Work Life

How a Facebook post turned 40 strangers' yards into a flower farm

After twelve years of teaching, Marisa Mender-Franklin sought a way to build a social enterprise but lacked the necessary land. In a leap of faith, she turned to a local Facebook group in Memphis, asking strangers if they would allow her to cultivate flowers in their private front yards.

How a Facebook post turned 40 strangers' yards into a flower farm

The response was immediate and overwhelming. Within one week of her January 2021 post, Mender-Franklin received 40 offers from residents willing to lend their garden space. She promised to maintain the land, provide periodic bouquets, and bolster local pollinator populations in exchange for access to water and sunlight. By March, she had selected five initial plots and began planting while balancing her full-time teaching career.

Sixteen months later, Mender-Franklin left her classroom role to manage what had become a thriving business. Today, Midtown Bramble & Bloom utilizes 10 community yards without any financial exchange for the land. The operation now includes a subscription service, a storefront, and a weekend market presence. Beyond floral sales, the enterprise functions as a community hub, employing seven staff members, hosting educational classes, and donating thousands of dollars annually to local nonprofits through monthly fundraisers. What began as a logistical solution for a lack of capital has evolved into a model for community-based commerce, proving that a simple digital request can reshape a neighborhood's social and economic landscape.

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