Background: the Mini Moon is a 200 sq. ft. light-straw clay and cob building. It was started May 2016 and at this point the straw-clay walls are done but the round “cozy cob corner” is not yet built. In May-June 2017 we put the first coat of earthen plaster on the inside and outside straw-clay walls, and we installed the first layer of the earthen floor. In August/September we buit the cob wall. Now we will be working on the earthen plaster inside and outside the house, and some carpentry.
For more information or to RSVP, contact Jenny: jenny@tryonfarm.org; 503-548-8459, or look at TLC Farm’s Facebook page for event info.
All ages, abilities and skill level welcomed.
WORKPARTIES:
Saturday and Sunday, October 21 and 22, noon to 5pm: earthen plastering!!
More info here:
https://www.facebook.com/events/1494491697287230
Saturday and Sunday, October 28 and 29: Earthen plastering
More info coming soon!
We will also work some weekday evenings; get in touch with Jenny to find out which!
I'll have some snacks; please bring your own lunch and/or snacks to share.
Join us at Tryon Life Community Farm for an afternoon of seed-exhange, seed celebration, and welcoming of the spring season.
We'll gather 'round to bless up the seeds that will be feeding us this year kick off the growing season with a celebration of new life, with music, storytelling and lots of seed sharing.
This family friendly event is a fundraiser for TLC Farm's Ethnobotany Education Program, and we're asking a suggested donation of $10 dollars for this event. Bring extra cash for raffle tickets & silent auction items and seeds to exchange and share!
No onsite Parking! We'll be running a continuous shuttle from Riverdale High School which is located a mile up the road at 9727 SW Terwilliger Blvd., Portland, OR 97219
Navigate gallery: (thumbnails represent previous and following two images, if present, surrounding current image)
Saturday March 4, 11am-1pm (bees) & 2pm-4pm (trees)
Come to one or both of these hands-on workshops, in which you'll learn the basics of tending for native pollinators and pruning the apples, pears, and plums they help fruit!
11-1: bees. Mason bees are solitary bees, meaning they don't form colonies and aren't susceptible to the hive collapses that threaten the global food supply. They are more active in cool, moist mornings than honeybees, and their remarkable lifecycle means they gather a year's supply of food -and do all their pollinating -in the spring when fruit trees are flowering. Learn how to tend them and increase your flock and buy some farmgrown bees at a discount (if you wish).
2-4: trees. Fruit trees - especially apples and pears, and to a lesser extent, plums - thrive with yearly pruning to encourage fruit production and minimize bough breakage and disease. Late winter is the perfect time to prune for structure and fruiting; we'll discuss and demonstrate examples of how to train and prune young trees, repair years of neglect in mature trees, and how to maintain a balance of fruiting wood and young growth. Bring your own sharp loppers or secateurs if you want to practice!
$25 suggested donation for each session (no one turned away for lack of funds). Bring a lunch, if you plan to stay for both sessions. To register, or for more information, contact brush@tryonfarm.org
Workshop presenter Brush, TLC Farm's orchardist, has been tending fruit trees at TLC Farm for ten years, and cultivating mason bees for five. He is especially infatuated with the cider and perry trees he has grafted and nursed that should bear first fruits this year.
Not so very long ago, the land we now call Tryon Life Community Farm was the hunting grounds of the Tualatin Kalapuya and the Clackamas Chinook.
For thousands of years they thrived, until 200 years ago devastating diseases swept through their villages severely reducing the population. Before they had a chance to recover, waves of Euro-American colonization hit the land we now call Oregon. Years of struggle to retain tribal autonomy followed, as did many promises made and broken by the United States government. Mounting pressure for more land by white settlers led the federal government to extinguish all native claim to land in the Willamette and Tualatin valleys and forcibly remove the tribes to the Grande Ronde and other reservations in 1855.
The government then set about giving the land away to Euro-American settlers, including Hotchkiss Socrates Tryon who claimed the valley which is now his namesake park. His name is well known, even included in the name of our land project, while those from whom the land was stolen have been forgotten by many.
Why do you need to know this? Learning and sharing the history of this land, and that of all western Oregon, is key to understanding why those who visit, volunteer, come to classes, and enjoy events here, have been predominately white. And why this needs to change.
Over the past few years, TLC Farm has been actively reshaping itself to counter this legacy of colonialism. To do so, a new collective created by and for people of color has taken root on this land. The Sacred Lands Alliance is working with TLC Farm volunteers to make the land and programs more accessible for frontline communities who have been alienated from thier lands.
We can't undo the past, but we can absolutely shape the future.
Thanks for your part in making the future more just and equitable, here at TLC Farm and in all the places we collectively strive for justice.
Feedback and participation welcome! Please send bug reports to web@tryonfarm.org