top of page
13257075_618577771641012_1432021688_n-1.jpg

FERAL HOLLOW'S STORY

This is the story of how we found this hollow - and how it found us. You'll move through the land's history and our family's timeline up to now. Follow the thread or wander. Either way works here.

Feral Hollow is rich in stories.

Feral Hollow is an acidic cove forest at the end of its second succession of growth in unceded Monacan territory. Like many eastern forests, our forest was victim of chestnut blight and our mountain was selectively logged about 70 years ago. We can still follow the remains old logging road across the ridge and see where the loggers tethered their horses. It’s one of the few flat spaces in the hollow! History has marked the hollow in other ways. You can still see the faint outlines of a cabin built sometime in the early 1800s and follow the wagon trail that cut through the mountains to the James River.

Hand-built historic log cabin constructed by mentors using traditional tools and skills at Feral Hollow Botanical Sanctuary.

In more recent times, Feral Hollow was the home of the Blue Heron Outdoor School, which registered it as a botanical sanctuary with United Plant Savers in 2011. It was through Blue Heron that our family was first introduced to the hollow, and we made it our permanent home in the summer of 2020. In the past handful of years, we’ve reintroduced native plant communities that were destroyed by logging, cleared springs to make ground water available, and built our farm infrastructure mostly using resources from the land itself. We've carefully felled trees, milled wood, and used recycled doors and windows to help minimize our impact on the mountain we've fallen so in love with.

Freshly harvested  native plants on a wooden board, prepared for the Feral Hollow farm-to-clinic apothecary.

After years of intentionally building our farmstead by hand, we're opening our hollow up to community. We're sharing the overflowing abundance of native plants with other plant nerds, inviting adventurous folks and more experienced foragers to learn about the mushrooms and other wild edibles that grow in our mountain forest, and crafting clinical spaces for all of us to heal, grow and deepen our relationship to the land under our feet. We invite you to join our Clinical Consultations and explore the land-based support offered through our farm-to-clinic apothecary.

129791933_412810533098905_693734406166907535_n.jpg
Feral Hollow Timeline.png
18013568_1902184353335442_272370719784960000_n.jpg

"IN THE LANDSCAPE OF COMMUNITY, AS IN THE LANDSCAPE OF THE FOREST, OUR SURVIVAL DEPENDS ON CONNECTION. WE ARE NOT MEANT TO HEAL IN ISOLATION, BUT IN RELATIONSHIP WITH THE LIVING WORLD AND ONE ANOTHER."
-ROBIN WALL KIMMERER

OUR FOUNDATIONS:
 

  • Land Stewardship + Indigenous Acknowledgement - We honor, respect, and uplift relatives of the Monacan tribal nation on whose traditional land all our work is made possible.  Read more about the Monacan people here. Learn about the indigenous people, territories, treaties, and languages where you are through the Native-Land Map.

  • Accessibility + Inclusivity at Feral Hollow - Feral Hollow is a sanctuary for all bodies and minds. We strive to make our digital home as accessible as our physical one, especially for those navigating high-symptom days or sensory sensitivities. We manage our own technology though and are always learning! If you encounter any barriers or need information in a different format to accommodate your needs, please reach out via our Contact Form or email us directly at feralhollowgardens@gmail.com. We are happy to help you directly.

bottom of page