Food & GardenTodmordenGrow food anywhere with Incredible EdibleTurn spare corners into neighbourhood harvests Incredible Edible began in Todmorden when residents planted herbs, fruit, and veg in public beds anyone could pick. The model spread: small teams, bold signs, and food that belongs to the street again. What you can do - Read the our story page and map what you could plant on a verge, canal bank, or school edge - Start a local group and list your beds on the Incredible Edible network - Host a walk showing where food already grows and where the next bed could go How it works You need soil, permission from the landowner, and a handful of neighbours who will weed once a week. Groups share cuttings, run short planting mornings, and leave harvest free for passers-by. Why it matters Public food breaks the idea that growing is private or expert-only. It invites children, commuters, and elders into the same plot. Source & repost Shared here so you can get inspired or find action already happening near you. Solarpunker does not own or organise it. Source: Incredible Edible.gardenfoodcommunity +2
Food & GardenTodmordenOpen your garden for a community harvest trailInvite neighbours to taste what you grow Incredible Edible action ideas include harvest trails: open gardens, school beds, and canal-side plots on one afternoon so people walk, taste, and swap recipes. What you can do - Browse the actions hub for trail templates and signage tips - Recruit five gardens within walking distance and publish a simple map - End with a shared table: surplus veg, chutney samples, and seed envelopes How it works Each host marks beds that are OK to pick and labels anything that needs asking first. A coordinator handles timing, accessibility, and a wet-weather plan. Why it matters Harvest trails make hidden growers visible. They turn private pride into public invitation without needing a festival budget. Source & repost Shared here so you can get inspired or find action already happening near you. Solarpunker does not own or organise it. Source: Incredible Edible. Photo: Chris Allen, Calthorpe Community Garden (CC BY-SA 2.0).harvesttrailopen-garden +2