1 Dec 2010

A New Cherry Orchard for Cherry Orchard

Dublin’s Lord Mayor, Gerry Breen, will plant the first cherry tree in what will become a new cherry orchard, at the community garden, Cherry Orchard, Ballyfermot, Dublin 10 on Monday 29th November at 10.30am.

As 2010 is the international year of biodiversity, Dublin City Council is pleased to be supporting this conservation project. The main aims of the project are to create a functioning cherry orchard in the area that will enrich the existing gardens and be a beautiful amenity for the local schools and community. The second aim is to protect the two native Irish cherries, prunus padus and prunus avium, which are in decline in the wild. The orchard will maintain population stocks and provide food for the birds, butterflies and wildlife. “The cherry tree I’m planting today is very special, given the name and history of the area. The community garden project is already a huge success and I am confident the cherry orchard will grow and thrive with the care and attention the local community will give it” said the Lord Mayor.

  • The launch of this initiative will take place on the site where a new scheme of community allotments are currently being developed to have ready for spring 2011
  • The community allotment scheme is the second phase of a larger community gardening initiative undertaken by Cherry Orchard Regeneration Project with the support of a number of bodies including Dublin City Council, Ballyfermot | Chapelizod Partnership, CDVEC and most importantly; the local residents and community.  The site for the allotments is directly adjacent to the new community garden in Cherry Orchard
  • The new allotment site is a perfect location to host the first official Cherry Orchard to be planted in the area in recent memory as part of a broader environmental initiative in the community of Cherry Orchard
  • The community garden project has been a huge success in its first year; the first vegetables were sown in June and since that time it has gone from strength to strength
  • The success of the initiative to date is entirely due to the overwhelming input, commitment and dedication from the local community.  The majority of the hard labour developing the garden was completed by the local Men’s Club called MAGIC.  The club was set-up by the Regeneration Project in response to the high number of men out of work in the area in summer 2009.  The members of the club have given their time voluntarily to help with the establishment of this initiative along with working with the Regeneration Project on a number of other very worthwhile projects in the area.  The garden was nurtured, managed and maintained all year long by a very enthusiastic and dedicated group of local residents with a strong thirst to learn more about gardening, meet new people, get involved and give something back to the community they live in.  These two groups have worked hand-in-hand and have subsequently formed a community gardening committee to oversee the future development and management of the garden.  They have set a very sturdy foundation upon which to commence the second phase of the gardening initiative which is the development of community allotments
  • The idea for the project came from Bloom and RHS garden designer Fiann Ó Nualláin who has been working with Dublin City Council on several “plant your place name” projects. In the bluebell region of Dublin 12 Fiann and local schoolchildren have begun transforming verges and green spaces into a repository for the endangered native bluebell (hycanthoidies non scripta)

Regards
Joseph Blair
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