Meet the VISTAs



The AmeriCorps* VISTA volunteers who make-up the Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative are a unique and diverse group of young, passionate individuals. We all come from different backgrounds, different education experiences, and different worldviews. Together, though, we combine a wide variety of skills to target one singular goal: ending poverty. Through outreach, through education, and through empowerment, we are working toward that end.

We are:




Name: Eric Guindon
Grow Food, Grow Hope position: Community Outreach Coordinator
Age: 25
Hometown: Wilmington, OH
Education: B.A. in Spanish and International Relations from Heidelberg College

Favorite vegetable: "A big, juicy homegrown tomato."

What Grow Food, Grow Hope means to me: "I see GFGH as an excellent opportunity to not only engage in community service, but also provide community members (and ourselves) with the framework to improve upon and appreciate the importance of quality of life."

Favorite quote: "Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication."


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Name: Dessie Buchanan
Grow Food, Grow Hope position: Farmers' Market & Buy Local Food Coordinator
Age: 26
Hometown: Wilmington, OH
Education: B.A. in Anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis. M.A. in Social Anthropology from University of Wales, Lampeter.

Favorite vegetable: "My grandpa's sweet corn."

What Grow Food, Grow Hope means to me: "Grow Food, Grow Hope is a way for me to give back to the community that raised, nurtured and helped me grow into the individual I am today. It is a way of letting the people of this community know that this is not the end for Wilmington there are people who care about the future of this community, there are things we can do to help ourselves as well as others, and working together there are ways to overcome."

Favorite quote: "We'd be fools not to ride this strange torpedo to the end." - Hunter S. Thompson.

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Name: Mariah Fulton
Grow Food, Grow Hope position: Youth Outreach Coordinator
Age: 22
Hometown: Carrollton, OH
Education: B.A. in Early Childhood Education from Wilmington College

Favorite vegetable: "Corn."

What Grow Food, Grow Hope means to me: "Ever since I can remember, I've had a passion to help people in need. My heart's desire is to see lives change. Grow Food, Grow Hope allows me to reach out to struggling and hurting community and to provide resources that could truly make a difference in their lives, and in the lives of their families and friends.

Favorite quote: "You may be one person to the world, but you may also be the world to one person" - Unknown


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Name: Sonja Koehler
Grow Food, Grow Hope position: Research & Data Collection Coordinator
Age: 23
Hometown: Mainville, OH
Education: B.A. in Education and History from Wilmington College

Favorite vegetable: "Potato."

What Grow Food, Grow Hope means to me: "I wanted to give back to the community that I called home for four years as a college student. Grow Food, Grow Hope has allowed me to do that. I see this initiative as a way for the people of Wilmington to come together and support one another."

Favorite quote: "Have happy thoughts!"


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Name: John Cropper
Grow Food, Grow Hope position: Public Relations Coordinator
Age: 23
Hometown: Wilmington, OH
Education: B.A. in Public Affairs Journalism and Italian from the Ohio State University.

Favorite vegetable: "Grilled asparagus"

What Grow Food, Grow Hope means to me: "To me, Grow Food, Grow Hope is a community-driven food movement meant to change the way people think about their dinner plate. It's a way for me to serve within my community on actionable, tangible goals, and to reach out to those in need of help."

Favorite quote: "A man is rich in proportion to the number of things he can afford to let alone." - Henry David Thoreau

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Name: Jennifer Kerschner
Grow Food, Grow Hope position: Community Gardens / Edible Landscape Coordinator
Age: 23
Hometown: Litchfield, OH
Education: B.S. in Agricultural Production and Agricultural Education from Wilmington College.

Favorite vegetable: "Eggplant"

What Grow Food, Grow Hope means to me: "Agriculture has been a key component in the rise of human civilization. Having a surplus of food has allowed humans to focus on improving others aspects of life, such as technology. In today's hard economic times, I feel as if it is important to remember where we come from and the community building potential of agriculture. Grow Food, Grow Hope will help people grow their own food, which in turn will open up other opportunities, as it has in the past."

Favorite quote: "There are no secrets to success. It is a result of preparation, hard work and learning from failure." - Colin Powell

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Name: Jessica Braun
Grow Food, Grow Hope position: Food Distribution Coordinator
Age: 22
Hometown: Wapakoneta, OH
Education: B.A. in French from the Ohio State University.

