At the northeast corner of Mack Park, just minutes from campus, the Indiana Community Garden has been flourishing—increasing access to fresh vegetables while spreading gardening knowledge—for the last decade.
Essential to reaching the 10-year mark, garden coordinators say, has been the support of IUP volunteers, who have taken on tasks from grant writing and mural painting to weeding, planting, mulching, and harvesting.
Spending time in the garden benefits the volunteers as well. International students have used their plots to grow herbs and vegetables not found in local grocery stores. And, for many volunteers, working in the garden offers their only real connection with the community outside of IUP.
“It gives us an opportunity to meet so many people from the community.”
Volunteer coordinator Kay Snyder, an IUP professor emerita of sociology, said the garden has had frequent help from fraternities and sororities, the Geological Society of IUP, the Student Association of Nutrition and Dietetics, and Strategies for Ecology Education, Diversity, and Sustainability, or SEEDS Club.
Those who have helped this semester include new students, who spent an afternoon at the garden during Welcome Week in August, and members of the Student Government Association and Graduate Student Assembly, who volunteered in September. Photographer Brian Henry documented both visits.