📖 Read & Listen Free
The empty lot on Maple Street had been covered in weeds and broken glass for as long as anyone in the neighborhood could remember. Then one spring, a woman named Ms. Okafor put up a sign that said Community Garden Coming Soon! and everything changed.
Twelve families signed up to help. They spent two weekends clearing the weeds, hauling away the trash, and testing the soil. It was backbreaking work, but nobody complained because they could already imagine what it would look like.
Each family was given a small plot to grow whatever they wanted. The Chens planted bok choy and snow peas. The Garcias planted tomatoes, peppers, and herbs. An older man named Mr. Singh planted five different varieties of squash.
Ten-year-old Dani and her mom planted sunflowers along the fence because, as Dani said, every garden needs something tall and happy-looking to greet you when you walk in.
By July, the lot had been transformed. It was green and buzzing with bees, smelling of basil and warm earth. Neighbors who had never spoken much to each other found themselves chatting over the fence between their plots.
There were setbacks too — a heat wave scorched the lettuce in August, and a family of rabbits found a gap under the fence and ate half of Mr. Singh's squash. But people shared their harvests and helped each other replant.
In the fall, the garden held a harvest festival. People brought dishes made entirely from things they had grown. Dani made sunflower seed brittle and gave a piece to every person who came through the gate.
Standing at the edge of the lot that evening, watching neighbors talk and laugh and share food under strings of warm lights, Dani thought that the most important thing they had grown all summer was not a vegetable at all.