An Innovative Approach to Sustainability
Located at the confluence of the Little Slocan and Slocan Rivers in Vallican, B.C., the Elk Root Conservation Farm Society (ERC) is a not-for-profit organization committed to promoting ecological stewardship, alleviating food insecurity, and supporting Indigenous food sovereignty. Central to ERC’s vision is the recognition that healthy ecosystems and healthy communities are deeply interconnected.
The Society emerged from the personal efforts of its founders, whose passion quickly extended outwards to inspire the larger community. As Kate explains, “Elk Root Conservation was born out of some of the work that originally my partner and I were working on in the sense of what we were doing for ourselves… the community when they saw what we were doing, were absolutely inspired… and wanted to be part of it.” Reflecting on their beginnings, Kate shares, “we moved to the Valley and had a wide breadth of life experience, and a vision of what we thought as human beings’ would help the overall environment.”
This vision quickly came to life, as their early efforts began to draw the community’s attention. “Someone said to us, you know, you can get grants for that to help the community,” Kate recalls. “We initially got a couple of grants, small grants as individuals, and then someone said, you should incorporate a society and do this.” What began as a personal project soon evolved into something much larger, “way beyond what we intended,” as Kate describes. Ultimately, the decision to expand their work well beyond their original vision came from a simple motivation, “we saw a need, and I think that’s the bottom line,” as Kate put it.
Since these early beginnings, Kate and the rest of the ERC team have worked hard towards their goal of supporting healthy communities and ecosystems, leading a range of innovative research and community-based projects. “We have grown from our first $5,000 grant to being quite an extensive organization,” Kate shares.
The ERC sustains a diverse range of projects, including its native plant nursery and seed library, community food box program, and riparian zoneMoist, biodiverse areas situated between dry habitats and bodies of water or wetlands. They serve key functions in ecosystems such as trapping carbon, maintaining water temperature, filtering nutrients and supporting stream banks. restoration initiatives. The ERC is also home to educational demonstration gardens that provide hands-on learning opportunities for community members of all ages, on topics ranging from native plants, pollinator protection and environmental conservation, to organic regenerative agricultural practices. When responding to the interconnected challenges of climate change adaptation, the ERC has placed particular emphasis on the protection of pollinators, due to their essential role in ecosystem health.

