archibald neighborhood garden annual report

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Archibald Neighborhood Garden Year two: 2008 is a project of www.growteamvt.com [email protected]

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2008 Annual Report for Grow Team O.N.E./ Archibald Neighborhood Garden.

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Archibald Neighborhood Garden

Year two: 2008

is a project of

www.growteamvt.com [email protected]

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 2

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 3

THANK YOU to all our contributors, community supporters, and well-wishers.

We couldn’t do it without you!

The Archibald Neighborhood Garden has received contributions and in-kind support from:

American Flatbread

Burlington’s Community and Economic Development Office

Burlington’s Community Development Block Grant program Burlington Parks and Recreation

Department Burlington Time Banks

Chittenden Solid Waste District City Market

Dot’s Market Elmore Roots Nursery

Friends of Burlington Gardens Gardener’s Supply

Healthy City Youth Farm International Foods

Intervale Community Farm

Intervale Compost Products Koenig Cedar Company New England Grassroots

Environment Fund Panadero

Pitchfork Farm Red Wagon Plants RivenWoodCrafts

Round River Design Shelburne Farms

UVM Plant and Soil Sciences Department

UVM Soil Testing Lab Vantage Press

Vermont Community Garden Network

Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden & Grand Isle Counties

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 4

In this report

About Grow Team ONE (Old North End).......................................................................... 5

About the Old North End.................................................................................................... 6

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008: By the numbers ................................................... 7

The gardeners...................................................................................................................... 8

2008 highlights & accomplishments................................................................................... 9

Community partnerships................................................................................................... 11

Events................................................................................................................................ 12

Grant funding .................................................................................................................... 13

Community fundraising .................................................................................................... 13

Expenses ........................................................................................................................... 14

Photos................................................................................................................................ 15

Garden layout.................................................................................................................... 19

In the news ........................................................................................................................ 20

Garden guidelines ............................................................................................................. 26

Gardener agreement .......................................................................................................... 27

The report was produced by Jessica Hyman on behalf of the Archibald Neighborhood Garden steering committee.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 5

About the Archibald Neighborhood Garden The Archibald Neighborhood Garden (ANG) is located at 28 Archibald St., near the intersection of Archibald and Walnut streets, across from H.O. Wheeler elementary school and next to Dot’s Market in Burlington, Vermont’s Old North End (ONE). Use of the garden site is made possible by the Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden and Grand Isle Counties, which owns the property. ANG is sponsored by the Burlington Department of Parks and Recreation. Archibald Garden grew out of a need for access to the space and resources to grow fresh fruits and vegetables in the Old North End. Although Burlington is known for its urban agriculture community (in particular, the Intervale) and has a strong network of community gardens operated by the city Department of Parks and Recreation, none of these gardens are in the Old North End. Moreover, the majority of ONE residents rent apartments with limited or no green space, have limited incomes, and limited transportation options. In addition to facilitating garden access in the Old North End, Archibald Garden has helped to build community and encourage urban agriculture in the neighborhood.

Source: Google Maps

About Grow Team ONE (Old North End)

Mission: Grow Team ONE cultivates community leadership and learning through gardening in Burlington’s Old North End. Vision: Grow Team ONE aims to create a culture of gardening in Burlington’s Old North End. The community-based group facilitates access to garden space, knowledge, and resources so that all ONE residents can grow, share and eat fresh food. Goals: Grow Team ONE’s goals are to be a resource to residents who want to learn about growing, harvesting and preserving food; facilitate the creation of sustainable home and neighborhood gardens; connect residents looking for garden space with homeowners; improve access to fresh produce for Old North End residents; and implement urban permaculture design principals. Grow Team ONE is a member of Burlington Time Banks, a local network that brings neighbors together to identify community needs and resources and promote the exchange of labor and knowledge.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 28 Archibald St., Burlington, Vt.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 6

About the Old North End

The Archibald Neighborhood Garden provides garden space in the city’s most ethnically and economically diverse neighborhood. The ONE has a high proportion of female-headed households (60%) and 39 percent of children aged 17 and younger live in poverty. About a quarter of ONE adults do not have high school diplomas and homeownership rates are among the lowest in the city (U.S. Census 2000). The garden is located across the street from H. O. Wheeler elementary school and next to Dot’s Market, a convenience store with a small deli counter. Dot’s and the school face a small triangular park which is the site of a weekly summer farmers market.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 7

