Annual Harvest Festival 2022
OVGG's harvest festival is an annual event we throw for the community around Fall time. The harvest festival celebrates our last harvest of the year before we enter the winter dormant months. We want to center each harvest festival event around a theme that relates to environmental justice and climate change and an educational experience for all, and this year's theme centers around Native Plants and Community.
-Thi Vo; Urban Agriculture Specialist
This year’s harvest festival was another fantastic success! Community members and partners got together at Ocean View Growing Grounds to celebrate our harvest and learn more about our environmental justice learning hub.
Visitors got the chance to socialize, have some family fun and enjoy some delicious corn! Our community members were able to enjoy tours from our Program Director, asked garden specific questions to our Urban Agriculture Specialist, and learned more about the Young Envrionmental Justcie Academy from our very own youth ambassadors.
Our visitors also had the chance to talk with our partners at the San Diego Audubon to learn more bout native plants, San Diego Family Health Center for any questiosn related to their health insurance, and San Diego Continuing Education to learn more about the free resources available for further education.
The children who visited also had their fun painting pumpkins, eating delicious corn and fruits, and playing with the fun activities brought by the Inner City Athletic Program. They were also given a ‘passport’, in which they’d go to various educational locations at OVGG where our Interns and Fellows would teach them about the station and its importance.
This year’s harvest festival was made possible by the work of The Global ARC Staff, the partnerships that have been made with the participating organizations, and members of the community surounding OVGG.
At the Ocean View Growing Grounds Environmental Justice Learning Hub Harvest Festivals are events for building relationships among community members.
It is through these relationships (also called Social Capital) that a community is able to create a common vision as well as agree on their issues and concerns in a way that allow individuals to work together in a group to effectively achieve a common purpose – a healthy community.
- Bill Oswald; Associate Executive Director for Research and Evaluation
Bringing together members of the community who volunteer with first time visitors who have seen the garden before but hadn’t had the chance to enter. Connecting them to participants/members of the Young Environmental Justice Advocates Academy and the Parent~Student~Resident Organization. Going further and connecting all community members to our partners and external resources. We aim to build a network of relationships that values the large variety of expertise, knowledge, and overall strengths to further improve quality of life.
Community residents are connecting to resources, learning and taking advantage of them all while keeping a connection to The Global ARC.