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Angry gardeners lose the plot in allotment queue



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Published Date: 20 April 2008
THEY are the most exclusive clubs in Scotland, with thousands waiting up to a decade to gain entry.
But the clamour is not for access to the private schools, golf courses or private dining rooms. Instead it is for a humble allotment.

Scotland on Sunday can reveal that more than 3,000 Scots are facing waits of up to 10 years to be issued with a p
lot of land by their local authority.

One campaigner claims it is now simpler to get your children enrolled into the elite private school attended by Prince William, Prince Harry, David Cameron and Boris Johnson, then to get an allotment in parts of urban Scotland.

Such is the level of demand for plots that there are claims that individuals have even attempted to bribe and cajole their way to the top of waiting lists.

A countrywide shortage of allotments means that waiting lists can stretch to nine years in Glasgow, eight in Edinburgh and three in both Stirling and Fife. Gardeners requesting a plot in Aberdeen and Dundee can expect to wait two years before they are successful.

Jenny Mollison of the Scottish Allotment Gardens Society said the waiting lists had spiralled in recent years.

"It is easier to get your children into Eton then it is to get an allotment in Scotland these days. Waiting lists are absolutely huge throughout the country.

"It is terribly upsetting for people looking to get an allotment for the first time."

For decades following the Second World War the popularity of allotments plummeted as they became increasingly regarded as the anachronistic domain of pottering pensioners in flat-caps.

But now the burgeoning demand for environmentally-friendly, organic produce has seen middle-class couples clamour to get their own piece of land to tend.

Mollison added: "People are becoming increasingly aware of environmental issues and this means that allotments are more and more popular. The idea of growing your own food is appealing because there is no packaging and no food miles."

A survey carried out by Sags has revealed that 3,020 people around the country are on waiting lists, looking for one of the 6,341 plots currently in use.

More than 1,700 people in Edinburgh and Glasgow alone are registered as being unable to get an allotment.

Jenny Murray, secretary of the Glasgow Allotment Forum, said the waiting list in parts of the city was now at nine years and rising.

"I have had people crying on the telephone when I break the news to them," she said.

"Some people like the idea of taking their young children along to an allotment. But by the time they come to the top of the waiting list their children are already grown up."

Many older gardeners have given up hope of ever getting a patch.

One Glasgow widower said: "I'm in my 70s now and in all likelihood I don't think I'll live to see the day when I get offered an allotment. It is sad that Glasgow can win the Commonwealth Games, but can't provide enough allotments for their own senior citizens to enjoy in their retirement."

One Edinburgh allotment holder, Peter Wright, said the situation was equally dire in the capital.

"The demand for allotments in Edinburgh now outweighs the supply by a factor of about 150%.

"At the most popular sites people as waiting for as long as seven or eight years. The council daren't advertise allotments because the waiting lists would rocket still further."

Wright, who shares a site with everyone from young mothers to pensioners in their 90s, believes that a minority of individuals may be attempting to cheat their way into getting a patch.

"You hear all sorts of talk about people pestering the allotments officers to try to get to the top of the queue.

"When people are waiting patiently for years it is understandable that they can get quite annoyed if they think someone may be attempting to jump ahead of them."

Another allotment official has heard of people attempting to "buy out" existing allotment tenants by offering them sizeable sums of money.

The waiting time in Fife, where there are 200 people on waiting lists, and Stirling, where there are 60, is three years – while in Dundee, where 150 are waiting, it is two years.

But Aberdeen, which has bucked the trend by lowering its waiting list to below 300 in recent years, may hold an answer to the horticultural log-jam.

Donald Buchan, of the Aberdeen Allotments and Garden Society, said: "Now when people vacate a plot we divide it into two.

"Our waiting lists were previously very long, but this has helped to bring them down to around two years."

Allotments became popular in Scotland during the Second World War as part of the 'Dig for Victory' campaign, but since then the number of plots has fallen from 80,000 to just over 6,000.

Local authorities are required by law to provide allotment sites and Cosla, the umbrella body for Scotland's councils, has compiled a report which urges local authorities to acquire, manage and develop more land for allotments.

Annual rent for a full plot is around £35 and rules routinely state that patches cannot be passed on to family members following the death of a tenant.

Growth story of DIY food production

ORIGINATING in the 19th century, the term 'allotment' is found on maps dating back to 1851, with sites recorded in Pollok Park from 1895.

