
We have a saying at 约炮视频: 鈥淲here birds thrive, people prosper.鈥 It鈥檚 a theme that connects our conservation programs to the well-being of people. Bird-friendly gardening relates closely to this idea, but sometimes it can be hard to remember how it plays out in real life.
Earlier this month, I visited the (aka SAVA) to learn about the meaning behind a bird-friendly garden they recently asked us to help create. What I heard inspired me more than I could鈥檝e imagined.
The Need for a Garden
SAVA is a nonprofit in northern Colorado that provides crisis intervention, advocacy, and counseling for people affected by sexual violence. They recently opened a new office in Loveland, Colorado, on an out-of-the-way street. When they moved in, the building was excessively beige and the entrance was weedy. It鈥檚 hard enough to go to a sexual assault center, so SAVA鈥檚 staff wanted to make it more welcoming. Planting a garden was a natural start.
In SAVA鈥檚 conference room, I met with Amanda Olivier, executive director of SAVA, Amy Dondale, a longtime SAVA volunteer, and Aaron Michael, owner of and designer of SAVA鈥檚 new garden. Plants are a big part of SAVA鈥檚 work. Amanda explained, 鈥淎ll of our therapy offices have plants in them. I mean, some of them are wicked green. Something about growing life is just calming.鈥
After more than two years of COVID, SAVA鈥檚 staff needed a source of calm more than ever. 鈥淭he SAVA staff has had an extremely hard two years. Not everybody is safe at home,鈥 explained Amy. Violence rose during the pandemic and SAVA鈥檚 caseload skyrocketed. 鈥淪o the staff has really had some grueling, exhausting days,鈥 she said.
A garden鈥攕omething vibrant and beautiful鈥攑rovided a much-needed reprieve. It was something positive their staff could celebrate and work towards.
Why a bird-friendly garden though? 鈥淭hat was probably me,鈥 answered Amy, who had already been interested in planting native plants in her yard. She volunteered at a Habitat Hero garden planting at the Habitat for Humanity ReStore in Fort Collins in 2021. 鈥淭hat just really made me very excited about the whole idea of landing spots for birds,鈥 she said. In fact, at the event, she talked to Jamie Weiss, Habitat Hero coordinator, and asked her how to get an organization signed up for a garden.
Making It a Reality
One of the first steps was finding funding. Fortunately, Ken Garff Ford and Comcast Colorado donated $5,000 and $2,500, respectively, to create the garden. 约炮视频 contracted Earth Love Gardens to design it. In his design, the CEO and founder of Earth Love Gardens, Aaron Michael, selected plants with purple flowers to facilitate calmness and placed tall grasses to provide a sense of shelter. All that was left was finding help to plant it.
Luckily, Ken Garff Ford has an employee volunteer program, and we invited them to help plant the garden over three days last July. In the end, more than 50 volunteers attended, a number far greater than SAVA鈥檚 staff expected.
鈥淢y staff cried multiple times, to be honest,鈥 said Amanda. 鈥淧eople really showed up for us. That鈥檚鈥hat鈥檚 a lot for us, because you just don鈥檛 always feel supported in this work.鈥 Sexual violence is such a heavy, uncomfortable topic. People don鈥檛 want to talk about it or know how to deal with it, according to Amanda. 鈥淏ut by having an opportunity to come plant a plant with us, they could step up,鈥 she said.
The volunteers weren鈥檛 connected to SAVA before the event, but according to Amanda and Amy, many of them did have a connection to sexual violence. 鈥淓very one of them absolutely knows someone. We all do. Those are the unfortunate statistics,鈥 said Amanda.
Reactions to the Garden
When I first walked up to SAVA鈥檚 Loveland office, the purple blooms of bee balm and yellow petals of black-eyed Susans greeted me. I was excited to see a native leafcutter bee and skipper butterfly already drinking nectar from them. Green leaves from many other plants too new to bloom were swaying in the breeze of approaching rain clouds.
SAVA鈥檚 staff are happy with the garden too. 鈥淎lready people have favorites. That bee balm is a popular plant!鈥 laughed Amy. One of Amanda鈥檚 staff told her that she smiles when she walks up to the building now. In an email thanking Amy for her work on the garden, one SAVA employee wrote, 鈥淚t looks so beautiful, and it feels so nice to walk into a well-maintained, well-manicured building. There is no doubt that our clients will be positively impacted by this addition- it鈥檚 hard enough to walk into SAVA to receive services, but I think an attractive exterior will make it just a touch easier.鈥
鈥淣ow there鈥檚 a different pride in ownership because we have this beautiful garden that we want the whole building to live up to,鈥 said Amanda. 鈥淭hat really means a lot when my staff can feel really proud of the space they鈥檙e in. They need that.鈥
The gardens鈥 healing benefits will extend to SAVA鈥檚 clients, too. Amanda thinks therapists might use it for child therapy. She also thinks it could be a good place for parents to sit while their kids are in therapy. Kids sometimes yell during therapy, she explained. It鈥檚 a healthy process, but it can be distressing for parents to hear. So the garden can make the process a little bit easier for parents in that way.
More Than a Garden
After the interview, I left SAVA feeling energized and inspired in ways that I didn鈥檛 expect. The garden means and represents so much to their staff. 鈥淲hat happened outside kind of represents [our] work too, right? It was transformative,鈥 said Amanda. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 what we hope by people coming to SAVA, that they鈥檙e able to transform through healing."
When my head鈥檚 in the weeds, I sometimes lose sight of the bigger picture of the gardens we help plant, but Amanda brought it out again for me: 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just a garden; this is a cause people want to support.鈥
When Aaron explained how he designed the garden to create a sense of security for SAVA鈥檚 visitors, it struck me that a bird-friendly garden does the same thing for birds. It creates a place where birds鈥攁nd people鈥攃an prosper.