The Oklahoman

In West Philadelph­ia ...

To a nation forlorn and fazed, garden activists are shipping seeds amid uncertain days

- By Samantha Melamed

O ne afternoon recently, at a table in the back of West Philadelph­ia's Making Worlds bookstore, Kate Illes shook aji pepper seeds into hand-labeled envelopes. In a comfortabl­e chair near a section on prisons and oppress i on, Nathan Kleinman bundled Brussels sprout seeds. And, over by the front desk, Trika Parasimo meted out melon seeds.

This make shift assembly line is the nationwide hub of the Cooperativ­e Gardens Commission. Inconspicu­ous though it may be, it's the epicenter of a new food gardening movement born from this moment of scarcity — as Americans have seen grocery store shelves stripped bare by panic buying and viral photos of zucchini rotting in the field for want of distributi­on channels — and as millions of unemployed are suddenly staring down abundant free time, looming food insecurity and a deep craving to be outdoors.

This is a victory-garden movement improved by technology: with biweekly conference calls drawing participan­ts from across the country; collaborat­ively developed Google Docs with gardening safety guidel i nes; a proliferat­ion of webinars and Zoom classes; a hashtag, #coop gardens, that people can use to offer

or request resources; and a hotline, 202-7096225, to connect novice gardeners to mentors local to their bioregions.

“We know f rom the history of war gardens that after World War II, a lot of people who took up gardening didn't continue, and a lot of people who tried to grow food for themselves failed,” Klein man said .“The broader vision of the group is to facilitate resource-sharing and knowledge- sharing so that anyone who wants to grow food this year can.”

But this green rush also is facing unpreceden­ted barriers — as many who garden at schools and nonprofit-run farms are being locked out or asked to stay home, crucial resources such as the Fairmount Park organic recycling center are closed, and some garden centers were denied waivers to stay open as essential businesses. Above all, gardeners said, access to seeds has been a challenge, as companies are backordere­d — struggling to meet increased demand with r educed staffing as spring weather bears down.

The Cooperativ­e Gardens Commission is addressing that seed shortage, taking in mill i ons of heirloom and organic seeds donated in bulk by companies from Maine to Oregon, packing them into envelopes, and shipping them to more than 100 regional distributo­rs to share with local farmers.

It' s time-sensitive work, said Klein man, who also contribute­d seeds f rom his Elmer, New Jersey-based nonprofit, the Experiment­al Far m Network. “The priority is to get stuff first to people in Southerly areas, because they really need to get seeds in the ground quicker. Then, mainly, we' re prioritizi­ng by need—places where food in security was a problem before the pandemic.” By mid- May, everything must go.

Growing uncertaint­y

Across the gardening community, there is a through-line of urgency, hampered by uncertaint­y about what's safe and what's legal.

Two weeks ago, the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Agricultur­e issued guidance affirming that urban farms are essential and instructin­g them on how to operate safely, wearing masks and staggering work shifts. And Philadelph­ia's Garden Justice Legal Initiative has sent around a letter template affirming that gardeners are essential workers.

Even so, many elderly gardeners who anchored longstandi­ng Philadelph­ia gardens feel unsafe venturing out this year, said Jennifer Greenberg, of the Neighborho­od Gardens Trust. “We're starting to think about how to work with volunteers to provide additional help to those gardeners, so that we can make sure there are crops growing and they're still able to get the food they're going to need.”

Further complicati­ng matters is that some garden centers were denied waivers to reopen as essential businesses, leaving them to operate limited delivery services in a legal gray area.

That happened to Primex in Glenside, even though it sells essential farming supplies such as vegetables, seeds and chicken feed.

Owner David Green said he has since started doing deliveries — but his first venture into ecommerce, using email ordering, has been maddeningl­y inefficien­t and backlogged. This should be his peak season, but his daily sales are about 20% of last year's. He recently canceled an order for a truckload of vegetable starts, worried he wouldn't be able to move them. Primex sells raised- bed kits from a company that has seen demand spike 500% since the pandemic — but marketing them to his customers right now seems impossible.

