
Bee the Change: Supporting Pollinators, Art, and Education with Bee Girl
Here at Ashland Food Co-op, we’re buzzing with excitement about our July Change for Good partner: Bee Girl / Bee Regenerative! This local nonprofit is doing some bee-autiful work to protect pollinators, restore habitats, and teach the next generation how to care for the tiny creatures that keep our food systems thriving.
Bee Girl + Bee Regenerative: More Than Just a Name
Bee Regenerative is the co-branded evolution of Bee Girl - founded and led by the ever-inspiring Sarah Red-Laird (aka The Bee Girl herself). While Sarah is still the lead worker bee, this mission has officially grown beyond the hive. Bee Regenerative brings together a team of staff, contractors, and collaborators who work shoulder-to-shoulder with ranchers, winemakers, universities, government agencies, and fellow nonprofits to tackle the biggest issues bees face in agriculture. Together, they’re creating real, lasting solutions that benefit both pollinators and producers.
Why Bees Matter (and Why Bee Girl Is a Hero)
Bees may be small, but they play a huge role in our ecosystem - pollinating one in every three bites of food we eat. That’s why Bee Girl and her team work tirelessly to create more places for pollinators to thrive right here in Southern Oregon.
Their mission goes beyond just saving bees - it’s about cultivating healthy ecosystems, supporting sustainable agriculture, and inspiring stewardship through science, education, and art.
Local Projects Making a Big Impact
🐝 Bee Friendly Vineyards
Local winemakers and grape growers are getting a pollinator-friendly upgrade thanks to Bee Girl’s collaboration efforts. This program brings habitat (think: blooming flowers, nesting spots, and clean water) directly into the vineyard rows. Cheers to bees AND better wine!
🌼 Bee Hopeful
This youth program teaches kids how important bees are - and how they can be bee heroes in their own backyards. With a focus on positivity and hands-on learning, Bee Hopeful empowers the next generation to protect what they love.
🎨 Bee Habitat in Cyanotype
Founder Sarah uses flowers and bees from real habitat projects to create stunning cyanotype art pieces that educate and inspire. It’s part science, part soul - and it’ll make you see pollinators in a whole new light.
Events to Check Out
📍 Pints for a Purpose
Thursday, July 3rd, The Phoodery in Phoenix, OR
Grab a drink, win gear from Patagonia and Sunday Afternoons, and support pollinators - it doesn’t get much more Southern Oregon summer than that.
🎨 Ashland Open Studio Tour
October 18–19, Enclāve Studios, Ashland, OR
Sarah’s studio will be open during this event hosted by the Ashland Gallery Association. Come see the “Bee Habitat in Cyanotype” exhibit in person and meet the artist behind the mission.
Bee the Change with Us
Every time you round up at the register in July, you’re helping Bee Girl expand their local impact. Whether it's teaching a classroom full of curious kids or planting habitat among the grapevines, your spare change is helping Southern Oregon bloom - literally.
Learn more about their work at www.beegirl.org, and stop by the Co-op to support Bee Girl through Change for Good.
Let’s pollinate some positive change - together. 🌸🐝
More Co-op News

A Party for YOU
Each year we hold an Annual Meeting and Owner Picnic. This is our chance to catch up over a delightful picnic and most importantly update you on the recent year’s events and financials.
This year, we are changing things up a bit. The Annual Meeting and Owner Picnic will be more family friendly than ever before. We have a new menu designed to appeal to busy little (and big!) hands so you and your kiddos have time to enjoy one of our many family friendly activities.

6 Reasons to Buy in Bulk
Bulk bins have been a staple at the Ashland Food Co-op since we opened our doors in 1972. For good reason too, buying in bulk is better. Better for your pocket book, better for the environment, and better for your belly. Here’s why.
6 Reasons to Buy in Bulk

Co-op + Community = A Perfect Match
At the Co-op, we are all about community. After all, YOU are why we are here and providing healthy, organic food to the Rogue Valley.
As a cooperative enterprise, there are seven principles we follow. We use them as guidlines to put our values into practice. Principle 7, Concern for Community, affords us the opportunity to give back to local nonprofits that do so much good in this beautiful place we call home.

