Cheney Community Gardens

Cheney Community Gardens Community Gardens in the City of Cheney WA. For information on 2026Garden Plots, call Mark at
(509) 879-6383 The garden is a social place.

Dedicated gardeners gather
Community garden has strong social aspect
By Lisa Leinberger
Thu., Sept. 24, 2009

Tucked away on a small extension of Centennial Park in Cheney near the intersection of Seventh and Mary streets is a community garden, a shared patch of land where Cheney residents can grow their own produce, herbs and flowers.

“I think this garden has been going on since the mid ‘70s,”

said Carl Ruud, the garden chairman. Every spring, gardeners are assigned a 20-by-40-foot plot, for which they pay $30 per year toward water costs. Members also contribute about 20 percent of their crops to the Cheney Food Bank. Penny Bone is finishing up her first summer as a member of the community garden. She said she used to live at the Christmas Tree Farm outside of Cheney and when she moved to town a year ago she found she could continue to garden. Bone said she starts with herbs such as comfrey, which she infuses with oil and rubs on scars and rashes. She also grows savory, lemon balm, chamomile, sage, feverfew and basil. Then she moved on to plant kale, snow peas, eggplant, tomatoes, lettuce and is looking forward to planting garlic in October. Her flower bed includes an actual bed – she has an old headboard and footboard rooted into the ground around her flowers. She said that joining the garden has been fun; after spending many years gardening alone, she has found she likes the camaraderie of a community garden.

“It’s so much fun to have people to talk to,” Bone said. Many gardeners – there are about 18 to 20 with plots this year – bring chairs to sit in, shell their peas, trade food and chat with others. Andrea Kraft said she appreciates that everyone bands together and takes care of other gardeners’ plots when they can’t. She said Ruud often steps in if someone needs to go out of town or if someone starts off the season excited about the garden, then gets bored and abandons the effort. John and Barbara Ballister grow so much produce that Barbara said she never has to buy produce in the summer. The two grow carrots in their plot, cover them up when the weather gets cold and have fresh carrots throughout the winter.

“I think we understand how people lived 400 years ago,” John Ballister said. The community garden is organic – it is pesticide- and herbicide-free, gardeners use leaves from surrounding maple trees to cover their plots in the winter and get compost from the city for the soil. John Ballister said he spends about an hour a day on his plot. When he was in the Air Force, he used to run the gardens at Fairchild Air Force Base.

“This is so much easier than flying airplanes,” he said. Ruud said the gardeners meet a couple of times a year and most people start their gardens in the spring.

“Nobody gardens because they have to,” said John Ballister. “They garden because they like it.”

Nearly half way through the summer months and garden is busting with growth and flowering now.  The normal temperatures ...
08/11/2024

Nearly half way through the summer months and garden is busting with growth and flowering now. The normal temperatures have returned and the corn shot up, the fall broccoli has taken root and both cucumbers and beans are climbing up the fences. With the extreme heat, the tomatoes have slowly started to bear fruit and the leaves are not curling as much, so I do expect a good harvest in the latter stages of summer. Squash is starting to run and the corn is tasseling and almost reaching 8 feet tall!!

As summer is in full swing, activities in the gardens of weeding, watering and wondering is evident!  2024 Cheney Commun...
08/08/2024

As summer is in full swing, activities in the gardens of weeding, watering and wondering is evident! 2024 Cheney Community gardens welcomes Gineza, Callan and Becca! It's evident they have gardened before and are learning the nuances of gardening in the Pacific northwest!

08/06/2024

Well it's getting to THAT point when harvest of certain vegetables are attracting both nature and people to the gardens! Today I elected to water in the evening and to my dismay, found the gate to my garden undone and looking like someone entered it.

I garden with another gardener and upon contacting her, have come to the conclusion that someone entered the garden without permission of they or I being there. As harvest is upon us and all of the time, energy and resources we have expended since May is coming to fruition, others feel they have the need or right to enter private gardens to either view or take what they feel they are entitled too.

As fellow gardeners, it is our responsibility to ensure all of the gardens are secure from those that feel this need and let each other know when someone enters their garden when they are not there. While the majority of people would never undo a gate or enter a secured area, there are those that feel that the community gardens are for the community that lives in Cheney which is not the case.

Please be diligent and keep your eyes and ears open to make certain your garden is secure as well as others!

Is growing food cheaper than buying at the store?  I will give you one answer that is fence sitting, not always!  But it...
07/28/2024

Is growing food cheaper than buying at the store? I will give you one answer that is fence sitting, not always! But it can be YES!

I purchased 4 - 6cell starts of Stonehead Cabbage at $2.49 on sale. I planted 19 starts after prepping the soil with Cheney mulch supplied by the City. I purchased a 3.8 oz woven matt landscape fabric to eliminate most weeding and protect the soil from evaporation. 20 feet of the matt cost $3.34. Total cost for planting 19 starts came to $11.23.

Safeway sells both Organic and Nonorganic Cabbage for $1.99 or $1.49 a lb respectively.

I gave a head to John to weigh, and he informed me it was 5 lbs. Granted not all the cabbage weighs 5 lbs as 1 head I harvested early for the parents was around 3.5 lbs. If we take 4 lbs at the average weight and do the 'math', as an Organic cabbage, my yeild in the garden for 19 cabbages is 76 lbs at $1.99 or $151.24 while the Nonorganic, $113.24.

It appears in this case it is cheaper to grow your own cabbage not accounting for sales on cabbage at the store which at best would be around $0.39 per pound or $29.64 for 76 lbs. Nearly triple what it would cost to grow but I've never seen Organic Cabbage anywhere for $0.39 lb!!!

2nd most asked question this year; Why are my tomato plants stunted and not setting fruit?
07/28/2024

2nd most asked question this year; Why are my tomato plants stunted and not setting fruit?

Summer heat can really stress your tomato plants. Here's what happens and what you can do about it. Plus a list of the best heat tolerant varieties.

Probably the most asked question when corn starts tasseling!
07/28/2024

Probably the most asked question when corn starts tasseling!

Do you fertilize corn after it tassels? Learn the answer to this question and more with our comprehensive guide on corn fertilization. We cover everything from when to fertilize corn to how much fertilizer to use, so you can grow healthy, productive corn crops.

Address

600 N 2nd Street
Cheney, WA
99004

Telephone

+15098796383

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Cheney Community Gardens posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Cheney Community Gardens:

Share

Category