community gardening. | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Melanie Mindlin (sassetta![]() |
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Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2024 18:11:14 -0800 (PST) |
At Ashland Cohousing we have about 4000 square feet set aside for the community garden. There are several fruit trees along one border and a large composting area, a small garden shed, a grape vine creating a shady spot with a table, an area with a gate into the parking lot where we can receive deliveries of compost, wood chips, etc, and 10 garden beds about 3’ wide by 20 ft. long. Sometimes we do yoga in the paths because it has a quiet, private feel. When we started 17 years ago, I assumed that we would have a bed for each household that wanted one. We are a 13 home community, so this seemed reasonable. However, right from the start, folks wanted to have the garden be communal. The community has always paid for all garden expenses, including water (quite a substantial expense), seeds, amendments, tools, irrigation supplies. But not labor of course. The garden team members and energy varies, but really the responsibility and much of the work falls to me as the garden team leader and willing volunteer. Since I love to garden and have more time than many, this has mostly worked out. We have a workday once a month, and I ask for 2-4 helpers. We also do our own landscape maintenance and common house cleaning on workdays, along with occasional other tasks, so there is competition for workers. Fortunately, gardening is a popular workday assignment. The rest of the time I wheedle, remind and encourage folks to work in the garden. I can usually get someone to do the non-automated part of the watering while I’m away in the summer. There is usually someone I can talk into helping with harder or two person chores. Sometimes there is another community member who wants to spend extra time in the garden. Sometimes it’s a place to chat while tending to some weeding or other care. Thankfully, some younger folks have moved into our community recently, and they can kick out quite a lot of work on workdays. I just have to be organized and ready for the moment. Similar to another comment from a garden manager, I probably spend 20 hours/week there in planting season. Nobody gets paid to work and nobody pays for produce. However, I observe that the people doing more of the garden work are also doing more of the harvesting. It’s partly that they know what’s available, but it’s also people’s internal sense of what they “deserve.” This works out great much of the time, but when there is an abundance of beans, zucchini or cucumbers, we sometimes need to go door to door to get people to take it. If one has the time, this can be a fun socializing opportunity, but sometimes food goes to waste. Did I mention, we prioritize food for community meals? If garden ingredients are part of the cook’s plan, they let everyone know by email not to harvest that item for a few days before the meal so there will be plenty. We often have lovely garden salads at dinner. Right now we are eating an abundance of miner’s lettuce, chickweed and mustard greens. We’ve let people who want some personal garden space have a section, but these sections always suffer from neglect. I think you need a burning soul to have a successful community garden. But it is rewarding and a way to bring people together. We try to come up with things the kids can help with and get them out there too. Good luck, Melanie Ashland Cohousing
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Re: community gardening. Maraiah (Lynn) Nadeau, January 23 2024
- Re: community gardening. Sharon Miller, January 23 2024
- community gardening. Melanie Mindlin, January 23 2024
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