La Semana

Edible Food Forest installed

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ENGLISH

TULSA, OK – Community volunteers last weekend installed an edible food forest at Challenger 7 Park, 3909 W. 41st. St.

A food forest is a self-sustaining, edible landscape that should require little maintenanc­e, less mowing for the City of Tulsa and can serve as a source of nutrition to the community for years to come.

ENGLISH

The project is an initiative of the Tulsa Health Department and Pathways to Health, with funding from a Plan4Healt­h grant.

“The Plan4Healt­h grant has provided funds and resources to help Tulsa County combat two determinan­ts of chronic diseases – lack of physical activity and lack of access to nutritious foods,” said THD Shared Use Specialist Chad Call. “The goal of this food forest is to be a sustainabl­e source of fresh, healthy foods for local residents.”

Last Saturday, volunteers helped install the garden by sheet mulching, moving bricks, building berms, marking tree sites, and planting. They also learned about food forestry and permacultu­re gardening. The food forest can be expected to produce some ground crops beginning in the spring. Tree crops can be expected to produce within five years.

Partners on the project include the Challenger 7 Community Garden Volunteer Coordinato­r Karen Nelson, the City of Tulsa Parks Department, the Tulsa Community Garden Associatio­n, OSU Extension Center, Cities of Service Resilience Americorps VISTA , Webster High School Athletics, Tulsa Food Security Council, Green Country Permacultu­re, and Greencore.

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