Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Growing together

CoHO, First Presbyteri­an plant garden

- BY TAMMY KEITH Senior Writer

The partners in a new community garden in Conway see the project as an opportunit­y to grow food, as well as relationsh­ips.

Phillip Fletcher of Conway, founder of the nonprofit Christian organizati­on City of Hope Outreach, said CoHO was awarded a $6,000 grant from the Presbyteri­an Church (U.S.A.). CoHO partnered with First Presbyteri­an Church, 2400 Prince St. in Conway, where the new raised-bed garden was created.

“We kicked it off on Palm Sunday weekend,” Fletcher said. “We planted seeds and soil that Saturday, and that Sunday we had a big gathering — an Easter egg hunt for the kids, and we brought all the kids from the three communitie­s [CoHO] serves together with the Presbyteri­an kids. We had a meal together. We had a blessing of the gardens as well.”

The grant will also be used to improve the gardens in the three areas CoHO serves in Conway: Oakwood and Brookside mobile home parks and the South Ash neighborho­od.

“We’ll be sharing workdays,” Fletcher said. Kids from the neighborho­ods CoHO serves will come work in the garden at the Presbyteri­an church; the members of the church will help with the gardens in the neighborho­ods CoHO serves.

Peg Falls-Corbitt, a member of the church and a faculty member at Hendrix College, helped write the grant after Fletcher alerted her to it. She is overseeing the project, too.

“It also happened that our church, we are recognized as an Earth Care Congregati­on. We’ve committed to being careful and attentive to what the church can do to have sustainabl­e practices,” she said.

The church provides a free meal, Daily Bread, at 5:30 p.m. every other Thursday at First Presbyteri­an Church. On the off weeks, the meal is held at First United Methodist Church, she said.

Fletcher and Falls-Corbitt said growing produce for that community meal is one goal of the garden.

“One of the problems — while lowincome people might have some money for

some food — fresh vegetables are too expensive,” FallsCorbi­tt said. “We offer a salad bar every time we serve a meal, and it’s just gone.

“If our community garden can either help provide that meal or send people home with some food, that would be great.” Fletcher agreed.

“The garden will be used to help supply healthy food when people come [to First Presbyteri­an] looking for a food box or even utility assistance,” he said.

Fletcher said radishes, tomatoes, flowers and herbs have been planted.

In addition to supplying food through the program, Falls-Corbitt said, “We want to help educate the congregati­on about good gardening practices, a healthy lifestyle, so it has an educationa­l purpose, as well as the other,” she said.

The third purpose, which Falls-Corbitt said “may be the main one for me, personally, is just to be in partnershi­p with CoHO and the neighborho­ods they serve. I do think very highly of the work that CoHO does. The opportunit­y to work with City of Hope is most exciting for me.”

Falls-Corbitt said she has driven a van to pick up people who need transporta­tion to Daily Bread, and she has been to the Oakwood and Brookside neighborho­ods that CoHO serves.

“I see true service and mission as building relationsh­ips with one another so there is a mutual exchange. Mission and service are not just ‘I decided someone else needs something’ and then giving it to them. You need to be in a relationsh­ip to find out what they need, and you need mutual learning and understand­ing.”

Falls-Corbitt said she is excited to work with Fletcher and build relationsh­ips with residents of the neighborho­ods.

She said that a couple of weeks before the garden project kicked off, Fletcher spoke to the First Presbyteri­an congregati­on. On Palm Sunday, both Fletcher and the Rev. Mike Ulasewich, pastor of First Presbyteri­an, spoke.

“One of the things we have already done — and this is under the theme of more fully developing the partnershi­p — is CoHO has a transition home [for men] called Hope Home, and three of our men took a meal over and shared it with Hope Home,” she said. “We coordinate­d it with the Daily Bread meal. I’ve heard that went really well.”

Falls-Corbitt said three other church members — Jan Spann, Betsy Williams and Jamie Henderson — are part of the garden project. She said Spann also may attend CoHO meetings to keep communicat­ion going in the partnershi­p.

“They’re going to be the ones really focused on when does the garden need to be weeded? When do we need to plant more?” Falls-Corbitt said. “We hope it really does grow food.”

 ?? WILLIAM HARVEY/RIVER VALLEY & OZARK EDITION ?? From left, Phillip Fletcher, Peg Falls-Corbitt, Jill Steed and the Rev. Mike Ulasewich stand in front of one of the raised garden beds at First Presbyteri­an Church in Conway. The community garden is a partnershi­p between City of Hope Outreach, of which...
WILLIAM HARVEY/RIVER VALLEY & OZARK EDITION From left, Phillip Fletcher, Peg Falls-Corbitt, Jill Steed and the Rev. Mike Ulasewich stand in front of one of the raised garden beds at First Presbyteri­an Church in Conway. The community garden is a partnershi­p between City of Hope Outreach, of which...
 ?? WILLIAM HARVEY/RIVER VALLEY & OZARK EDITION ?? Jill Steed checks some radishes, along with Phillip Fletcher, left, and the Rev. Mike Ulasewich.
WILLIAM HARVEY/RIVER VALLEY & OZARK EDITION Jill Steed checks some radishes, along with Phillip Fletcher, left, and the Rev. Mike Ulasewich.

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