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WWII-era ‘victory gardens’ make a comeback amid coronavirus

Published on March 31, 2020

Dr. Meade Krosby and her daughter Juniper, 8, look through their garden together in their Fremont backyard on March 23, 2020. The family is planting vegetables in order to remain as self sufficient as they can in response to COVID-19. “I want to make people aware that if you have a sunny window or patio, you can grow stuff too,” Krosby says.
Dr. Meade Krosby and her daughter Juniper, 8, look through their garden together in their Fremont backyard on March 23, 2020. The family is planting vegetables in order to remain as self sufficient as they can in response to COVID-19. “I want to make people aware that if you have a sunny window or patio, you can grow stuff too,” Krosby says. Image Credit: Dorothy Edwards, Crosscut.

For Washington’s hobby gardeners, late winter and early spring are often times to dream of summer blooms and yards. But with a pandemic poised to kill more Americans than have died in world wars, some are repurposing their personal plots into a new generation of victory gardens — symbols of self-reliance, food production and community resilience not seen since wartime.

While Gov. Jay Inslee says Washington’s food supply chain is sound, many local gardeners are echoing a broader national desire to be proactive during the coronavirus crisis.

“One of the positive spins of COVID-19 is the response from the community, and the need for folks to get out there and garden,” says Kenya Fredie, program supervisor of all 90 P-Patch community gardens in Seattle. “[P-Patches] are unique ways to grow your own food during these economically uncertain times. We can be social with the distancing, getting people out of isolation and into the sunshine, getting their hands in the soil.”

Dr. Meade Krosby, senior scientist at the University of Washington Climate Impacts Group, says once the coronavirus pandemic shuttled everyone indoors, she found room among her ornamental, drought-tolerant, wildlife-conscious plants for food plants. She’s starting with a 5-by-7.5-foot plot in her backyard.

As the daughter of a World War II history professor and granddaughter of Norwegians who kept a garden during that war, she acknowledges the war analogy isn’t perfect for our current situation. But the ideals of self-sufficiency and community speak to her now. If finding fresh foods becomes challenging, she wants to take some burden off the food system and help people with less privilege maintain access to healthy options.

 

Continue reading at Crosscut.


Originally written by Hannah Weinberger for Crosscut.
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