Shared garden plots, explained without the guesswork.
Ionzormi gathers how Canadian community gardens and allotments actually run — the rental agreements, the seasonal calendar, the soil work, and the quiet etiquette that keeps a shared site civil from May through October.
A plot is a seasonal agreement, not just a patch of soil.
Across Canadian municipalities the pattern repeats: register, sign an annual rental agreement, garden the season, clear out before a deadline. The specifics differ city to city, so the details below are general — confirm yours with the local coordinator.
- Season Many programs run roughly May to October; Montréal lists May 1 to the last Saturday in October.
- One plot rule Toronto, Winnipeg, London and Montréal generally limit registrations to one plot per person or civic address.
- Allotment vs. community garden Allotment-style plots are gardened individually; community gardens are often group-run, sometimes with shared, donated harvests.
- Waitlists Demand frequently exceeds supply, so registering on a waitlist is common and does not guarantee a plot the same year.
- No subletting Reassigning or subleasing a plot is typically prohibited; vacated plots return to the waitlist.
Three references for a working season.
Plot rules and rental agreements
Registration, the annual agreement, inspections, and the cleanup deadline — the obligations you sign up for when you take a plot.
Read →
Seasonal planting windows by zone
Frost dates and hardiness zones decide your calendar. How cool-season and warm-season crops line up from the Prairies to coastal BC.
Read →
Soil preparation and shared space
Building beds, composting on site, water access, and the unwritten etiquette that keeps neighbouring plots on good terms.
Read →From registration to cleanup, in stages.
A simplified arc of a community-garden season. Exact dates vary by program and region.
Join the program or waitlist in late winter or spring.
Return the annual rental agreement, often within two weeks.
Clear, amend and shape beds once soil is workable.
Plant by zone, water, weed, and keep the plot tidy for inspections.
Harvest and clean the plot by the program's fall deadline.
Send a note.
Have a correction, a question about a guide, or a public municipal program we should reference? Use the form. Ionzormi is informational and is not affiliated with any municipality.
- Email editor@ionzormi.org
- Subject Community gardening & allotments
- Region Canada