$20,000 will bring another community garden to the city; TD Bank writes the cheque.

News 100 greenBy Staff

March 30th, 2017

BURLINGTON, ON

 

The Toronto-Dominion Friends of the Environment Foundation is sending the city a cheque for $20,000 to enhance the construction of a new community garden in Ireland Park. Construction of the new garden will begin this fall and will open in spring 2018. The garden will include 36 ground based plots and 3 raised accessible plots.

The city has come a long way since June of 2011 when Amy Schnurr of Burlington Green and Michelle Bennett stood as a tag team before city council trying to convince them to put up 15% of the cost of opening the first city based community garden.

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Amy Schnurr at the opening of the first community  Garden. Former city general manager Scott Stewart on the left and Rob Peachy realizing that it was Schnurr and Burlington Green that got the city into community gardens.

Council wasn’t all that keen on the idea but they couldn’t get away from the two women; they were relentless.
They prevailed and the community garden opened to some fanfare and has grown to the point where there are now four such gardens.

Construction of the new garden will begin this fall and will open in spring 2018. The garden will include 36 ground based plots and 3 raised accessible plots.

Funding will be used to expand accessible garden plots and accessible pathways throughout half of the community garden. These pathways will use wild thyme—a drought-tolerant, pollinator-friendly ground-cover with reinforced turf mesh—rather than wood chips. This will result in an even, stable, accessible surface, allowing people with limited mobility equal opportunity to visit more areas of the community garden and interact with the other gardeners.

The grant will contribute to the cost of an accessible garden shed, an accessible picnic table and three raised, accessible garden plots.

A perennial garden will be planted around a one-metre border outside the garden fence to attract bees and add flowers to the area. TD FEF staff will be asked to help plant the perennial garden as part of TD’s staff volunteer program.

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Michelle Bennett – talked the city out of $11,000 + and created a network of community gardens.

The city has four community gardens with 126 plots in total for 2017:

• Amherst Park
• Central Park
• Francis Road Bikeway
• Maple Park.

This year’s planting season will run from May 1 to Oct. 22, 2017. All plots have been assigned for this season.

The cost to rent a plot for the season is $50. Water, soil and compost are supplied and all plots have full sun.

Community garden applications are available online at www.burlington.ca/communitygardens, the Burlington Seniors’ Centre, or City Hall, 426 Brant St., at the Service Burlington counter. Completed applications are accepted until Nov. 30, 2017 for the 2018 planting season. Plots at all five gardens will be allocated by lottery at the close of the application period.

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