Hi,
we've been guerrilla gardening for a few years now, ours is also a quite political
project, of which i shall talk too much here, as not to upset Paul wheaton (forum admin), since he prefers topics to stay away from
politics and religion.
check it out here:
www.swompenglish.wordpress.com
One thing you can do when guerrilla gardening is use the grounds as a community project. Look for a neighbourhood committee, and see if they are interested in this type of project. You can increase social cohesion while adressing the degradation of the neighborhood through neglect of these grounds.
When using this tactic there are a few possible outcomes:
- you get away with it an inject a positive pulse in the neighborhood, as well as get to garden the ground.
- the owner will be pointed on his responsibilities towards society to take care of his property, and will finally start to develop. The barren ground is finally developed and no more take down the reputation and athmosphere in the neigborhood.
- you dont get away with it because the law is the law, they destroy what you have planted and the owner still doesnt look after the ground.
the choice for a covert or totally out in the open approach is one that might depend on the location, busy crossroads, side-alley, in the middle of housing blocks of parent with children, in a shopping mall, etc.
What do you want to grow will also affect the approach.
Planting fruiting/nut trees and wild flowers that require minimal maintenance make it possible to let your visits go by unnoticed, depending on the spot you might want to do this planting at night (if it is a desolate urban area where not many people live or look at the vacant lot or come by at night, this might be safest), but anywhere busy during daytime (with the mentioned orange or yellow vest, and maybe even a clipboard with some drawing on it.).
Planting some fruit trees and shrubs here and there at night, and spreading lots of native plants, possibly by walk-by-seedbomb-throwing, you have a chance for get stuff growing unnoticed for a long time, by the time they want to start clearing it again it could look great, or could have looked great during summer with all kind of colors and flowers. (make sure to take pics of that).
By that time (well enough before) you can start approaching officials and get some deal that they let you go ahead with it.
If turning it into a vegg or ornamental garden is just not tolerated (cos they fear you taking sort of possesion of the property and having a hard time getting rid of you by the time someone wants to develop the lot) it might be possible to at least get them to stop weeding once a year. These barren vacant lots are usually great places to study succession. Vacant lots to me, are the zone 5's for urban people, and speeding up succesion is just a seebal away. Choose your pioneer species well.
When your intention is to grow fruit and vegg, then making this a community/neighborhood project might be the wy to go. start building contacts with social structures in the neighborhood. Get parents with children involved, find active and involved community members, plan the thing out and depending on existing contacts and relation with
local governments just start doing it, or (if there is a good relation to local politicians) appraoch them and have a chat with them.
I wouldnt really encourage approaching them before you do it, even though thats most peoples instinct (why could you be against gardening an unused uggly lot?), it just tends to work so much more convincing when a beautifull garden is your living proof, and when children are happily getting dirty and seeding and watering gardens...
google any combination of the following words 'liz christy green guerrilla community garden', for some really good inspiration. Getting in contact with them might also help.