - Philadelphia,PA,USA
... required by Jan. 30). Franklinville Community Center, 1584 Coles Mill Rd., 
Franklinville; 856-694-2833. Phil Normandy, plant-collections ... 

Classes, Seminars and Workshops
2theadvocate.com - Baton Rouge,LA,USA
... BATON ROUGE SYMPHONY & THE COMMUNITY SCHOOL FOR THE ARTS: Pre-school music 
... oil painting, Tales of the Far East, The Silk Road, gardening, lifewriting, 
Bible ... 

East Bay Briefings
Providence Journal (subscription) - Providence,RI,USA
... The series will be led by community services librarian Lauri Burke. ... 
Blithewold gardening class: Blithewold Mansion, Gardens & Arboretum will offer 
a three-part ... 

Home and Garden briefs - 1/27/2006
North County Times - Escondido,CA,USA
... HOMEBUYER CLASSES: Faith Based Community Development Corp ... pm CNPS 
members will be available to help you choose plants and give free native plant 
gardening advice ... 




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