Urban Ecosystems & Monthly Giving

June 17, 2026


We are having an exciting 2026! And I want to take a moment to uplift Kayla, the Compost Ed Centre’s Education Director, and her work with the urban gardens program. 

We celebrated Kayla’s 10-year work anniversary in February. Her sustained commitment to the Compost Ed Centre has had an incredible impact on the organization and our community. She is the primary steward of the Compost Ed Centre’s demonstration site, and if you’ve been by for a visit or a site tour, you know that the demonstration site is a community magnet and refuge for local biodiversity. (And pro tip: also, an excellent place for an afternoon coffee break!) 

It is through the success of this space that we have been called on to sustain and grow other projects throughout the City of Victoria. In response to community demand, we have rapidly scaled up the number of urban green spaces stewarded over the past three years. 

  • In 2024, we started coordinating two new community allotment gardens with 70 plots, fruit and nut trees, composting systems, and communal flower beds. 
  • The City of Victoria has 300 km of boulevards (that grassy area between sidewalks and the street), and they could all be transformed into a gorgeous network of native plant gardens and/or food growing spaces. We’ve been doing our part to create that network by installing new boulevard gardens every year, and we are installing new ones in 2026. 
  • And in big moves, we’re developing a new community food forest on Garden St set to open (officially) in the fall of 2026. The food forest has existed as a “third space” garden and orchard for over three decades, and it features cherries, hazelnuts, multiple types of apples, berries, and flowering perennials. (We describe it as magical!) 

Through this work, we are improving the health of urban ecosystems through an emphasis on biodiversity, defragmentation, and soil health. 

And it can be easy to forget that urban areas are ecosystems. Ecosystems sustain communities and cultures, underpin food and water supplies, and are the cornerstone of economies, livelihoods, and wider society. And our ecosystems rely on healthy soils that function as vital living systems i.e. compost is at the heart of EVERYTHING! 

We want to continue doing this work. We want to demonstrate the value and viability of tending to urban soil health as a cornerstone of long-term community prosperity and security. But we’re at capacity. Much like the healthy soil needed to sustain a health ecosystem, we need your support to sustain our work. If you are able to, please consider becoming monthly donor today to support this work. 

Posted in Announcement, Blog, Fundraising, News, Reflections

Green Valley: Film and Fundraiser

May 14, 2026


Join us for “Green Valley: Film and Fundraiser” 🎬🌱

Join us at The Vic Theatre for a special one-night screening of Green Valley, the debut feature documentary from Victoria-raised filmmaker Morgan Tams. Filmed over two and a half years entirely off the grid, the film follows the residents of Blue Jay Lake Farm — a remote, self-sustaining community on BC’s West Coast — as they build homes, grow food, raise animals, and find their way to each other.

This isn’t just a screening. It’s a gathering. Victoria Cool Aid Society, the Compost Education Centre, The Gardener’s Pantry, and Wilder Restoration have all come together around this film — bringing native plant seed packet giveaways, community displays, a raffle, and much-needed plant nerdiness. Proceeds from the evening support the Victoria Compost Education Centre.

Green Valley premiered at the 2025 RIDM Documentary Film Festival to critical praise. Tonight it comes home.

Friday, May 22nd | Doors 6:30 PM | Film 7:00 PM The Vic Theatre, 808 Douglas Street, Victoria BC

Your ticket supports the Victoria Compost and Conservation Education Society and our hands-on education programs. Together, we’ll explore practical ways to reduce waste, build healthy soil, and strengthen our local ecosystem—one garden, one compost bin, and one neighbor at a time.

Posted in Blog, Events, Fundraising

Giving Tuesday

December 4, 2024


At this time of year, we get a lot of signals from nature to slow down. Days are shorter, temperatures are cooler, and plant growth has slowed. I put my garden plot to “bed” by adding leaf mulch. We’re lucky to live someplace where you can do winter gardening (and Kayla directed me towards some gorgeous parsley, broccoli, and cauliflower at our August Plant Sale that I popped into my plot), but I’m also feeling grateful to have one less thing to do over the next few months.

I had a great time gardening this spring and summer, but I also didn’t quite give my garden the attention it deserved. I added the gardening without taking something away, and as the summer got busy with activities, maintaining my plot became another item on my to-do list. I wanted to be productive, and I wanted the space to be successful. But I didn’t carve out the time necessary to be present and to get to know what my small patch of green needed from me to thrive. I grew a surprising number of tomatoes and made numerous batches of pesto, but I can only thank the plants for thriving under my benign neglect. As often is the case, I could have done more by doing less.

I’m trying to hold on to that lesson – do more by doing less – even though I’m getting a lot of signals to pick things up. There’s Halloween candy to eat, Black Friday goods to purchase, and holiday shopping to do. ‘Tis the season of over consumption! What can you and I do in this moment to reconnect to the signals from nature?

Rest

I invite you to slow down! Daydream. Take a nap. Heck, make it possible for someone else to take a nap. Tricia Hersey, the brilliant mind behind the Nap Ministry, has shared that rest has an ecological component: when we rest, the Earth rests. How lovely is that!? So: cozy up, folks.

