Queen goes green with veg patch – what can we do?

Posted on June 14th, 2009 in Allotments, Discussion, GardenLend, Gardening, Gardening News, News, garden sharing by GardenLend

According to a recent report by Peter Hunt, BBC News’ Royal correspondent, “The Queen is the proud owner of an allotment. The royal sustainable vegetable patch has been dug inside the 40-acre grounds of Buckingham Palace. The capital’s biggest private garden is the setting for the Queen’s annual garden parties and it is also home to a lake, a helicopter landing area and a tennis court where King George VI used to play against Fred Perry. The Queen can look forward to savouring the fruits of her gardeners’ labours.  Soon to be served at the royal table will be a range of produce including runner beans, leeks, beetroot and an endangered variety of climbing French beans called Blue Queen. It is the brainchild of the Queen’s deputy head gardener, Claire Midgeley.

Which is nice and shows our monarch ‘mucking in’ to some degree – which can only be a good thing.

This does raise the question for us lesser folk who do not have a spare palace or castle to turn over to the land: what can we do?

Following Her Majesty’s example, looking out directly around our various estates, there is quite a bit of green space that is not really doing anything, not even just looking pretty and providing relaxation and solace – ripe for agricultural development.  Step 2 is the really cunning bit: if it is not in your gift to just march in and plant whatever you like, just ask the owner or person entrusted with looking after the said plot if it would be alright to plant some fruit & veg, tend the land and share in the bounty.

This has been the ethos set forth by GardenLend since its inception in 2006: keep it local, personal and sustainable.  If you are still stuck for somewhere to plant, tend and till, then why not join GardenLend and post a message on the boards saying for what you are looking and where you are based?  Similarly, should you have the odd county, field or patch of garden that could do with becoming more productive, why not sign up and post your request for serfs to till the land frustrated gardeners to transform it into a horticultural Paradise?

You will help save the planet, save yourselves a fortune and follow a Royal example.  What could be better?

Full story at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8098799.stm

“Land Share” goes live

Posted on April 11th, 2009 in Allotments, Discussion, GardenLend, Gardening, Gardening News, News, Organic gardening, garden sharing by GardenLend

The “Land Share” listings pages have gone live, according to the email I received this morning:

http://landshare.channel4.com/

What is Landshare?

  1. A place linking people who want to grow their own fruit & veg to space where they can grow it
  2. A network of help and expertise

Another iron in the fire is always welcome in the continued efforts to put neglected land and gardens to better use.

See previous related blog entries at http://blog.gardenlend.co.uk/tag/landshare/

Your thoughts are – as ever – more than welcome.

There is still the option to join GardenLend – I trust our efforts will continue in parallel with this new site to the aim of making gardening and horticultural space available more to those who want it, whilst providing a service for those who have land that they can no longer tend.

Gardeners’ Waterloo

Posted on March 25th, 2009 in GardenLend by GardenLend

The London Paper has a fascinating article on where to plant if you do not have a garden.  Places suggested include: balconies, window boxes, rooftops and (hence the bad pun) Wellingtons.  Read the full story at:

http://www.thelondonpaper.com/cs/Satellite/london/eat/article/1157160556234?packedargs=suffix%3DArticleController

Another method that springs to mind is to ask your friends and neighbours if they have garden space that they would let you turn over to horticultural use.  You could even go so far as to join GardenLend, one of the longest established land and garden sharing schemes.

Please join at http://find.GardenLend.co.uk

“Frome goes crazy for allotments”

Posted on March 14th, 2009 in GardenLend by GardenLend

“An influx of allotment applicants has prompted Frome Town Council to appeal for residents with large or derelict gardens to come forward.

Around 80 people are on the waiting list for a plot in one of the seven sites in Frome, and now the council is considering a number of new ideas to help these people gain a pitch.

The council, which now owns all the sites, has already been sub-dividing a few of the larger 115 plots, and has been looking at buying and renting new sites in the town.

But so far this has proved fruitless.”

From http://www.thisissomerset.co.uk/news/Frome-goes-crazy-allotments/article-768935-detail/article.html

My suggestion would be to look towards neglected and underused gardens with a view to asking the owners if they would like to share them with the burgeoning number of allotment growers.  This would provide numerous additional social and personal benefits, leading to greater social cohesion, along with fruit, vegetables and a better quality of life all round.  What will the good Burghers of Frome decide? You’ll have to read the article at http://www.thisissomerset.co.uk/news/Frome-goes-crazy-allotments/article-768935-detail/article.html

Blogs, shoots and leaves

Welcome back to GardenLend

Got a garden? Fed up with it? Can’t cope any longer? Just not interested? Have the weeds taken over?

Want a garden? Frustrated green fingers? Not even a balcony? No window sill? Dreaming of flowers and vegetables?

Look no further. Well, only a little further.

GardenLend is a website that links up neglected gardens and their owners with keen gardeners who have nowhere to garden.  The site has undergone a revamp and we aim to have as much as possible of the services and features available online.

Registering at our members’ area all that it takes to start to solve your problems. We provide the contacts and you take it from there.”

Such a simple and brilliant idea – almost foolproof, it would seem – but few, if any takers so far and – equally mysteriously – no indications why this revolutionary approach to rescuing neglected gardens and to maximising the enjoyment of limited green space that we have to the greatest benefit of the most people has not been the rip-roaring success that it merits.

In the wake of the Environmental Audit Committee report on Carbon Trading, what better way to add to your personal carbon credits?

