

"We're the garden in all of its phases – the fallow earth in the winter and the big field of wildflowers in the summer. We're all that all the time." - Amber Gray
Gamrie Gardens is an evolving, living project - a movement towards sustainable, soil-enhancing, life-supporting small scale agriculture. We believe in more than just working with the land; we aim to give back to it, learning how to heal and nurture the earth while growing food for people and wildlife alike. We are a community projects that aims to inspire and support our community in growing food sovereignty.
The Land and What We Grow
We've planted a mini native woodland, a wildlife food forest, and natural hedging to support biodiversity. Our orchard is growing with plums, apples, and cherries, alongside beds of carrots, garlic, potatoes, beets, tomatoes, and an abundance of fresh herbs. We experiment with no-dig gardening, sustainable small scale building and garden solutions, rotational grazing with sheep, and living willow structures that blend with the landscape. Young needle trees will help form windbreaks and animal shelters in the years to come, while small above-ground ponds attract more critters, enhancing the ecosystem. Every piece of this land is designed with sustainability and regeneration in mind wich also means leaving much of our land to re-wild on its own!
The Vision
Right now, Gamrie Gardens is a food growing project exploring natural solutions for small-scale organic gardening. Our goal is to grow into a CSA market garden and skill-sharing space, a place where people can reconnect with the land and learn practical ways to build resilience through growing food.
This isn’t just about self-sufficiency - it’s about reversing footprints, giving back more than we take, and working with nature rather than against it. Instead of simply leaving no trace, we choose to leave a meaningful one: healthier soil, stronger ecosystems, and a deeper understanding of how we can be worthy stewards of the land.
Join us in learning, growing, and taking back a little power - one harvest at a time.