Saturday

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[this is good]
I think guerrilla gardening is a wonderful idea. As I was reading this I was thinking of an ideal piece of land on the NE corner of 13th and Classen. Some friends of mine recently purchased a house that backs up to this lot. They are always complaining about all the homeless people in the area (they have found evidence of several sleeping in their yard prior to them actually occupying the house), but unfortunately they are plotting to run the homeless out of the neighborhood. I suppose this means that if you were to plant a garden behind their house they would go out there personally to destroy it. There's also an empty lot directly across the street from my house. It's at the end of a dead end street, but the back of the lot can be easily accessed from a bridge that crosses the interstate. There's a gap in the fences plenty big enough for someone to walk through. Maybe you should come look at it.
They are always complaining about all the homeless people in the area (they have found evidence of several sleeping in their yard prior to them actually occupying the house), but unfortunately they are plotting to run the homeless out of the neighborhood.

Yeah, that's a big problem. Every time the homeless find somewhere they feel is safe and from which they can begin to rebuild their lives, they get run off. Their resources are dwindling, no one wants them around, but they have to go somewhere.

Sure, I'll come look at the plot.

I'll need to find out who owns it, what they plan with it and if they mind it being planted in the interim with the understanding that if they choose to sell or develope it, we'll lose access to it to garden it. It'll probably get overgrown with weeds (most of the niche plots have, but they've also produced a surprising amount of edibles), and whatever gets planted there will have to grow with seriously benign neglect. That's why I've been calling it "guerrilla gardening" - gardening as and when we can, in hit or miss fashion.

I'll need to find out who owns it,

I can answer that for you. It it owned by the state highway department. When the highway was originally built there was a house on it. Shortly after the highway was finished the house began to fall apart so it was purchased, condemned, and torn down. They generally only mow it when someone who lives around here (usually us) calls to complain. Now that Ken owns a brushhog he's been talking about doing the mowing himself (it'll take him about 10 minutes). If he decides to start doing that your garden will be safe.
Thanks! Getting permission from the state highway department is easy peasy.

It'll still be weedy, though. Even at my home gardens I can't keep up with the weeds. I don't expect homeless people or volunteers to be better at weeding than I am.
Weeding isn't my thing either. 8:-)

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