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West Asheville Garden Stroll
 
Sep 14, 2009  09:17 PM
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For those of you who missed it and would have like to gone, here is a window into the garden stroll. I would think this would be something the main Xpress page would cover. Didn’t see nothin there.

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Reply #1 • Sep 14, 2009  09:21 PM
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You didn’t mention it to them over a dirty martini or PBR at the Rankin Vault, so your story will be overlooked.

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Reply #2 • Sep 14, 2009  09:27 PM
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One of their own garden writers should have pitched the story to them. I wasn’t selling anything. Had a lot of West Asheville business backing the event. Smells like ad dollars walking out the door to me.

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Reply #3 • Sep 14, 2009  11:23 PM
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their ‘garden writers’ dont seem to really know what the funk is going on int he community, from what i can tell.

 
Reply #4 • Sep 15, 2009  04:31 PM
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Here’s a mildly related article from Iowa

DAVENPORT, Iowa - The harvest season is underway in some communities around Iowa where public spaces like parks and street easements have been put to work as gardens. Darrin Nordahl, a city designer in Davenport, thinks there should be more of that, and he has written a book called “Public Produce: The New Urban Agriculture.” In it he encourages cities to do public plantings of everything from grapes to corn to tomatoes, and he says this is unlike traditional community gardens.

“What we are seeing now is not so much the vacant lot or a back corner of a little-used park, but the very intensely-populated downtown plaza or even a busy street.”

He says that just as city workers now mow grass or trim trees in such areas as street easements, they could also tend gardens, where the fruit and vegetables produced would then be available to anyone. According to Nordahl, in a world of diminishing oil reserves and climate change, growing food in public spaces makes sense.

“What we’re trying to promote here, providing fresh food at a lower cost for the public, involves food security. What we’re finding is that the large-scale agriculture endeavors aren’t as safe as we’d like to believe.”

Nordahl believes farming on urban public land will supplement traditional agriculture. The city of Davenport has approved spending $370,000 to turn part of a downtown parking area into a public garden.

Darrin Nordahl’s book comes out September 25th. There will be a conference on community food security in Des Moines October 10-13.

http://www.publicnewsservice.org/index.php?/content/article/10504-1