Voices From The Community | Spinal Cord Injury & Paralysis

Quality of Life Grantee Spotlight: Common Roots Farm

Written by Reeve Staff | Jun 3, 2024 1:00:00 PM

It felt like falling off a cliff. That’s how Heidi Cartan describes her family’s experience when her son, Noah, who was born with cerebral palsy, reached 22 years old.

“There is a dramatic and abrupt stop to most opportunities for engagement and community available to people with intellectual and physical disabilities. We wanted Noah’s time ahead to be as meaningful, rich, and fulfilling as possible, but the opportunities were few and far between,” says Cartan.

So Cartan and her husband, Philippe Habib, decided to bring the community to Noah. She combined her decades of human services experience with her passion for gardening to create Common Roots Farm in 2016. Located less than a mile from downtown Santa Cruz, the four-acre organic farm was built from the ground up with accessibility in mind using universal design principles.

“An eight-foot-wide path around the perimeter ensures all the animals, greenhouse, and work areas are accessible. We also created wider furrows between the planting beds,” says Cartan. “But as a working farm, the beds are 100 feet long and could feel intimidating to navigate for someone with disabilities. The farm needed a hub, an area where the community could comfortably gather and engage.”

In 2021, Common Roots Farm received a $15,000 Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation Quality of Life grant to build the Seed to Salad Garden within the farm. The garden includes a shade structure, four ADA cafe tables, six picnic tables, and garden beds that allow a wheelchair to roll into them.

“This space has become a welcoming centerpiece of our farm. The shade structure really frames the area as a focal point of farm activity,” says Cartan. “I can’t overstate how much of a difference it has made. It is huge.”

The Seed to Salad Garden includes all the same crops grown elsewhere on the farm but on a smaller, more accessible scale. More than 20 food crops, including squash, lettuce, peppers, onions, tomatoes, and 25 varieties of cut flowers, are grown on the farm for sale locally. The new space enables visitors of all abilities to help with farm activities and feel a sense of purpose.

“The farm’s goal is to include people in an intentional way, and everyone can participate in creating a better future through growing healthy foods. It is a space that breaks down barriers,” says Cartan. “Here, people with disabilities are recognized for what they can contribute toward helping to feed our community. We focus on quality, not speed.”