Urban Sprouts

Friday, January 8th, 2010
Urban Sprouts Urban Sprouts

Garden Seeks Gardener. Must have green thumbs, patience and flexibility. Will be working with other gardeners. You: will have a passion for tending. Me: will bear fruit, vegetables and plants for neighbors and community to enjoy. Personal advertisement aside, Seattle, Wash.-based Urban Garden Share brings gardens and gardeners together. Think Match.com but on a green tip: someone lists their garden profile on urbangardenshare.org, complete with backyard dimensions (house description, square footage, current state), what grows well and what the owner provides (labor, design direction, etc.). Someone else views the listing and contacts the owner for a match.

It’s relatively easy to get growing. From the homepage of Urban Garden Share, you can create a garden profile or gardener profile and dig into the listings. Some are empty lots in neighborhoods that have gone fallow, front lawns, back lawns that need care and attention. To start, a home must receive adequate sun (at minimum 8 hours of it) and have a water source (drip system or soaker hose is preferred to cut down on water usage). And as much as Urban Garden Share is about community building, it’s also about being honest and clear about who’s buying what, not unlike a real live relationship!

The share concept is also based on trust: your “match” will often have daytime access to your garden. Urban Garden Share’s founders—all seasoned gardeners who launched the venture one year ago—also harp about expectations too. That weeds happen. Things die. Mother Nature does her thing and that control falls by the wayside. Patience will be needed. You will learn and teach.  Appreciate what’s grown, and celebrate a harvest, together.

As Urban Garden Share’s founders say on their site: “When neighbors come together and co-operatively grow food, dirt flies and good things happen.”

So grab that shovel.

Ready? Set? Plant.

Genevieve
Genevieve
Genevieve Roja is an environmental health educator, writer and event planner in San Francisco, Calif. She co-founded what is now Teens for Safe Cosmetics, a thriving U.S. organization under Teens Turning Green (teensturninggreen.org). She is the founder and owner of Lily Spruce (lilyspruce.com), an event planning business with both sustainability and style in mind.

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