Cultivating Beneficial Relationships and Cultures in Sacramento
The Sacramento Permaculture Guild exists to connect people certified, experienced, or interested in permaculture, ecological design, green living, and organic gardening in the Sacramento region in order to create a more vibrant and sustainable local community through work-parties, potlucks, workshops and skillshares.
Let's have a Fall Harvest Potluck! We can bring food and drink to share, especially local, organic, seasonal, or special foods. Please write back with your preference of date by October 11th.
A couple dates, given election energy and holiday hecticness, for you input are:
Saturday, November 8th,
Sunday, November 9th,
Sunday October 19th
**Saturday November 15th**
Please let us know what would work as soon as possible.
At the potluck, we can also talk about future and current projects. Possible winter- friendly permy projects include sewing thermal curtains, preserving some of the fall bounty or making large amounts of applesauce or cider (for freezing, canning, or drinking), making eco-holiday gifts for folks, planting fall bulbs, sheet mulching or generally winterizing a garden. We can also start to plan a Seed/Plant Exchange ( http://www.foodnotlawns.com/seedswap.html ) for 2009 if folks are interested. We could either do an early spring one and exchange starts as well as seeds, or, if ambitious, we participate in the January 31, 2009 International Seed Swap Day of Action ( http://www.foodnotlawns.com/ )
Hi Sac Permies!
Let's have a Fall Harvest Potluck! We can bring food and drink to share, especially local, organic, seasonal, or special foods. Please write back with your preference of date by October 11th.
A couple dates, given election energy and holiday hecticness, for you input are:
Saturday, November 8th,
Sunday, November 9th,
Sunday October 19th
**Saturday November 15th**
Please let us know what would work as soon as possible.
At the potluck, we can also talk about future and current projects. Possible winter- friendly permy projects include sewing thermal curtains, preserving some of the fall bounty or making large amounts of applesauce or cider (for freezing, canning, or drinking), making eco-holiday gifts for folks, planting fall bulbs, sheet mulching or generally winterizing a garden. We can also start to plan a Seed/Plant Exchange ( http://www.foodnotlawns.com/seedswap.html ) for 2009 if folks are interested. We could either do an early spring one and exchange starts as well as seeds, or, if ambitious, we participate in the January 31, 2009 International Seed Swap Day of Action ( http://www.foodnotlawns.com/ )
Let me know what days work for folks!
-Shaina