1. |
Access to land |
Community gardens are sometimes such a fluctuating activity (…) due to the system we live in, how expensive the land is. It is very difficult for some gardens to stay in the same place for a longer time, for more than five years, for example, due to land reasons [expert / 50–60] |
fear of losing space for a garden – temporariness and uncertainty about the future of the garden |
2. |
(…) from one year to the next, we were extending the occupancy permit for this land and it was done in a simple way, we wrote to the district office, which agreed for a year, because it was never known when this plot of land would disappear (…) it was a safety buffer for road expansion (…) So, we sat on top of a ticking time bomb, not knowing when this plot would be sold (…) [activist, gardener / 40–50] |
3. |
Ownership of the space |
There is some kind of mixed model that everyone has some space of their own, but there is also a common space that we take care of. Or totally community-based that we have a common space, we plant together, we cultivate together, we use it together [activist, gardener / 30–40] |
sense of the lack of ownership |
4. |
(…) maybe people lack a sense of ownership? Maybe, if it is not written that it is theirs, they do not fully feel the possibility of getting involved in it [gardener / 60–70] |
5. |
It seems to me that in Poland it is impossible to build on something that is fully public and common, that there is something in our nature that makes it necessary for us to know that something belongs to us [expert / 40–50] |
6. |
Ownership of crops |
Probably yes, it happens quite often [that someone ‘steals’ a tomato or a cucumber], it is quite normal, that we probably do not get too attached to these crops, that we give ourselves some slack that maybe someone will just pick it and we won’t cry [gardener / 30–40] |
ownership of crops is important |
7. |
Proximity |
It seems to me that this is the most important thing – that it should be close to these people, within view. That these gardens should not be hidden somewhere in the distance, but just be localised between the blocks of flats [expert, gardener / 30–40] |
necessity of close garden location in relation to one’s place of residence |
8. |
But, also, from such activity of this garden and from the fact that the garden requires constant care, it can be seen that people who lived here in the area, could drop in and do something on the way from or to work, they were much more involved than people from the other districts [expert, gardener / 50–60] |
9. |
Community |
I see, the residents really come, take care of it [garden], etc. But there they also have a community that has been living there for many, many years (…) on the principle that there is a cohesive community [expert / 30–40] |
sense of belonging and creating a community |
10. |
(…) take into account how it should be developed throughout the whole year or for several years, and not just be a whim for one season (...) to prevent this, you have to approach it wisely and take into account that this community around the garden simply has to just keep meeting during the winter [expert / 50–60] |
11. |
Regular work |
(…) this work is similar to adopting a pet. And it’s just like that – that I don’t adopt a pet and then go away. Cultivating plants is year-round work, requiring regularity, and people do not know this, they are not ready for it (...) They would just like to play. It is fun, but it is also work [expert / 30–40] |
responsibility and systemisation of gardening activity |
12. |
Operating model |
(…) as [Name 6] mentioned, a very systematic approach to the matter is needed here, a very strong coordination of these activities, from the beginning of determining what it should look like, who should manage it, who should take care of it, simply by name, who has what duties. It must be established, because if we don’t have such arrangements, then there will always be some problems (…) It could be done by volunteers (…) only that it would have to be well planned [activist, gardener / 30–40] |
need for organisation and management |
13. |
(…) some models are needed (…) Because they operate, from my observations, in this way – I am talking about community gardens now – in a somewhat guerilla, undefined way, which largely depends on what is the private knowledge of people who work in cultural institutions [activist, gardener / 50–60] |