In the meantime, for folks curious about what guerrilla gardening is all about, here are a few links that highlight both global and local groups that are using gardening to improve their communities and also challenge assumptions about what our cities should be like and who they should serve.
- Richard Reynolds' blog, The Guerrilla Gardening Homepage: Richard Reynolds lives London, UK, and started guerrilla gardening by planting the empty planters in front of his highrise. He's also written a book, On Guerrilla Gardening.
- The Toronto Public Space Committee: This group emerged to protect streets and public spaces from commercialization and privatization, particularly as large billboards began to occupy so much of the visual space in Toronto. Guerrilla Gardening is one of their major areas of activism.
- The Green Guerillas: A New York-based community group that helps people develop and sustain community gardens and public art projects. The network of community gardens that they have helped to found and sustain numbers in the hundreds.
This is the tip of the iceberg in this diverse and global movement, but there's a lot to be inspired by in these three websites.
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