Intentions and plans to begin a garden began long before empirical evidence was collected that proved its necessity. However, urban gardens require land, which, given the recent redevelopment of downtown, is scarce and very expensive.
After surveying the area, LACAN gained permission to begin a rooftop garden high above Main Street.
So we had finally found a plot of land for our garden. What next? We wanted to start a garden that reversed the standard treatment of residents as inferior “clients.” We wanted our gardeners to have ownership over the garden’s daily functioning and its seasonal harvests.
“Team Food” (a subcommittee within LACAN meeting biweekly to organize the community around food/health policy, nutrition, and physical exercise) drew up a proposal whereby resident members could learn how to manage the garden themselves from planting to harvesting. The idea was to establish a core of expert gardeners that could teach others and eventually establish other gardens in the neighborhood.
We contacted the Master Gardener program run by the University of California. The Master Gardener program, conducted throughout the United States and Canada, is a two-part educational effort, in which avid gardeners are provided many hours of intense home horticulture training, and in return they "pay back" local university extension agents through volunteerism. Master Gardeners assist with garden lectures, exhibits, demonstrations, school and community gardening, phone diagnostic service, research, and many other projects. See http://camastergardeners.ucdavis.edu/
We were put in contact with Maggie Lobl, a Master Gardener here in Los Angeles. Maggie volunteered to meet with Team Food twice a month to hold gardening workshops as we developed our garden and our gardeners.