Re: [SG] What to do?


Many communities have community gardens, where you can apply for a plot and
garden happily along side other gardeners. Seattle has a very successful
program with community garden patches in several places in the city. I don't
know what they cost but I think it isn't much, just enough to cover
insurance and water. Maybe your city has a program, and then it wouldn't
matter if you had to move.
----- Original Message -----
From: Roberta Diehl <diehlr@INDIANA.EDU>
To: <shadegardens@MAELSTROM.STJOHNS.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, June 22, 1999 6:09 PM
Subject: Re: [SG] What to do?


> Do you have a friend who gardens who can take your special plants and grow
> them with the understanding that next time you have a garden you can get
> starts of them from him/her? That's what I would try to do.
>
> Alternatively, buy the house yourself and continue living there. Collect
> rent to earn the money to buy more hostas!
>
> Bobbi Diehl
> Bloomington, IN
> zone 5/6
>
>
> On Tue, 22 Jun 1999, venies.place wrote:
>
> > I have been gardening at the house I live in for the last two years.  I
live
> > in a third floor apartment of a huge, old house.  But, my landlord is
> > thinking of selling!!!  I have some plants like black eye susans, purple
> > coneflower, shasta daisies, that I will not mind leaving.  But, I have
some
> > hostas that I will die to leave and my hydrangeas.  The apartment
building I
> > am think of moving to does not have a patio or balcony.  What can I do?
> >
> > Pottsey
> > zone5, OH
> >
>



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