The Whanganui Environment Base (WhEB), on the Whanganui Resource Recovery Centre (WRRC) premises, has a table in the porch for donated plants. Gardeners who love sharing their excess seedlings and other live plant material drop them off – labelled or unlabelled – sometimes when nobody is on deck to receive them.
Visitors make a donation for the plants they want to take away, just as they do for other items in the Re-Use Academy (RUA) inside the WhEB.
All kinds of healthy plants have been donated by generous gardeners: vegetable and flower seedlings, annuals, perennials, bulbs, corms, rhizomes and, once, a tray of buxus hedging. Dahlia plants have been presented in used coffee cups.
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Balsam was a new species to me. I happily paid a dollar for a punnet of six seedlings. They all took, easily, once planted. Well, they flourished; the following spring there were dozens. Meanwhile, on the Wairarapa Garden Tour in November 2016, I noticed tall balsam seedlings had taken over a semi-shady patch the size of a primary school swimming pool.