Fruitful Commons

Fruitful Commons

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02/17/2026

Permaculture Principal #2: Catch and Store Energy

The second permaculture principle invites us to catch and store energy—from sunlight and rainwater to nutrients, seeds, and community effort. In permaculture design, the goal is to close loops so resources are held, reused, and shared, rather than lost or wasted.

Project Highlight: Festival Beach Food Forest

When Festival Beach Food Forest broke ground 10 years ago, it was little more than a field of bermuda grass with just a handful of trees. Through a careful, multi-year design process, they assessed slope and drainage and built berms and swales along the land’s natural contours to slow, spread, and store rainwater. Instead of rushing off into storm drains, water now soaks into the soil, nourishing trees, shrubs, and understory plants.

Over the past decade, this system, paired with practices like chop-and-drop mulching and thousands of volunteer hours, has transformed the site into a shady, resilient oasis near downtown Austin. In 2024, FBFF began their expansion from ¾ acre to over 3 acres, adding new berms and swales planted with evergreen sumac, yaupon holly, Mexican plum, mulberry, pomegranate, desert olive, and more.

By working with the flow of nature, FBFF shows how catching and storing energy can build thriving ecosystems that care for both land and people.

To learn more about building berms and swales to support water management, visit Santa Cruz Permaculture: https://santacruzpermaculture.com/2019/08/berms-swales/

👉 Read the full blog series on our website to dive deeper into this principle, explore practical examples, and follow along as we unpack all 12 permaculture principles this year. www.fruitfulcommons.org/happenings

Festival Beach Food Forest

02/11/2026

📣 Did you know a pipeline will soon cut through a portion of Festival Beach Food Forest?

Advocacy is a core part of what Fruitful Commons does, working with the City to protect the land stewarded by community groups and honor the thousands of volunteer hours that make spaces like this possible.

In this video, Jodi Lane, our Executive Director, walks us through the food forest to show what’s at stake.

A wastewater pipeline connected to the I-35 project will impact more than 90 recently planted trees and plants. After receiving only weeks’ notice, our staff and FBFF volunteers have jumped into action to make plans to relocate and protect what they can and rebuild communications with the City regarding this project.

✨ Learn more and get involved at the link below. Join emergency workdays and help us steward this space.
https://festivalbeach.org/pipeline

Creating and protecting community spaces takes collaboration, transparency, and respect for the people who care for them. Fruitful Commons advocates for grassroots organizations who build these vibrant spaces!

Festival Beach Food Forest

Photos from Fruitful Commons's post 01/16/2026

🌱 New date 🌱

We’ve rescheduled our Gathering of Growers Tree Planting Workshop to better serve the St. John community, and we hope you can join us!

📅 Saturday, February 28
⏰ 10 AM–1 PM
📍 St. John Faith Community Garden

This hands-on workshop in parternship with TreeFolks will cover fruit tree planting, mulching, composting, watering, pruning, and more as we continue expanding the orchard together. Snacks and warm beverages provided.

Thanks for your flexibility and for growing with us — community comes first, always. 💚

🔗 RSVP: bit.ly/treeplantingstjohn

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29 Waller St
Austin, TX
78702