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Kiana Okafor

Concrete jungles allow for more growth than steel. My first garden was a shoe organizer nailed vertically to a fire escape in Brooklyn. Each pocket had growing herbs—soil roots split the seams while the mint crept into the broccoli box below. Urban gardening requires creativity. You learn to identify urban microclimates. That south-facing wall in the alley? Perfect for figs. The shady side of the dumpster? The hostas won't care.

I killed my first avocado pit by mollycoddling it to death. I checked on it and rotated it – for even sun - twice daily. I drowned it in filtered water. A barista gave me her rejected pit from her smoothie, all wrinkled, and said, "Just put it in a jar and forget about it." That is the one that sprouted. Now, I am propagating grocery store ginger in take-out containers. Plants crave resiliency more than coddling.

Is your balcony a wind tunnel? Try Swiss chard—its stems brace themselves like tiny skyscrapers. Last fall, I revived a dead old rosemary that a client had stopped watering. We finally repurposed her AC drip into a self-watering terracotta system. Share your hacks. Trade lemongrass for eggs! Or turn cracked buckets into wicking beds. Dirt is democratic. A five-gallon pail of tomatoes tastes as good as acres would.

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