Saved by a gardening angel
Toronto Star, May 6, 2000
By Catherine Dunphy
Garbage-littered wastelands
turned into growing concerns
This hard rock, rubble-infested
corner of our inner city is sure no garden. But try telling that to
Toronto’s garden guerilla, Canada’s own Johnny Appleseed, downtown
Corktown’s irrepressible Garden Nurse.
When Pat Ciufo, 46, looks
out over the blasted and littered wasteland owned by Ontario Realty
Corp. behind the Canary Restaurant and its parking lot, what she sees
is a healing plant used by aboriginals to treat burns, as well as wild
carrot, clover and chicory.
And a whole lot of dandelions.
"I’m not a formal
garden type," she says. "As long as things are growing, I’m
happy. I don’t believe there’s such a thing as weeds. They’re just
plants in the wrong place at the wrong time."
Today at noon, this eyesore
morphs into the Front and Cherry Streets Community Garden. There will
be maypole dancers, politicians, speeches, some soil spreading plus
seed and sapling planting to make it so. There may also still be the
smashed cans of Schlitz, reminders of Wendy’s takeout, a Chevy hubcap
and other urban detritus.
"Oh well" laughs
Ciufo, a nurse a Mt. Sinai Hospital and single mother of three boys. "Soon
we’ll have our hedgerow (along Front St.) And the birds will have a
place to rest and they will come back."
It is the city’s 81st community
garden, the biggest one in town.
And Ciufo moved the earth
to make it happen.
"She’s amazing," says
Susan Antler of the Composting Council of Canada, one of many organizations
involved in the project.
"She’s proof of the
power of one," says Laura Berman of Field to Table, a food-producing
operation which is utilizing some of the land for a project to determine
just how much food can be produced in such a site.
Ciufo is persistent. It
took five months to get a two-year lease on this land located at the
heart of Toronto’s bid for the 2008 Olympics.
The Ontario Realty Corp’s
management firm didn’t make it easy, but now the beleaguered bureaucrats
are enthusiastic, perhaps because they’re well aware the connection
to this garden is the only good news deal they’ve done in awhile.
The hassle of dealing with
such authorities is largely the reason Ciufo likes "guerilla gardening" where
green-thumbed do-gooders simply plant sections of forgotten land.
"It’s so much easier
that way," she says.
She first planted a row
of sunflowers along the laneway behind her house which could be seen-
and appreciated– from Adelaide St. She did a guerrilla planting outside
the front of Mt. Sinai two summers ago. "People said they liked
it," she grins.
Then she decided that Sackville
Park, at the corner of Power and Richmond Sts., needed improving.
"My boys hate walking
with me, I keep stopping," she says.
Her eldest son Daniel,
20, agrees.
"She’s always walking
past something and saying, "This could be so much better."
She’s created what she
calls a healing garden, a small woodlot and a storm water garden in
Sackville Park. She also got the idea for the Stepstone to the Don
project, where she, her sons and neighbours planted 1,500 trees and
shrubs.
Now it’s time for Front
and Cherry. Because, as she says, she knows the right people, and has
converted many more to her unorthodox gardening, the project involves
just about everyone in the community and officials from almost all
layers of government.
This garden will have a
tranquility walk, an innovative cold frame greenhouse heated by compost,
and a teepee encircled by gardens whose contents anyone can help themselves
to.
It will have a wetland
area, an urban agricultural research area run by Field to Table, and
30 to 40 small garden plots.
But for now all it has
is about 140 truckloads of compost and earth.
The compost comes from
the city’s Keele Valley leaf composing facility, complete with remnants
of the plastic bags city homeowners dutifully used to collect their
waste. The earth was removed from the west side of City Hall when the
leaking roof of the underground parking lot was being fixed.
Today the potatoes, carrots,
onions and later, beans, Swiss chard and corn will be planted for the
stone soup garden.
But yesterday, Ciufo was
still working out problems with neighbours over the project’s water
source. She’s unfazed.
"I hope that they’ll
see they can’t just sit and glare at me all day."
After all, when the harvest
comes in, there will be soup for the critics, too.
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