Jackfruit 101
You might have noticed a rather large, prickly fruit hanging out next to the apples, oranges, and papayas in the Produce Department. Meet the Jackfruit, the newest addition to the Produce Department. In case you don't know "jack" about Jackfruit, here is a crash course.
- The Jackfruit is native to South and Southeast Asia and is a close cousin of the fig.
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The Co-op sources the fruit from Patagonia Orchards. Their fruit is grown in the tropical rainforest of Nayarit, Mexico.

Get Your Garden On
This is one of our favorite times of the year. The sun is out and the days are longer, time to play in the dirt. Our Produce Staff share their favorite seeds and starts to help you get your garden going.

Meet the Meat Department
Welcome back to our Behind the Scenes blog series. So far you’ve meet the dynamic Produce and Deli teams. Next up, the department that is packed with protein, meet the Meat Department.
Did you know?
Rachel's Spring Produce Picks
Rachel Rose, Assistant Produce Manager, shares her spring produce picks.
Strawberries
Most people are surprised to know that early spring are two of the best months out of the year for tasty strawberries. The first batch out of California is usually so sweet and full of flavor that the rest of the year I often shy away from strawberries. They just don’t measure up to the fruit coming out early in the year.

5 Edible Plants to Start in Your Garden Now
Spring is most definitely upon us, and we are lucky enough to live in Southern Oregon where the weather during this time is usually (ahem) co-operative enough to let us get some plants in the ground in between the hail storms and rainbows. There are actually many plants that do quite well in this time of transition, as they prefer the cooler temperatures that we get here this time of year, before the real heat sets in. Here are a few that we have right now at the Co-op, direct from local, organic farms. Plant these in your garden now for best results!
UPDATED Organic Raw Macadamia Nuts Recalled Because of Possible Health Risk
UPDATED 3/17/16
Ashland Food Co-Op of Ashland, Oregon issues the updated press release to clarify that we re-packed and sold Organic Raw Macadamia nuts in random weight bags at our retail store in Oregon only between January 5th, 2016 and February 4th, 2016. We do not have any internet sale or distribute affected product outside Oregon.
Garden of Life Raw Meal Recall
Garden of Life has issued a voluntary recall on all Raw Meal products shipped after August 15, 2015.
Please see the below link to Garden of Life’s blog for all lot numbers that they are recalling, as well as details of the recall.
Let Thy Food Be Thy Medicine
Rachel Rose, Assistant Produce Manager, shares her winter produce picks.
The cells in our bodies are all made using the building blocks that we provide in the food that we eat, the air that we breathe and the water we drink. If we want healthy bodies, feeding ourselves and our families the cleanest healthiest foods is a real good start. We are what we eat!
Burdock root

Behind the Scenes: The Deli
Welcome back to our Behind the Scenes blog series. We recently took you into the colorful world of Produce. Now we’d like to introduce you to the department that enters beast mode daily: the Deli.
Did you know?

31 Reasons to Visit the Co-op
Happy 2016! It’s a brand new year, new month, new day. No doubt many of you’ve made a variety of resolutions to make this year the best yet. The Co-op can help you succeed. How? Let us tell you. Here are 31 reasons why you should visit the Co-op every day this month to improve your life and your community.

Behind the Scenes: Produce Department
You shop for groceries at the Co-op. For lunch, you often stop at the Deli for a quick meal from the Hot Bar. You meet friends outside on the plaza, give each other long hugs, and catch up on life. After a long week, you swing by for the Friday beer and wine tastings at the Kiosk. But how well do you really know the Co-op?

2015: A Year to Remember
Can it really be that time of year again? 2015 was full of so many things for which to be grateful. Here’s a list of some of the highlights.
We celebrated the 10-thousandth person to become a Co-op owner! Co-op ownership is a way to help create a more humane and democratic way to do business locally. A robust cooperative economy is one way to take a stand against corporate misbehavior.