Dear Don, 

People steal.  Don't feel particularly bad that it's happening in a garden - 
in the UK, for example, plant & tool theft are huge, if you believe the press 
reports, largely because gardening is so popular and people will buy up the 
swag, or plant a looted perennial that they've bought hot because it's cheap. 

Yes, fences are essential.  When we started the Clinton Community Garden in 
the heart of Hells Kitchen in 1979,  we walked in on a Beirut-like urban 
moonscape with rubble, rusted cars, expended bullets and a dead junkie drawing 
flies. What we saved, we fenced, watched - kinda easy because there are 
tenements 
all around the garden, and worked to keep secure. 

We still have theft - just last week someone stole some new patio chairs the 
same day they were donated,  fer chrissakes, but we have managed to preserve 
our tools and stuff by following some basic procedures. 

1) Fence the garden completely around it's perimeter if you don't have secure 
brick walls at least on a few sides. 

2) Have a few rules but clear, and post the signage  throughout the garden 
and up front. Let it be known among the garden rank-and-file that there have 
been thefts, they hurt the garden, and you'd really appreciate it if they have 
any ideas about how to make the garden more secure. And listen to what people 
say. And say that, "Heck, garden shears come home in my pocket too. But we have 
to remember to bring them back." 

The idea is to get folks conscious and aware, without getting them paranoid. 
It's just learning to be being careful with garden property.  

3) Let it be known to your neighbors that there have been thefts and let 
local law enforcement know about it too - The line, " And we're raising food 
for 
seniors, the homeless, etc.., " gets the idea across that there is some 
significance to what is being stolen. You're on the cop's beat, they should 
come by 
and say, "hi." 

4) At night time, or when there are no gardeners in the gardener lock it.  
I'm an 8 foot fence fan - it takes effort to climb and eight foot fence and 
climbing one takes some effort and is pretty obvious. 

5) At the Clinton Community Garden, we have a shed for tools, that is in the 
back locked garden area. There is an unlocked lean-to attached to the shed 
with the more replacable tools, and locked areas in the main shed where we keep 
beekeeping equipment, the chipper shredder and the more expensive tools.  
Access to these areas are on a "need to use" basis and is controlled by key. 

6) All garden tools are marked with a hideous yellow paint, and have the 
legend, "Clinton Community Garden," permanently marked on them." There is no 
question that they are our tools. 

7) Most imporantly, you have to foster a sense of real ownership of the 
garden in everyone who uses it - that the land, the tools, the plants are all 
owned 
in common and that theft really is an assault on everyone. 

I'm sorry that the wands, gazing balls, a decorations have been stolen - and 
that someone is enjoying them in private, or has tried to sell them. You're 
not going to be able to stop theft completely, but by keeping stuff secure, 
marking tools and garden property, and creating a sense of ownership in all of 
your gardeners and partners, then you have a chance at keeping your garden from 
"walking away." 

Everbest, 
Adam Honigman
Volunteer, 
 Clinton Community Garden 

> We're just starting to get theft. Small stuff -
> watering wands, gazing balls and other garden
> decorations, that kind of thing. No tools or hoses
> taken - yet. We are partly fenced (a company has
> offered to make us a nice 'real' fence, but there's
> not a clear time frame), the site is on a busy road in
> a farmer's field, surrounded by development but with
> no residence close.
> 
> Anyone experienced something similar? Any ideas about
> who the culprits might be, given the pattern of theft?
> If we don't fence, what can we do? If we do get a
> fence, any recommendation on type? Key protocols?

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