Five minutes with…our community gardener
Victoria helps residents enjoy our gardens and keeps them looking beautiful.

It’s difficult to sum up what I love about gardening. It’s everything. How different plants grow, the seasonal and weather changes (even rain!), seeing others enjoy the flowers that appear and how it invigorates all your senses.
I have always loved flowers, trees and plants. I previously worked as an NHS speech and language therapist and before that in education. Over time, I found myself increasingly turning to outdoor work. The more I did, the more the enthusiasm grew, until I was certain that gardening was the career path for me.
I have seen the proof that gardens can be restorative. I encourage our residents to enjoy the gardens as much as possible, whether that’s sitting and looking, or participating in tasks. During the tighter lockdown, they were a safe space for people to sit and relax. Residents said they felt lucky to have them.
Talking to the residents is lovely. It’s great to learn what plants people like in the garden, or what they are doing with their container gardens outside their flats. I love listening to tales from their lives – many people have such interesting stories. It’s quite inspiring and sometimes very funny.
It was a really hot spring and summer but we watered mostly by hand. I could not have done it all without the residents helping me. They were completely brilliant. They often help me with plant names that are new to me (there are so many!), and do daily tasks like open and close the greenhouse and check on the barrel pond at weekends. It really helps. Heading into winter, there will be many jobs to do in the gardens. One of the biggest is mulching, which is adding an enriching and insulating layer of composted material to every bed in the garden. We have lovely things on show, like winter flowering shrubs. The residents often stop to chat about what they can see on their way through the gardens.
There is always some colour throughout the year. Jackie, the head community gardener, has used succession planting. So when certain plants fade, others begin to pop up. There are lots of lovely surprises as the weeks go by. You have no idea the gardens are there from the busy London roads outside. You step into a peaceful, natural space you’re not expecting. When I first visited almost a year ago, I felt the ‘wow’ factor, and I still get that now.
Find out more about our sheltered housing
With award-winning communal gardens, our friendly and affordable sheltered housing helps residents live independently for as long as possible.
We have flats available now for older people from Hammersmith. Talk to us on 020 8600 0650 / 07733 842 574, email info@hamunitedcharities.com or read more here.





Lydia Gandaa, Director of Bubble & Squeak, explains, “The children were shocked to find out how much food was being wasted. They asked Waitrose and Marks and Spencer’s if they could collect any food that would otherwise have been thrown away. They also pitched what is now the Mayor’s Fund for London and won £1,500, which they used to set up a weekly food stall in the school playground. East Acton/Old Oak is a highly deprived area, so it was about supporting the families that live locally to access healthy, quality food that would have otherwise gone to waste.”
The job market is extremely challenging at the moment. For people with a disability, it can feel almost impossible to find work.
Miracle Brews