Spotlight on the Interfaith Garden

The Community Garden Coalition has been helping Boone County residents grow healthful produce and develop gardening communities for over 40 years. One of our member gardens that I think epitomizes the ideal of community gardening is the Interfaith Garden

The coordinators of the Interfaith Garden stand next to their garden sign.
From left: Lily Chan, Noah Heringman, Suzanne Hemmann, Susan DeMian and Brent Lowenberg. Photo credit: Kathy Doisy

Originally, it began in 2006 as the Congregation Beth Shalom (CBS) Community Garden, to provide a service opportunity for students at the CBS school with the harvest donated to the Food Bank. Student volunteers from MU and local secondary schools helped maintain the garden until 2009, when the St. Thomas More Newman Center Parish was asked to help. 

For the past decade, this garden has raised and donated an annual average of 1,700 pounds of organic produce to the Food Bank for Central and Northeast Missouri. Sustaining such a massive effort takes a lot of help! 

Volunteers under the leadership of Lily Chan, Susan DeMian, Brent Lowenberg, and Noah Heringman meet 1 to 2 times a week to prepare the beds, plant, weed and harvest. The variety of produce varies with the season, but includes lettuces, spinach, radishes, mustard greens, turnips, beets, chard, kale, snow peas, collards, carrots, potatoes, sweet potatoes, onions, herbs, beans, peas, peppers, tomatoes, okra, squash, cucumber, garlic, walnuts, chestnuts, persimmons, strawberries, grapes, apples, peaches, pears, and rhubarb! If I was a client of the Food Bank, I’d make sure to go on the days that Interfaith delivers!


Volunteers come from all over Columbia, but regulars include congregants from Beth Shalom, Newman Center, and our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church. Susan and Mike Devaney, Marilyn and Dennis Bettenhausen, and Laura Flacks-Narrol started tomato, pepper, and herb seeds and donated seedlings to the garden. A few MU College of Engineering honor societies, Student Council and Tolton High School seniors offer to volunteer in the garden one to two times a year as their service projects.


To achieve this level of success in Boone County takes more than hard work – it requires deer fencing! Interfaith was fenced many years ago with the financial help of the CGC, and plans are in the works to fence in the large orchard that surrounds the fenced vegetable garden. The local deer really like fresh fruit and frequently pick the fruit trees clean!

As the year winds down, please consider supporting Interfaith Garden and the Community Garden Coalition.

collage of photos of people using community gardens along with the logos for the Community Garden Coalition and CoMoGives and text saying "Help our gardens grow with your donation! Through Midnight, December 31."

Can You Help Support Community Gardens?

collage of photos of people using community gardens along with the logos for the Community Garden Coalition and CoMoGives and text saying "Help our gardens grow with your donation! Through Midnight, December 31."

As we head into winter and our member gardens go largely dormant, we’re asking our supporters to consider making a donation to fund community gardening for 2025. You can show your support with a donation via CoMoGives, now through December 31. Here’s a note from one of our newer board members, Ginny Trauth.

Hello to all Community Garden Coalition supporters and friends!

My name is Ginny Trauth and as a fresher face to the CGC all-volunteer board I’d like to introduce myself and share what being a part of CGC means to me.

Three years ago, I stumbled into the world of community gardening when I moved to a new part of town and regularly drove past CGC’s Unite4Health garden. After some online searching I learned that that garden was part of CGC and even though I was a pretty inexperienced gardener, I decided to reach out and see if I could join.

With CGC’s assistance, through compost, water, seeds, straw, and tools, and my garden leader’s knowledge I was able to hit the ground running and quickly caught the gardening bug! Working on my garden, seeing it grow, and meeting new people in my community  became a real joy in my life. My community garden gave so much to me that I decided I needed to give back to it. First through financial donations and working on volunteer projects and, when the opportunity presented itself, as a board member.

During this time of year, when thankfulness and community are at the top of mind, I ask that you consider donating to CGC to help give back to and support an organization that gives to and supports so many!

Donations to CGC and to other wonderful community organizations can be made at through CoMoGives until December 31 at 11:59 PM.

I thank you and wish you a warm holiday season!
– Ginny Trauth