Sunday, May 31, 2009

Garden Passages


the following article was published in the Lammazine :


Apr 9: Garden Passages


Tavis - Co-moderator of Environment, Politics & Development forum:
(Copyrights: all photos by Cindy Poon, except giant turnip by Jayne.Click any photo to enlarge.)

What's the Tai Peng Community Garden all about?
You might think it's all about growing juicy and delicious fresh organic veg. Yes and no – John has enjoyed a constant supply of greens to supply his healthy raw food diet. Geoff has had a tremendous crop of cherry tomatoes that never seems to stop giving. Jayne and her son Tai grew a turnip large enough to require VV truck assistance at harvest time.

But on the other hand there are many of us who remain undaunted by sparse harvests. Nancy's Mexican food fetish has prompted her to become our bean expert. But, her enthusiasm for bean growing seems to be growing faster than the beans themselves. She proudly informed me the other day that her efforts so far have yielded a small tin of beans – I forget the exact number something like 57 beans and counting! She's not alone in her story of somewhat modest vegetable gardening success. So, why do some of us vegetatively impaired gardeners keep coming back when the veg lure itself seems as small as a protected Roemer's Tree Frog and nearly as hard to find?
For one thing there are always the flowers; the path-side portion of the garden is just for flowers. You eat first with your eyes as you pass through it toward the vegetable gardens at the back. And for some, the flower garden fills their appetite enough. Skye is our Flora, our Goddess of Flowers, and she, along with a few others, has made the garden delightfully beautiful this year. I have heard local people passing by refer to our garden as the 'Tai Peng Fa Yuen' or Tai Peng Flower Garden.
For some, the garden is a great photo opportunity. Sendya has used her photographic magic to transform our few humble flowers, vegetables, and old furniture salvaged from the bins into an outdoor cathedral – colourful stain glass scenes depicting life, joy and laughter. For some the garden provides a much needed spiritual respite – a quiet place to meditate – a place to gaze up at the night sky and wonder at the falling of a star.
If you ask the children what the garden's all about, they'll tell you about the tadpoles and the catfish in the pond (and, unfortunately, exactly how best to catch them). They'll expound the delights of mud pies and birthday cake. (Last Sunday, Tristan, Avi, Jette, and Younas all had birthdays so we had a communal cake-making effort.) They'll tell you about blind snakes – they'll explain that bananas are actually plants and not trees, but mostly they'll tell you that the garden's a great place to play with their friends.
And I think that's perhaps the most important part of the garden; meeting friends, working together, learning how to make our differences more of a strength than an obstacle.
It is after all, not just a garden, but a community garden. In this way it's a laboratory, a playground - it's more than metaphor but a focused point of connection and learning that speaks to the bigger issues and the life of community that extends beyond that garden and through the busy streets of Lamma communities. It speaks to the community that includes not only human kind, but plants, trees, insects, amphibians, water and sky. It's a place to build and strengthen relationship among people and with nature. This garden is a place where we can learn what 'community' really means.








Thursday, October 23, 2008

New Book about Lamma Island!

I was so excited to discover a new book was recently published about Lamma Island. It is called "Lamma Story" I rushed out as soon as I knew where to buy it at the B&B Restaurant in Yung Shue Wan and bought my own copy. When I began to read it, I was surprised to find it state that Lamma needed to have more development (more houses and industries). I was especially worried when I found that the man who gave all the money to publish the book was the same man who wants to build many hotels on Lamma Island. This worries me a lot because the people who live here love the clean natural environment and dont want it to be busier with more tourists, cars and polution. So, I wrote a book review and got it published in the lammazine, the community newsletter. Take a look if you're interested!

Back to the garden in 2008!


Well, it's been a while since I chatted with you in this blog. Since my last posting, the Tai Peng Community Garden has grown for a whole season and been harvested. It was pretty bare at first, as you can see in this picture from our first meeting. I think the thing I love most about the garden is how much fun the kids have. Check out my youngest son, Tristan and his new girlfriend! I think they have more fun than the adults!
Denis, one of the members of the garden, loves to take a lot of photos and you can take a look here. In my garden this year I'm growing eggplant, sweet potatoes, ginger, carrots, Swiss Chard and parsely. Of all the seeds I've planted, so far the only ones to sprout were the Swiss Chard. By the way, I've added lots of links to Wikipedia pages explaining things you might not know about like Swiss Chard. When you go to the site, you will see a languages column on the left side of the page. If you scroll down to the last language you will be able to click on 中文 and see the Chinese version of the same page. This might help you a bit :-)

