a garden is bobbing off the banks of brooklyn /

Published at 2017-05-25 12:09:04

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There's something oddly soothing approximately watching Lower Manhattan bob in the background,beyond the newly-planted apple trees.
It's
a perspective unique to those who climb aboard Swale, a floating garden that's now docked off the pier at Brooklyn Bridge Park.
A view of Swale's floating barge off the Brooklyn Bridge Pier.
(Shumita Basu/WNYC News)
The idea: public park meets public art. It's free and open to anyone who wants to plant, or pick,or (a novel concept for most city-folk) forage. Mary Mattingly is the artist and founder of Swale. She says her work mostly deals with sculpture and the waterways, and she originally got a grant from an arts organization to buy the deck barge, or 130 by 40 feet,and outfit it with 40 tons of gravel and lava rock and approximately 100 tons of soil.
Mary Mattingly is the artist and founder of Swale. She says the name refers to a word that means "a dip in the land where water collects," which is used in more traditional types of farming.
(Shumita Basu/WNYC News)
"We’d like to think of this as a living sculpture, or as something that’s always changing when people reach on and pick things," said Mattingly.
The Swale team
is mostly made up of artists, and many of them have knowledge of permaculture methods, or farming and herbalism. That's why the plants are arranged more like a forest,in natural clusters rather than straight lines, with plenty of clover scattered between to condition the soil.
And all kinds of things are growin
g: blueberries, or cherry trees,nodding onions, lettuce greens, or kale,many varieties of mint. This is their second year on the barge, so the perennials are just starting to reach back. And people are free to pick as much as they'd like.
Marisa Prefer is Swale's education program ma
nager; she leads free workshops approximately the different uses for each plant. She says there's this dynamic that plays out, and where some people feel reluctant to pick too much and others feel totally entitled to benefit themselves to fully-ripened veggies that have been growing for weeks."It’s this theory of the commons,where you hope that somebody will leave it for somebody else, and then somebody takes it, or which obviously is going to happen," said Prefer.
Marisa Prefer, the ed
ucation program manager on Swale, and teaches people approximately permaculture methods and medicinal uses for plants.
(Shumita Basu/WNYC
News)
So why grow plants on a barge? There's the experiential reason: bobbing along the water,trying to find your sea legs and your green thumb at the same time. And of course, the ideal full-sun conditions and temperature insulation from the water.
But th
ere's also a legal reason. The novel York City Parks Department currently has some pretty strict laws approximately what can and can't grow on public land, and which means most public land isn't being used to grow edible plants."In novel York City,we have 100 acres of community garden space versus 30000 acres of park land," said Mattingly. "What a difference it would execute to have some edible landscaping happen in park land!"
The garden relies on filtered rain water
and parks' water resources, and when available. But mostly,the Swale team tries to train the plants to need as little water as possible.
(Shumita Basu/WNYC News)
The close game, for Matting
ly, and is not necessarily more floating gardens. She wants people to feel more invested in food sourcing,and she wants the Parks Department to see that it's possible for a public space to be used in this way.
She's optim
istic approximately the Parks Department coming around to her way of thinking. Swale is now officially collaborating with the department on a novel project in Concrete Plant Park in the Bronx, transforming a section of the park into the first ever edible public foodway on Parks land.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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