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European volunteers help Greek ‘bailout gardens’

An urban farmer plants an olive tree and local people look on, in the former military camp Karatasiou, in the Northern Greek city of Thessaloniki, on Sunday, April 27, 2014. Volunteer residents are being encouraged to utilize many suburban areas left vacant amidst a drop in real estate prices, to grow crops aimed at helping people hit by the country’s financial crisis. (AP Photo/Nikolas Giakoumidis)

Municipal authorities in Thessaloniki, a city in northern Greece of about 1.5 million people, have sought out disused plots land owned by the military, the national railway company and other public agencies 

By Costas Kantouris,
Associated Press
27 April 2014

Excerpt:

Costas Kantouris, Associated Press
27 April 2014

An urban farmer plants an olive tree and local people look on, in the former military camp Karatasiou, in the Northern Greek city of Thessaloniki, on Sunday, April 27, 2014. Volunteer residents are being encouraged to utilize many suburban areas left vacant amidst a drop in real estate prices, to grow crops aimed at helping people hit by the country’s financial crisis. (AP Photo/Nikolas Giakoumidis)
THESSALONIKI, Greece (AP) — Volunteer gardeners from countries around Europe visited Greece’s second largest city, Thessaloniki, on Sunday to help local urban planting initiatives set up help residents hit by the country’s financial crisis.

Urban gardens — used to plant vegetables and make use of land left vacant amid a sharp drop in real estate prices — have sprung up across Greece since the crisis brought the country to the brink of bankruptcy four years ago. Austerity measures demanded as part of Greece’s international rescue have created widespread unemployment and hardship.

The volunteers from seven European countries are from a France-based group, called Kokopelli, that was created to promote seed variety and whose members are currently touring cities in south Europe.

On Sunday, they visited a disused army base where city residents have been allowed to create garden allotments, and organized a seed exchange, where aspiring gardeners swap locals varieties.

“We brought seeds for potatoes, onions and beans. Variety is important, and it’s up to everyone involved to keep it going,” German volunteer Juergen Schroeder told the AP.

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