Guerrilla Villano
Guerrilla Villano
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Sprouting up
Nobody knows exactly how or when guerrilla gardening began. Some say it was in the 1960s, when peaceniks in West Coast cities such as Los Angeles and San Francisco took it upon themselves to brighten up some of the most dilapidated lots in their communities. Others say it wasnt until 1973, when Liz Christy, an activist, formed a group called Green Guerrillas and turned a private lot in New Yorks Bowery neighborhood into an elaborate garden. Still others insist that modern interpretation of the phrase started in London, where Richard Reynolds has become a mini-celebrity. Reynolds also launched guerrillagardening.org, which many guerrilla gardeners use to organize their campaigns. Today, the vast majority of projects involve two basic kinds of gardens: flower gardens and xeriscape gardens. The former are exactly what they sound
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participants on how and where to place the plants. He encourages them to pick up trash and asks everyone to take a bag of trash with them to throw away. Its not just about the garden. Its about changing the whole landscape, he says. If we can clean up an entire block through this process, weve done the community a great service.
Mark Winne, an author based in Santa Fe, N.M., spotlighted this phenomenon in his 2010 book, Food Rebels, Guerrilla Gardeners and Smart-Cookin Mamas: Fighting Back in an Age of Industrial Agriculture. Winne says that after years of reporting, he concluded that guerrilla gardening is a way for people to feel like theyre taking control of their lives and their communities. Its simple, but its true: Guerrilla gardening is just making the most of the resources and tools at hand to give your community what it needs, he says. Without question, the star of Winnes book is 47-year-old Maurice Small. Since the mid1980s, Small has helped create more than 500 gardens in and around Cuyahoga County, Ohio, near his Cleveland home. One of the gardens, at an abandoned school in Elyria, produced 285 pounds of produce per week.
Another one, in Youngstown, produced 190 pounds at peak bloom. If youre ready to plant something beautiful, you have to ask yourself, Can people eat this? Small says. When people are hungry, when they cant afford to buy their own food, tomatoes, collard greens, onions, and lettuce can be things of true beauty. The way Small sees it, there are two secrets to his success. First, he grows all of his own plants and brings them to the gardens as seedlings. Second, he makes a big deal of compost. He and his adult son work with local restaurants and community members to collect materials for composting. They add these materials to biodegradable waste and use the finished product as a supplement for soil and fertilizer. Small insists this compost boosts everything in his gardens.
CO N T I N U E D
reforestationintroducing plants to a plot of land from the air. The tactic has been around since the 1930s, when planes used the method to plant new flora on remote hillsides that had been ravaged by fire. It became popular in the 1960s, when peace-loving activists used aerial reforestation to make green, not war in areas of urban blight. These days, seedbombing has become so sophisticated that gardeners can purchase pre-made bombs containing different
combinations of seeds. Since 2010, Greenaid has blitzed the market with seedbombs, selling them online and in vending machines located in supermarkets and home improvement stores across the country. Whats more, Greenaid provides customers with interactive maps that detail locations in various cities and regions where people have used seedbombs. The maps also allow users to suggest locations for future bombs. Were really trying to build a community, says Daniel Phillips, co-director of the company. That way, people help each other. Numbers indicate the plan is working. In less than two years, the company has distributed more than 100 vending machines around the world and sold about 100,000 seedbombs. That equates to more than 50 million individual seeds being spread worldwide.
COURTESY OF SEEDBOMBS
To solve this conundrum, many guerrilla gardeners strive to establish personal connections in the communities they serve. The hope is to inspire residents to care for the gardens once they take root by assuming watering duties and protecting the gardens from vandalism and theft. Guerrilla gardeners also risk run-ins with local police and other forms of law enforcement. Reynolds, the London-based gardener, has a colorful history of interacting with police. Here in the U.S., gardeners report fewer incidents, though most say theyve been accosted at least once or twice. Bunnells group has had a handful of run-ins with workers from CalTrans, the state agency in charge of the freeway off-ramps on which gardens have been planted. Thankfully, he notes, none of his gardeners has been arrested yet.
The nature of a guerrilla garden is transient. They are meant to call attention to an issue and confront aesthetic tyranny.
Emily Eisele, activist, Detroit
Whats next
Most guerrilla gardeners say their efforts make tangible differences in their communities. They vow to continue their work in the name of the greater good. Other gardeners, however, say that as materials and land become more expensive, under-the-radar efforts likely will be taken over by formal community garden groups. In New York, for instance, the Green Guerrillas organization, formed in 1973, no longer focuses on guerrilla work. Instead, the groups members support established efforts in community gardens across Manhattan and other boroughs. Steve Frillman, who heads the organization, says the transition was inevitable. With more than 600 community gardens now in New York City, citizens have ample opportunities to beautify their neighborhoods without fear of breaking the law. '
Inherent challenges
With all of the benefits of guerrilla gardening, its hard to imagine a downside. But its there. No. 1 on the list is the problem of impermanence. Because local governments rarely sanction guerrilla gardens on public land, the gardens lack protection from destruction or removal. Guerrilla gardens on private land face a similar challenge. Any time property owners decide to wipe out a garden, they can, no questions asked. Emily Eisele, an activist from Detroit, planted a garden of irises, daylilies, yarrow, autumn joy, and other perennials in a trash-strewn
lot in the city of Hamtramck, Mich.. In the spring of 2010, the garden was removed to make way for a new housing project. The nature of a guerrilla garden is transient. They are meant to call attention to an issue and confront aesthetic tyranny, she says. If change occursif a real park is built when the community defends the space, much needed housing is erected, or the owner begins taking care of their abandoned lotthen something has been accomplished. Watering is another constant headache. Many flowering plants need water to live, and it can be difficult to come up with reliable watering strategies in illicit gardens where no irrigation systems exist.
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