SETP Hosts Food Forest Planting Event at Polly Judd

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April and early May is the time for Spokane Gives Month in the beautiful city of Spokane. Spokane Gives Month presents an opportunity for community members to give back by participating in volunteer projects throughout the city. The initiative is generously put on by our friends over at United Way Spokane.  

On May 5th, 2018, Spokane Edible Tree Project participated in the initiative by hosting a Food Forest Planting Event with Friends of Polly Judd at Polly Judd Park in an effort to build up the long time dream of having a Food Forest in the heart of the park. 

With the help of native shrub donations from the Spokane Conservation District, a Spokane Gives Initiative Grant from Spokane County United Way, and the hard work of a volunteer crew, 14 edible trees and shrubs were added to the Polly Judd Food Forest. Two filbert, two apricot, five native elderberries and five native Saskatoon serviceberries were planted.

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The sod was cut from the ground as the first step, followed by the digging of holes at proper depth. This was not always easy. Rocks had to be broken, which were removed from the soil and repurposed as rock mulch for the Polly Judd native pollinator garden. The rocks were also used to begin creating a rock wall around the garden. When the holes were finally dug, the trees were placed in the Earth, surrounded with the field soil, and wood chips were placed around the trees to act as a mulch.

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The Polly Judd Food Forest is also part of the The Susie Forest Foundation. Susie was an avid cyclist and activist for pedestrian rights. Tragically, she was killed in a motor vehicle accident 15 years ago while actively pursuing her mission to create positive change in this world. Her mother, Nancy MacKerrow, lives in the lower south hill neighborhood in Spokane. After Susie’s death, she set up a Susie Forest Foundation to honor her by planting trees as a way of bringing back life from a tragic situation. Two plum trees and a linden tree were planted in her honor at the Polly Judd Earth Day Celebration in 2018, which Spokane Edible Tree project was honored to be a part of. As a dedication, community members wrote their hopes down on paper and hung them on the branches of the trees. The sentiment is that the hopes of the community will eventually biodegrade into the soil, alchemizing them to become one with the tree.

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Inland Northwest Food Network Scion Exchange

Inland Northwest Food Network Scion Exchange

The Inland Northwest Food Network is hosting a community scion exchange on Saturday, March 24. Scion wood is a shoot or twig of a tree that has been cut for grafting. At the exchange, you'll find over 100 varieties of scion wood for purchase. The exchange runs from 11am to 3pm at the Episcopal Church of the Resurrection, 15319 E 8th Avenue, Spokane Valley. It's free to attend.

More details here: inwfoodnetwork.org/scion-exchange

INW Food Network is also holding grafting workshop with Jim McGinty from 11am to 1pm, but the workshop is sold out.

2018 Fruit Tree Education Series

Sunday, February 25
Fruit Tree Selection
Community Building, 35 W. Main Ave., Spokane
2pm - 3:30pm, $5
Register here

Saturday, March 10
Pruning Workshop with Spirit Pruners
Resurrection Orchard, 15319 E 8th Ave., Spokane Valley
9:30am - 12:30pm, $10 general, $5 SETP volunteers & registered tree owners
Register here

Tuesday, April 17
Pest Prevension
WSU Extension, 222 N Havana, Spokane
6pm - 9pm
Registration details coming soon (via WSU Extension)