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008: By the numbers

2 years – age of Archibald Neighborhood Garden (ANG) 30 – Old North End residents who gardened at the site

25 – the number of individual, group and communal herb beds 5 – garden mentors shared their gardening expertise throughout the season

110 gallons – capacity of ANG’s rain barrel collection system

2 – babies born to ANG gardening families in late summer

14 – number of gardening, wellness and cooking workshops

100+ – number of different plants grown in the garden

1 – number of upright bass players at the 2008 Garden Party

30 cubic yards – amount of donated compost used in the raised beds

6 – number of ANG gardeners it takes to move a garden shed

Recycle North Youth Build crew members built the garden shed from recycled materials. It was purchased with funds from a Community Development Block Grant through CEDO.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 8

The gardeners In its second year, Archibald Neighborhood Garden attracted a wide range of gardeners. Thirty gardeners grew fresh, healthy food in the 19 individual and group plots. Many participated weekly during the community gardening times, others helped out with special projects and took part in workshops occurring throughout the growing season. Here’s a snapshot of some of this year’s gardeners:

• A Burundian family grew amaranth from seeds that they brought from Burundi • A long-time Old North End resident who lives a block from the garden and had

never gardened before • A group of four UVM graduate students, one of which gave birth to the site’s

youngest gardener in July • A group of four women from Mercy Connections, a local social service agency • Two families with young children, who both live within a few blocks of the

garden • A 20-something college student and 50-something Old North End resident grew a

great friendship through sharing a plot

Garden mentor Jessica Tanner leads a workshop on square-foot gardening.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 9

2008 highlights & accomplishments

Expansion: Due to a great demand for garden space in the Old North End, the Archibald Neighborhood garden expanded from two large communal plots to 19 individual and group plots. The change from communal to individual plots was the result of gardeners’ expressed desire to cultivate their own food in their own spaces. The shared herb beds were retained and expanded. Recruitment: Plots were assigned through an application process, with priority given to those living closest to the garden and those who did not have access to other garden sites. The fee was a suggested $20 donation and gardeners were given the option to pay in time dollars or to volunteer at the garden instead of paying in dollars. Gardeners in all but five of the plots paid the fee and two of them paid $40 instead of $20. Information about the garden and plot availability was disseminated through posters in area schools, convenience stores and Laundromats, postings on Front Porch Forum and door-to-door outreach on the streets adjacent to the garden. There were more applicants than space, so some people were asked if they would be willing to share plots and others were put on a waiting list. There was some turnover once the spots were assigned. One person found a larger garden site elsewhere and another decided she was not ready to take on the responsibility of a garden. Two people from the waiting list happily took on those plots. Over the course of the summer, one gardener moved away and a neighbor took over her plot. Infrastructure improvements: Thanks to grant funding, the Archibald Neighborhood Garden was able to make the following site improvements:

• Water System (Funding from Vermont Community Garden Network) The rain water collection system consists of an 150-gallon, dual-barrel assembly on a raised platform and fed by gutters mounted on a neighbor’s shed roof. The two 75-gallon barrels are linked so they can be filled in tandem. They are made from UV stable 25 percent recycled polyethylene and have removable debris screens, four-foot hoses with on/off valves and overflow hoses. The free-standing platform was constructed with recycled materials. Most of the wood is rot-resistant cedar and the base is concrete blocks. The system was designed and installed by two dedicated volunteers, Sean Melinn and Paul Schwartzkopf. Sean designed the collection system and Paul designed the platform. The two worked together to build the platform and install the barrels and connectors. The gutters are attached to the roof of a garage owned by neighbor Ron Sourdiff. As a thank you for the use of his roof, garden volunteers repainted the graffiti-laden side of the garage. The backup watering system consists of two hoses (one 75-foot and one 100-foot) and a hose reel. It is attached to the municipal water supply at Dot’s market, which is adjacent to the garden. Although we had made arrangements to pay

