“Gardens Maketh the City” might be an alternative name for the Canadian Communities in Bloom initiative which Stratford has taken part in since its inception in 1994. Then Mayor of Stratford, Ted Blowes, was one of the organization’s founding members and a highly active and visible advocate of this programme. Before his death in 2013, Ted was the instigator of the pollinator garden beneath what was then the “Bridge to Nowhere” and has now been renamed the “Bridge of Hope” in Confederation Park, Stratford. The importance of creating and maintaining gardens that specifically attract butterflies, bees and other pollinators cannot be understated in a world that is increasingly aware of the necessity of reducing, reusing and recycling in order to preserve the world for future generations. As part of its ongoing remit, the Stratford Communities in Bloom Committee actively encourages its residents to be part of this endeavour as well as creating other pollinator areas throughout the City itself. Gardens and their plants provide the medicines, oxygen, shelter and beauty that are so essential to the quality of life and wellbeing of any city’s residents.
As well as beautifying the City and providing the essentials outlined above through its gardens, the Stratford Communities in Bloom Committee is dedicated to ensuring that waste management is carried out by its residents as well as the City’s own team. Having a clean environment in which to live and raise families is of paramount importance and is encouraged by the Committee whenever possible.
Civic pride has been an unexpected side-effect of the Stratford Communities in Bloom presence, exhibiting itself in the number and quality of homeowners’ gardens that have sprung up and are lovingly maintained throughout the summer months.
But the winter months are not forgotten by the Committee which takes part in Stratford’s downtown Winter Lights exhibit that runs through the Christmas season into late January each year. Started in 2020, this project ensures that the City is as beautiful with snow on the ground as it is with flowers.
For its excellence in providing hope during the pandemic the world has been experiencing, in 2021 the Stratford Communities in Bloom Committee was awarded the National “2021 Hope is Growing” Award. This it did by introducing yellow flowers (the colour of Hope) into as many of its gardens around the City as possible and also encouraging the community to do likewise. It also used part of its “Garden of Hope” in the downtown core to commemorate Indigenous children and those who perished in the past.
All of which is why “Gardens Maketh the City” seems an appropriate alternate to “Communities in Bloom” in Stratford, given that its residents have taken up the challenge of ensuring a high quality of life for the future through their plantings and encouragement of important insect life in them, as well as waste awareness - all instilling in the community a sense of civic pride.