On a barren cornfield in Hugo, crews are transforming the land with ambitious plans.
After clearing invasive buckthorn trees, they will restore the sandy, clay soil and plant trees and a meadow to house birds and insects while boosting the amount of healthy, culturally specific food for Native Americans in the Twin Cities.
"We're trying to turn the clock back on the soil," said Jessika Greendeer, the farm manager. "It's going to take some time."
To meet a growing need for healthy foods — especially during the COVID-19 pandemic — Dream of Wild Health, a Minneapolis nonprofit and one of the only Native American-led farms in the Twin Cities, bought the 20-acre site this year. It triples the amount of land for the organization to grow food and teach Native American kids agriculture and nutrition.
"The need for additional land was critical," said Neely Snyder, executive director of the nonprofit. "It just feels like, now more than ever, there's a need for food."
More than 7 tons of fruit and vegetables grown each year at the nonprofit's original 10-acre organic farm and orchard in Hugo, 30 miles northeast of Minneapolis, are distributed through youth programs, farmers markets, a CSA, sold wholesale to Indian chefs and restaurants and donated to food shelves.
The nonprofit's work is part of a broader movement in Minnesota's American Indian community to combat health issues and promote healthy indigenous foods and food sovereignty, reclaiming a traditional way of life and relationship with the land.
Many of the state's 11 tribes — seven Anishinaabe or Ojibwe and four Dakota or Sioux — are in "food deserts," low-income areas with limited access to grocery stores. American Indians also face higher rates of health issues such as diabetes and obesity — disparities widening during the COVID-19 pandemic.