White House Garden 2013 |
Visiting
gardens is a favorite pastime of mine, a way for me to get to know cities and
people of places I visit. I love talking
with the gardeners or nosing along overgrown paths. It
doesn’t matter where my rambles take me or why I’m there; whenever I can, I
take time to stop and smell the flowers.
These gardens, great and small, have boasted towering topiaries, flowing
rivers of bloom, whimsical sculptures, and miniature delights tucked into rocky
nooks.
A few resonated so deeply within me that they help guide my
philanthropic self, like the Edible Schoolyard New Orleans or the urban
community gardens pocketed about the Big Apple by the New York Restoration Project. Chef Sam Kass helped found the White House kitchen garden (2013) |
And then there is the one that indelibly etched itself upon on
my mind and soul: the White House kitchen garden. Founded in 2009, its low-sided raised
beds have hosted thousands of school children over the years as they visit for
planting, harvesting, and cooking lessons.
Bees that work the flowers from the nearby hive are an integral part of
the lesson plans given to help connect the kids to their food and our earth.
That humble, working garden feeds both dignitaries and those
in need by producing 2,000 pounds of produce each year from 2,800 square feet;
a third of the produce is donated to soup kitchens. In the upcoming transition, the garden
appears to be remaining, thanks to a $2.5 Million gift from the W. Atlee Burpee
Company and the Burpee Foundation to the National Park Foundation in October,
2016. The National Park Service cares
for the grounds around the White House, including the kitchen garden.
Beyond serving as a living classroom the White House kitchen
garden has served as inspiration to home gardeners across the US; many of us rejoiced
when it was installed and the historians among us appreciated the nod to former
Presidents and First Ladies cultivating those grounds for food.
I hope she does.
There, past the surprisingly small Rose Garden, the kitchen garden
provides a seating area in its heart, where visitors find a little peace and
quiet. It’s always entertaining to watch
bees work the flowers, and scents from herbs wash across you as the breeze
shifts.
To its creator, the garden bids farewell. It will endure, as gardens do when changing
hands. For those of us it inspired to
get planting in our own communities, our work is not yet done. According to the American Community Gardening Association “community gardening improves people’s quality of life by providing a catalyst for neighborhood and community development, stimulating social interaction, encouraging self-reliance, beautifying neighborhoods, producing nutritious food, reducing family food budgets, conserving resources and creating opportunities for recreation, exercise, therapy and education.”
Get active in your community through gardening programs, to
keep the legacy of the White House kitchen garden, and our own gardens, alive.
Thank you for this bittersweet post.
ReplyDeleteThere are so many winks and nods comparing our nation to a garden. This is a lovely one.
We all have our own ways of being an activist.