Photos: Plot demand keeps growing

 

 
 
 
 
Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.
 

Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.

Photograph by: Submitted photo , for Langley Advance

Community gardens have been sprouting up around the Langleys and they're proving popular with people who want to garden but may not have the land.

The Langley Environmental Partners Society (LEPS) actively manages two community gardens in Langley in conjunction with the Township.

- Murrayville Community Garden, 224th Street and Old Yale Rd.

- Walnut Grove Community Garden, 8889 Walnut Grove Dr.

To find out about available plots at either, call Stephanie at 604-532-3515 or scaptein@tol.ca.

To a lesser extent, LEPS helps with the Aldergrove Community Garden also in conjunction with the Township. The gardeners have taken on a lot of the administrative duties.

- Aldergrove Community Garden, 26770 29th Ave. The contact there is aldergrovecommunitygardens@gmail.com.

Costs to have a community garden plot generally range from $20 to $40. Each one has its own set of rules. For more on LEPS, check out www.leps.bc.ca. Murrayville and Walnut Grove have wheelchair accessible plots and Aldergrove is working on them.

Other gardening sites:

- Maples Discovery Gardens Co-op, 7743 200th St. Contact: 604-888-0240 or info@maplesliving.ca

- Trinity Western University Community Garden, 7600 Glover Rd. Contact: 604-888-7511

- U Grow Organic Community Garden, 8181 252nd St. Contact 604-888-1236 or westcreekorganics@yahoo.com

- City of Langley Community Garden, 20050 53rd Ave. Contact: 604-514-2997 or jclough@langleycity.ca

- Topham Park Community Garden, 21555 91st Ave. Contact: 604-532-7350

- Langley City is working on having plots available on the BC Hydro right of way near the Brookswood Dog Park.

From the Langley Advance, Aug. 7, 2012

Members of Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise are creating their third community garden.

by Roxanne Hooper

Langley Advance

With a resurgence of backyard gardening - but a lack of plot space in most current-day urban lots - interest and demand for community gardens has been blossoming.

That's in part the motivation behind a new garden taking root in Walnut Grove.

In past, the Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise - one of the four clubs operating in Langley - created two other community gardens. One is at the Langley Community Services site at the foot of 207th Street by the Nicomekl River and the other behind the tennis courts at the Walnut Grove Community Centre, providing about 75 garden beds for rent.

"But it's not enough," said Rotarian and project member Wayne Patterson.

So earlier this year, the team broke ground on its third community garden, again in Walnut Grove.

The idea for this new garden, at 216th Street and 92nd Avenue, was the brainchild of Bill Lindell.

He proposed clearing an overgrown section of Township land known as Topham Park, suggesting the club build about 100 raised beds, as well as a gazebo, benches, and more pathways in its place.

"This was wasted land. It wasn't used for anything," Patterson said, describing the original site as an "eyesore" except for a small pathway that stretched between a neighbouring subdivision and Topham elementary.

Well, phase one of community garden project has just recently been finished, boasted Patterson, who insists this was his first - but definitely not his last - community garden project.

"It's a direct effect - you see firsthand how you're giving back to the community. It's something you can see and look at for years to come," he added, pleased that the first 24 beds are complete and most all are already rented out through the Township.

Patterson was among of the first of a 20-member Rotary team on the ground on this project.

His work began back in April and he spent the better part of three months clearing almost three acres of 10-foot high blackberry bushes, grading the site for access off 216th Street, filling in an old well, cleaning away underbrush for more pathways under a series of first-growth cedars and alder trees on the site, leveling space for the garden beds and parking, and running water into the garden area.

Then, over the course of two recent weekends, the rest of the Rotary team came in and helped fence off a section of the site and build the first series of six-foot-square raised planter boxes.

It would have been an expensive proposition, thus far, if not for all the donations, Patterson said.

He noted that Rotary kicked in $10,000, and that has been augmented by a wealth of volunteer labour and gifts in kind.

Local companies have stepped out to help by giving everything from gravel and fencing, to woodchips, dirt, plumbing services, and equipment rentals, he said, pointing to companies such as United Rentals, Cloverdale Fuels, Gawley & Son, North Coast Building Products, Liquidus Plumbing, and Mid Valley Fencing.

But the work doesn't end though, Patterson explained.

Early next spring they'll begin on the second, and hopefully final, phase of construction that will include the gazebo, paths, a supply shed, and the addition of about 70 more garden beds - including a few that will be wheelchair accessible plots.

In the meantime, Rotarians will spend the next few months hunting down donations for phase two.

"We're hoping we can get people to donate that, too," said Patterson.

Anyone interested in contributing can contact Patterson at 604-534-5374 (work) or 604-838-5004 (cell).

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.
 

Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.

Photograph by: Submitted photo , for Langley Advance

 
Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.
Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.
Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.
Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.
Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.
Several people gathered at a new community garden site for its official opening recently. The Rotary Club of Langley Sunrise turned anarea of Topham Park into a site of 24 plots with more in the future.
 
 
 
 
 
 

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