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How to organize a community garden

I have always thought about organizing a community garden. However, when one lives in a rural community just about everyone has a garden of some size.

We see many cities with a lot of vacant space starting to organize community gardens. Community gardens bring people together, help them develop pride in re-organizing a vacant lot that perhaps was very run down, it teaches them how to help themselves, it also teaches them how to garden and it often brings families together in a project that they never dreamed of.

Community gardens develop a lot of end results other than providing food for people to eat. They create beauty and a safer neighborhood area as a place to live and raise one's children. Often some of these community gardens add flowers to the entrances and exits of their gardens thus teaching the participants about food for the soul.

To get started one needs to organize people who care about, or know about or want to learn about gardening. These people need to understand what their commitment needs to be and the responsibility that will be involved in creating and maintaining a community garden.

The group should then decide on what the community garden's goals are going to be. Will the neighbors involved want it to be an active recreation area like a playground or will they prefer a garden to sit in, or to raise vegetables and flowers in. Will the plantings be directly in the ground or will there be raised beds. Will the community garden offer plots for each member of the group to maintain or will this be a cooperatively managed project? Will this area be a permanent open space or will the lot be just a temporary beautification until something is built on it in the future?

If the group wants the lot to be protected as an insured open space then ownership or tenancy will be necessary in order to secure funding or grants for the improvements the group wants to make. Will the group be seeking funding or donations to work the project and most serious of all will they be willing to assume the long term responsibility for the planting, maintaining and perhaps potential liability for the project's site?

Once that is all decided upon, then the site chosen must be accessible to nearby water, even if it is just a fire hydrant and if that be the case will the town or city allow you access to it? Will there be enough sun on your chosen spot? Will the neighbors be in favor of your project and will they help with it?

If this is in a commercial area, many times local businesses


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

How to organize a community garden

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    by Melanie Marten

    Once you recognize the benefits of a community garden, you will want to organize one right away. Not only do community gardens

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  • 2 of 3

    by Ann Hinds

    A community garden is a remarkable sight. Individual plots, growing plants, which are as unique as the people who grow them.

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  • 3 of 3

    by Arlene Wright-Correll

    I have always thought about organizing a community garden. However, when one lives in a rural community just about everyone

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