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 10

owner Lori Francour for the water used throughout the growing season, she declined payment out of support for the garden. This water system has made a significant contribution to the garden and the gardeners. The rudimentary single-barrel rain water collection system put in place in 2007proved inadequate for the needs of the garden. When the barrel ran dry, gardeners resorted to hauling water from their homes. We were also fortunate to have a neighbor who stretched a hose across the street to the garden to water during the driest periods. Neither of these were sustainable practices and with the garden’s expansion, there was great need to create an infrastructure that would give all gardeners equal access to water. The VCGN mini-grant, we were able to create an onsite water system that meets the needs of the garden while employing environmentally sound practices. In doing so, we also strengthened the connections with the garden’s residential and commercial neighbors.

• Garden Shed (Funding from CDBG)

The garden shed is a 3- by 4-foot structure made almost entirely of recycled materials by Recycle North Youth Build. It provides shared storage space for tools, seeds and other materials during the growing season and houses the hoses and garden signs during the winter. installing the shed was a group effort. Six gardeners and volunteers worked together to move the heavy shed from the street to its spot at the back of the garden.

• Garden Sign (Funding from New England Grassroots Environment Fund)

Mark Krawczyk of Riven WoodCrafts hand-built a frame for the garden sign from recycled black locust. The sign itself will be installed in the spring. It will have a place on the front for garden and community notices and a blackboard on the back for gardeners.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 11

Community partnerships The Archibald Neighborhood Garden has strong relationships with many community organizations and businesses:

• The Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden & Grand Isle Counties, which owns the garden site, has leased it for $1 per year for the past two seasons. Each year, the $1 has been returned to the garden as a donation.

• Intervale Compost Products donated all the raised bed mix for the initial beds in 2007 and for the beds installed in 2008. ICP’s support has been critical to the garden’s creation and expansion. The soil at the site is contaminated with lead and other heavy metals, making in-ground gardening unwise. The cost of purchasing the raised bed mix for the garden site would have been $900-$1,200.

• Friends of Burlington Gardens, which has provided encouragement and advice to the Archibald Neighborhood Garden since its inception, donated the proceeds from its annual plant sale to help pay for the garden expansion project. In 2009, Grow Team ONE will coordinate the plant sale.

• In 2008, the Burlington Department of Parks & Recreation sponsorship of the garden provided it with liability insurance. The department also served as an intermediary for the lease with the Visiting Nurse Association. This invaluable relationship allowed for the expansion of the garden and its offerings to the community. We are currently negotiating a three-year lease for the site. The Parks & Recreation Commission has approved a three-year continuation of this arrangement. (Approval is pending from the Burlington City Council.)

• The Archibald Neighborhood Garden is a member of the Intervale Center Community Connections project, which seeks to improve connections between Burlington’s Old North End and the Intervale. Information about the garden was part of a food access display at the Old North End Farmers Market.

• A University of Vermont Plant & Soil Sciences class used the garden for a service-learning project. Students performed intensive soil testing and developed a remediation plan for the site.

• The garden is a City Market member work site. Member workers can earn discounts on their purchases at the local grocery store by working at the garden. From April through November, City Market member workers logged 160 hours through building and planting projects, garden maintenance, facilitating workshops, coordination and outreach. City Market also partners with the garden for healthy cooking workshops.

• Additionally, we are coordinating with a fifth-grade teacher at H.O. Wheeler School to create a curriculum-based connection between the class and the garden.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 12

Events

• Workshops: Garden mentors and community partners held five gardening and cooking workshops during the summer and a series of yoga and tai chi/ qigong classes. The workshops were free and open to gardeners and community members.

• Garden Party: A public party was held July 26 during the Old North End Ramble, a celebration of arts and community. The event drew about 100 people and included a free barbecue, children’s activities, live music and garden tours.

• Chard Cook-off: A chard cook-off and contest was held July 29. Gardeners were

invited to bring their favorite chard dish to share and the person with the winning recipe received a prize.

Clockwise from top left: Caroline Homan of City Market leads a cooking workshop; Brett Hughes entertains gardeners and community members during the Garden Party; and the garden had an abundance of chard thanks to a donation of starts from Pitchfork Farm.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 13

Grant funding The garden received a total of $1,715 in grants in 2008:

• Vermont Community Garden Network: $215 for a water collection system.