Favorite vegetable: "Potatoes, because they're delicious no matter how you cook them."

What Grow Food, Grow Hope means to me: "While watching our episode of Rachael Ray, I caught the most important statement in the entire episode: 'We're looking to Wilmington to inspire all of us,' and I think Rachael hit the nail on the head. Being here, working here, I'm going to be a part of what inspires and what changes peoples' lives everyday. We're not feeding people, we're changing the world, one meal at a time."

Favorite quote: "Mais les yeux sont aveugles. Il faut chercher avec le cœur." Translated: But the eyes are blind. One must look with the heart... " - The Little Prince

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Name: Aileen Ash
Grow Food, Grow Hope position: Grower's Co-Op Coordinator
Age: 24
Hometown: Glenside, PA
Education: B.S. in Wildlife Conservation Biology and International Development from the University of Rhode Island.

Favorite vegetable: "Squash"

What Grow Food, Grow Hope means to me: "I think we have lost the connection to our food, where it comes from, and the healthy labor involved. Grow Food Grow Hope will provide me with the opportunity to help a community in need reconnect with their food supply and with each other. I feel fortunate that I have found a place where my energy and efforts are needed.""

Favorite quote: "I only went out for a walk and finally concluded to stay out till sundown, for going out, I found, was really going in." - John Muir

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About Us

The Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative is a Wilmington College sponsored project which seeks to raise awareness of the benefits of local food production, backyard and community gardening, and increasing self-sustainability in our daily food habits. Both the city of Wilmington and Wilmington College have a history steeped in rich agricultural heritage, and we believe our environment to be the perfect incubator for local and sustainable food production.


Grow Food, Grow Hope is an AmeriCorps* VISTA project carried out by nine VISTA volunteers and a number of integral community partners. Our primary focus areas include community and backyard gardening, “buy local” campaigning, farmers markets, CSA education, youth and community outreach, research and data collection, and public relations.



As an organization, we facilitate a community garden on the W.C. campus, where families and volunteers tend to 20 plots of kitchen-ready herbs and vegetables. We have devoted an acre of land on the Wilmington College farm for bulk vegetable production, and the majority of the food harvested will be donated to local food pantries. We are partnering with the city of Wilmington and the Clinton County Regional Planning Commission in a Buy Local First campaign, the Clinton County Farmer's Market, and the  Demonstration Garden. Though all of these initiatives were begun well before Grow Food, Grow Hope opened its doors, we hope to offer extra outreach capacity both around the community and specifically on the Wilmington College campus.

As AmeriCorps* VISTA volunteers, our service to Wilmington and the people in this community is our primary concern. We hope to engage, empower and interact with local citizens, and we invite you to join us in our efforts to reduce the effects of poverty. By growing a little food, we can sow a lot of hope.

You can follow our progress online here, on Twitter (twitter.com/growfoodandhope) and on Facebook.

For more information call (937) 382-6661 ext. 693, or email growfoodgrowhope@wilmington.edu

In the News

Media coverage of the Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative.

Newspaper:

"Planting Commences at WC 'Grow Food, Grow Hope' Garden" Wilmington News Journal, (5/7/2009).

"Harvest Begins at 'Grow Food, Grow Hope' Garden" Wilmington News Journal, (6/5/2009).

"Hope, Gardens Nourish Town DHL Left" Columbus Dispatch, (7/12/2009)

"YMCA Day Campers Visit ECC Demonstration Garden" Wilmington News Journal, (7/28/09).

"Potato Pantry Better Be Supersized" Wilmington News Journal, (10/8/2009)

"Hard-hit Community Learns to Grow Food" Associated Press, (11/11/2009)

 "Community Garden Helps Locals Grow Fresh Food" Epoch times, (11/18/2009)
 
"Gardening projects accepting applications" Wilmington News Journal, (1/12/10)

Television / Online Video:

"Groups Provide Help for Unemployed in Wilmington" WLWT, Channel 5 Cincinnati, (7/16/09).