Donate

Consider donating to the causes you love. We’re so grateful to have been chosen by the volunteers of the Seedy Saturday organizing committee to be the backbone organization of the 2025 event. In parallel to the leaf mulch on my garden plot that’s recharging nutrients for a productive growing season next year, the volunteers are putting in time and energy over the winter to make the spring 2025 event a success.

The folks on the committee are giving their time to organize this event, and I invite the rest of us to do what we can to make the event happen. The committee would appreciate donations as small as $5, which will go to ensuring that this community event can happen in February 2025! Make a tax-deductible charitable donation to Seedy Saturday through our fundraising page.

Low-Impact Gifting

If you are a gift giver, think about items that are low impact e.g. locally sourced, secondhand, fair trade, etc. If you can, give the gift of time.  In a world where there’s so much STUFF, think about giving someone an experience or quality time spent together. If you’re like one of my brilliant colleagues who spends this quiet season knitting, carving, weaving, and shaping clay, think about taking on a craft. As part of our site shift (which you may have seen or even heard), we said goodbye to a gorgeous eucalyptus tree. We were able to chip a lot of the eucalyptus tree, and we’ve spread those chips around the site where they will continue their life as they decompose and build soil. We’re also selling larger milled pieces as a fundraiser for our Child and Youth Education Program. Consider buying some mementos of this tree for your next carpentry project.

Let me know what you think! Do you have other ideas for how to reconnect to nature at this time of the year? I’d love to hear them.

Love,
Claire

Posted in Announcement, Blog, Fundraising, Partnerships, ReflectionsTagged , , , ,

Changes are afoot at the CEC Demonstration Site

November 14, 2024


If you’ve walked past the Compost Education Centre demonstration site at 1216 North Park Street in the past couple months, you’ve likely noticed tree removal on the north side, temporary fencing at different places and road work on North Park!

For the past 4 years since the Caledonia Housing Development was in its consultation phase, the CEC has known that our site footprint would be impacted.

That all came to reality starting October 1 here at the CEC demonstration site. Because of needs for specific access points into the housing development, Vining is in the process of being widened (between Chambers St and the development), and in exchange for the lost demonstration site space and allotment garden space, the demonstration stie is expanding into North Park St between Chambers St and the development.

The wonderful folks at Hatchet and Seed have been sub-contracted by the construction company to build out new demonstration areas on North Park, rebuild the greenhouse and coldframe, and reconfigure some impacted allotment garden beds. We’ll be replanting some fruit trees on the south side of the site to try to make up for the loss of the two mature apple trees we had along the back fence. The CEC recognizes the impact of removing large trees like the apples and eucalyptus, and so we held a special tree ceremony for those trees in advance of them being removed. Small trees are not a replacement for mature trees in terms of the ecosystem services they provide, so we were very sad to see these mature trees go.

On the positive side, much of the eucalyptus was chipped and we’ve spread those chips around the site, and they will continue their life as they decompose and build soil. Additionally, larger, straight logs from the eucalyptus were milled up beautifully, and we are now selling them as a fundraiser for the CEC! Please consider purchasing a memento from the eucalyptus tree for your next project. Details and inventory of the wood can be found here: https://www.facebook.com/share/15W9fDvQAi/ or here: https://www.usedvictoria.com/miscellaneous-for-sale/40983950

Posted in Blog, Fundraising, NewsTagged , ,

Seven Years of Success with the Healing City Soils Program

October 1, 2023


The Healing City Soils (HCS) program dismantles barriers to people growing their own food; educates on how soil health is vital to local ecosystems, community wellbeing, and climate change mitigation; and builds community around restoring damaged soils. The program is a partnership between the Compost Education Centre (CEC) and Royal Roads University (RRU). On August 28th, the HCS community came together at Hatley Castle on the RRU campus to watch – and celebrate – undergraduate environmental science students present the results from the program’s seventh successful year of implementation.

Soil testing can be expensive, and the results are often complex, confusing, and disheartening. The uncertainty of soil contamination, the expense of soil testing, and the opaqueness of soil testing results are all barriers that prevent people from growing their own food. The RRU students addressed these barriers and furthermore, they educated on the importance of soil health. There were other environmental science students, Capital Regional District (CRD) growers and gatherers, CEC staff, RRU professors and staff, and friends and family in attendance; and the audience walked away with an improved understanding and appreciation for soil health.

 

Have questions about your soil quality? Stay connected!

Subscribe to our newsletter to receive updates on Healing City Soils 2024 soil testing

 

 

Over the course of eight months, two student groups in Professor Matt Dodd’s environmental science major project course performed literature reviews, designed research questions, learned new laboratory protocols, and engaged in hands-on environmental science.

Both student groups competently explained their science, shared their challenges, provided recommendations for next year’s crop of students, and tackled critical barriers to scaling up sustainable food systems in the CRD.

