Useful
Plants Garden at Kirstenbosch
Introduction

The Useful Plants Garden Project, (UPGP) sees the amalgamation and upgrading
of both the medicinal garden and the plant use trail at Kirstenbosch National
Botanical Garden into one functional and socially relevant entity.
The UPG project is set to run for two years includes two phases:
- Phase 1, includes planning, landscaping, sourcing of plants and implementation
of the garden.
- Phase 2 focuses on education, skill dissemination in schools and
communities, with traditional healers and other relevant bodies.
The UPGP is a demonstration of a new South African garden. It combines centuries
of plant use knowledge from all the peoples and cultures of South Africa
while conserving the national treasure contained in the extraordinary diversity
of indigenous plants. The design with a centrepiece of a traditional Xhosa/Mpondo
hut, demonstrates the beauty of form combined with function.
The UPGP aims to give hope to all sectors of society by suggesting practical
indigenous plant solutions for social and economic development. It is
a practical demonstration of land and flora conservation and their sustainable
uses. The UPDP suggests how to better manage natural resources and introduces
new ways of working with the soil and plants while reviving and preserving
an ancient, traditional, cultural inheritance.
To make this project a success,
working relationships will be forged with traditional healers, educational
institutions, environmentalists, botanists and communities. Phase 2 focuses
on involving these stakeholders to preserve and conserve our threatened
flora by promoting useful garden development.
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Useful Plants Garden
at Kirstenbosch
Sponsors
Rowland & Leta Hill Trust

Botanical Society


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