Sustainability department team and our friends from WSU went on a Beacon Food Forest tour. We all really enjoyed it and thought the Beacon Food Forest is a great place. Many thanks to Priya for leading us on this tour and answering our questions!
Below are some information about Beacon Food Forest:
“Community grows here
We cultivate a community dedicated to building equitable food systems for all people, and stewarding our environment for the benefit of all species.
We believe in Caring for the Earth.
We steward our local ecosystem by building healthy soil and increasing the diversity of plants and habitat.
We believe in Caring for the People.
We bring people together to grow and share food, learn from each other, and know their neighbors.
We work to create a Fair Share for all.
We are on land stolen from the Duwamish, Suquamish, Muckleshoot, and other peoples, stewards and co-creators of abundance with the land since time immemorial. We work to dismantle an unjust food system rooted in white supremacy and conquest by nurturing its replacement, already alive and ready to grow. Through open harvest and collaboration within and among communities, we work to create a fair share for all”.
Beacon Food Forest is maintained by volunteers and managed by the Food Forest Collective, a 501c[3] tax-exempt organization, with support from the Seattle Department of Neighborhoods P-Patch Community Gardening Program.
The P-Patch Community Gardening Program is made up of community managed open spaces throughout Seattle where gardeners use small plots of land to grow organic food, flowers, and herbs. All P-Patch gardens are open to the public to enjoy and are utilized as communal spaces, restorative spaces, learning and idea incubators, and venues for community gatherings.
To learn more about Beacon Food Forest