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Readers respond to a guerrilla gardener

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Until I read “Guerrilla Gardeners Dig In,” May 29, [about people like Scott who anonymously plant on neglected public space,] I didn’t realize I am a guerrilla gardener.

I am ashamed to admit I have spent quite a bit of money buying seed packets and sprinkling the contents around places I visit that have glaring bare spots or are prone to weeds.

I’ve planted many types of seeds over the years, including California natives, but I notice the hardiest seeds are from alyssum and evening primrose, which will self-sow and colonize barren and drought-prone sections.

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Thanks for the tip on the art of seed bombing.

Robert Hemedes

Los Angeles

HOORAY FOR Scott! And for Ramon Arevalo [the Long Beach superintendent of grounds maintenance who admires his work].

However, I won’t be at all surprised if some city official -- stupidly thinking he’s doing the right thing -- introduces some law against this type of activity, or some ordinance that calls for a fee and license of some sort for engaging in it.

Gary E. Myers Downey

LOCAL horticultural societies chock-full of volunteers should be directed to derelict municipal lands and, in effect, be given the “keys to the city” and every opportunity to revitalize the open and neglected lands that we all own.

Gerry Robbins

via e-mail

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Backyard oasis

THANK YOU for “Country Oasis in the City,” May 22. I love that type of living, what they have done to achieve their special place, the house, gardens, animals. Well, the Ilse Ackerman-Meeno Peluce family are wonderful!

Patty Healey via e-mail

ARTICLES focusing on positive activity in Lincoln Heights have been few and far between, so yours is most refreshing, welcomed and appreciated by many of us who live here. Thank you.

I’d like to point out that the iconic Brewery industrial art complex [mentioned in the article] is in Lincoln Heights.

E. Michael Diaz Lincoln Heights

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SO INSPIRING. I have a little patio of my own that I’m starting to plant. I was getting a little impatient with the slow growth, but now I see what can transform over a couple of years.

Joann De La Ossa Diamond Bar

Send letters to the L.A. Times, Home section, 202 W. 1st St., Los Angeles, CA, 90012, or e-mail home@latimes.com.

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