Garden of Life (S. 17th & 18th)

Garden Name: Garden of Life Community Garden

Organization: South 17TH & 18th Street Neighborhood Association

Location: Corner of Hopkins Place and South 18th Street

A front view of the Garden of Life, showing its plant beds, benches and activities.
Photo by Google Maps

What to Know:

Garden of Life was established in 2019 by a few elders in the community who wanted to create a space for older neighbors and children to relax and enjoy the outdoors. They hoped to expand the space into a community garden but did not have the funds to do so.

South 17TH & 18th Street Neighborhood Association, founded by Patricia Latham, quickly came to the rescue. Christina Cherry, elected president of the Neighborhood Association, saw there was a gap between community members and the local government. She became a community connector by reaching out to residents who lacked proper representation, such as Hispanic residents who spoke exclusively Spanish and had no one to communicate with them. The Garden of Life soon had a dedicated community leader and organization behind it. Flower beds were built on the lot, more benches and chairs were placed for residents to relax on, and members came together to begin planting. Christina saw the garden as way to “engage [and] give back to the community.” While the garden flourished as much as it could, funding was needed to keep it running.

The Association applied for grants to help with funding. They’ve been successful in many applications, but funding and volunteers must remain consistent to make the Garden the best it could be.  Lack of funding presents some “road bumps,” Christina says, but what’s there can only grow. As Christina says, right now the garden is “something very beautiful in the community, but we’re not all the way there yet.”

This space is dear to the community thanks to all the hands that have come together to improve it. Some of the goals in the near future are to expand the garden enough to allow for residents to adopt plots. The garden is open every Wednesday from 10am and 12pm for maintenance.

Events Hosted at this Location:

Jazz in the Garden

Gameday at the Garden

Newark Night Out

Free Haircuts for the Community

Garden Education (Farm to Table)

Photo by Google Maps

Want to get involved? Contact S. 17TH & S. 18TH Street Block Association at Info@ChristinaCherry.org. They also have monthly meetings every second Saturday at 10am at the community Garden.

Norwood Garden

Garden Name: Norwood Street Garden (HOV Garden #2)

Organization: Heart of Vailsburg Block Club Coalition

Location: 65 Norwood St, Newark, NJ 07106

Four volunteers maintaining a bed of herbs in the Norwood garden.
Photo by Amina Hylton

 

What to Know:

This garden has been open and flourishing since 2016. It is one of Heart of Vailsburg’s 19 active gardens in the city.

Heart of Vailsburg (HOV) is a volunteer organization that hosts community events for the neighborhood, raises awareness about various programs offered by the city of Newark, and works to bring the community together. This organization also partners with Unified Vailsburg Services Organization.

At this garden there are beds dedicated to herbs such as mint and basil, as well as produce like lettuce, peppers, and spinach. HOV leader, Amina Hylton, comments that their gardens look to provide produce that is plentiful in harvest and easy to care for throughout the year. Volunteer Ali Khawaja, student and co-president of Lifestyle Medicine, mentions also that planting a small number of seeds can yield a fantastic harvest, making the lot at Norwood a quickly leafy area.

Photo taken by Ali Khawaja

After a harvest, leftover produce is given to neighbors or nearby grocers. HOV does this to spread the wealth and bring awareness to the greenspace in the neighborhood.

HOV also wishes to bring neighbors’ attention to different types of produce, such as tropical fruit like bitter melon. Amina mentioned that she’d never heard of some of the produce they’ve planted at the garden, but they’ve been a great success.

The 2020 pandemic greatly affected the very communities these gardens are made to provide for. Communities of color and low-income families especially suffered from lack of resources and access to sustainable food. Following the pandemic, the Norwood Garden has not been as active as it used to be, but HOV is working to keep it running for everyone.

Photo by Amina Hylton

Events Hosted at this Location:

Growshops – learn how to plant and care for different plants within the garden at one of these events

Growtainments – community gatherings to watch a variety of demonstrations

Turn Down the Garden – a yearly event that occurs between mid- to late-autumn where the garden is cleaned and turned down for the winter in preparation of the next harvest season

 

Want to get involved? Contact HOV at heartofvailsburg@gmail.com

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