Growing commitment

Despite all the obstacles, everyone counting out seeds was holding on to some vision of a lush green patch of relief this summer.

Illes said she's breaking ground on a garden on two vacant lots in West Philadelph­ia, clearing trash and sourcing wood from Philly Reclaim for raised beds. Her most pressing concern is petitionin­g the city to restore access to the public compost pile in Fairmount Park so she and others will have dirt to grow in.

Parasimo, who works at a community farm in North Philadelph­ia, has been improvisin­g since the nonprofit that runs the farm sent all workers and volunteers home and gave away most of its plant starts .“I' m kind of guerrilla planting instead ,” he said, trying to keep that farm growing on a modified scale — though the fate of the farm stand, which in past years accepted food stamps and set prices at half those of Whole Foods, is uncertain. Parasimo also is working to start as many pop-up food gardens in the city as he can.

They are among thousands of gardeners recommitti­ng to growing food, said Sally McCabe, of the Pennsylvan­ia Horticultu­ral Society. “People are worried about what's going to happen: whether food is going to get harder to get, and whether garden supplies are going to get harder to get.”

If they can get the resources and education they need, she believes, a new generation of gardeners will be born.

PHS is doing its part.

Its City Harvest program, which works with 129 gardens to provide thousands of tons of fresh produce each year to soup kitchens, food banks and low-cost farm stands, is up and running.

While PHS suspended plans to launch a garden-tool library because of the virus, it's been filming web series on organic gardening for beginners, and gardening with kids. Some classes have drawn thousands of participan­ts. “People are hungry for this stuff,” McCabe said.

They are learning that although this may not be the easiest time to start a garden, there is plenty of help.

Sony a Harris, who started the Bullock Garden Project while she was a special education teacher in Glassboro, said some gardeners she works with have been locked out of the schoolyard­s they were working in Philadelph­ia's Kensington section and in Elizabeth, New Jersey.

It will not stop Harris, who's on a mission to prove that food can grow anywhere. Her own kitchen window is a test case: from takeout containers and dollar-store topsoil, she's sprouting rosemary, string beans‚ peas, cherry tomatoes, carrots, barley, rye. For kids displaced from their school gardens, she has mailed out seed packets and is running Zoom gardening classes to teach container gardening at home.

Harris said the message is simple: “You and your family can sustain yourself. We can teach you how to do it. We're giving advice and seeds and seedlings and plants. I'm growing extra in my garden this year because there may be someone who is going to need that food.”

 ??  ?? Volunteers Nate Kleinman, left, Kate Illes, center, and Shelby Kim, right, pack seeds April 22 inside the Making Worlds bookstore in Philadelph­ia. [DAVID MAIALETTI PHOTOS / THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/ TNS]
Volunteers Nate Kleinman, left, Kate Illes, center, and Shelby Kim, right, pack seeds April 22 inside the Making Worlds bookstore in Philadelph­ia. [DAVID MAIALETTI PHOTOS / THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/ TNS]
 ??  ?? Volunteer Shelby Kim fills an envelope with cherry tomato seeds April 22 inside the Making Worlds bookstore in Philadelph­ia. A group of volunteers is packing up tens of thousands of seeds to ship to gardeners across the country.
Volunteer Shelby Kim fills an envelope with cherry tomato seeds April 22 inside the Making Worlds bookstore in Philadelph­ia. A group of volunteers is packing up tens of thousands of seeds to ship to gardeners across the country.
 ?? [MICHAEL BRYANT/ THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/ TNS] ?? David Green, owner of the currently shut down Primex Garden Center in Glenside, Pa., relocks the gate March 24 after entering his business. He was forced to close as a nonessenti­al business in Pennsylvan­ia. He and a few remaining employees, mostly family, are still watering and maintainin­g plants, hoping they will be able to reopen.
[MICHAEL BRYANT/ THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/ TNS] David Green, owner of the currently shut down Primex Garden Center in Glenside, Pa., relocks the gate March 24 after entering his business. He was forced to close as a nonessenti­al business in Pennsylvan­ia. He and a few remaining employees, mostly family, are still watering and maintainin­g plants, hoping they will be able to reopen.

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