• Community Development Block Grant: $470 for a garden shed and a handicapped-accessible raised bed.

• New England Grassroots Environment Fund: $1,200 for a garden sign and neighborhood bulletin board, outreach materials, communal garden tools, a sandbox for children, bioremediation and ground cover materials, and workshops and public garden events.

GRANTS Total award Award Date

Amount Received Received

Balance available

VCGN $250 1/6/2008 $215 11/5/2008 0 CDBG $470 1/7/2008 $300 8/30/2008 $170 NEGEF $1,200 1/8/2008 $1,200 7/31/2008 0 TOTAL GRANT FUNDING: $1,715

Community fundraising

The Archibald Neighborhood Garden raised a total of $800 through community fundraising.

• Anonymous donation: After a plea to the community to help fund the spring expansion project, a community resident made a donation of $250.

• Friends of Burlington Gardens: The non-profit organization donated the proceeds from its annual plant sale to help pay for the garden expansion project.

• City Market: In response to a targeted request for support, City Market donated $100 toward the garden expansion project.

• Garden Party: Donations accepted at the July 26 garden party paid for the barbecue food and other supplies for the party.

DONATIONS Amount Date Anonymous Donor $250 5/19/2008 FBG Plant Sale $330 5/22/2008 City Market $100 6/14/2008 Garden Party $120 7/26/2008 TOTAL DONATIONS $800

The garden also received $260 in plot fees as well as donations of products and services from numerous local businesses and community organizations throughout the summer. The estimated value of these contributions is $1,720 (see page 2 for a full list of contributors).

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 14

Expenses Infrastructure improvements and community outreach comprised the majority of the garden’s expenses for 2008.

ITEMS Amount

Events $130.07 Garden shed & lock $316.04 Maintenance $25.13 Plants $21.99 Raised beds $641.92 Shared tools $10.00 Signage $427.00 Supplies $24.48 Water system $219.98 TOTAL EXPENSES $1816.61

Gardeners, mentors and a team from IBM take a break after building 15 raised beds at the Archibald Neighborhood Garden in the spring. The IBM crew helped out at the garden as

part of the United Way Days of caring (Photo by A. Wulffraat).

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 15

Photos

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 16

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 17

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Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 18

Putting the garden to bed for the winter. Left: Marcy and Brandon mulch the Mercy Connections group plot.

Right: Garden mentor Jeri Helen leads a garlic planting workshop.

Gardener and permaculture expert Mike

Blazewicz harvests sun chokes.

Gardener Erin Roche

plants spring bulbs.

The bulbs were

a donation from

Gardener’s Supply

through Friends of

Burlington Gardens

Each of the 19

individual and

group plots held a

unique combinatioin

of veggies, fruit and

flowers.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 19

Garden layout

Site plan by Paul Schwartzkopf

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 20

In the news Burlington Free Press, April 28, 2008

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Old North End gardeners raise beds

By Joel Banner BairdFree Press Staff Writer

April 28, 2008The 25 volunteers who gathered Friday morning would not mow the grass at the near-empty lot at Archibald andWalnut streets. Nor, despite their designs for a garden, would they till it under.

Lab tests indicated that the soil, having for years endured the droppings of a gas station and car lot, might transferits legacy of heavy metals and solvents into vegetable crops.

The test results didn't prevent Ashley Lidman from rescuing two tulip bulbs from rubble along the fence line. Withluck, she said, they'll take root in a flower bed along the garden's southern edge, which she helped colonize lastyear.

Lidman, a North End resident, a University of Vermont graduate student and part of the Archibald NeighborhoodGarden steering committee, said she learned to garden last year in her small front yard on North Winooski Avenue.

"I have a perennial interest in growing food in an urban setting," Lidman said. "This place isn't officially part of mystudies, but it all connects. It takes a lot of people."

Lidman studies urban ecology and urban forestry at the university's Natural Resources Department. She definedher role in the garden as "a go-between" for Grow Team ONE, a grassroots community group (the "one" stands for"Old North End") and her peers in the academic world.

