New sensory garden added to community in village of Bryant

Extension Master Gardener Sonja Wright expanded a community garden in Bryant and created a sensory garden that intentionally spurs visitors to engage all five senses. (Photo courtesy of U of I Extension)

Sonja Wright, University of Illinois Extension Master Gardener serving Fulton, Mason, Peoria, and Tazewell counties, created a sensory garden in her hometown of Bryant.

Through her professional career as a speech pathologist, Wright understands the value of using all five senses as a means of skills recovery.

As an active member of the community, and as a village trustee, she is aware several community members live with various types of physical and learning disabilities and the sensory garden is of special value to them and their families. Additionally, the garden has already attracted visitors from outside Bryant.

Created years ago, the garden features a design inspired by the area’s agricultural life. Wishing to honor the original garden and connect with the traditions it represents, Wright developed a plan that added five long raised beds — one for each of the senses — designed in a circular fashion around the existing garden.

She further planned for a thick, soft mulch path between the existing garden at the core and the sensory garden around it.

The raised beds are long, narrow, and not too high: just right for children and adults to easily reach in and touch plants, grasp and break off a piece to taste or smell, lean in to see them up close, or listen and hear them rustling in the breeze.  Lamb’s Ear and parsley are but two of the dozens of plants that await visitors to touch, taste, smell, see, and hear.

Wright’s love of barn quilts led her to design and create a series of artistic panels that surrounds the garden. The colors in the quilt patterns echo the colors in the surrounding natural environment, adding to the sense of coherence, belonging, and comfort.

In addition to being a space for exploration, contemplation, renewal, healing, and recovery, the Sensory Garden has fostered a sense of community.

Sonja Wright’s love of barn quilts led her to design and create a series of artistic panels that surrounds the sensory garden she designed in Bryant. (Photo courtesy of U of I Extension)

The local Brownie Troop has put in work days there, building and decorating butterfly house art for the garden. Individual residents have contributed time and enthusiasm to help maintain the garden. The village has contributed resources and support to what is a wonderful gift to the entire community.

Through the Sensory Garden and other involvements, Wright quickly completed her 60 Extension Master Gardener volunteer hours that moved her from intern to official Extension Master Gardener. Her journey continues and so does the garden she created in Bryant.

She is making plans for a pollinator garden at the site, perhaps as a next concentric area enfolding the original garden structure and the Sensory Garden.

A new program called Core Horticulture Education is being offered for anyone interested in learning more about a wide variety of horticulture topics, for personal or professional enrichment.

The course is the first step for anyone interested in progressing to the Extension Master Gardener program.

For more information, contact Ian Goslin, Extension horticulture program coordinator at ianmg@illinois.edu or visit our website at go.illinois.edu/ExtensionFMPT.