Find community gardens through the Bay Area Older Adults network.
The Bay Area Food Bank, in collaboration with the Center for Family and Community Development, has started a community garden, the beginning of a countywide initiative that will include micro gardens at sites for after-school snacks and summer lunches, with the food bank's garden serving as the main educational spot for the project.
What Your Little Sprouts Can Grow Want to help your kids get closer to the earth? Why not have them get down and dirty, doing work in it? Community gardening is a great way for families to nurture their own plot of green. Along the way, kids experience the pride of growing their own food...
The Edible Demonstration Gardens at Lake Merritt offer FREE workshops and volunteer days from April thru November. See our groups and schedules below, let us know if you have any questions, and we'll see you out there! Alameda County Master Gardeners, volunteer days every Wednesday from 10-11:30am.
Every healthy community has a Village Meeting Place that all neighbors feel drawn to. Brooks Park is such a Village Meeting Place, where San Francisco residents grow vegetables, enjoy the hilltop wilderness, practice Tai Chi, play ping pong, bocce ball, badminton and volley ball.
A San Francisco community garden located on Page Street between Webster and Buchanan.
Howard Langton Garden is a community based garden for the people that live in the South of Market Area of San Francisco.
The garden is cared for by local Gardeners and looked after by the City and County of San Francisco.
San Francisco best kept secret, this garden is nestled high on the bluffs of Fort Mason.
Planting Justice is democratizing access to affordable, nutritious food by empowering disenfranchised urban residents with the skills, resources, and inspiration to maximize food production, economic opportunities, and environmental sustainability in our neighborhoods.