The tiny garden — finding allies

As summer heated up, my Mom and I tended our tiny guerrilla gardens — and found allies along the way.

One day my mom descended the steps towards her little garden in a Rosedale Park.  As she approached, she noticed that a good Samaritan had put down some topsoil and added a few plants.

She was a bit shocked at first but we tried to reframe the experience.

“I think someone has been inspired by your little garden, Mom,” I told her.

Over the next few weeks, she diligently watered the expanded garden. She noted that as her spring pansies started to fade, a new generation of geraniums and zinnias — planted by the good Samaritan — were coming into their own. “They’re budding out very nicely,” Mom told me.

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Toronto entered a heat wave with daily temperatures into the 30C range. Still, mom set off each morning from her apartment with a watering can, and often returned later that day, to keep her garden watered.

Fans and allies

Along the way she discovered she had some gardening fans — and allies. “Just a quick note,” she wrote, “to tell you that while I was watering our pansies, a lady stopped and mentioned to me that she has already met and chatted with you when you were digging in the garden! Her name is Mary and she has kindly offered to do some watering for us once in awhile.”

Mom also said she had been visited by the good Samaritan who had placed the soil and extra plants around the little log garden. She couldn’t recall the woman’s name but had thanked her. Meanwhile, she noted that many people “had stopped with complimentary comments about our mini garden. I like to think it is appreciated by most of those who use the steps, up or down.”

“So you’re the mystery guy”

Over at the gritty northwest corner of Pape and Cosburn, I was quietly watering my Tiny Garden #3 one morning when the crossing guard approached me: “So you’re the mystery guy with the flowers,” he said.

“Yeah I live down the road and I thought the corner needed sprucing up,” I replied.

“Well people appreciate it and were wondering who put them there,” he said, stepping out into the intersection with his stop sign.

“Thanks for keeping everyone safe,” I told him.

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My tiny garden now had some other allies:

While I was out of town one week, my Thorncliffe garden friend Debi and her husband dropped by to water it.  The couple are guerilla gardeners in their own right. They have planted two beautiful trees at one entrance to a major grocery store on Broadview Avenue.  The trees — a silver maple and locust — are flourishing with some occasional TLC by Debi and her husband.  They seem to have been adopted by the grocery store grounds crew as well, who keep the grass well cut around them

Hope and inspiration

Another gardening friend, Mike M., who was awaiting some major surgery, wrote to me: “I’m sure the fun,  colour and HOPE of the transformation of that grey space will put people right at the core of natural beauty, and may inspire them to spread the beautiful concept.”

On that note, my friend Reshmi, a former colleague in health care communications, gave me a large flower pot to expand the tiny garden, and offered her help with the expansion. And Mike R., who rides his bike through the intersection daily, said he would keep an eye on it during his commute to work. Friends and fellow citizens were coming out of the woodwork to support Tiny Garden #3.

Did I mention the cashier at the Wine Rack across the street? She told me: “Oh I love those flowers, I wondered where they came from.”

So much goodwill for the little guerilla gardens — the gardeners are feeling blessed!

 

Tiny garden #3 — on a mission

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While my mom adopted and lovingly tended her new guerilla garden in a park near Rosedale Subway, I found a location for my next tiny garden.

Pape Avenue north of Danforth is a bustling community featuring small shops, schools and a community centre where our kids used to swim. Homes are a mix of high-rise rentals and post-war houses. It’s grittier and perhaps more vibrant than the popular Danforth Avenue nearby.

But the busy intersection at Pape and Cosburn had fallen on tough times after the closure of Crow Cleaners, a dry-cleaning and laundry shop where workers once starched and steamed shirts on big machines in the window facing Cosburn. Situated on the northwest corner of the intersection, the once-thriving shop was now boarded up, its paint peeling, a target for graffiti.

Despite its forlorn state, many people continued to congregate on its broad steps to catch some shade, await a bus or meet a friend. Each day nearby, a crossing guard with his orange vest, whistle and stop sign would ensure safe passage of hundreds of school kids and citizens at rush hour times.

So I decided to brighten up this neglected corner — with Tiny Garden #3.

Planning the mission

Tiny garden #3 started with a large green pot discarded by my neighbor earlier this year. The pot seemed sturdy enough. It was reasonably light and had a big hole for drainage. Next was a nice arrangement of sun-loving red and white geraniums for this south-facing garden. I came across a basket arrangement on sale for 15 bucks at a garden centre and pounced. Finally, I prepared some home-made triple mix consisting of earth from my garden, well-rotted compost from our kitchen veggie scraps, and some peat moss.

On an early May morning I parked on Cosburn Ave. and walked my materials over to the corner. My heart rate spiked a bit as I approached the site — not from the exertion of hauling a heavy load, but because of the nature of my guerilla gardening mission itself.

I was about to install a tiny garden in the concrete jungle, with no permissions and likely contravening at least one important municipal bylaw. Not to mention I had cheaped out by not putting money in the parking metre.

I felt like that guy in the movie Platoon, who was on what could be his last military mission. “I got a bad feeling about this one,” I told myself. But I carried on, as my late Dad would say.

I got organized, set up the garden quickly and emptied a watering can on it.

A ray of sunshine

The spring sun was shining, school kids were babbling as they crossed the intersection on the way to school. The red and white geraniums in my pot were in full bloom. I had high hopes for Tiny Garden #3.

As every gardener knows, planting is the easy part. It’s the ongoing TLC that can be tough. But for today, Tiny Garden #3 had landed.

Mission accomplished.

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