Many allotments arose out of informal arrangements between landowners and gardeners, while businesses such as the North British Railway Company promoted them as a means of self-improvement for workers.

They were first recognised formally by the Allotments (Scotland) Act 1892. Councils became heavily involved during the First World War because of a food crisis and during the Dig for Victory campaign in the Second World War.

Even public parks were used for food production. Dr Carrot and Potato Pete, the cartoon public faces of the campaign, became icons.

Nationally they went into decline from the 1950s and 1960s, reviving somewhat in the 1970s but by the 1990s they were still a low priority for the authorities.

Allotments are also popular overseas. In Cuba an economic crisis unleashed by the loss of Soviet subsidies in the early 1990s forced large areas of Havana and other cities to be turned into large swathes of urban allotments.

The policy has proved to be extremely popular and has been adopted by other Latin American nations looking to promote self-sufficiency and cut food imports.



The full article contains 1102 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 19 April 2008 7:40 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
1

Guga II,

Rockall 20/04/2008 01:16:56
Do the greenies and the Whigs want to apply their proposed garden tax to allotments too?
2

Matt there,

somewhere 20/04/2008 01:43:51
The SOS could launch a campaign to increase the number of allotments, perhaps setting up a charitable trust to oversee it?
3

haggis 10,

20/04/2008 04:42:19
Donald Buchan Lives a world of ever decreasing circles one in which he thinks that by cutting plots in half every couple of years when there is a demand for allotments he will solve the problem NOT SO all that happens is that you end up with a piece of ground the size of a postage stamp useles for growing anything other than half a bag of tatties a useless exercise in disappearing tricks and not one to be considered by any sane person!!!!!! especially in these times of economic uncertainty and not something to feed a growing FAMILY ON ! The fault lies with the City And Regional Councils not opening up new ground in City and rural areas, in the hope that they can sell the ground off to the private sector for private housing not much hope since the very people they are trying to sell them to, cannot afford to pay their mortgages.!!
David Stevens Allotment holder For 15 Years Lady Road Allots.Scottish Allotments & Garden Society Award of Merit.
4

haggis 10,

The Capital City of Scotland 20/04/2008 04:46:54
The ideal size of a plot should be in the region of thirty foot by twenty foot .
5

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta; . CA.....a place in the Sun 20/04/2008 07:35:44
4
haggis 10,
-----------------------

Hey Dude the lot size around my home is 220,770 sq'.

Is that big enough dude. ?

GC

6

haggis 10,

` 20/04/2008 08:51:07
#5 That kind of reply could only come from a land of noddin donkey's HEE-HAW
7

haggis 10,

` 20/04/2008 09:03:46
#5 That kind of reply could only come from a land of noddin donkey's HEE-HAW
8

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 20/04/2008 09:51:47
If British farmers were as efficient as the best allotment holders, Britain could feed half the world.
9

Slasher McGurk,

20/04/2008 10:00:53
I may be treading on the toes of pensioners, single mums and middle class couples here, but come on. Surely the money needed to lower these waiting lists can be used, by local authorities, to better effect. I would rather see a tighter leash put on the houdlum kids that terrorise communities, than a 10 x 6 ft plot of land put aside for the fresh greens of John and Mary PQ gardener.

Anyway, i thought veg grew on shelfs in supermarkets?
10

Mcsnagpile,

20/04/2008 10:15:46
Allotments the latest con; some people only take their driving license to pick up the carryout pizza. In the suburbs the back garden is for the bouncy castle, the barbi, the kids play swings, evening booze on the patio, or decking, gas heaters. Plots for home produce? You have to wash the vegetables and they do not fit in the microwave. I heard a proposal recently to build houses without kitchens, as most youngsters cannot cook anything that does not fit into a microwave.
Seriously, it is not cheap or easy to keep a vegetable garden. The old days of going to the local farmer for a bucket of manure are gone. My garden is the only one I know with a properly designed garden and vegetable plot and it costs time and money.
11

Toast,

20/04/2008 10:28:28
If you don't use your allotment for growing vegetables it should be given to somebody who will,as #10 says,it is a lot of hard work and a large percentage of allotments are overgrown or used as meeting places.
12

11+failed,

the pans 20/04/2008 10:28:36
Bring on the land tax that will cut the queues.
13

Hamish Scott,

20/04/2008 11:05:42
It is disappointing that so little effort appears to be made to satisfy demand (how many people don't even bother to go on the waiting list or don't have any allotments in their area?). Fresh air and exercise, isn't that what we are supposed to be in need of?
14

sheena,

Menstrie 20/04/2008 11:36:39
I know of a few folk who have taken on someone else's garden to grow fruit and veg, which is then shared between the 'gardener' and the owner. Perhaps the powers that be could organise a database for those looking for a plot and those unable/unwilling to tend their own garden.