Friday, volunteers arranged black rectangles of landscape cloth into the outlines of 15 raised beds. But the garden'sreal groundwork began more than a year ago, when Grow Team ONE pitched its plan to neighbors, the Universityof Vermont, businesses and nonprofits, the city of Burlington, and regional utilities.

North-ender Jessica Hyman, a graduate research assistant at UVM's Center for Rural Studies and a master'scandidate in Community Development and Applied Economics, played a pivotal role.

She didn't lobby on her own behalf; she's has a vegetable garden in her spacious backyard.

Hyman said she was moved to act by what she saw as a common need and a unique opportunity. Last year, twomodest-sized plots thrived at the site, and the empty lot's owners, the Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden andGrand Isle Counties, agreed to a $1 year's lease.

"They returned the dollar, as a donation," Hyman said.

Other donations, cash and in-kind, will tide the garden through its early stages -- although Hyman and othermembers of Grow Team ONE paid for the hemlock lumber that frames the beds, and they still need help with abetter watering system.

"Last year we had friendly neighbors running hoses across the street a couple of times," she said. "We've hadbucket brigades."

Another collaboration formed when UVM professor Don Ross steered his students in a soil and water pollution and

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 21

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remediation class to Archibald Street.

Samir Doshi, a graduate assistant in the class, oversaw the soil testing.

"We found higher levels of lead, cadmium, copper and zinc in isolated locations (although levels of contaminantsunderneath the current raised beds are negligible)," he wrote in an e-mail.

Doshi said the class is winding up an investigation into strategies that will, over time, lower concentrations of toxicmetals in the garden's native soil. Among them: using plants such as Indian mustard and sunflowers to extract anddilute problematic molecules, a process called phytoremediation.

"The rewards of service learning are that we are able to directly apply the knowledge we are learning in our classthrough service to the community," Doshi wrote, "and also able to diversify our learning through experience."

Wayne Gross, director of Burlington's Department of Parks and Recreation, said "mushrooming demand" wasspurring neighborhoods to seek out garden space. At Archibald, his department would help with insurance needsand other logistics.

Community gardens, he said, thrive when the grassroots organization remained intact to oversee the details

"We see much more local buy-in that way," he said.

The lack of available garden space in Burlington shapes the city's horticultural policies. By May 1, Gross estimatesthat more than 400 plots will be registered. This year's waiting list has set a record.

Friday, the whine of a chop-saw signaled the framing of rot-resistant hemlock boards in the North End.

Hyman, who is skilled with power tools, as well as community organizing, took a short break.

"About 30 people are registered for plots, and there's a waiting list," she said. "We're trying to see if we cansqueeze in one more raised bed."

Contact Joel Banner Baird at 660-1843 or [email protected].

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 22

City Market Onion Skin newsletter, July 2008

Community Business PartnerCity Market members can win a free day of doggie daycare!

Since 1990, Auntie Dee Dee’s Doggie Daycare has provided the public a cage-free, in-home dog boarding option. Dee is a Licensed Veterinary Technician with twenty-two years experience. What makes Auntie Dee Dee’s Doggie Daycare so different is that the dogs in Dee’s care not only get complete freedom in her home and 13 acres of land, but get so much exercise and attention they sleep stress-free at night! Contact Auntie Dee Dee directly at [email protected] or (802) 454-4660. City Market members can win a “first day free with week’s boarding” this month. Visit our Customer Service desk to enter today.

Cooperative Principles1. Voluntary and Open Membership

2. Democratic Member Control

3. Member Economic Participation

4. Autonomy and Independence

5. Education, Training and Information

6. Cooperation Among Cooperatives

7. Concern for Community

Board of DirectorsDonna Bister 658-4562

David Booth 425-2754

Nathan Caswell 347-277-7129

Adele Dienno 862-2595

Kiernan Flynn [email protected]

Rachel Jolly 863-6390

Garry Schaedel 864-9972

Onion Skin Editorial StaffEditor : Nicole Fenton

Production Coordinator : Nicole Fenton

Illustration : Martha Hull & Becky RouleauLayout: Becky RouleauPhotography : Becky Rouleau &

Martha Hull

Advertising Information:

The Onion Skin July 2008 3

We welcomed 32 new members

to the Co-op in May.