"Wilmington's Long Recession" 60 Minutes, CBS News magazine television show (12/20/09)

"Can a Democrat Win Ohio this Year?" The New York Times, nytimes.com (5/30/10)

Radio:


"Wilmington's Homegrown Hope, Part 2" WYSO Yellow Springs, NPR Affiliate

"Wilmington's Homegrown Hope, Part 3" WYSO Yellow Springs, NPR Affiliate



Gardening Reading List

Whether you're a veteran gardener, an enthusiastic hobbyist or a budding newbie, there is always new literature to consult to increase your know-how and fine tune your techniques.

Below are a handful of helpful books for gardeners of any skill level. All of the books can be bought locally at Books n' More in downtown Wilmington, where they are priced relatively close to their Amazon counterparts.

Trowel and Error: Over 700 Tips, Remedies and Shortcuts for the Gardener
Sharon Lovejoy

Brief synopsis:  

"Cure plant viruses with spoiled milk. Steep a natural and effective insecticide out of fresh basil. Place flat stones under squash or melons to hasten ripening. Recycle an old apple corer as the perfect dibber for muscari and other small bulbs. Start rosemary cuttings in a green glass bottle. Sprinkle baby powder over seedlings to discourage rabbits. Crush a garlic clove and apply it to your skin as an insect repellent. From urging the reader to take an occasional shower with the houseplants to giving all-natural gardenside first aid, "Trowel and Error" is a direct line to the kind of practical wisdom that comes only after a lifetime of experience. The book is indexed by problem, plant, pest, and solution, and includes a list of tools and common household items--borax, cornmeal, vinegar--that completes the gardener's arsenal.

Buy it locally
Buy it from Amazon

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All New Square Foot Gardening: Grow More in Less Space!
Mel Bartholomew

Brief synopsis:  

"When he created the 'square foot gardening' method, Mel Bartholomew, a retired engineer and efficiency expert, found the solution to the frustrations of most gardeners. His revolutionary system is simple: it's an ingenious planting method based on using square foot blocks of garden space instead of rows. Gardeners build up, not down, so there's no digging and no tilling after the first year. And the method requires less thinning, less weeding, and less watering.'

Buy it locally
Buy it from Amazon


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Gaia’s Garden: A Guide to Home-scale Permaculture
Toby Hemenway

Brief synopsis:

"Picture your backyard as one incredibly lush garden, filled with edible flowers, bursting with fruit and berries, and carpeted with scented herbs and tangy salad greens. The visual impact is of Monets palette, a wash of color, texture, and hue. But this is no still life. The flowers nurture endangered pollinators. Bright-featured songbirds feed on abundant berries and gather twigs for their nests.The plants themselves are grouped in natural communities, where each species plays a role in building soil, deterring pests, storing nutrients, and luring beneficial insects. And finally, you--good ol homo sapiens--are an integral part of the scene. Your garden tools are resting against a nearby tree, and have a slight patina of rust, because this garden requires so little maintenance. You recline into a hammock to admire your work. You have created a garden paradise.This is no dream, but rather an ecological garden, which takes the principles of permaculture and applies them on a home-scale. There is nothing technical, intrusive, secretive, or expensive about this form of gardening. All that is required is some botanical knowledge (which is in this book) and a mindset that defines a backyard paradise as something other than a carpet of grass fed by MiracleGro."

Buy it locally
Buy it from Amazon

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Garden My Heart: Organic Strategies for Backyard Sustainability
Cecil Bothwell

Brief synopsis:

Garden writer and editor Cecil Bothwell delivers a series of essays reflecting almost 40 years as an organic gardener, with characteristic insight and humor. The book is a guide through the seasons and the weeds, with ideas about edible landscaping and vermiculture, back yard ponds and alternatives to the suburban lawn, by a writer with a deep background in environmentalism and green living. Bothwell is the author of several books including the best-selling guide, Finding Your Way in Asheville, and the critically acclaimed biography, The Prince of War: Billy Graham's Crusade for a Wholly Christian Empire.

