
CommuniTea Garden creates peaceful space for residents, visitors Read more: Moab Times-Independent - CommuniTea Garden creates peaceful space for residents visitors
June 09, 2016Using permaculture principles and water-wise design, a group of local  citizens are busy transforming a one-tenth-acre lot on the corner of 100  West and Walnut Lane from a patch of dirt to a vibrant community space.  Project coordinators hope the space, called the “CommuniTea Garden,”  will host future arts and educational events, while maintaining a slice  of “old Moab” as planned development transforms the 100 West corridor. 
 “It seems like Moab is turning into a bunch of three-story buildings  with underground parking,” said the site’s property owner, Jay  Nethercott. “I remember Moab in the ‘80s when it was a sleepy little  town. I wanted to make sure there’s a place in downtown Moab that’s not a  building, where people can sit down and collect their wits.” 
 Nethercott said he was looking for something “decent” to do with his  property, so he reached out to local permaculture designers Claire Core  and Jeffrey Adams last year. 
 After taking a full year to  observe the property and host idea-building workshops, the group  developed the idea for the CommuniTea Garden project to provide a  community space and regenerative permaculture garden that may even,  eventually, offer sun tea on tap to those who visit. 
 “We know  that there’s going to be lots of development and changes, so [the  garden] is helping continue having spaces for both the citizens of Moab  and the guests to come to a place that’s healthy and interesting and  beautiful,” Core said.
 A permaculture system of swales and rocks  mimicking a sinuous stream will provide water for the garden’s fruit  trees and native plants. Core said storm water will flow through a  curb-cut into a feature called a “Zuni bowl,” which will then separate  the pollutants from the fresh water before spreading the moisture to the  rest of the garden. 
 “It’s our sediment basin, so any  pollutants from the street get trapped right here and don’t flow all the  way through the garden,” Core said. “... [The garden] is designed in a  way so there’s different paths. Water goes through one section, and once  it fills up it will go into these little offshoots or tide pools.”
 And as water flows, Core said, so will people. 
 “A lot of people like to cut through [the space] from the residential  neighborhood, going to the school and the parks,” Core said. “So we  designed it in a way that would benefit the people who walk through  here.”
 Adams said passionate volunteers are currently helping  make the garden a reality, while learning a bit about permaculture  design in the process.
 “The garden is being implemented through  volunteer efforts, providing an opportunity for community members to  learn about the techniques of permaculture and also have a sense of  ownership in the project through their direct involvement,” Adams said.  “It has been really amazing to have so many people passing by stop to  help or express interest and gratitude for this space being created.”
 Nethercott said he hopes that in addition to being a “lovely sunny lot”  for people to gather, the CommuniTea Garden will continue demonstrating  sustainable land management for the community.
 “I’m an old man  but the rest of you have a strange world coming up with global warming,  and a different way of thinking has to come about,” he said. “We’ve got  to start somewhere, if everyone that could do something did do something  about it we’d be better off.”
 Core called the CommuniTea Garden  a collaboration between generations, as the project’s coordinators —  all of various ages — have all connected over a shared passion for  sustainability. 
 “To have [Nethercott] recognize the work that  young people are doing and trust in us to give us this big opportunity  has been amazing,” Core said. “And it’s something that we couldn’t have  done without him.”
 Once the project is completed, Nethercott  plans to gift the CommuniTea Garden to a nonprofit group so it will  remain a space for the community. 
 “There wasn’t a profit motive involved,” Nethercott said. “Moab’s been good to me over the years and I wanted to give back.”
 Core is encouraging community members to stop by and ask about the garden when they’re in the neighborhood. 
 “People that live in the neighborhood will stop and wave and ask what’s  going on. Even the teenage boys will say ‘whoa that’s cool’ when we say  there’s going to be a garden here,” Core said. “We want people to know  that this place exists, that it’s in process and people can feel open to  talk to us while we’re here.”
 For more information about the space or to volunteer, visit the Facebook page: The CommuniTea Garden.

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