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Zara Peters

Member since April 7, 2021

All input submitted by this participant

There are 3 projects available.
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Make the most of what we’ve got- £3500

Zara Peters•5 years ago The aim is to start a tree pit adoption scheme in Forest Gate. We are lucky to have many trees across the streets of Forest Gate though currently most are used for rubbish and dog waste. I have delivered a huge amount of greening work in FG before and know I can galvanise the community with this new scheme. The aim is to recruit at least 30 households to adopt a tree pit close to them or close to somewhere they work in the local area. I will secure and install with the help of each household a mini garden around the tree pit – this will help increase natural biodiversity as well as vastly improving the look and feel of the area. As the tree pits are in communal areas it will impact for more than the 30 households involved in the project – I would suggest around 300 local residents will receive benefit from the scheme. By engaging local people to take care of just one tree pit it means the workload is manageable and I’ve seen first-hand how taking care of undesirable public spaces discourages fly tipping and general dog waste. I have a proven track record within FG of being able to deliver such a project. The tree pit adoption scheme aligns with cleanliness and waste and increasing nature and biodiversity. It will reduce waste by creating small gardens which would act as a deterrent for rubbish and dog waste. It will increase areas beneficial for bug life and insects improving the overall green footprint.As I’ve mentioned I have worked on greening FG in the past and it’s something I’m passionate about. I started the Instagram account @theflowerstarter which is dedicated to the project – here you can find before and after shots of the areas I’ve worked on and helped recruit huge numbers of local residents to be involved. My greening endeavour was self-funded at first, later into my work I secured funding from the council which helped broaden the greening project – the areas are now all taken care of by locals and they’ve continued to remain as beautiful little gardens in what were otherwise neglected areas of Forest Gate. I managed to secure donations of money and supplies from local businesses and people which helped spread the funding much further than I had originally planned. If successful I aim to promote the tree pit adoption scheme via local groups I have connections with, community newsletters via the community garden and library, and my neighbours who came on board in my original greening campaign are connected with the local mosque and church. The great thing about greening is that it knows no boundaries – young or old, woman or man, any nationality can enjoy a garden that takes place of a neglected area that attracts rubbish. By starting a project that works in our public spaces it also ensures that everyone can have access and receive benefit from the scheme.  I started the tree pit adoption scheme and kicked off on Station Rd - we created 9 tree pit gardens this day. It was really lovely with lots of neighbours coming out to help and promising to take care of their chosen tree pit. I created some diy tree pit kits - I put together the treated wood, screws, compost, plants, bulbs and bark chip. This feels like a better way to fulfil the rest of the project though just at test stage for now. So far we’ve taken over around 17 tree pits across FGN and FGS. We planted hundreds of spring bulbs, they’re just popping through now so we all can’t wait to see the pretty flowers against the grey pavement.

Take Care of What We Have

Zara Peters•5 years ago The majority of the planters I've seen that have been added to the roads as part of the low traffic initiative are looking empty and abandoned. Who should be looking after these? Plants need replacing and there needs to be an ongoing commitment to take care of these. Similarly, there are a number of planters in front of the FG Community School that have been shifted out of place and not planted so they add to the area looking neglected. Tree pits across the area also need work - they mainly contain rubbish and are used as a toilet for dogs. Residents could be recruited to help look after their tree pit if we invest in improving them. I've been involved in building new planting areas in the last few years and we've made great progress though I think using a portion of the budget to take care of what we have will make a huge improvement in the overall environment.

Make our playgrounds more inspiring

Zara Peters•5 years ago It's great that we have lots of playgrounds around Forest Gate though it would be great to see these areas become more inspiring with the use of natural materials. It would be great to see us recycling things that we already have from our green areas - logs etc. I think it would be fun to use materials that can be found around the area too - an old car could be made safe to use as a climbing frame for example. We have local businesses (iron, stone etc) that could supply spare materials too. We could build interesting planting areas that become educational for the community.
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