From Bomb Site to Medicine Garden

You're receiving this email because you are a DailyGood subscriber.
Trouble Viewing? On a mobile? Just click here. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.

DailyGood News That Inspires

June 13, 2018

a project of ServiceSpace

From Bomb Site to Medicine Garden

Don't judge each day by the harvest you reap but by the seeds that you plant.

- Robert Louis Stevenson -

From Bomb Site to Medicine Garden

It was a fenced-off World War II bomb site that had rewilded, and a team of London artists decided it was the perfect place to grow a medicine garden. The site is in the middle of a social housing complex in the Bethnal Green neighborhood of Tower Hamlets, a London borough that has become the U.K.'s second most densely populated local authority, the basic unit of local government. But now, the garden grows more than 30 varieties of edible or medicinal plants, from dandelion and common nettle to cowslip and comfrey, that have grown in the London area for the past thousand years. Local residents can harvest the plants for free. { read more }

Be The Change

Look around your yard or your neighborhood for a neglected corner of earth. Take one action this week toward symbiosis with that space - helping it to help you to help it - in ever widening circles of relationship.


COMMENT | RATE      Email   Twitter   FaceBook

  Related Good News

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

The Disease of Being Busy

Two Words That Can Change a Life

What Matters Most?

Anne Lamott Writes Down Every Single Thing She Knows

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

10 Tips for Effective Communication

How to Age Gracefully

On the Relationship Between Failure, Humility and Wisdom

Dying to Be Me


DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers "good news" to 245,101 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.


Other ServiceSpace projects include:

KindSpring  //  KarmaTube  //  Conversations  //  Awakin  //  More

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Whistling in the Wind: Preserving a Language Without Words