Sowetan

Green oasis a haven on the Cape Flats

Old-age home is creating new life

- By Claire Keeton

Young men lounge on patchy grass and street corners in Bonteheuwe­l on the Cape Flats. In this barren landscape‚ Lilyhaven Place is a green oasis‚ with a vegetable and herb garden that is thriving on a grey-water system.

The NGO Urban Harvest installed the old-age home’s system to save water and nourish the food garden on which residents depend for nutrition.

Spinach‚ green peppers and herbs stand tall there despite Cape Town being hit by its worst water shortages.

Gardener Nkosi Nqazeleni showed off the small-scale wetland with reeds‚ which filters water collected from sinks and washing machines. This purificati­on system makes the water safe for food cultivatio­n.

Lilyhaven has more than 100 residents‚ and they chimed in with praise for the fresh‚ organic produce. Basking in the sun‚ 61-year-old Annette Funk said: “I like the green beans and we know it’s good for us.”

Urban Harvest founder Ben Getz said gardens had nutritiona­l‚ ecological and spiritual value‚ but a suburban garden needed anything from 5 000 to 10 000 litres a day to flourish.

“For me gardens are not a luxury‚ they are a necessity‚” said Getz. “With the current water shortages it is really important to find ways to keep food gardens alive.”

Urban Harvest has started more than 300 food gardens in Cape Town since 2006.

Said Getz: “We work with a lot of schools and community projects and have started putting in beautiful grey-water systems to support this. The systems produce odourless‚ colourless water which is almost good for drinking.”

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