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Noyo Food Forest Earth Day event in Fort Bragg gains an even bigger and diverse audience

Noyo Food Forest Earth Day event in Fort Bragg gains an even bigger and diverse audience

FORT BRAGG, 4/22/24 — The Noyo Food Forest’s Earth Day event, held Saturday, April 20, attracted 1,212 people through the gates, up slightly from last year’s 1,206. It’s a happy revival for an educational program that was threatened not just by the pandemic, but by the decline of the local food movement on the Mendocino Coast. The organizers were delighted and exhausted by the big, sunny event and by the increasing diversity of ages, ethnicities and politics, a primary goal of the organizers who started it back in 2006. This iteration was all about the thrills of spring, from topsoil to slow dancing. While cannabis was not offered or consumed on Saturday and the program bans all bud, that was where part of the money came from originally. Now a broader base of support has been found, organizers said.

This couple enjoyed a slow dance amidst a crowd distracted in all directions. It was surely not their first. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.

The Noyo Food Forest Learning Garden at Fort Bragg High School revived the beloved but moribund agricultural program back in 2006 when Susan LIghtfoot and two other women created it. The first Earth Day celebration began with a hand-holding circle and a prayer from a Native elder.

The Noyo Food Forest (NFF) picked Saturday for its Earth Day event, the two coinciding only once every seven years as will also happen this year for another signature Fort Bragg event, the World’s Largest Salmon Barbecue, held July 4. Earth Day is actually April 22 but in Mendocino, the date has become April 20, also known as the “high holiday” of Cannabis. Both Earth Day on April 22 and April 20 as the day for celebrating marijuana arose in the early 1970s.

2024 was a lucky year in every way, happening on 4/20, with summer-like weather and a big crowd. And not just any big crowd, but the kind the founders had hoped to someday develop — lots of kids to learn and have fun, Latino people and Natives. Originally, it was primarily attended by older mostly white counterculture folks. Despite being even older in 2024, they too were out in force, dancing in the sun to the likes of 2nd Hand Grass.

The most popular booth at Earth Day in Fort Bragg has always been the one offering bike-powered smoothie-making. Here a boy pedals hard to make his drink while a young man holds the lid on the smoothie blender. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.

The Noyo Food Forest’s past Earth Days were often beset by bizarre unseasonal rain, rain blizzards, atmospheric rivers, high winds (like last year), chilly, overcast and cold days. Not so in 2024. Full sun and no wind to make the aerial circus performance more exciting than it needed to be. Bounce houses full of kids while the grandparent hippies rocked out on the other side of the ground. 

Edwina Lincoln, a Native Yuki Elder from Round Valley, began this year’s event with a presentation about local forest issues and plans. That was followed by a performance by Circus Mecca, the Mendocino troop of young acrobats headed by Bones Newstad, followed by  a presentation about biochar by the Redwood Forest Foundation..There was live music all day including 2nd Hand Grass, Gwyneth Moreland & Morgan Daniel (of Foxglove), Seaside String Sisters, and Boomdrums. There was a booth from a local chapter of one of the fastest growing environmental organizations in the nation–Latino Outdoors. Started in 2009 by graduate student Jose Gonzalez, the organization has chapters from Boston to Florida to the Great Lakes to Houston to every coastal county in California. The Mendocino Chapter is also called the Northern Pomo territory and started in 2021.

Ericka Lutz of the Noyo Food Forest said the attendance number didn’t include the large number of vendors, volunteers, musicians and nonprofit booths. The event had 28 nonprofit organization booths and eight vendors, she said. 

Unfortunately,  most Fort Bragg festivals and events have poor disabled access. Last year, I walked more than a mile because there were so many cars parked on streets and filling all the high school parking lots. This year, there were no high school baseball games at the same time, so I walked only about 400 yards to the gate. There was no available handicapped parking either year and no way to drive up and drop off a wheelchair-bound person at the front gate. This is true of most events in the area. An exception is the well-run Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens, which even has special wheelchairs to ramble through the dirt trails and gardens.

Jo Mills and Victoria Joy of Noyo Food Forest work the plant sale. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.

