OUR
FARM

Goat looking through a fence
Farm Veggies including shallots and peppers

Swallowtail School
Land Acknowledgement

For thousands and thousands of years — since long before humans can remember — the land on which we stand thrived as oak savanna, tended by the native people. The Tualatin Kalapuya and other tribes gathered, as we do today, under ancient oak trees. They returned each fall to the warmth of this sacred ground. They collected acorns that fed them through the cold winters. And by way of story and song, they passed from elder to child the sacred knowledge of how to care for this land. They learned to burn fires to protect the oaks that anchor so much life around us, from the watchful owl to the flitting butterfly, the prancing deer to the hardworking squirrel. 

Today, we honor the light of the fire cultivated here long before we arrived, and those who kept it burning. We recognize the sacrifices forced upon the original stewards of this place, and we commit to keeping the fire they kindled for so long burning within our community. We do this by caring for this land and for all the creatures that call it home, and by sharing stories that teach us how. We do this so that this land can remain sacred not just for the children gathered here today, but for their children, and theirs after them. 

For this land and all it gives us, we give thanks, with our words, with our hearts and with our hands. 

Child's hands holding a baby chick
Hops growing at the farm

The role of
the farm at Swallowtail

The joy and freedom experienced by the children when they visit the Swallowtail farm is what brings many families to our school.

At the farm, students engage in sustainable agriculture and learn about native habitats. Activities supplement the classroom curriculum, particularly animal science, physics, chemistry, and botany.

From festivals and campouts to quiet meditative moments, the farm serves as a place for our students and families to connect to the earth and to one another.