Back to Back Events at the Bernice Garden this weekend!

Come join us for the The Bernice Garden Art Market and the 2nd Annual Plant Swap this weekend!

This Friday, April 13th, from 5 pm to 8 pm, is the pilot event of The Bernice Garden Art Market. This is our first art market event as apart of the 2nd Friday Art Nights in downtown Little Rock. We will have locally produced arts and crafts vendors, farm fresh produce, and music!

If you would like to be apart of this event, and help make it grow see here to become a vendor: Participate in the Bernice Garden Art Market on 2nd Friday Art Nights.

The Bernice Garden Art Market Flyer

And for Saturday we have the 2nd Annual Plant Swap cookout form 10 am to 2 pm.

the 2nd Annual Plant Swap flyer

We hope to see you there!

The Bernice Garden Plant Swap on Todays THV Channel 11

Inspiration blooms at Bernice Garden Plant Swap

7:10 AM, Apr 11, 2012

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (KTHV) — Spring is in the air so it’s time for established gardeners and those just getting started to get some inspiration at the Bernice Garden Plant Swap and Cookout.

Everyone is invited to come out Saturday, April 14 between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. to The Bernice Garden, which is located at 1401 South Main in downtown Little Rock.

Liz Sanders with Bernice Garden says the concept is simple: bring plants, seeds, pots, books, and gardening tools to swap with your neighbors.

“So, if someone has a kind of squash plant that you’ve never tried before, you can just take theirs and then you give them a tomato plant that you have too many of,” says Sanders.

The event is free so even if you don’t have anything to swap, Sanders says you are welcome to come out and browse.

The Food Truck will be set up with great breakfast options and Boulevard Bread is cooking up ribs, chicken, potato salad, cole slaw, BBQ beans & banana pie.

There will also be gardening tips and demos from your favorite local farmers, kids activities, live music, and plants to take home with you.

The Bernice Garden Plant Swap on Today's THV Channel 11

Watch the Video

Other highlights include:

- Shannon Wallace, local artist and landscape architect, making butterflies out of recycled materials!

-Music provided by HandMade Moments (jazz band)

-Green Corner Store will be open with many of their vendors. present to answer your questions and show off their products

-Loblolly will be open and selling treats that are spring related

-Laughing Stock Farm will be swapping plants and selling Arkansas strawberries

-Goodwill of Arkansas will be accepting donations. They will also be selling upcycled plant pots from old records

Bernice Garden Farmer’s Market article in Arkansas Democrat Gazette

Sunday farmers market on its way

 Bernice Garden to host new event

By Claudia Lauer

This article was published March 22, 2012 at 5:00 a.m. Arkansas Democrat Gazette

LITTLE ROCK — South Main Street residents will have a place by early May to buy locally grown vegetables and fruits, homemade jams and, eventually, Arkansas-produced meats, cheeses and other products.

The Bernice Garden at South Main and Daisy Gatson Bates Drive will host a Sunday farmers market starting May 6 and running through mid-October that will provide selling space for produce and goods grown or made within 150 miles of Little Rock. The addition to the Certified Arkansas Farmers Market network fits into the larger business theme developing along the section of South Main Street, which features several businesses focused on local goods and sustainable business practices.

“We want this to add to the neighborhood as a whole, to be part of a neighborhood that is lively and active all the time,” said Liz Sanders, event coordinator for Bernice Garden.

Sanders, who also farms a quarter-acre plot with her boyfriend, said the garden’s owner and staff focus on scheduling programs and events that will bring the community together and allow neighbors to interact and meet. She said the farmers market will focus on getting nutritious foods to the neighborhood.

Sanders said she and the other market organizers are working to finish the paperwork so vendors can accept vouchers from the federal Women, Infants and Children and the Electronic Benefit Transfer programs.

“We understand the neighborhood and we don’t want this to be about fancy, hoity-toity, or organic necessarily,” she said. “It’s not about exclusivity, but inclusiveness. Organic is great, but we want quality food, grown by quality people, for a quality neighborhood.”

