Warmer days have arrived at last here in Richmond, and with blooms abound throughout the nursery we are poppin’ with pollinators and a vibrant array of colors over here!
The month of June is LGBTQIA+ pride month in honor of the Stonewall riots of New York in 1969. Most folks are probably aware that the rainbow flag is the iconic symbol that represents the LGBTQIA community, but what is perhaps lesser known is how that came to be… Urged by Harvey Milk to make a symbol for the LGBTQIA+ community, a local San Francisco gay man, artist, and drag queen named Gilbert Baker set out to make a statement about diversity in the late 70’s, and chose the symbol of a rainbow to fit this mission because he felt that the variety of colors in the rainbow visually captured the sentiment of celebrating diversity well. The fact that rainbows are found in nature also aligned perfectly with the message that queerness and diversity are natural, and exist all around us. Baker opted to use a flag for the symbol because he saw flags as a powerful symbol of pride– a way of proclaiming one’s visibility and being proud of who you are. Each of the colors of the rainbow had its own meaning, with 8 colors originally– Hot pink for sex, red for life, orange for healing, yellow for sunlight, green for nature, turquoise for art, indigo for harmony, and violet for spirit. Upon mass production of the rainbow flag the colors changed slightly because of production issues, so it has since evolved into what is now the most widely known variant as a six color flag (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet).
Some of you reading this might be thinking, what does LGBTQIA+ Pride Month possibly have to do with California native plants? Quite frankly, plants are queer as heck! There are countless examples of ‘queer’ reproductive strategies in the botanical world– we won’t be delving into this topic at length right now, but if it interests you we suggest reading “Queer is Natural: An Interview with The Scrappy Naturalist” by Leslie Patron on Peninsula Open Space Trust blog and checking out the accompanying online event on Wednesday June 5th. There is also a great article called “Re-imagining Reproduction: The Queer Possibilities of Plants” by Banu Subramaniam and Madelaine Bartlett from the Journal of Integrative and Comparative Biology that is worth a read!
Ultimately, the LGBTQIA rights movement and Pride month are at their core a celebration of diversity and a fight to protect it, which is vital for native plants, our environment, and us humans alike! After all, we are part of the natural world too– our diverse ways of existing in this world are equally as important to protect as the plants, animals, fungi, and bacteria that we coexist with.
Celebrating diversity and working together to protect it is foundational to our business too! This month, we will donate all of our revenue from plant sales on Saturday June 15th to the Oakland LGBTQ Center to support their mission of “enhancing and sustaining the well-being of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) individuals, their families, and allies by providing educational, social, and health related activities, programs, and services”– If you’re interested in ‘feeding two birds with one hand’ to support the Oakland LGBTQ Center’s mission as well as ours, we hope you’ll shop with us on the 15th so you can get some native plants in the ground and contribute to our donation to the Oakland LGBTQ Center in the process!
We also want to shout out some local events happening this week to kick off pride month!
Saturday June 1st, 9am – 3pm
Pride Outside: Celebrate National Trails Day and Queer Community in Richmond, CA
Hosted by the Watershed Project at the Booker T Anderson Community Center (960 S 47th St, Richmond, CA 94804)
“Join us for a community restoration event in the morning, a picnic lunch, and end with a guided bird and plant walk along the San Francisco Bay Trail. Join us in community with fellow LGBTQIA+ folks and allies – All are welcome!”
Sunday June 2nd, 11am – 3pm
Richmond Pride Parade 2024
Hosted by Richmond Rainbow Pride
This year’s Richmond Pride Parade will be a walking parade that will begin at Nicholl Park (on the Macdonald Ave side) and make its way to the Civic Center (traveling east up 26th from Nicholl Park)
Wednesday June 5th, 7pm
Queer is Natural
Hosted by the Peninsula Open Space Trust
*online event, registration required
“🌈 Explore the colorful world of nature with “Queer is Natural”! Join Megan and Dr. Christine Wilkinson virtually on June 5th at 7PM as we dive into the fascinating phenomenon of queerness in the animal kingdom. To be perfectly queer (pun intended), this event is a must for anyone curious about the natural world and its queer connections.”
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