CLIENTS, PROJECTS, & COLLABS

Here we share client features for the current Minnow season.

Our seasonal themes will be updated biannually but, as we grow, we intend these to match the natural cycles of the Earth, which correlate more closely to those of the farmers and Indigenous communities we serve. Scroll down to see other clients and collaborations we’ll be featuring soon.


Pixca Farm

Located on the unceded land of the Kumeyaay along the flood plain of the Tijuana River, Pixca Farm has served culturally significant produce and flowers to the people of South Bay, San Diego. Their locally grown vegetables, farm fresh flowers, seedlings and compost have been offered through a year-round community supported agriculture (CSA) membership program, and through a seasonal food stand open to the public on Saturdays, with everything grown and produced through diversified and ecologically friendly methods.

Pixca Farm has been a community of farmers of color which attracted members of all ages since its inception. Early in 2021, their membership sought to formally organize as a worker cooperative, and Minnow provided the farmers with cooperative development services in collaboration with the San Diego Food Systems Alliance. Services have included cooperative business model and decisional structure workshops, strategic statement drafting, structuring of bylaws and internal governance, along with operational agreements and initial business planning.

Providing these services free of charge is only possible thanks to the generous contributions of people like you. Visit our fiscal sponsor and consider chipping-in monthly, it’ll help us support farm workers organizing under democratic governance structures. We also provide cooperative development services on a sliding scale to those who qualify.

Some Flowers From Pixca Farm

The selection above was used for a series of seven end-of-year thank you postcards mailed to friends and supporters last December. We’ll be adding more features about our work with this client soon. Stay in the loop by subscribing to our mailing list!

In the works:


Kai Poma

Kai Poma is a tribally-incorporated nonprofit organization founded by representatives of the Sherwood Valley Band of Pomo Indians, Round Valley Indian Tribes, and Coyote Valley Band of Pomo Indians, with legal, governance, and planning support from Minnow. It serves as the legal entity for the return of over 130 acres of land along the Pacific coast in Yuki and Pomo lands, present day Mendocino County, California, as required by SB 231, a bill sponsored by State Senator Mike McGuire (D-North Coast) and signed into law by Governor Newsom in 2021.

We have provided pro-bono legal consulting to the tribal representatives for Kai Poma thanks to support from the California Tribal Fund, a project of the First Nations Development Institute. Our work has included tracking and advising on the legislation, scoping and forming their legal entity, and facilitating communication and consultations with state agencies. We are currently negotiating the final return of the land and facilitating the creation of a land management plan for the property in collaboration with High Water Mark LLC, a Native American woman-owned environmental consulting firm.

Your support moves this work forward. Visit our donation page and consider monthly giving–it adds up for us. If you are interested in knowing more about this process or are in need of legal consultation, drop us a line. We also provide legal consultation and other services at sliding scale rates.


Tierras Milperas

Tierras Milperas is a collective of campesino and Indigenous families working to liberate their livelihoods from subjugation in the extractive agro-industry. Their 140 families are collectively known as La Asamblea (The Assembly), and steward seven milpas in Watsonville and Pajaro, California. They are moving towards acquiring community-managed farmland in which to practice traditional farming in dialogue with local Indigenous communities and to attain food sovereignty.

More than mere community gardens, milpas hold deep significance to the worldviews and religious beliefs of many Mesoamerican cultures, particularly among the Indigenous Peoples of the Yucatan Peninsula. Milpas are as much a complex agricultural system based on farm and fallow cycles, as they are the center of community life around food growing in relationship with plant and animal species.

Minnow began collaborating with Tierras Milperas in 2019 to support their transition out of white staff leadership and into collective governance and autonomy of the campesinos through a new fiscal sponsorship relationship. In 2022, the campesinos faced eviction from their largest and longest-standing milpa. Since then, we have assisted them in strategic campaigns and actions to protect and secure access to their current milpas, while continuing to support their long-term vision for community land tenure. 

We do this by providing legal and strategic advice for their transition to a self-governance model, one that’s able to retain their culturally important principles and practices under our Western-colonial legal system. Minnow also leverages financial resources to support the growth and development of La Asamblea as a campesino-led community organization and for their land acquisition needs. 

To learn more about Tierras Milperas and support their efforts to establish a land base for their membership, please visit their website.


Photo: Jacque Rupp

The People’s Land Fund

Farmers who are black, Indigenous or people of color (BIPOC) have historically been discriminated against when it comes to financial aid and relief support from government agencies. The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic was no exception. The People’s Land Fund was created by members of Minnow, First nations Development Institute/California Tribal Fund, Mandela Partners, Kitchen Table Advisors, Agriculture and Land-Based Training Association, Butterfly Movement, and Manzanita Capital Collective, to organize and manage an emergency response, the California BIPOC Farmers and Land Stewards Relief Fund.

Beyond emergency response, The People’s Land Fund exists as a legal and financial vehicle that is led and governed by leaders of color to support a just transition of land ownership, economic resources, and infrastructure to advance racial and land justice in California.

Today, The People’s Land Fund is dedicated to financially supporting Indigenous and ecological land stewardship practices to foster more equitable regional food systems while creating collective wealth. Its members are food and agricultural leaders from BIPOC communities and organizations that continue to embody the spirit of both being and working for farmers and land stewards of color.

The People’s Land Fund accepts land donations, puts capital in the hands of those who work the land, and works to fulfill the infrastructural needs of farmers. Visit the collective’s website to learn more and get involved.