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You are here: Home / Gardens to Visit / Gardens to visit: Terra Nova

Gardens to visit: Terra Nova

July 27, 2009 by Andrea Bellamy 6 Comments

Terra Nova entrance

My family and I visited the Terra Nova Rural Park in Richmond today. Despite having being told about the awesomeness of Terra Nova over a year ago, today was our first visit.

Spelt in the Daily Bread section of Terra Nova

Spelt growing in the Daily Bread section of the Schoolyard Society garden mixes wonderfully with other edibles. The original ornamental grass!

In addition to a thriving community garden, the Terra Nova lands are used by organizations for the benefit of the community. The Tzu Chi Foundation Sharing Farm and the Richmond Fruit Tree Sharing Project (Terra Nova Sharing Farm) grow food for the Richmond Food Bank.

Buckwheat and nasturtium

Then there’s the Terra Nova Schoolyard Society garden – a non-profit, community-based garden project that connects elementary and high school students with the earth. Students grow, monitor, harvest, and eat from the garden. For example, last year, they planted wheat, harvested and threshed it – then baked bread using the flour. The project, run by chef Ian Lai, integrates the complete food cycle – from seed to table, and from table to soil (in the form of composting).

I loved the way so many light, airy grains were integrated into the Schoolyard Society garden. Did you have any idea that buckwheat (above) was so pretty?

Terra Nova, community garden section

Terra Nova hosts a hugely-popular event called Chefs to the Field, coming up August 8. You should go.

Sign in the community garden

The community garden section of the park is divided into individual plots, which form a colourful patchwork of edibles and ornamentals. Gardeners were busy harvesting and tending their beds – but not too busy to tell me about what they were growing.

Sunflower

If you go: Terra Nova Rural Park is at 2631 Westminster Hwy, Richmond – about 30 minutes drive from Vancouver. Entrance and parking is free. The Richmond Food Secure blog lists upcoming workshops and events (such as “Beescaping” and “What can I plant now?”) held at the park. Combine with lunch on the wharves at Steveston (only a few minutes away) and you’ve got yourself a fabulous summer daytrip.

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Filed Under: Gardens to Visit, Veggies & Edibles Tagged With: community garden, grains, Schoolyard Society, Terra Nova

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Joy says

    July 28, 2009 at 4:40 am

    Andrea .. this is also one of the gardens I would love to visit as well .. it must have been heavenly : )

  2. Lou says

    July 28, 2009 at 7:44 pm

    This is a must-see! Thanks for the post. The Beescaping seminar sounds interesting.

  3. jackie connelly says

    July 29, 2009 at 8:14 am

    Gorgeous! Great photos. I can’t wait to go check it out!

  4. Andrea says

    August 25, 2009 at 10:46 am

    What an inviting haven! Wish I’d visited it while we were living on the coast, but now we’re busy developing our own wee 4 acre organic market garden in Ontario.

    We need to convert the lawn, which takes 2 hours to mow, into a creative space: courtyard, walled garden, native flowers, etc. I’m sure I’ll find ideas here.

  5. J. Hersco says

    March 15, 2010 at 4:44 pm

    We have had Ian Lai speak @ the Langley Garden Club and would like to make a tour and come out and see in the summer. Please inform us how to go about it, and when is a good time.
    Sincerely,
    JH
    Please respond. Last year I tried contacting the Terranova via e-amil and never heard back.
    Thank you!!!!

  6. Andrea Bellamy says

    March 18, 2010 at 2:02 pm

    Hi J.

    Sorry, I can’t answer for TerraNova’s lack of email response, since I’m not affiliated with them. The garden does appear to be open at any time, though.

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