When Kelda Miller finishes work, she rides around Puyallup, Wash., tending vegetable beds at offices, a church, some apartment blocks. In season, she'll pick fruit or greens, then head to her Sumner, Wash., home to a garden filled with enough produce for her to sell on weekends.
What's unusual about Miller is that none of the spaces where she gardens are hers. Her gardens are on other people's land, the fruit she picks on other people's trees. It's called guerrilla gardening -- and it's legal, productive and surprisingly easy to do.
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