The Idea

GardenLend.co.uk is one of those sublimely simple ideas that – to coin a phrase – “does what it says on the tin” and as such is almost above explanation.  Just in case we have missed the point, it is a forum allowing garden owners to advertise for people to help and for those wishing to plant and grow fruit, vegetables and flowers to find such places to a mutually beneficial outcome.  In addition, the planet gets to look a bit prettier, carbon dioxide levels reduce, healthier food grows in season in more natural surrounds and everyone is a little less stressed about the forthcoming Armageddon, or at least whence the next courgette is coming.

The site and its features

In addition to Gardeners Wanted and Gardens Wanted, there are discussion forums (fora & fauna?) on a range of subjects: Introductions, New Members, Ask GardenLend, General Advice, Container Gardening, Edible Gardening, Garden Design, Green Gardening, Grass and Lawns, plus Gardening News and General Discussion in the members’ area.

A blog about GardenLend and related horticultural, political and amusing thoughts on the great gardening issues of the day provides an irregular update on matters of interest, allowing visitors to contribute to the great debating points of the moment.

The site also boasts an online shop where people can also find garden supplies and books, as well as links to sites of interest to gardeners.  For the more enterprising amongst our visitors, www.GardenLend.com offers e-Commerce Web Hosting for all that you need for your own online store.

The history of GardenLend

GardenLend.co.uk started as a joint collaboration between the husband and wife team of Ian and Sarah Springham, back in 2006.  The initial idea was Sarah’s: “When I was a child I grew up in a house with a big garden. My mother taught me to garden and I loved it. As I grew up, I moved to smaller and smaller places until I ended up with just a balcony. I really missed my garden and took up an allotment. Every day as I walk there, I pass a lot of neglected gardens and want to knock on the door of the house and say ‘Can I have your garden, please?’  With this site, I hope to enable frustrated gardeners to do just that. I’m sure that behind the door is someone who looks out of their window every day and wishes that someone would transform their garden into a thing of beauty. My husband, Ian, had to do gardening as a punishment as a child, but now enjoys our allotment and thinks this is a great idea. Between us, we can make this work and bring pleasure to more people.”

Ian is an IT professional of what seems to be many, many decades’ standing and needed a project for an online course in web entrepreneurship – thus another marriage made in Heaven was struck and the site was developed.

Initially, the site contained almost all that it now does, but in a pretty static and – dare I say it? – slightly bland format; the idea was so great that it did not seem to need much frippery attached.  Providing a constant stream of home-generated content did seem a trifle daunting, but we pressed on regardless. Regardless of low activity on the site, little rescuing of gardens or gardeners and almost no income from this noble venture. 

We sent out press releases, thought up brilliant promotional schemes, were featured a couple of times in our local newspaper – even being nominated for the Green Guardian Awards last year, optimised the site for search engines – key terms getting right to the top 10 on Google listings, did everything that we could think of to get GardenLend off the ground, but still no joy.

A change of approach was the only solution: the site had an overhaul, the low membership fee of £5.00 abandoned; the site, blog, forum and shop linked together more tightly and the whole endeavour became focussed much more on interaction with Gardeners and Garden Owners. 

The present situation

As shown, GardenLend.co.uk has been extensively revamped, with the aim of making it freely accessible to the burgeoning numbers of people wishing to grow their own fruit, vegetables and flowers and to those with green spaces that they feel are not being used to their greatest potential.  Ancillary services, such as the shop, with its host of accessories and books for home and garden plus the latest “reviewed and recommended reading” and the blog also cater for the needs, material and philosophical, of our growing membership.

Membership is free and relatively easy to join  There are few restrictions, outside of the usual ones regarding legality, privacy, common sense, taste, decency, good manners and appropriateness.  So what are you waiting for?

The future

World food prices soar while you have an unproductive garden – does this make sense?  With allotments as rare as hen’s teeth these days, why not turn your garden into one?  Can’t be bothered or have no time? Join GardenLend and meet up with gardeners with no place to garden IN YOUR AREA and then you can both benefit from what your garden can produce.  With the economy in a downward spiral and food prices rising, doesn’t it make sense to maximize the value of your home by turning your plot into an old-fashioned kitchen garden?  You can grow fruit, vegetables and herbs – saving money and getting better quality than you can from supermarkets.  Your carbon footprint will be down and your feel-good factor up.  You can grow the basics that you use every day, or expensive produce like asparagus that will soon be even more of a treat than you’d like. 

Join GardenLend and get growing.  Find a garden or a gardener on our site.  Help save the planet and your money too!

Links

Site: http://www.gardenlend.co.uk/

Members: http://find.gardenlend.co.uk/

Blog: http://blog.gardenlend.co.uk/

Shop: http://shop.gardenlend.co.uk

Email: info@gardenlend.co.uk


[1] Environmental Audit Committee

http://www.parliament.uk/eacom/

 

[2] MPs back personal carbon credits

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7419724.stm

 

 

Welcome back to GardenLend

Posted on April 11th, 2008 in GardenLend by GardenLend

Got a garden? Fed up with it? Can’t cope any longer? Just not interested? Have the weeds taken over?

Want a garden? Frustrated green fingers? Not even a balcony? No window sill? Dreaming of flowers and vegetables?

Look no further. Well, only a little further.

GardenLend is a website that links up neglected gardens and their owners with keen gardeners who have nowhere to garden.  The site has undergone a revamp and we aim to have as much as possible of the services and features available online.

Registering at our members’ area all that it takes to start to solve your problems. We provide the contacts and you take it from there.

You can also find garden supplies on our pages and links to sites of interest to gardeners, as well as our shop.

Ian (ian@gardenlend.co.uk)

http://www.gardenlend.co.uk/