Guerrilla gardening is political gardening, a form of nonviolent direct action, primarily practiced by environmentalists. Activists take over an abandoned piece of land which they don't own to grow crops or plants. The practices are non- violent, unlike guerrilla warfare that can cause bloodshed. Guerrilla gardeners believe in reclaiming land from perceived neglect or misuse and assigning a new purpose for it.
Guerrilla gardeners will sometimes carry out their actions late at night geared up with gardening gloves, watering cans, compost, seeds and plants. They plant and sow a new vegetable patch or flowering garden. Others will work more openly, actively seeking to engage with members of the local community, as illustrated in the examples that follow.
"Pure Genius!!"
One high profile example of Guerrilla Gardening took place in May 1996, when around 500
The Land is Ours activists, including the
journalist George Monbiot, occupied 13 acres of derelict land belonging to the
Guinness company on the banks of the
River Thames in
Wandsworth, south
London, in order to highlight what they described as "the appalling misuse of urban land, the lack of provision of affordable housing and the deterioration of the urban environment".
A community grew up on the site called "Pure Genius!!" (named ironically after a well known Guinness advertising slogan) that existed for some five and a half months before finally being evicted.
Mayday 2000
On
May day 2000,
Reclaim the Streets organised a mass Guerrilla Gardening action in
Parliament Square,
London. After a
carnivalesque procession with
samba band, and
Critical Mass bike ride from
Hyde Park, thousands of Guerrilla Gardeners occupied the square and planted
vegetables and
flowers. A
maypole was errected around which many of the gardeners
danced.
Banners hung in the square read; '
Resistance is
Fertile', 'Let London
Sprout', '
Capitalism is Pants', and 'The
Earth is a Common
Treasury for All,' the latter being a quote from the seventeenth century
Digger Gerrard Winstanley. An
Indymedia public access terminal was set up in the new
allotment, and the
statue of
Winston Churchill was given a green turf
mohican.
Leaf Street Community Garden
Leaf Street is an acre of land in
Hulme,
Manchester that was once an urban street until turfed over by Manchester City Council. Local people, facilitated by Manchester
Permaculture Group, took direct action in turning the site into a thriving
community garden *.
A Long History
Guerrilla gardening has a long history, although the first usage of the term appears to be on
Bruce Sterling's Veridian mailing list
* in December 1998.
In Northern Utah apple trees commonly grow along the banks of canals.
Asparagus grows along the smaller ditch banks. Many of these plants were
seeded 150 years ago by the workers who dug the canals, by burying lunch's apple
core in the freshly dug soil, or by surreptitiously spreading seeds
along a new ditchbank. Guerrilla gardening continues today as
individuals secretly plant fruit trees, edible perennials, and flowers in parks,
along bike trails, etc. Some guerrilla gardeners do so for the purpose of
providing food in case of emergency.
Further reading
- Lamborn, P., and Weinberg, B. (Eds.), (1999), Avant Gardening: Ecological Struggle in The City and The World. Autonomedia. ISBN 1570270929
See also
External links
Community building | DIY Culture | Environmental organizations | Environmentalism | Permaculture | gardening
Guerilla Gardening