With a big garden my motto has always been - if you can't eat it don't grow it - our plum and pear trees are just as bonny as any other trees. Bushes? currants, gooseberries. Ground cover? Strawberries, courgette. Bit of colour? Rhubarb, giant raspberries. Something spectacular? Sunflowers.

At the garden centre you find families who have no time or can't afford to grow veg but are buying trays of bedding plants and ornamental shrubs. GYO - a healthy, money saving, way of life.
15

westview,

on top of the topsoil 20/04/2008 16:55:49
Sheena *14*, good idea. Advertise in your local supermarket for folk who would like their ground tidy in exchange for some produce. Make sure that the garden you are growing things in actualy belongs to the person wanting it tidy. Put all new carparks under ground and plant allotments on top. All new sports and fittness grounds should be surrounded by allotments. Growing things give an interest to all ages and is great socially and for folks health. It also gets you away from the computer and tv screen!
16

Sarah Leonie,

London 20/04/2008 17:46:47
Myself and my husband run an organisation called GardenLend, which is a totally free service matching up people who haven't got the time, inclination or fitness to look after their own gardens with people desperate to grow fruit, veg and flowers. find.gardenlend.co.uk takes you to the bulletin board where you can register for free and post messages about you gardening wants and needs as a garden owner or gardener. The GardenLend website itself is having a re-vamp and will be up again by the middle of next week. It seems the only way forward with allotments as rare as hen's teeth.
17

Sarah Leonie,

London 20/04/2008 17:48:00
Myself and my husband run an organisation called GardenLend, which is a totally free service matching up people who haven't got the time, inclination or fitness to look after their own gardens with people desperate to grow fruit, veg and flowers. find.gardenlend.co.uk takes you to the bulletin board where you can register for free and post messages about your gardening wants and needs as a garden owner or gardener. The GardenLend website itself is having a re-vamp and will be up again by the middle of next week. It seems the only way forward with allotments as rare as hen's teeth.
18

buccleuch,

Glasgow 20/04/2008 19:50:15
I remember reading about a very successful community allotment that was created in a deprived part of London which brought all the commnumty together, broke down barriers between cultures etc. They used the back lot of a housing scheme. In Scotland there are thousands of these space behind tenements almost always a complete midden. Why not get these areas up and running and put in comuunuty recycling etc.



Oh I forgot, I'm in Scotland where good ideas are ignored by the council....
19

henrymanchester,

UK 20/04/2008 20:52:46
I bet if you changed your name to Winston Razamataz Marley Ahmed you'd get an allotment within weeks....
20

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 20/04/2008 21:10:54
Maybe a good idea not to hurry too much to acquire an allotment especially if it's about to be taxed by our "green" comrades.
21

pofi,

embra 20/04/2008 21:43:03
I don't know where #11 lives, if a large number of plots are overgrown then someone should be kicking ass!Not sure what he/she means about plots being used as meeting places; as they are in close proximity with each other it is difficult not to "meet people"...

#16/17 Garden sharing, brilliant! Might even stop people slabbing or tarmacing their gardens. How is it some people who have gardens have absolutely no interest in them?!

#18 Great idea, but, unfortunately, if you check your title deeds you will see that back greens are actually meant to be bleaching and drying areas only, not gardens.

I waited two years for my plot, which I've now had for five years, and truly treasure. Unfortunately not all plot holders look after theirs as well as they should. Thankfully though some of them are finally giving up, and the problem is diminishing. Remember, a plot is not a piece of heritable property to bequeath in your Will, it belongs to the Council and you're a council tenant. Use it or lose it- there are plenty who would love to have one.
I do have to laugh at those who drive into the site and park up next to their plots. (No, they aren't disabled). (I try not to think of their fuel emissions affecting my crops...)Couldn't walk the length of themselves, as they say! And most of them have large gardens at home!
Ideally, priority would be given to those on the list living in flats.Unfortunately with land prices being at a premium acquiring new sites is a difficult proposition. With the amount of interest shown in allotments selling off existing ones should be unthinkable.

 

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