How do you move a garden? Part one: The Sand Point P-Patch
"The old garden was really fun. It was the first time I'd ever actually had enough room to really grow vegetables. A lot of my neighbors had plots over there. I would be cooking dinner or something and if I wanted something from the garden, I'd start the water, run over, pick it, bring it back, and pop it in!" (Leslye Coe) Part I: Sand Point In an earlier post , we described the loss of a P-Patch on 27th Avenue NE near Eckstein Middle School. Some of the gardeners from 27th Avenue were able to acquire plots at the Sand Point P-Patch approximately two miles east along Sand Point Way. This property, too, fell to development, in 2001, making way for a new facility for Seattle Children’s Hospital, the owner of the land. However, unlike some gardens mentioned here, the Sand Point P-Patch did not die, but was moved wholesale across the street to Magnuson Park. Farming Tradition on the Sand Point Peninsula From the early 1900s small farms could be found dotting the Sand Poin...