The next Board meeting is 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. July 28, 2008

in the

City Market Conference Room.

Join us!

WEBSKILLET.COM: Local website production & upgrades. For simple, functional and attractive design, content management systems and strategic communications contact Jonathan Kissam at [email protected] or 865-3048.

SUMMER DAY CAMPS: Science & Theater, at the historic West Monitor Barn, Richmond. Theater: July 28-Aug. 1; Science: Aug. 12-15. Taught by recently retired teachers. More info: 434-4977; [email protected]

***************************************This benefit is free and available only to members. Equity must be current. The deadline for ad submissions is the 10th of the month preceding publication. 30 words maximum, including contact information. We reserve the right to refuse or edit ads. One ad per member, no more than two issues per submission. Submit classified ads via email: [email protected]. We are unable to accept ads by telephone.

Grow Team ONE Grow Team ONE, a grassroots community organization in Burlington’s Old North End, coordinates the Archibald Neighborhood Garden. The two-year-old garden is located at the intersection of Archibald and Walnut streets, across from H.O. Wheeler School. With 19 plots, 30 gardeners and a team of mentors who hold gardening and wellness workshops at the site, the Archibald Neighborhood Garden is a vibrant community hub and helps increase food security in the Old North End.

Space for the garden has been provided by the Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden & Grand Isle Counties. Intervale Compost Products donated all the raised-bed mix. The independently run garden is sponsored by Burlington Parks & Recreation Department and receives guidance from Friends of Burlington Gardens. City Market member workers can earn hours by helping with general garden upkeep, hosting workshops, assisting with events and coordinating special projects, such as a garden tool donation drive. For more information, check out the member worker binder at the City Market Customer Service desk or contact Jess Hyman at [email protected] or 802-598-3139.

Mark your calendars!

City Market/Onion River Co-op Board of Directors elections will be held in October. For further details, please look for in-store info and future issues of the Onion Skin.

Calling all Kombucha Lovers!

City Market now offers local Kombucha by the pound. Aqua Vitea Kombucha from Salisbury, Vermont is available for purchase by the pound ($2.69) out of a kegerator in aisle 6 and in pre-filled growlers ($14.99). Empty 16oz bottles can also be purchased for $1.00 or customers can bring in their own containers to fill.

City Market Classifieds

Community Outreach Partner Patronage refund continues in Fiscal 09

We are pleased to report that the Patronage Refund program for members will continue in the next fiscal year, which starts July 1. The program is the way in which the Co-op acts as a non-profit towards member purchases and is intended to continue indefinitely. Patronage Refund rebates will be configured on the Co-op’s Fiscal Year, July 1 through June 30. The variable each year will be the cash disbursements based upon the needs of the Co-op. At the very least, disbursements will be 20% of patronage share of the individual pool. The disbursement will be determined by the Board of Directors annually.

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 23

Burlington Area Community Gardens newsletter, Fall 2008

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Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 24

The Archibald Neighborhood Garden was established in 2007 near the intersection of Archibald and Walnut streets, next to Dot’s Market, in Burlington, Vt. The garden is coordinated by Grow Team ONE, a grassroots community organization that cultivates leadership and learning through gardening in Burlington’s Old North End.

Space for the garden is made possible by the Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden & Grand Isle Counties, which owns the property. Intervale Compost Products donated all the raised-bed mix. The independently run garden is sponsored by Burlington Parks and Recreation Department and receives guidance from Friends of Burlington Gardens.

Many Old North End residents don’t have access to safe garden space at their homes or the ability to travel to community garden sites located outside the neighborhood. Most of the gardeners for the 2008 growing season live within five blocks of the site. They range from young families to recent immigrants to college students, many of whom are beginning gardeners. The Archibald Neighborhood Garden provides raised-bed plots, shared supplies and community workshops. Bi-weekly group gardening times help build community and connect beginning gardeners with a team of on- and off-site mentors.