The first student group focused on providing free heavy metal soil testing of backyards, community gardens, boulevard gardens, and traditional harvesting sites in the Capital Regional District (CRD) to 100 food grower and gatherer program participants; this is part of the CEC’s long-term HCS program. All participants received the results of their heavy metal soil tests alongside easy-to-understand educational materials like the CEC’s factsheet on soil contamination. The results will be incorporated into an interactive online map.

 

Do you think this research is cool?

Contribute to the sustainability of this program! Become a donor

 

The second student group was drawn in by the questions of the Ground Beneath Our Feet (GBOF) pilot that the CEC started in 2020; the GBOF group analyzed the potential of using plants, compost, and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) to remediate soils contaminated with heavy metals. AMF naturally occur in many habitats, and they improve plant nutrition, stress resistance and tolerance, soil structure and fertility. The students maintained three different pilot sites where they tested soil quality and plant tissue for heavy metals, planted and maintained plants hypothesized to be bioaccumulators, and applied compost and AMF. The students found the combination of woolly sunflower, compost, and AMF to be effective in remediating contaminated soils.

[envira-gallery id=”9427″]

 

We are so grateful to the First West Foundation’s for making this work possible!

By Claire Remington, Executive Director

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Blog, Civic Engagement, Fundraising, Healing City Soils, News, PartnershipsTagged , , , , , ,

August Organic Plant Sale Wrap up & Thank yous

August 10, 2022


 

Wow, what a great turn out for the plant sale last weekend! A massive thank you to every person who came out to buy plants, connect with community, and celebrate the CEC’s 30th birthday with us.

 

These fundraising events are paramount to the operation of our year-round programming which connects many people, young and old, to composting and ecological gardening education.

 

A special thank you to all the volunteers who wheelbarrowed HUNDREDS of plants from our demonstration gardens to Haegert Park.

And we’d also like to thank our generous event sponsors who made the growth of this year’s sale to a market event possible: Country Grocer, Paper Heart Films, Root Cellar, Chek Media, Hoyne Brewing, Cold Comfort Ice Cream, and Vancity

Happy planting, and remember—you can always call our hotline if you have any composting or gardening questions! 250 386 WORM (9676) 

Posted in Blog, Events, Fundraising, News, Organic Gardening, ReflectionsTagged , ,

Summer Raffle

July 6, 2022


Did you hear? We’re having a raffle for a brand new cargo e-bike! 

 

In 2021 the Compost Education Centre began a concerted effort to expand and evolve our Child and Youth Education program, including the crucial addition of a second child and youth educator, Jeffrey Ellom. As a team, Jeffrey and Child & Youth Education Manager, Elora Adamson, have developed a host of new workshops and programs. These include one-off workshops like ‘Bees and Blossoms’, ‘Spectacular Seeds’, ‘Flawless Fungi’ and more! Fundraising from the Summer 2022 E-Bike Raffle will support not only the development of more relevant and exciting science and environmental resiliency workshops for young people, but will also contribute to new programming initiatives such as the ‘Parent-Child Workshop Series’.

 

Drop by in person, find us at events, or click here to grab your tickets to score this sweet ride.

 

Winner drawn in September. Thank you to @fairfieldbicycleshop for the generous donation.

1000 tickets, 1 for $2.00; 1500 tickets, 3 for $5.00; 3000 tickets, 10 for $15.00 | BC Gaming Event License #133883 | Winners consent to the release of their name by the licensee. 

*Participants must be 19+ and a resident of BC to enter

Posted in Announcement, Blog, Child and Youth Education, Fundraising, Partnerships, RetailTagged , , , ,

The Compost Education Centre Needs Your Help

November 23, 2017


You can find ways to support us on our homepage and via these links:
http://givingtuesday.ca/partners/compost-education-centre

or here:
https://compost.bc.ca/get-involved/donate/

Posted in Announcement, Blog, Fundraising, NewsTagged , , ,

Comfrey Bocking 14 Slips @ the CEC

October 6, 2017


Fall is prime time to plant comfrey slips and next week the CEC will be selling Comfrey Bocking 14 slips by donation!

Posted in Blog, Featured, Fundraising, News, Organic Gardening, RetailTagged , , , ,

What on Earth? Stories Rooted in Land and Nature, Nov 4th, 7:30-9:30

August 31, 2016


Storytellers_Guild_Fundraiser_Poster_web

Join the Victoria Storytellers’ Guild for an evening of stories rooted in land and nature.

You are welcome to come to listen or can also bring a story of your own to share. Stories can be of different lengths up to 10 minutes or so. Shorter stories are welcome, too. They can be folk tales, fairy tales, myths, legends, personal stores (happened to the teller or someone close to them), can have some singing or response from the audience. They must be told “by heart”, that is, not read from text or with the use of notes.

Admission by donation at the door, with all proceeds going to support the Compost Education Centre’s programming. Tea and cookies will be provided

When:  7:30 pm to 9:30 pm, Friday, November 4th

Where:  1831 Fern St., the Quakers’ Meeting Hall.

 

Posted in Announcement, Blog, Events, Fundraising, NewsTagged , , , ,