Deanna Cheng [email protected] For the volunteers who came out April 12 to prepare the garden beds at David Thomp- son secondary school, it was about supporting environmental causes in any way they could. Volunteer Barbara Bradbury said there’s a huge need for indi- viduals to help out. “The Van- couver Park Board doesn’t have enough money,” she said. “They can’t hire enough people to do it and it’s labour intensive.” Bradbury said she’s always been gardening. Growing up on a farm in Mill Bay, she has wit- nessed changes in the climate and ecosystem and believes the Earth needs as much support as it can get. “The natural environment is declining from all the [indus- trial, commercial and residential] development,” she said. The David Thompson garden beds are a two-year-old initia- tive between Fresh Roots and the Vancouver School Board in a push for fresher produce in the cafeteria and food literacy skills in the students. Beside the gar- dens are an outdoor classroom with logs positioned around a chalkboard like an amphithe- atre and a group of green picnic tables underneath shady trees. Lower Mainland Green Team organizer Lyda Salatian said her organization wants to help the public and empower volunteers. “People want to help the envi- ronment but don’t know what to do or don’t see the opportunities. I want to change that,” she said. “We want to put it back into their hands and make an impact instead letting them feel they can’t do anything.” Salatian sees her group as a gateway to opportunities for Van- couverites and counts it a success if people create or join established environmental groups within their own neighbourhoods. Consistency is important, she said. Seven able-bodied helpers were digging into the earth and removing clumps of grass from the beds so they didn’t compete for nutrients in the soil April 8. The day was cloudy, and the threat of rain might have kept others from attending. Fresh Roots community coordi- nator Rosalind Sadowski said kids engage in weekly garden clubs and are empowered to eat better in their daily lives because they know where their food comes from. “It takes a community to feed a community,” she said. “It’s not just a corporation.” Sadowski said the gardens also changed the face of the school by animating the space. She said gardens didn’t thrive before because of a variety of reasons. Teachers who were in charge would move to a differ- ent school, some were intimi- dated by their lack of knowl- edge, and sometimes no one was available to care for the gardens during the summer. “It takes a lot of dedicated work.” Fresh Roots and the Lower Mainland Green Team stepped in to help out. At the moment, Fresh Roots has gardens at Van- couver Technical secondary and David Thompson. Neil Xing Chan, the youngest helper of the day, would like to see a garden at his school, Eric Hamber secondary. “It’s some- what hard work but it’s manage- able,” he said. It was the 15-year-old’s first time volunteering with the Green Team, an opportunity his mother suggested to him while he was looking for volunteer hours to fulfill his high school graduation requirement. He plans to continue volunteer- ing because he feels he’s making a contribution to the community and is learning from Sadowski. Bradbury said the younger gen- erations are not working outside enough. “They don’t know what’s a weed, what’s not. They don’t recognize invasive species.” twitter.com/writerly_dee Volunteers help the garden grow Rosalind Sadowski, Fresh Roots’ community coordinator (foreground), and Grade 12 students Jessica Fang and Joseph Nan, at David Thompson secondary school. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 2015 THE VANCOUVER COURIER E1