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Community food garden proposed for Bijou park


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By Kathryn Reed

Anyone who has tried to grow produce in the Lake Tahoe Basin has at least one story of failure to tell. But if gardening advocates have their way, more positive stories are about to be told.

“The whole purpose is to teach how to grow in an alpine environment,” Gerri Grego told the South Lake Tahoe City Council last week.

Grego and other members of the Lake Tahoe Sustainability Collaborative want to turn a 30-foot-by-80-foot plot of land in Bijou Community Park into a community food garden.

Proposed location for a community garden in Bijou Community Park. Photo illustration/Provided

Proposed location for a community garden in Bijou Community Park. Photo illustration/Provided

While the council embraced the idea, it did not want to give the go-ahead when there is no policy on the books for how non-government groups can use the city’s land.

Peter Fink, who is on the city’s Parks and Recreation Commission, said that group is in the process of devising such a policy that would then be approved by staff. It’s expected to be completed at the commission’s October meeting.

The commission did approve a trial run for the food garden at its September meeting, but that is on hold for now.

The council directed the sustainability collaborative to go back to the parks commission once the public use policy is completed. Then the parks commissioners will rehear the proposal.

Grego said she didn’t want the agreement entered into until April 1 to give her group the time needed to get insurance and other details settled. The goal is all the paperwork will be done by the spring so planting would begin next season along with 2014 being the first harvest.

The garden is proposed to go between the circle of roads before the snack shack.

Brian Hirdman, a certified permaculture design consultant, is working with the group.

“A garden is needed in Tahoe to demonstrate how you can grow food here,” Hirdman told the council Sept. 17. “The location is perfect because it is a central location.”

The plants will be in containers, so no digging is involved. And no permanent structures will be built. Water for the drip irrigation system will be paid for by the collaborative. Minimal temporary signs will be installed.

It will be an organic garden – meaning no pesticides or herbicides.

To begin with, the food would be given to low-income people in town through various charities. As the harvest grows, the distribution will grow to include alternative food sources, Barton Memorial Hospital, schools and restaurants.

Rebecca Bryson, who is part of the collaborative, said the group is working with the schools when it comes to nutrition standards. She pointed out how studies show kids who are involved with knowing where their food comes from tend to eat more healthy foods.

Throughout the growing season the goal is to teach people how they could have a garden in their yard or develop a garden for particular neighborhoods.

Hirdman also teaches at Lake Tahoe Community College. He plans to incorporate the garden into his curriculum.

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Comments

Comments (10)
  1. Biggerpicture says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    So what is that newly fenced off area filled with wood chips going to be used for?

  2. Denise Upton says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    Wondering what plan is in place to keep our local wildlife out of the garden? Bears,
    Coyotes. Raccoons, Rabbits and Squirrels & birds especially. Electric fencing? Could be a real challenge AND a real magnet FOR our wildlife!

  3. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    A community garden at Bijou Park would be great! Gardening in Tahoe is challenging but worth the effort. If the council and the group behind this come to an agreement it would be good for the whole community.
    More and more folks are planting gardens around here on So.Shore and enjoying the rewards. Nothing like a fresh picked handfull of Snow Peas to munch on!
    A few days ago some kids were playing in the street after their piano lesson ended(my neighbor across the street gives lessons at her house). I invited the trio of kids to come over and pick some beans or anything else they wanted. These kids had never picked anything in their lives. I showed them how to do it without damaging the plant. The one little guy picks a bean and I ask “Do you like string beans?”, he shakes his head no and I say “try the one you just picked, pop it in your mouth and eat it raw”. When he started crunching on it the look on his face was priceless, he loved it! “Hey”,he shouted out “you guys, try some green beans, their great!” I don’t know who had more fun, the kids eating fresh off the vine beans or me watching them scurry around the garden!
    Pease make the community garden a reality.
    Take care, Old Farmer Long Skiis

  4. Tahoe Reader says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    Good to hear about this.

    Truckee Regional Park has hosted the Truckee Community Garden for a number of years. Plenty of lessons for SLT to be learned from that.

  5. dumbfounded says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    Bigger, I think that is for the Police Dog Training Area. They are getting their SWAT teams ready for winter parking enforcement…

  6. copper says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    How about an on site medical marijuana grow site? And a distribution booth? Then parking meters for the customers? Voila, the City’s out of the red!

  7. sunriser2 says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    Great idea, I love it when something fun, educational and healthy can be accomplished without spending a lot of money.

    Anything that gets the kids outside is a step in the right direction.

    I hope the Sierra Club doesn’t sue to stop it!

  8. hekler says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    Old Long Skiis is the man

  9. worldcycle says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    This sounds like a great idea! I have been growing vegetables in Tahoe for going on 40 years now. A real challenge to say the least. This year I got the largest harvest of tomatoes ever. I really took my gardening to the next level when I acquired a copy of Jeff Ball’s “60 Minute Garden” We should take this further by creating a community garden that allows people who live where their lots do not receive enough sun or are flat enough to have a garden. They could lease small plots where they could build a few 4×12 raised beds and grow vegetables for themselves. (Raised beds are much more productive than containers will ever be) I have learned that when done properly I always have more than enough with plenty to give to friends and neighbors.

  10. John says - Posted: September 23, 2013

    This paper is interesting and completely counter intuitive.

    http://www.ia.ucsb.edu/pa/display.aspx?pkey=2494

    The net benefit of growing and eating local food? Less than 1% reduction in green house gas emissions. That according to the right wing wackos at UC Santa Barbara. The garden is still a good idea for a park, its fun. But that is what it is, fun.