One of Cardiff’s most
culturally diverse allotment associations is planning to make gardening accessible
to the disabled and beginners after securing a large charity windfall.
Pengam Pavilion Allotments, off
Rover Way in Pengam, has been a site for keen gardeners since 1927 and currently
has around 70 members producing a wide range of produce, including fruit, vegetables
and flowers.
They have spent years
cultivating the land themselves, supported by Cardiff Council’s allotment
services team, and making good use of their limited funds by recycling materials
to make sheds and polytunnels.
Now, however, they have
received a major donation from building supplies company Travis Perkins in the
form of railway sleepers and other materials to help develop a reclaimed corner
of their site and create new plots suitable for new and disabled gardeners.
The Pengam allotments association
president, Dennis Ramsey, said the donation – from Travis Perkins’ Legacy Fund –
came after he and his members had worked hard to clear a half-acre area that
was overgrown with brambles and trees.
“We wanted to do what we
could here to create more space. Once we’d cleared the land, we invited the council
to see what we’d done and they were so impressed that they put us forward for
the Legacy Fund.
“Now, with the help of the
council, we intend to create about 21 small ‘starter gardens’ for those who are
new to allotments and a number of raised beds that will be specially adapted
for disabled users.”
Tracey Woodberry, the
association’s secretary, said she hoped the transformation of the plot would be
complete within two or three months. “We know we have a lot of work still to do
but we’re confident we will get everything done before the summer.
“We still have more donated
materials to come, including top soil, and stone dust to create good access to
the plots.”
The association prides itself
on its inclusivity and boasts members from almost 20 different ethnic
communities within Cardiff, including gardeners from Portugal, Turkey, Yemen,
Iraq, Nepal and Bangladesh. It also has a high proportion of women members.
“We have expanded a lot in
recent years,” said Dennis, “and we have always tried to make the best use of
what resources we can find. We’re always scouring social media for bargains and
have become expert at turning old trampoline frames into polytunnels, for
example.”
A Cardiff Council spokesman
said it had received a number of applications from allotment groups across the
city for a share of Travis Perkins’ Legacy Fund but had been particularly
impressed by Pengam Pavilion’s plans.
If you would like to become
an allotment holder in Cardiff, just click on this website –https://www.outdoorcardiff.com/get-involved/allotments/
To read more about Cardiff
Council’s recently published allotment strategy for the whole of the city,
follow this link: https://cardiff.moderngov.co.uk/documents/s56479/Cabinet%2010%20March%202022%20Alltoment%20Strat.pdf