The Mendocino Voice covered the event last year with many photos of Circus Mecca:

Noyo Food Forest celebrates Earth Day with a big crowd and a new lease on life

Noyo Food Forest, with its signature Learning Garden — a small climate-smart production farm spread out over roughly an acre on the Fort Bragg High School campus — was founded in 2006 by three coastal women, led by Susan Lightfoot,  who first envisioned accessible garden spaces for the community to use. The Learning Garden has since evolved into a thriving production farm dedicated to growing food for the Fort Bragg Unified School District farm-to-cafeteria program. Those involved in NFF found that pupils will eat nutritious food if they are involved in growing it. Fresh produce, grown with regenerative, sustainable practices by students, community volunteers, and Noyo Food Forest staff, is walked from the farm to the school cafeteria, less than a block away.NFF also models community-based agriculture, sustainable pest management, developing increased biodiversity, carbon sequestration, and other climate-resilient practices. NFF offers free and low-cost workshops, paid internships, and classes in organic, community-based agriculture to train local farmers and gardeners to feed the community. The organization works in partnership with other organizations in our community including Noyo Center for Marine Science, Mendocino Land Trust, Latino Coalition, and Parents and Friends. Noyo Food Forest is supported by plant and produce sales plus donations and grants, and operated by staff, board of directors, students and volunteers.

This little girl enjoyed the perch of her dad’s shoulders and the view of earth-bound kids. There was coloring, digging and other fun for kids throughout the event. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.

Edwina Lincoln, a local Native woman who has been active in the Land Back movement and the local food movement is shown after her presentation that got the event started. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice
This man and woman walked through the crowd, courting smiles and a chance to buy a raffle ticket to 10 cubic yards of compost from Cold Creek Compost, one of the businesses with a booth at the Earth Day event. The inland compost company offers a chicken manure blend popular with local farmers. It can be had at Geo Aggregates in Fort Bragg. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice
Kat Gabrielson from California State Parks offered education and the opportunity to play in the dirt and take some soil and California poppy seeds home for free. State Parks just added its first new Mendocino County property in many years at Montgomery Woods State Natural Reserve. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.
The Noyo Food Forest’s biggest goal has always been to attract youth to its event and garden so that they will learn to eat fresh produce, a goal that seems to be having more success as time goes on. Here, a group of teens tour the event. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.

One of the original sponsors that has stayed with the event despite the ups and downs of the cannabis industry is Thanksgiving Coffee, where Joe Seta, shown here, offered first tastes of a
new iced coffee. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice
The Fort Bragg High’s Learning Garden has as many flowers as veggies this time of year. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.
The Fort Bragg Garden Club is one of the oldest surviving clubs from the Mendocino Coast, which once had dozens of such active organizations. These two women ran a booth that advertised their upcoming plant sale. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.
While the elders dancing to 2nd Hand Grass might not move as fast as they did at rock concerts back in the day, many kicked off their shoes and gave it a whirl at Noyo Food Forests’ Earth Day celebration on Saturday.Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice
C and S Waste Solutions offered a booth with opportunities for kids to learn about recycling. The garbage company that serves Fort Bragg is now part of a larger conglomerate and major garbage collection firm. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.
Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens offered a booth where kids could color, play and adults could read about their ongoing plant sale and upcoming Rhododendron show and sale. Rhody events date back to at least the 1940s in Fort Bragg. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.
English professor Vincent Poturica gave out materials about activities and classes at Mendocino College’s Fort Bragg campus and free educational bling like a keychain anatomy class skeleton spine. He said the campus is now offering more classes than ever. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.
The Seaside String Sisters warmed up at the entrance to the event, while Mateo Ortiz, the City of Fort Bragg’s systems analyst and videographer, filmed. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice.

The Learning Garden sign shows how long the effort to get kids to eat fresh food has been going. Frank Hartzell/The Mendocino Voice

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Frank Hartzell

Frank Hartzell is a freelancer reporter and an occasional correspondent for The Mendocino Voice. He has published more than 10,000 news articles since his first job in Houston in 1986. He is the recipient of numerous awards for many years as a reporter, editor and publisher mostly and has worked at newspapers including the Appeal-Democrat, Sacramento Bee, Newark Ohio Advocate and as managing editor of the Napa Valley Register.

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