Since Dan and I started blogging about our journey to a more sustainable lifestyle we have had the opportunity to come in contact with so many inspiring community groups cultivating an oasis of sustainability here in Tucson.
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Emma demonstrates how to shore up a catchment basin. |
Tohono O’odham Community Action (TOCA) is reviving their cultural traditions by having tribal elders mentor youth on their native foods.
Friends of Tucson’s Birthplace re-built the
Mission Garden, a living museum, to demonstrate how to grow crops from pre-Columbian to those that Father Kino established in that location.
Native Seeds/SEARCH
maintains community food traditions by preserving diverse and heritage seeds.
Manzo Elementary,
Changemaker High and
City High tend to the next generation of desert gardeners. Through their community garden programs, the
Community Food Bank of Southern Arizona doesn’t just feed the hungry, but teaches them to grow food for themselves.
Iskashitaa Refugee Network assists refugees in becoming self-sufficient (and reduces food waste) by harvesting fruit that would otherwise go unpicked.
Dunbar Springs neighborhood worked to make their street an example of an edible, urban forest irrigated by rainwater.
Watershed Management Group is building a community that works together to restore Tucson’s aquifer by implementing rainwater harvesting techniques and desert landscaping in people's yards, gardens, streets and businesses. These groups (among others) are gleaning from Tucson’s rich cultural history ways to live in harmony with the desert. This is truly an exciting time to be a part of this vibrant community!
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Shooting the first segment with Brad Lancaster at Dunbar Springs |
I decided to make a documentary about the accomplishments of these communities with the hope that it would inspire others. So I approached activist/ documentarian
Evan Grae Davis with the idea. Evan had just read
Edible Baja Arizona’s article about Tucson being the first US city to be designated a UNESCO World City of Gastronomy for the same advancements. He was excited to tell our story!
Our last shoot was for the rainwater harvesting segment featuring Watershed Management Group. Dan and I have planted our roots into the WMG community. In addition to being members of their co-op, Dan recently got the good news that he was accepted into their docent training program! We love being a part of a community that is working to restore our groundwater and get our rivers flowing again.
Here we are shooting in Jason and Connie Carder's yard. (See Jason working alongside of Emma in the pic above.) They had 3 roadside catchment basins (wow!) and berms installed to control the runoff after their house had been flooded during a recent storm.
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Happy owner Connie Carder |
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Co-op members Grant and Carrie Stratton share why they volunteer |
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Where's Waldo...uh...Dan? |
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Emma helps a co-op volunteer arrange rocks |
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Two hard workers: workshop instructor Emma Stahl-Wert and my baby Dan |
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Purslane!!! |
A little patch of purslane ignited a conversation about edible weeds. Later in the day, Dan heard someone call out, "Don't step on the purslane!" A woman after my own heart! It's so great to work alongside kindred spirits who feel as passionate as we do about getting our rivers flowing again and protecting
purslane!
Wow! Lots of organizations to learn more about! Thanks for sharing! I am "part" of the WMG co-op insofar as I receive their emails, but my usefulness as a manual laborer is declining daily as I approach my October due date. I definitely want to work with the co-op once I am done being a baby hotel (and it isn't so hot out!)
ReplyDeleteThanks for writing!