Buy it locally
Buy it from Amazon

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Garden Anywhere
Alys Fowler

Brief synopsis:

Have a small patch of soil? Or just a window box? Not a problem. Garden Anywhere shows how anyone can create an oasis in the smallest of spaces. We're not talking just a simple pot of marigolds, here. Garden Anywhere outlines everything an aspiring gardener needs to know to sow a bounteous, thriving garden. Alys Fowler, trained at the New York Botanical Garden, guides readers through the process from the ground up—from planning the garden to composting, pruning, harvesting, and propagating. Stylish photos illustrate the how-tos while Alys shares tips on creating gorgeous container gardens, herb gardens, kitchen gardens and more, without spending a fortune.

Buy it locally
Buy it from Amazon

How to Donate

Gifts and donations from you are what make this project possible, and we are beholden to them. When you give to Grow Food, Grow Hope, please know that your gift will have an immediate and tangible impact on the hungry in our community.

At the bottom of the donation form, make sure you select "Grow Food, Grow Hope" from the Annual Giving and Restricted Funds pull down tab.

CASH, CHECK or MONEY ORDER
Donations in check or cash can be sent to:

Pyle Center
1870 Quaker Way
Wilmington, OH 45177

Please be sure to put "Grow Food, Grow Hope" in the memo line of any checks.
Thank you, and we appreciate your dedication to our project.

Local Agencies

Below is a list of local need-based agencies who we work with regularly; click on the name of each organization to learn more about how to volunteer with them. An interactive map of those sites can be found below the list. Want your agency added to the list? Contact Jessica Braun, Food Distribution Coordinator, at (937) 382-6661 ext. 488.


Sugartree Ministries
180 E. Main Street
Wilmington, OH
45177
(937) 382-8359

Clinton County Community Action
789 N. Nelson Avenue
P.O. Box 32
Wilmington, OH
45177
(937) 382-4846

Clinton County Services for the Homeless
36 Gallup Street
Wilmington, OH
45177
(937) 382-6272

Blanchester First Church of God
726 N. Broadway St.
Blanchester, OH
45107
(937) 783-4719

Blanchester Community Food Pantry
318 E. Main Street
Blanchester, OH
45107
(937) 783-3334

United Methodist Church of New Vienna
11576 St. Rt. 28
New Vienna, OH
45159
(937) 987-2800

Jackson Area Ministries
6 Cambrian Avenue
Jackson, OH
45640
(740) 286-1320

Hope Emergency Program
5333 Kernan Road
Lynchburg, OH
45142
(937) 364-1055

Our Daily Bread 
133 E Main Street
Hillsboro, OH
45133
(937) 402-4543



View Local Food Agency Map in a larger map

Food Distribution



In the peak months of harvest season, the amount of food grown for donation on the Wilmington College Farm sometimes totals hundreds of pounds a day. There are several need-based agencies in Wilmington and Clinton County that give food to the hungry, and we make sure they have fresh, nutritious produce as often as possible.

In 2009 we donated more than 10,000 lbs. of food to local organizations. We work most often with Sugartree Ministries, the largest food pantry in the County. We also distribute to Clinton County Community Action, the Wilmington Homeless Shelter and Jackson Area Ministries, among others. Does your organization distribute food to those in need? Contact our Food Distribution Coordinator below.


In 2010 we hope to expand both the amount of food we are able to grow and the agencies to which we distribute. If you or organization would like more information about our food distribution, please contact:

Jessica Braun
Food Distribution Coordinator
Wilmington College AmeriCorps* VISTA
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative
(937) 382-6661 ext. 488
 

Our Calendar

Clinton County Fresh Network


The mission of the Clinton County Fresh Network is straightforward – to strengthen the local fresh food economy in Clinton County. Working towards this mission, we aim to create a viable and sustainable local food system with direct links between local farmers and local consumers, between local production and local consumption.

In a community with such a rich agricultural heritage, we want to ensure that all citizens in Clinton County have access to nutritious, affordable, local food. At the same time, we want to provide the support that will enable local farmers to secure a living from growing and selling local, fresh food.

This is a new initiative with actionable goals and measurable results. Read below for information about our local food survey.

Your participation in this survey is the crucial first step in building the Clinton County Fresh Network, a coalition made up of local growers, restaurant owners, grocers, academics, food providers, hunger advocates, government representatives, and local leaders. By contributing your information, you are helping to form the relationships between fresh food producers and consumers that make up the very foundation of the Fresh Network. We hope to use the results of this survey to gain awareness of both the current and the future potential fresh food supply in Clinton County.

