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Frequently asked questions about
community gardens
What is a community garden? A
community garden is a piece of land shared by friends and neighbours for
growing vegetables and flowers, and providing opportunities for positive
social interactions and recreation. It may be sandwiched between two
buildings, on the outskirts of a city, in an apartment building
courtyard, on hospital grounds, alongside railroad tracks, or even in
your own backyard. Community gardens can take on diverse forms.
Designated land can be divided up among neighbours for personal use or
developed into school gardens where subjects including biology,
environmental science, and mathematics can be taught and explored in the
garden environment. Other community gardens have been used for growing
food for food banks, educational and training workshops, youth gardening
programs, and integrated into senior centers. A garden’s theme and
program possibilities are virtually endless.
Why does our community need a community garden?
Along with providing a source of food, a deeper understanding our
interdependence with natural systems can result from community
gardening. Gardens in the urban environment contribute to increasing
diversity of land use, activities, cultural traditions, and
bio-diversity. The resulting learning about ecology as well as a variety
of cultures besides our own may, in turn, result in behaviors positively
impacting social well-being and environmental and public health.
How many community gardens are there in Toronto?
Toronto now boasts over 90 community gardens, plus 20 allotment gardens
of approximately 2,500 plots. The total number of individual plots
probably totals well over 4500, with new gardens starting up all of the
time.
What can you grow in a community garden?
Community gardeners grow many things, not just vegetables. You can grow
fruit, herbs, flowers. East York community garden will include
individual vegetable gardens and have communal areas where trees, shrubs
and flowers, both annual and perennial, are grown.
How
much time do I need to spend in the garden every week? Most
gardens require that every gardener must spend enough time in his or her
garden so that each plot is kept properly maintained and as weed-free as
possible. Everyone participates in spring and fall clean up days, and
harvest celebrations. Often there will be an improvement project that
the garden committee organizes, like building a seating area or a
children’s garden area. The community garden participants set their own
rules about required participation for these group work days.
Who is organizing this project, and paying for it?
The East York Community Garden network has been working closely with the
City of Toronto’s Community Gardening Department and Foodshare, a local
food security organization specializing in community gardening. Through
Foodshare, some members of the EYCG network have completed training in
establishing community gardens, how to make a project successful with
the right attitudes and community connections. The EYCG network also
includes many knowledgeable gardeners and grassroots community-building
experts.
The City of Toronto has the goal of having a community
garden in each Ward within the next few years. This project received
final City approval, after being enthusiastically accepted through the
local public consultation process. The City has arranged plot digging,
fencing, water supply and the provision of soil and compost for the use
of the community garden. The gardeners are engaging in fundraising
activities for tools and supplies, as well as plant materials.
What are some Benefits of Community Gardening?
Community building tool--create opportunities for
neighbours to work together Grow fresh, nutritious produce in urban
areas for community members or food banks Clean up and use vacant and
unsightly lots Provide safe learning space for children and adults
Reduce crime and vandalism Preserve urban green space Economic
empowerment—provide income opportunities Reduce city heat from
streets and parking lots Enable positive human-earth connections and
the cultivation of environmental stewardship Reduce stress and
improve mental health of community members Beautify and enrich
neighborhoods and enhance their sense of identity Provide
opportunities for intergenerational and cross-cultural connections
(With thanks to Utah Community Gardens Network)
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