Home gardens bloom as neighbors share
PLANTING greenery at home and sharing seeds with neighbors has become popular among some locals looking to relieve depression amid the coronavirus epidemic.
Sun Jie, a 30-year-old blogger and a mother of two, now spends about four hours a day taking care of succulent scallion, carrot, potato and several other pot plants on her balcony as well as in a community garden in Yangpu District.
She said the plants have brought happiness to her family, while they have to stay at home most of the time due to the epidemic.
“I tell my son and daughter that we are undergoing trouble, just like the plants must experience wind and rain while growing,” Sun said. “They feel less anxious about the epidemic now.”
She also gives well-wrapped seeds, such as loquat and cinnamon trees collected from both her balcony and community garden as, to her neighbors in the 580 Guoding Road community. All the seeds have been disinfected.
About 30 young parents have accepted the seeds and joined Sun’s growing campaign. “The epidemic gives us more time at home,” Sun said. They share planting and parenting experiences through WeChat.
Initiated by Liu Yuelai, a professor with Tongji University, the non-profit Seeding campaign attracted over 200 participants within a week. They are mainly young local workers like Sun, who are working at home during the novel coronavirus outbreak.
They raise plants at home and put wrapped seeds or rootstocks in public areas of neighborhoods with notes inviting others to take part.
The Clover Nature School, a non-government organization founded by Liu, teaches planting skills and also delivers seeds, soils and organic fertilizer free when more than 10 residents in a neighborhood are willing to join in the campaign.
“We hope that those who stay indoors for epidemic prevention can feel a taste of spring through potted plants on their balcony or terrace,” Liu said.
Liu was inspired to launch the campaign by a friend in central China’s Wuhan City, the heart of the novel coronavirus pneumonia outbreak.
Professor Zhang Jianfei from Wuhan University said that mint and garlic sprouts she planted on her balcony brought her hope and calmness during the bleakest quarantine periods after the epidemic broke out in January.
“I hope the epidemic will end soon before the farming season for me to plant towel gourd, bitter gourd, water spinach and other green vegetables,” Zhang wrote in a message to Liu.
Meanwhile, neighbors are expected to rebuild mutual trust and warm relationships through the non-contact gardening and exchange campaign, Liu added.
Liu notes that people often want to establish closer relationships with neighbors during disasters.
Post-disaster cities in southwest China’s Sichuan Province and Taiwan Island as well as some Japanese cities have developed better social governance and community relationships than elsewhere, according to Liu’s research.
“People can easily realize that community and neighbors are their only support during earthquakes, tsunamis or the epidemic this time,” he added.
Liu’s organization offers instructions on how to wrap seeds and put them in safe public places for others to collect, as well as how to write notes to ask for seeds from neighbors.
It also teaches how to obtain rootstocks from vegetables such as potato, garlic, leek, mint and chili, which can be easily planted at home.
Some planters can even enrich their dining tables with homegrown vegetables.
Retired professor Wang Bowei of Tongji has been planting vegetables on the balcony for several years. The former senior architect can harvest enough vegetables for a whole family throughout the year.
“There is no other skill but to follow the wisdom of the ancestors and plant the right vegetables during the corresponding solar terms,” Wang said. For instance, gourds and beans must be planted before the Qingming Festival, while carrot should be put into the soil before summer.
“Planting vegetables is my little trick to establish a close emotional bond with nature,” said Wang. “It reminds me to always pay respect to the heavens and to nature, though we are living in concrete high-rises,” he added.
After the epidemic, participants of the Seeding campaign can move their plants to nearby community gardens and take care of them with neighbors.
Liu’s Clover Nature School has injected vitality to about 60 community gardens at local neighborhoods.
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