The Archibald Neighborhood Garden has received support and contributions from American Flatbread, Burlington’s Community and Economic Development Office, Burlington Parks and Recreation Department, Burlington Time Banks, Chittenden Solid Waste District, City Market, Elmore Roots Nursery, Friends of Burlington Gardens, Healthy City Youth Farm, International Foods, Intervale Community Farm, Intervale Compost Products, Koenig Cedar Company, Old North End Time Bank, Panadero, Pitchfork Farm, Red Wagon Plants, RivenWoodCrafts, Round River Design, Shelburne Farms, UVM Plant & Soil Sciences Department, UVM Soil Testing Lab, Vermont Community Garden Network and the Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden & Grand Isle Counties.

E-mail [email protected] or call 598-3139.

!

!

Grow Team ONE (Old North End) started in March 2007 through the Old North End Time Bank (http://burlingtontimebanks.blogspot.com). It aims to be a resource to residents who want to learn about growing, harvesting and preserving food; facili-tate the creation of sustainable home and neighborhood gardens; connect residents looking for garden space with homeowners; improve access to fresh produce for Old North End residents; and implement urban permaculture design principles.

The Archibald Neighborhood Garden was established in 2007 near the intersection of Archibald and Walnut streets, next to Dot’s Market, in Burlington, Vt. The garden is coordinated by Grow Team ONE, a grassroots community organization that cultivates leadership and learning through gardening in Burlington’s Old North End.

Space for the garden is made possible by the Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden & Grand Isle Counties, which owns the property. Intervale Compost Products donated all the raised-bed mix. The independently run garden is sponsored by Burlington Parks and Recreation Department and receives guidance from Friends of Burlington Gardens.

Many Old North End residents don’t have access to safe garden space at their homes or the ability to travel to community garden sites located outside the neighborhood. Most of the gardeners for the 2008 growing season live within five blocks of the site. They range from young families to recent immigrants to college students, many of whom are beginning gardeners. The Archibald Neighborhood Garden provides raised-bed plots, shared supplies and community workshops. Bi-weekly group gardening times help build community and connect beginning gardeners with a team of on- and off-site mentors.

The Archibald Neighborhood Garden has received support and contributions from American Flatbread, Burlington’s Community and Economic Development Office, Burlington Parks and Recreation Department, Burlington Time Banks, Chittenden Solid Waste District, City Market, Elmore Roots Nursery, Friends of Burlington Gardens, Healthy City Youth Farm, International Foods, Intervale Community Farm, Intervale Compost Products, Koenig Cedar Company, Old North End Time Bank, Panadero, Pitchfork Farm, Red Wagon Plants, RivenWoodCrafts, Round River Design, Shelburne Farms, UVM Plant & Soil Sciences Department, UVM Soil Testing Lab, Vermont Community Garden Network and the Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden & Grand Isle Counties.

E-mail [email protected] or call 598-3139.

!

!

Grow Team ONE (Old North End) started in March 2007 through the Old North End Time Bank (http://burlingtontimebanks.blogspot.com). It aims to be a resource to residents who want to learn about growing, harvesting and preserving food; facili-tate the creation of sustainable home and neighborhood gardens; connect residents looking for garden space with homeowners; improve access to fresh produce for Old North End residents; and implement urban permaculture design principles.

Do you want to

G A R D E N

in the Old North End

this summer?

Join the Archibald Neighborhood Garden

at the corner of Archibald and Walnut streets!

Grow your own food, meet neighbors and have fun in a beautiful location.

No gardening experience necessary.

You will have access to garden tools, seeds and a garden mentor to answer questions.

Applications are due March 15.

Priority will be given to those who live closest to the garden and those who don’t have access to other community garden sites.

Contact Jess at 598-3139 or [email protected] for

an application form and more information.

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Outreach materials Here are some of the of outreach materials from 2008:

HARVEST COOKING

WORKSHOP

TUESDAY, SEPT. 23 5:15-5:45 p.m.

at the

ARCHIBALD NEIGHBORHOOD

GARDEN (Next to Dot’s Market)

FREE Info: 598-3139

Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 25

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Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 26

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Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 27

Gardener agreement

Participant gardening agreement Archibald Neighborhood Garden

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Archibald Neighborhood Garden 2008 Report 28