The P-Patch program supports low-income and historically underserved residents of the community.
The City of Seattle’s P-Patch Community Gardening Program is celebrating its 50th anniversary all year long with events and enhancement projects at some of its 91 gardens throughout the city, the Seattle Times reports.
“P-Patch” is named after the Picardo family, which operated a truck farm in Wedgwood in the early 20th century, according to Seattle Department of Neighborhoods. The family allowed a neighbor to start a community garden and grow food on their property in the early 1970s to help those affected by the recession. The Picardos’ experiment was so successful that the remaining farm was eventually sold to Seattle’s city government, creating the city’s first P-Patch.
Seattle designated the Picardos’ land as the first community garden in 1973, and the new P-Patch program was named after the Italian-American family.
These days, the program, led by lifelong urban farmer Kenya Fredie, runs on an annual budget from the city’s general fund. The P-Patch Program serves more than 3,500 households throughout Seattle.
“It’s always such a joy to see people walk through and just gain a sense of peace in these very urban, dense areas,” Fredie told the Seattle Times.
Gardens are an exceptional resource for healthy and organic food in areas that are already designated food deserts. As reported by today!
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