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magazine / so05 / indepth

In-depth

The Ottawa Valley

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Canadian Geographic feature
Agricultural city
Rural evolution
    Farmers’ Markets
Urban preservation
    “Treatise of an urban farmer”
Top 10 adventures
    Down in the Valley
Toxic solution
Ghost towns
Burying the past

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Wedged between a 400-series highway and a densly-populated co-operative housing neighbourhood, Strathcona Community Garden in Ottawa’s central-east end makes the most of a small green space.

Treatise of an urban farmer
Maintaining a tie to the land in the middle of the city

Learn more:
• The Canadian Atlas Online: Learn more about this region

External links:
• Cuba’s Second Revolution
• The Death and Life of Great American Cities
• Canadian Central Experimental Farm

I’m often surprised that anything grows in my garden plot at Bytown Urban Gardens (BUGS), pinned between constant construction and the roaring highway in downtown Ottawa. Each tomato seems like a miracle.

I’ve had a plot — and been a member of the steering committee — at BUGS in Ottawa for three summers now. Each year, I come together with fellow gardeners to take a gamble on our little patch of dirt and share the communal chores. Like other farmers, we don’t know which crops will fail and which will succeed. We don’t know if the squirrels — or the teenagers — will steal our produce.

Living in a house that doesn’t have a yard and next to a street that is under endless construction, I go to the garden to distance myself from the urban blight and the stresses of modern life.


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I enjoy the cross-section of urban dwellers that make up my garden’s community: There is Richard, who only grows onions and lovingly cares for the compost. David has turned part of his plot into a play area for his young sons. A collective household maintains their collective garden. An 86-year-old French woman is growing everything bio-dynamically (definition). One year, someone grew a small field of wheat. This year we have a collective strawberry patch. We are as eclectic a group as one would expect from downtown living.

At my garden, I see people who live in poverty and are able to grow a little food for themselves, and others who generously give their surplus to others. I see stressed-out or depressed people coming to the garden to heal their minds. I see people learning and sharing skills. I see people helping others and breaking the isolation of their homes. I see people trying on leadership and finding it suits them.

This is why I fought so hard to protect my garden when it was threatened by the City of Ottawa’s bid to sell off surplus land last year. The land had been sold for housing and the city spun the situation as gardening versus desperately needed housing. It never occurred to them that the same people need both food and an affordable place to sleep. In the end, we succeeded in ensuring that a garden will stay on the site, even when the building is complete, allowing the connection we’ve forged with both the community and the land stand, and hopefully, flourish.

By Natasha Beaudin


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