Sunny Samplings: Mid-Summer Foraging Walk

Deepen your relationship with the local landscape by learning the foundations of safe, ethical, and reciprocal foraging. While exploring seasonal wild foods, we'll learn about local ecology, plant ID, and our shared history of human-plant connection.

Foraging in the summer teaches us about the ebbs and flows of the seasons. From striking abundance to seasonal stress, we become intimately aware of the vagaries of climate, water, and heat. In this way, foraging is as much a fulfilling activity as it is a humbling teacher: asking us to observe, wait, tend, withhold, and honor the land as much as we celebrate the harvest. 

With this important reality in mind, we can still find plenty to enjoy and learn as we reach the height of the warm season. Refreshing fruits like sumac drupes and autumn olive share the land with nutritious and medicinal berries, flowers and greens, often most vibrant in the cooler, shadier microclimates that provide relief from the summer heat. 

Whether you are interested in wild foods, local plants and ecology, or alternative uses for plants through wildcrafting and medicine-making, you're invited to join our Mid-Summer Forging Walk, taking place Sunday, August 3rd from 10am to 12pm.

Along the way, we will spend time paying tribute to our long shared history with plants, looking beyond the question of "what can I eat?" on the landscape. We will also emphasize ethical foraging and ways of giving back to the land from which we’re taking–reinforcing how thinking like an ecosystem should guide the practice of gathering wild foods.

Beginners and experienced foragers are welcome. 


Program Notes:

This class will take place outdoors. Please check the weather in advance and dress accordingly. Be prepared for walking on uneven terrain and potentially muddy conditions. 

All programs are subject to change due to unforeseen circumstances including inclement weather. Participants will receive an email in the days preceding the program for any changes or cancellations. You can review our current Cancellation and Refund Policy here

Parking takes place in the field above the farmhouse. Plan to arrive 10 minutes early so we can begin the class on time. 

The cost for this program is $25/person. Sliding scale options are available to increase accessibility. Young children accompanying an adult may attend without charge.  


About the Instructor: Andrew Leahy

Growing up in a rural town called Sweet Valley, just south of Ricketts Glen, Andrew spent his life fostering a love for the PA wilds. He attended Muhlenberg College in Allentown and majored in English Literature and Music Composition while exploring regional ecology, slow food, composting, gardening, and foraging in the spaces between. This eventually led him to the staff of the Horn Farm Center, where, as Community Engagement Coordinator, he organizes educational opportunities, coordinates volunteers, runs social media, blogs, and assists with development and outreach projects. 

Andrew is an avid forager and student of wild spaces, interested in rekindling ways of living on the landscape that are place-sourced and mutually nuturing. In 2023, he had the privilege of enriching his experience by taking the Horn Farm Center's Land Steward Training Program. Beyond the Horn Farm, Andrew leads a book club for the Lancaster Composting Co-Ops, volunteers as a land steward with the Lancaster Conservancy, and spends Saturdays selling produce at Green Circle Organics in Lancaster Central Market.


 

When
August 3rd, 2025 from 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Location
4945 Horn Rd
York, PA 17406
United States
Contact
Phone: (717) 757-6441
Event Fee(s)
Monthly Foraging Walk
Tier 1 (regular admission)` $25.00
Tier 2 (reduced cost) $16.00
Tier 3 (pay-it-forward) $34.00
Optional Donation