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WORKSHOP ARCHIVE - COMMUNITY GARDENING 101

Week 2 Questions

Question 1: how would you deal with last minute opposition
You’ve done all of your advance work, put flyers up in the neighbourhood, held 2 community meetings at your house, got a tight group of 7 people all keen to create a community garden, and everything is ready to go for the first work day in the garden. The night before you get a call from your city councillor who has gotten a call from an irate neighbour of the site,who claims not to have heard anything about the project until today. The person is convinced that “welfare bums, homeless and worse” are going to invade the neighbourhood. The councillor isn’t familiar with the particulars of your project, though you did send him a flyer.

1: What will you do and what could you have done to have avoided the problem in the first place?

Question 2: Too many people, too few plots...
2.Everyone is excited about the new community garden--30 people have signed up but you only have 25 plots. What will you do?

Question 3: too many weeds, too few gardeners...
3. The new community garden has gotten off to a roaring success. Some of the gardeners are very experienced and some are first-timers. The first timers are enthusiastic and are planting every square inch of their plots. Many of them are in their plots every evening after work during May and June, really getting into gardening. Now it’s the end of July, hot and humid and the first-timers aren’t spending every spare moment in their plots anymore--in fact, 2 of the plots are getting quite over grown, plants are going unharvested and the weeds are starting to move out of the plots and into the paths. The other gardeners are getting a bit perturbed about the weeds and want you to do something about it.
QUESTION 3: What do you do?

Question 4: Groundrules: how do you ensure that all understand them?
4. It was decided at one of the planning meetings to make the garden strictly organic This was included into the garden’s bylaws, which were handed out to everyone with their registration form. Since everyone in the garden seems to speak passable English, translations were not made. It’s the end of June and aphids are invading the garden. One of the older gardeners, Mr. Nowicki, sprays his tomatoes with a very un-organic chemical spray. He decides to be neighbourly and also sprays his neighbours’ tomatoes on each side of his plot. When some of the other gardeners see him doing this, there’s an uproar. Mr. Nowicki, for whom English is a second language and whose eyesight is poor, doesn’t understand what the fuss is about. As far as he’s concerned he has done his neighbours a favour.
QUESTION 4 :What will you do and how could you have avoided this situation?

Question 5 : A sustainable start-up?
5. The mother of a friend of your 9 year old daughter calls you with the idea of starting a small garden at your kids’ school. You think it’s a fantastic idea and agree to help her get it started. You volunteer to talk to the principal and see if it’s feasible. The principal is cautiously enthusiastic and suggests that you talk to the teachers at their monthly staff meeting the following week. The other mother thinks that’s a good idea but she can’t go to the meeting because she’s too busy that day. You go anyway and the teachers seem to be interested and think they might use a garden for science class if lesson plans were available. The principal agrees to a small test garden. When you tell the other mother she is very excited and tells you that, although she can’t be there, she can get her husband and her teenage son and lots of his friends (who have a community service requirement ) to dig the garden that weekend. The ball is really rolling now.
QUESTION 5: What's going on here, what do you think happens next & why?