Want to engage with the plants in your landscape in a deeper way? What are their stories and how have they got here? How do they fit into the local ecology and global context? How can we protect and work with them?
Radicle Plant Walks weave botany, horticulture, foraging, activism and politics to explore local plantscapes in their fullest sense.
Together we will understand the complex history of plants, honour indigenous stories, discuss the gifts of the plants growing around us, and explore how we can build grassroots food sovereignty and create a future based on respect for the land, plants, all peoples and creatures.
We will be looking at all manner of plants from street trees and ornamental plants to those growing wild.
Note these walks are not just about plant identification or foraging. Whilst you will no doubt learn to identify more plants and understand their uses, the walks are intended to inspire honest discussion and shift perspectives.
Location
We will be meeting just inside the main Forest Road entrance to Lloyd's Park, next to the William Morris Gallery.
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About the facilitator
The walks will be facilitated by Than Gunabalasingham of Nourish the Wild CIC. Than is a horticultural educator, having taught courses at OrganicLea and The Orchard Project. With a background in food and environmental policy research, he now works to create and teach about resilient food systems. Most of all he is passionate about food system change, creating edible landscapes that mimic the principles of nature and restoring wild spaces.