Oct 11, 2022
NGB Awards Therapeutic Garden Grants

National Garden Bureau, along with program sponsors American Meadows and Sakata Seed America, have announced the therapeutic gardens receiving grants and in-kind donations totaling more than $5,000.

The two winning gardens are:

Capper Foundation Gardens

Topeka, Kansas

First place vote-recipient; winner of a $3,000 grant.

The Capper Gardens consist of raised beds on a corner of their Topeka, Kansas campus, as well as raised and flat garden beds including many sensory components in their inner courtyard and container gardens at their residences. Pediatric therapists use the gardens to work on fine motor, gross motor and communication skills during individualized therapy sessions with the children. The adults they serve work alongside staff and volunteers to prepare and plant the gardens and care for them throughout the growing season. They also use the vegetables and herbs grown in the gardens in cooking classes offered at Capper. The Capper Gardens also provide staff, volunteers and the people they serve the opportunity to get outside and enjoy the beauty of the garden spaces. Their plan for this grant is to purchase additional sensory components for the courtyard gardens, including plants and outdoor musical instruments, as well as containers, plants, seeds, and specialized container garden soil for all the gardens.

Mary Free Bed Therapeutic Garden

Grand Rapids, Michigan

Runner-Up; winner of a $2,000 grant.

One of the Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital (MFB) Recreational Therapy offerings is horticulture therapy in an accessible therapy garden, which provides patients the opportunity to strengthen skills and connect with nature. Rehabilitation specialists work with patients on a variety of activities that focus on the skills needed to garden following an injury or illness, such as shopping to purchase seeds and tools, planting in raised beds, using gardening tools, and safely transitioning to uneven surfaces. The program also helps heal patients’ mental health. If selected for a grant, MFB would expand upon this program by creating a “Live Wall.” This Wall will be made entirely out of plants and will create a more intimate and healing therapy garden area for patients and visitors. The Wall will be positioned so that it blocks the view of the parking area, creating a calmer setting where patients and families can sit and experience a brief escape from a traditional hospital setting.

National Garden Bureau, American Meadows, Sakata Seed America and product in-kind sponsor, Corona Tools, would like to recognize all of the grant applicants that participated this year. All are listed on the NGB website.  NGB encourages support of these and other therapeutic gardens by the industry, local communities, and individuals.


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