Our Programs

Discover how our gardens grow food, knowledge, and connection in your neighborhood.

A meticulously maintained pollinator garden in photographic realism, designed beside a community garden space. Clusters of native flowering plants—purple coneflower, golden black-eyed Susans, delicate milkweed, and bright bee balm—create dense layers of color and texture. Flat stones form a winding path between plantings, and a small wooden sign labeled “Pollinator Habitat – Please Protect” stands at the edge. A clear glass bee hotel and a shallow stone birdbath sit nearby. Soft morning sunlight filters through, creating sparkling highlights on petals and gentle shadows under leaves. Shot at a low angle close to the blooms, with a shallow depth of field that renders distant garden beds as a soft green blur. The mood is serene and attentive, emphasizing environmental stewardship and the quiet labor of beneficial insects, without any human presence.
A shared harvest table scene in photographic realism, portraying the idea of mutual aid without any human figures. A long, simple wooden table stands under a shade tree, its surface arranged with labeled baskets: “Take What You Need,” “Share What You Grow,” and “For Local Initiatives.” Each basket contains different produce—crisp lettuce heads, plump zucchinis, scarlet radishes, aromatic herbs bundled with twine. A scale, a donation box, and a clipboard sign-in sheet rest neatly to one side. Dappled afternoon sunlight filters through leaves overhead, creating a pattern of soft light and shadow across the table. Shot from a three-quarter angle with moderate depth of field, the foreground labels and vegetables appear tack-sharp, while the tree canopy and background garden softly blur. The mood is inviting, organized, and community-centered.

Programs

From shared garden plots and free farm stands to workshops and youth programs, our core initiatives center food sovereignty, mutual aid, and ecological care across intergenerational and multicultural communities.

Stories