All of the information collected from the surveys will be kept anonymous and confidential. If you select to take part in the Clinton County Fresh Network contact list, only your farm contact information and your production details (what you produce at your farm) will be made public in the Fresh Network directory. This Fresh Network directory will offer a variety on free online and print marketing opportunities to reach local consumers.

If you have any questions or would like to learn more about the Clinton County Fresh Network, please contact Dessie Buchanan at dessie@buylocalcc.com or dessie@clintoncountyfarmersmarket.com.

Your participation in the Clinton County Fresh Network survey is valued and greatly appreciated.

Youth Programming




Learn & Grow is the youth-oriented component of the Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative. Through Learn & Grow, we are committed to bringing the core values of fresh food access and education to children through activities and workshops that get kids in the dirt and having fun. Currently, we coordinate educational activities at local pre-schools, Head Start and garden sites around Clinton County to bring standards-based curriculum directly to the classrooms of local children.



As we expand our outreach in Wilmington and Clinton County, we are looking to children first to be models for their peers and hopefully the rest of their families. If we can instill the importance of fresh and nutritious food while kids are young and still developing, they will be more likely to carry those values with them into their adulthood, and eventually teach their children the same concepts.




Are you interested in participating in or volunteering with one of our youth activities? Contact the VISTA members below for more information on how to get involved.


Rachel King
Youth Outreach/Research & Data Collection
Wilmington College AmeriCorps*VISTA
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative
(937) 382-6661 ext. 596

Amy Volz
Youth Outreach Coordinator
Wilmington College AmeriCorps*VISTA
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative
(937) 382-6661 ext. 596

Michelle Kerschner
Youth Outreach & Camps Coordinator
Wilmington College AmeriCorps*VISTA
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative
(937) 382-6661 ext. 596

Cooking Demonstrations


The cooking demonstrations during our community garden night, which feature recipes using ingredients harvested on-site, have become a popular feature of our weekly gathering. On this page you'll find the recipes for dishes prepared during these demonstrations, as well as instructional videos explaining how to prepare them.

Recipes

Dips
Lemon Sage Dip
Radish Leaf Pesto
Radish Dip
Herb & Lemon Goat Cheese Spread
Fresh Spinach Dip

Salads
Wilted Lettuce Salad
Strawberry Spinach Salad

Side Dishes
Sauteed Radishes with Thyme
Stir-Fry Hot Cabbage

Video Tutorials

Radish Pesto


Radish Dip


Lemon Sage Dip

Backyard Garden Project


Drawing on the success of our community garden in 2009, in 2010 we are taking small-plot gardening into the backyards of families around our community, with hopes of increasing access to fresh and nutritious food— one seed at a time.

By using the square-foot gardening method made famous by Mel Bartholomew, small-plot gardening is a manageable and productive way to augment a family's food supply and introduce the concepts of growing food from seed. We have created a goal of 35 new backyard gardens around Wilmington and Clinton County.

All of the resources needed to build, plant and maintain the gardens will be provided by Grow Food, Grow Hope for a modest fee of $25 to off-set the cost of supplies. There are a limited number of sponsorships for this program. Volunteers and GFGH staff members will make weekly site visits to the homes of garden families to help weed and harvest, to answer any questions the families might have and to monitor the overall progress of the garden bed.


For more information about our 2011 Backyard Garden Project, contact the AmeriCorps* VISTA member below:

Kaity Best

Backyard Gardens and Nutritional Education
Wilmington College AmeriCorps* VISTA
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative
(937) 382-6661 ext. 693


Buy Local WC



Spearheaded by the Clinton County Regional Planning Commission (CCRPC) and Main Street Wilmington, the Buy Local First campaign aims to educate the county about the enormous benefits of spending their money locally, at local businesses and restaurants. It is a coalition of businesses, residents, non-profit organizations and public officials with one singular common interest: advancing and strengthening the local economy by keeping as much money within Clinton County as possible.