The market will join a handful of other markets across the region, including the three largest — the River Market Farmers Market, which runs Tuesdays and Saturdays and will open for the season April 24; the Argenta Farmers Market in North Little Rock, which is open Saturdays and will start up April 14; and the Hillcrest Farmers Market, run by Pulaski Heights Baptist Church on Saturdays and opening for the season May 5 with a few vendors starting April 14.

The Argenta and Hillcrest markets are limited to sellers of locally grown produce, although the definition of local in terms of proximity to Little Rock varies by market. The River Market site allows resellers who buy produce at the Little Rock Port and take it to market without having a role in the growing or harvesting.

The Bernice Garden sent out surveys to the business community, potential farmers and sellers, and residents asking what they would like to see at the market and what day would be best. Sanders said the farmers were adamant that they did not want to have another market on a Saturday because of the others that operate that day. Residents said they preferred to have the market on the weekend, and about 80 percent said Sundays would work best.

“Farmers wanted a day midweek, but people can’t always get there all the time midweek,” Sanders said. “People were excited about Sunday and the farmers said they would prefer that to Saturday when they have people at the other markets as well.”

The Sunday hours, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., were not a favorite among many of the Main Street business owners because most businesses near the garden are closed Sunday. Several businesses are considering limited openings during the market depending on whether it generates enough foot traffic.

Shelley Green, owner of The Green Corner Store, a marketplace for local, sustainable and handcrafted goods, said the store will have a grand opening April 7 of its soda fountain, which will sell locally made ice cream and handmade herbal sodas. And if things go well, the soda fountain may stay open during farmers market hours.

“We’re definitely supportive of the market,” she said. “We’ve always wanted to have a local market here for the residents. I know the residents would love to have the quality of homegrown, fresh food.”

The Green Corner Store is one of several in the corridor that sell local products or focus on sustainable business practices. Boulevard Bread Company, the Studio Main architectural firm and The Root Cafe all fit into the environmental movement along South Main Street.

The Root Cafe will celebrate its one-year anniversary around the time the farmers market opens. The cafe’s owners and chefs buy as many ingredients as possible from Arkansas farmers and growers — many of whom are being tapped to sell at the market — creating a connection from farmers to lunch customers by telling people where and how the food was grown.

“There’s a lot of new stuff going on down here and a lot of it is focused on sustainability and local foods,” said Jack Sundell, who opened the cafe with his wife, Corri, in 2011. “I think it’s a great image to work for, but I also think more than anything, the district has the potential to become a really eclectic community-oriented neighborhood. It’s a neighborhood where you find old and young, black and white and Latino. You find residents and you also have commercial traffic from the River Market and downtown districts. It just seems like it has so much potential.”

Arkansas, Pages 7 on 03/22/2012

Arc Arkansas Art in the Park

Come by the beautiful Bernice Gardens Friday March 27th from 11 to 2 to see the Artists from The Arc Arkansas creating and selling their art.

Enjoy at Boulevard Bread or The Root Cafe and visit the Bernice Gardens to see some great art!

The Arc Arkansas provides supports, housing, advocacy, education and leadership to people with intellectual/developmental disabilities.

For more information about The ARC Arkansas, please contact Steven Hitt, Ceo or Cynthia Soone, Coo at 501-375-7770 or visit our website at ww.arcark.org.

Arc Arkansas Art in the Park Flyer

Photo of the Bernice Garden in Arkansas Democrat Gazette

Check out this photo taken at the Bernice Garden by Rick McFarland for the Arkansas Democrat Gazette. It is nice to see the community enjoying the garden. Thanks!
Photo by Rick McfarlandPhoto by rick mcfarland

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/RICK MCFARLAND –03/12/12– Ruby Stroupe, 11 months, crawls through her mother Stephanie’s legs and under a bench at The Bernice Gardens in Little Rock Monday. They were with a group of new moms and their babies taking advantage of the warm weather. They meet the 2nd Monday of every month.