"People in the community are excited about this, and we hope this will spur more activity," Collins said. "We would like to see orchards like this around the city." She long has had an interest in feeding the needy.
"My Mom grew up in the wake of the Great Depression, and she once told me that she knew she'd be rich if she could ever walk into a grocery store and buy whatever she wanted. That made a huge impression on me. It became my standard of wealth, too, and made me want to fight hunger any way I can," Collins said.
The Anthony Street Orchard features two pear trees, a persimmon tree, a fig tree, eight blackberry bushes, and wide planters filled with perennial herbs.
It is something from which the entire Bibb City community is benefiting. "There are just three rules," Brad Barnes said. Those rules: only take the fruit you need; do not sell anything you take; leave something for the next person.
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