Woman transforms lot into garden

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In this photo taken June 24, 2009, Karen Dohrn, of the nonprofit project 3E Heirlooms, shows off several raised beds she has planted in a parking lot in Rock Island Ill. Dohrn rents the lot from the city for $1 and grows tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, herbs, and edible flowers using the square-foot gardening method. She plans to sell the produce and use the money to help women who, like Ms. Dohrn, have escaped from verbally and emotionally abusive relationships.  (AP Photo/The Dispatch, Todd Welvaert)
In this photo taken June 24, 2009, Karen Dohrn, of the nonprofit project 3E Heirlooms, shows off several raised beds she has planted in a parking lot in Rock Island Ill. Dohrn rents the lot from the city for $1 and grows tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, herbs, and edible flowers using the square-foot gardening method. She plans to sell the produce and use the money to help women who, like Ms. Dohrn, have escaped from verbally and emotionally abusive relationships. (AP Photo/The Dispatch, Todd Welvaert)
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ROCK ISLAND (AP) – Karen Dohrn bops around the chipped and buckled parking lot at Ninth Street and Fourth Avenue. She wears a brown tank top, khaki shorts and flip flops. Her gardener's tan glows.

Here in this arid lot that she rents from the city of Rock Island for $1, Dohrn is growing tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, herbs, edible flowers, and more in raised beds. She is using the square-foot gardening method, growing as many plants as she can in a small space. These aren't just any plants: They're heirlooms – those old-fashioned favorites bred for flavor and nutrition, rather than keeping well during long-distance transport.

Once harvest time comes, she plans to sell the produce and use the money to help women who, like herself, have escaped from verbally and emotionally abusive relationships. Her nonprofit project is called 3E Heirlooms, and the E's stand for environment, ecology and economics.

Right now she is working the gardens alone, paying for the project mostly with her own money.

"This has been me," she says, pointing to the beds. She hasn't applied for any grants to fund the project.

She has had a few volunteers, and several businesses have chipped in. A second planting site is located outside Stern Beverage, Inc., in Milan, which donated the space.

Other donors have included Country Spring Water Company, the Davenport Compost Facility, Miller's Trucking and Excavating, Quad City Rain Barrels, Royal Neighbors of America, Bonnie Plants and Standard Forwarding.

Last year Dohrn moved back to the Quad-Cities from Des Moines, where she was a civil engineer.

She says, "I was working 90-hour weeks, and I just thought, 'I can't do this anymore.'"

She also left behind an abusive relationship, she says. That experience, in part, encouraged her to start 3E Heirlooms. She hopes to help women who are living in shelters to get on their feet.

"I wouldn't want my grandchildren living in a shelter," she says.

So far, she says, Augustana College has shown interest in purchasing some of her vegetables. In the future, she would like to open a store, where patrons could buy heirloom vegetables and fresh foods made from them, such as salads. Her vision also includes planting five heirloom gardens in each of the Quad-Cities next year.

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