Buy Local WC is Grow Food, Grow Hope's role within the Buy Local campaign. It is focused specifically on the Wilmington College campus, where some 1,200 potential shoppers spend 9 months of their year. We've been working to publicize local businesses through the Buy Local WC website as an alternative to chain stores like Wal-Mart whenever it is possible (we realize that sometimes it is not). Our small business owners are residents of this community just as we are, and when they thrive, we all do.

For more information about the Buy Local First Campaign, contact:


Jessica Braun
Food Distribution & Buy Local WC
Wilmington College AmeriCorps* VISTA
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative
jessica_braun@wilmington.edu
(937) 382-6661 ext. 306


For all blog posts about the Buy Local First Campaign, click here.

Wilmington College Farm

Wilmington College has long been an agricultural mainstay in our community and in the state of Ohio. In fact, only two colleges in the state offer four-year degrees in agriculture: Ohio State University in Columbus, and Wilmington.

We are grateful to be able to benefit from this history of agricultural education and production. Along those lines, we have devoted an acre of farmland on one of the colleges vast academic farms to bulk vegetable production. All of the produce harvested from the college farms are donated to area food pantries and organizations that serve the hungry in Clinton County. In 2009 we planted more than 500 tomato plants, a 1/4 acre of sweetcorn and potatoes, dozens of rows of peppers, squash, zucchini and pumpkins, among other vegetables.


Each Wednesday during the peak 2009 harvest season, Grow Food, Grow Hope VISTAs prepared individual bags of assorted produce and passed them out at Sugartree Ministries, the busiest food kitchen in the county. By late August 2009, we had harvested some 2,212 lbs. of tomatoes, 136 dozen ears of corn and 29 lbs. of peppers, all donated to local agencies. And we fully expect the harvest to be productive into early fall.


For more information about volunteering, what's grown on the farm or who we donate to, please contact:

Jennifer Kerschner
Community Garden & Edible Landscape Coordinator
Wilmington College AmeriCorps* VISTA
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative
jennifer_kerschner@wilmington.edu
(937) 382-6661 ext. 488



To see all blog posts about the Wilmington College Farm, click here.

Our Projects












Our Collaborative Projects





Edible Landscaping


A growing trend in vegetable gardening is planting landscape around buildings and public places with edible fruits, vegetables and herbs. In 2009, Wilmington College Department of Agriculture Chair Monte Anderson arranged the planting of a variety of edible plants around the campus' library.

People seldom see the flowers and plants that bear the fruits and vegetables that they buy in the supermarket, and often have trouble identifying a food's plant source. Food can be beautiful too, and green-space can be most productive when we are sustained by it.


Planted this year were tomatoes, eggplant, strawberries, peppers, chard, mustard, cilantro, dill and a handful of other herbs. The plants were open to the public for picking or harvesting, and all that was required in return was to log each item taken in a notebook inside the library.

In 2010 we are looking to expand the edible landscaping to include other plants and placed at other buildings around campus.

For more information about edible landscaping, please contact:


Jennifer Kerschner
Community Garden & Edible Landscape Coordinator
Wilmington College AmeriCorps* VISTA
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative
jennifer_kerschner@wilmington.edu
(937) 382-6661 ext. 488


To see all blog posts about edible landscaping, click here.

Grow Food, Grow Hope Demonstration Garden


The Grow Food, Grow Hope Demonstration Garden was opened in June of 2009 at the J.W. Denver Williams Memorial Park in Wilmington, with the purpose of demonstrating that a considerable amount of food can be grown in a relatively small amount of space. The Demonstration Garden serves as yet another opportunity for community members to see how easy and beneficial at-home and community gardening can be!

The garden is maintained by GFGH and community volunteers. The beds are split into four sections which feature a wide variety of vegetables and herbs. In the beds are: green beans, muskmelon, nasturtiums, cucumbers, squash, garlic, turnips, radishes, kohlrabi, onions, tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, eggplant, various herbs and a covercrop of buckwheat.


Grow Food, Grow Hope is constantly looking into new ways to involve children in local food initiatives and gardening in general.

If you would like more information about the J.W. Denver Demonstration Garden, please contact:


Meghan Otto
Project Manager
Wilmington College
Grow Food, Grow Hope Garden Initiative
meghan_otto@wilmington.edu
(937) 382-6661 ext. 321


To see all posts about the Demonstration Garden, click here.