We met Kristen W. (the current Nipmuc resident manager) in August 2024 and started our journey of learning from her and the land… alone, and in small to large groups that we organize. We go almost weekly (weather permitting) and do light farm work, and more. We are doing this for reparations, to build relationships, and to learn.
It is going great! We are growing our capacity, community and knowledge. We started veggies/flowers from seed, planted seedlings, weeded, removed pets, composted and mulched. We split and stacked wood. We learned to drive the tractor, use the wood splitter and power tools (and more) in a building project. We harvested *a lot* of blueberries this year! The food and wood goes to local Nipmuc community members.
We collaborated to have a special event this last October to bring relatives, newcomers, and regular guests to eat together, be educated about LandBack, and tour the land (the woods, the wetu, the planting field, and the blueberry patch). This was a fundraiser for P8guaso and we raised over $5,000 for the event.
Like many Indigenous personal and place names, English settlers misunderstand the Algonkian. Their ancestors’ name for the land was “p8guaso” (which sounds like “bôgwasso”) which means “shallow.”
At a recent special event, we learned of many hopes and dreams for the land that we will be sharing as soon as we can. We could use more volunteers to join us, and contributions to pay for projects (i.e., a tree nursery, buildings, and further maintenance of the land and buildings).
Accepting donations at: https://www.agrariantrust.org/p8guaso-fundraiser