The food forest at the Longmont site is waking up after winter! Chokecherry and serviceberry are leafing out, the garlic is 6 inches tall, and the first asparagus spears are poking through. At 5,400 feet with 18 inches of rain, every green shoot feels like a small miracle. Permaculture on the Front Range requires patience, observation, and really good water harvesting.
-
Talia Redhawk created an event
-
Boulder Admin created a topic
-
Rowan Blackwood created an event
-
Lucia Trujillo posted
3 months ago Public -
Rowan Blackwood posted
3 months ago PublicSunrise over Boulder Creek this morning from the BDA monitoring site above Nederland. You can see the beaver dam analog structure in the middle distance -- already creating a beautiful pool-riffle sequence. Two years ago this was an incised, degraded channel. Now it is coming back to life. This is what low-tech restoration looks like.
-
Marco Rivera posted
3 months ago PublicLooking for folks interested in a cooperative solar installation at RegenHub. Colorado gives us 300 days of sunshine and we are not using it! The Front Range Solar Coop could coordinate the install. If we pair it with Devon's community currency pilot, members could pay for their share in mutual credit. Anyone interested?
-
Finn O'Brien posted
3 months ago PublicDoes anyone have experience with community science monitoring equipment? Next Gen Front Range wants to start a youth watershed monitoring program on Bear Creek, but we need affordable dissolved oxygen meters and turbidity tubes. Any recommendations? Or better yet, does anyone have equipment they could lend or share?
-
Lucia Trujillo posted
3 months ago PublicReminder: Seed Swap and High-Altitude Growing Workshop next week at Longmont Farmstead! I am bringing heirloom Colorado tomato starts, high-altitude bean varieties, and some experimental quinoa seed adapted to 5,400 feet. What are you bringing? Food sovereignty on the Front Range starts with seeds that know this place.
-
Mira Solano posted
3 months ago PublicThe Cascadia node's watershed monitoring protocols are excellent -- we are adapting them for Boulder Creek. Their dissolved oxygen sampling methodology is more rigorous than what we have been using, and their volunteer training guide is really well done. This is cosmo-local coordination in action: knowledge shared freely between bioregional nodes, adapted for local conditions.
-
Devon Hartley posted
4 months ago PublicJust learned about Cascadia's community land trust model from the network -- could we adapt something similar for Front Range housing? Their commons-based approach to holding land for community benefit is exactly what Boulder needs as housing prices keep pushing out the people who actually steward this place. Anyone interested in exploring a Front Range land trust?
-
Boulder Admin posted
4 months ago PublicWelcome to the Boulder LocalNodes instance! This is our shared digital commons for regenerative organizing across the Front Range. Join a group, introduce yourself, and start connecting with fellow builders, stewards, and organizers. Where mountains meet the mesh, community meets coordination.
Please log in or sign up to comment.