From the overflowing window boxes of Bay Ridge to the patchwork of urban farms in East New York, gardening in Brooklyn means tradition, therapy, discipline, beauty, and can-do resilience. But when the second spring since Sandy came this year, many gardeners in coastal Brooklyn did not see the buds and blooms they were used to. Trees and other plants they had hoped would recover from saltwater inundation remained brown and lifeless. The message was clear: Not only would coastal communities have to rebuild their homes and businesses, they would have to restore their soils, trees, and green spaces as well. With an eye toward a more resilient future, these gardeners are asking: How do we plant smarter and stronger?
“After so much damage, it’s hard to know where to begin,” said Pamela Pettyjohn, a greening activist in Coney Island. “A gardening program is exactly what the community needed to uplift its spirits.” So Pamela and her neighbors entered eight blocks in this year’s Greenest Block in Brooklyn contest and hosted a GreenBridge street gardening clinic, to which the entire neighborhood was invited. “That clinic helped us take the first step,” she reported. During similar clinics hosted in Canarsie as well, GreenBridge staff and Brooklyn Urban Gardener volunteers explained the reasons behind a lackluster spring and stressed the importance of compost use and reintroducing a diverse array of salt-tolerant, native plants. (See BBG's tip sheet on coastal gardening post-Sandy.)
Currently, exciting plans are under way for a community-led garden project featuring native plants in Coney Island’s Kaiser Park, which will create, says Pamela, “a focal point for all of the community to enjoy.”
The effects of the superstorm certainly linger, but home and community gardeners on Brooklyn’s floodplains are proudly restoring deep roots and resilient gardens. Neighbors united in the spirit of greening will urge spring to bloom more brightly next year.