Thank you for checking out our project!

My message is simple...

Your support changes lives.

The number of people living in remote Aboriginal communities who suffer from lack of nutrition and food insecurity is increasing. No one should be without food in a country so richly provided with land, sun and human ingenuity. Hunger and food insecurity will not end in remote community without changes in the structure of how food is provided.
We can and must do better.

The key to solving this issue is shifting our focus from short-term food transactions to creating solutions that provide long-term positive outcomes, with Aboriginal individuals growing and selecting their own food with dignity, offering horticultural training programs, and working towards creating economic opportunities and healthy food options for people living in remote Australian communities. Food equity is health equity.

The Kenmore orchard and community garden is part of what we are doing to create self-sufficiency, healthy food, social opportunities and employment in the APY remote communities - help us save the orchard and develop an important community garden project for people we all care about. One of the key outcomes is to increase the number of people accessing country via the program.

We need your help to restore the Kenmore food orchard in Central Australia.

When this orchard was in operation many years ago, the community enjoyed fresh fruit and vegetables. I have spent half a decade across many different remote communities in the Central deserts, and I have to tell you that this region is very special. There aren't many places where Aboriginal communities look after each other the way they do in Pukatja, and it's rare to find a place where people are able to have access to an abundance of fresh, healthy food from an orchard.

In the last several years, the orchard has fallen into disrepair, people have passed on, the trees are getting older, and the orchard isn't providing the same level of food it once did. This project brings together volunteers, corporate and foundation sponsors, and our understanding of how to produce a garden and orchard project in one of the most unlikely of places. Working side-by-side, this project has the potential to transform the space into breathtaking displays of fresh food, cultivated by the pride of every partner, provide sustainable certified training in horticulture for Aboriginal people, and maintenance and protection of environmental and cultural values. This is an opportunity to mentor the community members in desert agro-ecology, agro-biodiversity, seed-saving, water-harvesting, on-farm pollination enhancement and climate-friendly strategies for local food production.

Through the generosity of partnerships, Bush Botanics has worked for years facilitating garden projects, community seed banks, greenhouses and small-scale orchard projects in remote Aboriginal communities. We believe in the power of these garden projects to promote healthy, engaged and vibrant communities.

We will continue to work alongside the local residents of the APY communities as they cultivate the orchard and garden as part of a sustainable economy and healthy food project - however this project recognizes that the community members must be empowered to play a key part of the solution to end food insecurity.

I hope you'll join us. We need your support at God's Garden Kenmore Park-Yunyarinyi.
Send me a note - william@bushbotanics.com

Best Wishes,