Please read below for the press release
and Rick’s comments…
From: Brooks, Richard
[mailto:rbrooks@...]
Sent: Friday, October 14, 2005
6:03 PM
To: Dawn Burgardt
Subject: Garden Crusader
Dawn,
Thought members of the Community Food and Gardening Network might want
to have a look at the story on the Gardener's Supply Company website about the Garden
Crusader award. Aside from the fact that it gives me a lot of credit that
you all deserve, its a fairly positive way of recognizing the value of all the
fine work so many people do to promote the environmental, social and spiritual
aspects of gardening. If you share this with others (Master Gardeners,
youth gardeners, teachers, etc), please know that my name is not what's
important. It's the message that gardening benefits everyone.
I've added a few notes in blue.
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2005 Garden Crusader
Awards |
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Winner: Grand Prize
Rick Brooks,
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Garden Crusader
Rick Brooks |
Rick Brooks has been working with youth, seniors and people
with developmental disabilities for many years. He's always on the lookout for
creative ways to help them feel more connected to their community and live
healthier lives. A few years ago he found the key: gardening. "Growing a
garden provides people with better nutrition, promotes a healthier lifestyle,
and increases social contact across all kinds of barriers," says Rick.
Non-Gardening Beginnings
It wasn't like gardening was in Rick's bones. "I'm a terrible
gardener," says Rick. "My wife's a Master Gardener and at home I
stick with the hard labor of digging, weeding and mowing." But Rick loves
nature and is fascinated by how people come together to celebrate her beauty.
As a teenager he traveled to Native American lands in the Southwest learning
American Indian dance and culture, and about their connection to the land.
Since
the early 1990s Rick has worked as the Director of the Health Promotion Project
at the
The Power of Gardening
Over the years, Rick has integrated gardening into an
impressive range of social programs for youth and adults in the
Rick
coordinated several conferences for health-care providers on the "Power of
Plants" and "Changing the World One Garden At a Time" to
demonstrate the benefits of gardening and ways to use gardens with their
clients. (Thank Ashley Ross,
Beth Holtzman,
Rick's
gardening-related activities started a buzz around
Working Together in the Garden
Rick has found that if community gardening projects are to have a long-lasting
impact, their success can't depend on an individual. "The long-term
success of these gardens depends on the recipients being directly involved and
having consistent support," says Rick. "People support that which
they help create."
A
good example of this partnership is the Madison Home Garden Project. To build
the gardens, Rick recruited student interns from the University, partnered with
local nonprofits and social service agencies, and enlisted the help of
neighbors. (Thank Audrey
Lesondak and students Kim Shea,Erica Gloss and Laurel Norris; Doug
Wubben). He then set up a system for ongoing contact with the
gardeners. Positive results weren't always immediate. "At the Waunakee
Adult Family Home there were two women who would aways sit in the backyard on
nice days, but they rarely talked or interacted with anyone," says Rick.
"The neighbors helped us build and plant a raised-bed garden. I never
thought these women even cared about the garden until one day I received a
present from them," he says. It was a jar of tomato jam they had made and
a picture of them smiling in the garden. "That was the best gift I could
have received," he says.
Gardening Abroad
Rick has not confined his gardening enthusiasm to
No
matter where the gardening is taking place, Rick always finds there's a common
thread. "Gardening is a way to relate to the Earth and bring people
together," he says. "There's a spiritual aspect to gardening that
goes beyond politics, culture, and religion. It allows people to talk about
what's most important in life, such as food, children, and home," says
Rick. (Thank
What's Next
By ensuring that community members are well-connected to
their gardens, Rick can move on to thinking about new projects. "I
encourage all kinds of crazy ideas," he says. "One idea I've been
advocating lately, is to cut off the roof of a school bus, install glass and
create a mobile greenhouse and garden lab where kids can learn about gardening," (Thank Katherine Murray and her staff at
FocusCorp. Now let's make it happen!)
Whatever
future projects Rick pursues, they will surely be focused on helping people
cultivate community to lead fuller lives. Rick knows the power of gardening to
make that happen. "My (our)
motto", says Rick, "is plant, grow and share what you know."
(And don't forget funders like the Evjue
Foundation, Knapp Bequest, Madison Master Gardeners, Ace Hardware on
Richard S
Brooks
Program
Outreach Manager
Dept.
of Professional Development & Applied Studies
520
Lowell Center, 610 Langdon Street
Division
of Continuing Studies, UW-Madison
608-265-4077
