April 4, 2003
Community garden proposal to germinate
in spring
Organizers eager to
push the little daisies and make them come up
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Iqaluit
Community Greenhouse Society members (from left), Alison Lee, Tanya Smith and
Fran Carter engage in a little dirty work.
(PHOTO COURTESY OF
THE IQALUIT COMMUNITY GREENHOUSE SOCIETY)
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CHARLOTTE
PETRIE
Plans for a community garden
have finally taken root after more than a year of intense work by members of
the Iqaluit Community Greenhouse Society.
Since pitching the idea
to an enthusiastic council in 2001, the society has been quietly, but tirelessly
working away at its goal to create a place where people can gather, and plants
and friendships can grow.
The group firmly believes
in the therapeutic benefits of growing things and the learning-friendly environment
a common garden creates in a community. And thats a quality the group
feels is especially important in a community like Iqaluit, where part of the
population is seasonal, and where cultural diversity shines as brilliant as
marigolds in summer.
The groups vision
involves an indoor greenhouse the size of a hockey arena with space for 80 to
100 plots, a separate potting shed, classrooms, lockers, a stage area for theatrical
performances and a cafeteria-style gathering place.
Along with the help of
a consultant, the group is tossing around four possible locations, the most
likely of which is near the citys power plant. This particular location
is currently favoured in part because of its proximity to the downtown core
A feasibility study completed
by the consultant in 2002 also identified a number of user groups, and the list
is long. The group hopes to attract anyone and everyone, from elders to children,
families, medical patients and service clubs.
"You dont have
to come with a rake, you can just talk," society member Fran Carter assured
with a friendly smile.
Fellow member Alison Lee
couldnt agree more.
"It will be a resource
for anybody in the community. Its a creative activity which appeals to
any age, and a marvelous tool for teaching school kids about how things grow
and learning about tundra plants," Lee added.
And the learning isnt
intended to be restricted to the plant variety. With classrooms and a theatre
stage, the group hopes the garden will grow beyond the walls of the greenhouse
to become the soil from which many other passions grow.
Storytelling, art displays
and theatrical performance can only enhance the lusciousness of a garden in
full bloom.
"It will be a place
for breaking down barriers and building friendships," Lee remarked.
But a lot less-dreamy stuff
has to be done before the first seeds can be planted. The group and its consultant
have embarked on the second phase of the feasibility study, which includes fine-tuning
some of the details determined in phase one, choosing a definitive location,
conducting market and cost analyses, researching funding sources and planning
the construction phase.
A recent conference attended
by members Tanya Smith and Fran Carter, and sponsored by Community Programs
of Environment Canada, invoked a new wave of enthusiasm.
"It fueled our imaginations,"
Carter said.
"We realized the skys
the limit," Smith added.
The conference, "Learning
from the Voices of the Soil," held in Alberta in early March, was attended
by about 100 people from across the country. Smith and Carter were part of a
group from various northern communities including Yellowknife, Inuvik, Hay River
and Fort Smith.
Delegates listened to speakers
describe their experiences in developing a community garden in an inner-city
area where 50 per cent of the population is Aboriginal. They told of how they
involved the entire community in their project, how they used local talents
and materials to minimize costs and create a sense of ownership for those involved.
They also showed how they
used their community garden as a place to grow an ethnobotanical garden, which
is a place for traditional Aboriginal crops, giving the people an opportunity
to learn from the elders.
The Iqaluit Community Greenhouse
Society has a similar vision and will be holding several events in the next
few months to pass their enthusiasm on to others within the community.
A plant swap is being held
in the Arctic College staff lounge April 26 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Some cuttings
will also be for sale for those who havent any slips to swap.
To find out more, attend
the public meeting scheduled for May 10, or try the new Web site at iqaluitgreenhouse.com
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