Wednesday, May 9, 2007




Hey! Whazzup with U today? I had soooo much fun last weekend – hiking and going fishing on the beautiful little island where I live. Fishing is a lot more fun than you might think!! I actually did catch some fish!! - 5 small rockfish. Hey! They were only about 10cm long but they tasted great!
I'm still thinking about how well that garden meeting went. (I'm starting a Community Garden where I live) People stop me in the street now in Yung Shue Wan (榕樹灣) to ask me about the garden. I think we'll be ready to start by next gardening season (the best time to grow vegetables in HK is in the winter).
Next weekend I'm going to take my sons to the beach. They love playing in the sand and throwing rocks in the water. Avi is getting pretty good at building sand castles. There are many great sandy beaches on Lamma but the closest to my house (at Luk Chau Wan) is stony so we mostly just fish there or look for shells and other neat stuff.
One thing that's been bothering me lately is that I'm not really getting enough exercise, and I'm fatter than I was before. I don't know what to do - I'm so busy. One thing I have been doing is trying to ride my bike around the island more. It's pretty good exercise for me biking home from the ferry pier because I live up the hill in Tai Peng. Mountain biking is really popular on Lamma and they even had a great race here a few months ago called 'The Lamma Enduro.' Bicycle Racers have to ride as many 5km laps around and over a mountain as they can in 5 hours. Crazy!! Someone wrote about it, "The concept is simple. The LAMMA ENDURO 2007 is five hours of pain." Nice! - Not what I need to get in shape, but a few more hours of exercise a week will get me fit I hope. I found a video on Youtube from last year's Enduro Race - check it out!

Monday, May 7, 2007

Community Garden Meeting!!

On Sunday we had the first meeting of the Tai Peng Community Garden. What a success!! Eleven people came: a university professor, a carpenter, a herpetologist (she studies frogs), a couple of teachers and one lady who works with special needs children (智能障礙).

I was so happy with this turnout because I was afraid only 2 or 3 people would come --- I had only posted the meeting agenda on the Lamma Community website earlier the same day. At 11:00 am I put up 5 posters advertising the garden meeting in Tai Peng and in Yung Shue Wan (榕樹灣). Anyway, I'm so excited that the garden has actually begun, because it will give my kids and I such a great place to grow flowers and vegetables and to make new friends.


There are other things to do in Tai Peng. There are quite a few French people who live here and regularly gather to play Pétanque (地掷球). I know they have a lot of fun playing because they make so much noise!! haha! (I don't mind ;-) Players throw metal balls and try to get them as close as they can to a small wooden ball that is thrown beforehand. One of these players also plays the saxophone, which is great to listen to on a warm spring night.

We can also hang out at the store, just drinking soda pop and meeting friends as they walk up from Yung Shue Wan. But I prefer more active things to do, like hiking in the hills or wandering down to the East Lamma Channel (東博寮海峽) to go fishing off the rocks. I really like these activities because I'm a nature lover, but I also like making friends and doing things together with my neighbors. I guess that's why the new garden make me feel so excited about the future. For me, it's just as much about friendship and community as it is about flowers and vegetables!

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

I thought I ought to post my picture. This picture of me with my 2 young boys was taken on the stony beach at Pak Kok Tsui a couple of months ago. We had a great time that day just playing and collecting all kinds of neat stuff that had washed up on the beach. My elder son, Avi, found this red flag that had once been a marker for some fisherman's lobster traps. Avi made it the court flag of our beach rubbish castle!
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Today, I'm really excited about starting a 'community shared garden' at my place in Tai Peng Village. I have started clearing up a pice of land for the project where I live and I just made a posting on Lamma.com, Lamma Island's Community Website, to ask if other people would be interested in helping to set it up.

Back in Calgary, Canada about 5 years ago, I had been involved in a community shared garden. At that time I had two 2 mentally challenged roommates also got involved and it had been a great way for all of us to make new friends. Not only that, but we had a good time and a lot of delicious fresh vegetables to share with all our non-gardening friends.

I sure hope this new garden can 'get off the ground!'

I found this neat little video about a community gardner in Toronto: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMJB_bhF58E