Yorkshire Post

OUR LOCKDOWN GROWERS

From health benefits to self-sufficienc­y, Yorkshire’s lockdown gardeners tell Sarah Wilson why they’ve taken to growing at home to get them through this difficult period.

- ■ Email: sarah.wilson@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

LIKE ANYONE who’s had the experience of supermarke­t shopping under lockdown, 24-year-old Hannah Bright has come face-to-face with empty shelves several times since the pandemic began. The most in-demand products are often random and vary from shop to shop. At Hannah’s local in Leeds, it’s fresh basil that’s been missing for “three or four weeks”.

Thanks to Hannah’s first-time foray into lockdown gardening, however, she’s now able to harvest her own basil – and various other herbs – without leaving the house at all. With garden centres and nurseries across Yorkshire reporting a “huge spike” in sales of grow-at-home fruit and vegetable seeds since lockdown began, she’s one of thousands across the county, and beyond, who have recently taken to growing their own.

And while seasoned gardeners are certainly relishing the opportunit­y to tend to their micro crops while stuck at home, an uptick in Google searches for “amateur gardening” and “square foot gardening” indicates that those with no experience, little experience and limited space are coming to gardening for the very first time.

The most obvious reason for this gardening boom is, of course, the free time that’s been bestowed, whether willingly or not, upon millions of workers who have been laid off, furloughed or shifted to full time home-working. Hannah, who works full-time in PR, admits that in ordinary circumstan­ces, she wouldn’t have had the time to set up her new veg patch which includes parsnips, broccoli, cucumber, chives, dill and basil.

“When you add on commuting time, and having the weekend being busy with going out and doing stuff... I just don’t think I would have been able to dedicate the time to doing it,” she says.

“[When working from home] I can just spend 15 minutes on my lunch break pottering about in the garden doing bits and bobs that I wouldn’t be able to normally.”

What’s more, tending to a garden or allotment is one of few permitted reasons for spending time outdoors during lockdown – with figures from several allotment sites across Yorkshire revealing a spike in plot requests since restrictio­ns came into place.

In Bradford, Allotments Officer Janette Goodinson says the increase in requests has been “incredible”, with the 104 applicatio­ns made in April 2020 dwarfing the 41 made during the same period last year.

Sarah Hardcastle of Calderdale Council, where allotment requests saw a five-year high in March and April, says that many applicants have cited mental health as their motivation for seeking a plot.

“A number of people applying to Calderdale Council for a plot in the past few weeks have mentioned mental wellbeing as a driver...Research has shown that allotments are not only good for our physical health as they get us moving more; they also play a significan­t role in boosting our mental health and wellbeing.”

For Sally Fairbrass, it’s this element of gardening that’s become especially important under lockdown. Currently working as an ICU nurse in Yorkshire, the 26 year-old demonstrat­es why the rise in lockdown gardening is about more than just free time. “I do find my garden a great stress relief...being outside and doing something with that future planning gives me a sense of purpose.”

Hannah echoes this, saying that she’s found gardening to be “a great way to take your mind off everything that’s going on”. Planting and growing, it seems, is offering people a way of exerting a degree of control over a future that is mostly uncertain; “future planning” that doesn’t just focus on the negatives.

In some cases, lockdown has added an urgency to long standing plans to start gardening. It wasn’t just the supermarke­ts which saw a run on products in the early stages of lockdown, but online seed and plant stores too. Rob Coates of Holmfirth, who recently started his own lockdown veg patch, is among those who ordered in a few weeks back. Though he says he’s “always liked the idea of being able to enjoy eating something that I’ve grown”, it was lockdown that pushed him to finally buy veg seedlings.

“In the circumstan­ces, growing my own vegetables seems like a good idea,” he says, touching on another impulse that’s been quietly driving the enthusiasm for lockdown gardening: the desire for self-sufficienc­y.

Having grown so accustomed to the ability to access whatever food products we like, whenever we like, empty shelves have laid bare the fragility of our food supply for the first time in a generation. And while it wasn’t her main motivation for growing, Hannah admits that this realisatio­n may have played into her decision to start gardening.

“The first time we went to the supermarke­t with social distancing measures in place...there was barely anything,” she says. “And you just think, you don’t know how long this will last, and we really don’t know a huge amount about the supply chain and how you actually get the vegetables into the supermarke­t and then onto your plate.” It’s comforting, she says, to know that what she has grown “will be recurring”, removing some of the anxiety over supermarke­t stock.

Sally, who has ambitions to “one day have a small-holding of my own” agrees that part of the thrill of growing food comes from the “element of being sustainabl­e and self-reliant”.

While the stereotypi­cal image of a gardener has long been white, elderly and middle class, she says that younger people are increasing­ly coming to gardening because of this self-sufficienc­y element. “There are a lot of younger people interested in the environmen­t and by extension where their food comes from and being responsibl­e about their impact and choices”.

Kay Heywood, secretary of the Boroughbri­dge Allotment society, says this understand­ing of a “typical” allotment-holder or gardener has been false for some time, with “plot holders of all ages [and] nationalit­ies” populating allotments today, whom she says are “definitely not” all middle class.

This demographi­c change and uptick in gardening may stick beyond the end of lockdown. Sally, Rob and Hannah, for instance, all have keen intentions to carry on gardening. Sally has ambitions to become even more self-sufficient with her food supply in the future, saying that her garden is “the start of a lifelong process that hopefully will only become more elaborate”.

Given the mental and physical benefits, she says she’d encourage everyone to give it a go to get them through lockdown, not worrying too much about rules and specifics.“All rules are out the window for lockdown gardening, it can be hard to get hold of supplies so get creative and use what you have.”

Most importantl­y, she says, “just get out there and try, have fun, there’s no such thing as failure, only valuable lessons learnt!”

I do find my garden a great stress relief... being outside and doing something with that future planning gives me a sense of purpose during the lockdown.

Sally Fairbrass, who has been gardening during the lockdown.

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 ??  ?? GOING GREEN: Sally Fairbrass, top, and Hannah Bright, above, have both been gardening during the nation’s lockdown.
GOING GREEN: Sally Fairbrass, top, and Hannah Bright, above, have both been gardening during the nation’s lockdown.
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