Indigenous Food Share

artistic table lay of fresh produce on a blanket

Indigenous Food Share (IFS) CSA

Our Indigenous Food Share program serves Native families within the greater Twin Cities metro.

Non-Native allies: We welcome you to shop from our stand at the Four Sisters Farmers Market from June – October.  We’ll have plenty of delicious produce to offer everyone who visits our stand!

2025 Shares

Share Size

As the land calls us to raise our plant relatives in increasingly sustainable ways, we’re adapting our previously “Large” and “Small” Indigenous Food Share options into a single, smaller sized box that we’re calling our Harvest Basket.

Our Harvest Basket will come with a variety of 6-8 vegetables, fruits, grains and/or legumes each week for the 16 week season, delivering to our relatives the freshest available food from Dream of Wild Health’s farm.  We are also offering a Fall Harvest Basket in a Large box, to fill your pantry with storage crops, as well as fresh harvested foods. We are making these size changes for the following reasons:

  • Climate change is keeping our fields wetter for longer into the spring; We’re starting our growing season slightly later and with different plant relatives.
  • Our soils need rest and rejuvenation; We’re planting some of them with cover crops instead of food to replenish nutrients and support pollinators.
  • Our community is asking for more traditional Native foods; We’re putting emphasis on deepening relationships with relatives including: beans, blueberries, chokecherries, corn, highbush-cranberries, peppers, potatoes, serviceberries, squash, strawberries, sweet potatoes, sunchokes, tomatoes, and wild plums.
  • Our community is asking for more ways to engage with our farm; We’re deepening relationships and finding different opportunities for Native organizations to continuously shape our programming – including the foods and medicines that we grow.

Payment Plans & Sliding Scales

We were happy to continue offering a sliding scale payment model and payment plants for our Indigenous Food Share program. This reflects part of our mission, which aims to increase food access to Native families in the Twin Cities. We also offer a work share option where IFS members can trade work on the farm on pre-arranged dates as another way to pay for their share.

Ashòògè (Apache), Ho’hou (Arapaho), WetAXkoosšteéRAt (Arikara), Pidamaya (Dakota), Ahéhee‘ (Diné), Pinagigi (Ho-Chunk), Miigwech (Ojibwe), Kherkhem (Tiwa), Chiokoe (Yoeme)
The Dream of Wild Health Team

table of fresh produce

Types of Shares

IFS shares begin June 19 and go through October 9, 2025. No shares the week of 7/4/24.

IFS Harvest Basket: $320

  • One box delivered each week – 16 boxes total.
  • 6-8 items per week, sometimes more.
    Baskets include fruits, vegetables, legumes, grains and herbs. Whatever is in season. Squash, beans, corn, tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, lettuce, cabbage and more.

IFS Fall Harvest Basket: $40

  • One box on October 16, 2025.
  • 12-14 different fruits, vegetables, grains and legumes.
  • Free and reduced priced shares are available. To make our shares accessible to program families and community partners, we offer a variety of flexible payment options, including: payment plans, sliding scale rates, workshare plans, and other options. We are committed to working with families on a case-by-case basis.

2024 IFS Information

The mission of Dream of Wild Health is to restore health and wellbeing in the Native community by recovering knowledge of and access to healthy, Indigenous foods, medicines and lifeways. Our Indigenous Food Share (IFS Share) is one direct way we fulfill that mission.

A weekly IFS share brings healthy, fresh produce from the DWH Farm to your home.  Each week our farm team will harvest, wash and pack a mix of 6-8 fruits, vegetables, legumes, grains and herbs into a box and deliver the share to one of our four pick-up locations.  

With each share you will receive a newsletter (print and/or email) including cultural teachings, language translations, storage, cooking and preservation information.

Each Summer Harvest Basket (box) includes: a variety of seasonal produce; usually around 6-8 items. While box contents change by the week, we aim for a good balance in each box, and as many traditional food items as are available from the garden. 

Early Summer Baskets might include: wild-rice, spinach, salad, scallions, strawberries, turnips, summer squash, peas, beets, garlic scapes, bok choy, kale, cilantro, dill

Mid Summer Baskets might include: summer squash, potatoes, green beans, tomatoes, peppers, onions, garlic, lettuce, cucumbers, watermelon, basil, thyme, dill

Early Fall Baskets might include: hominy corn, dried beans, winter squash, tomatoes, lettuce, peppers, onions, potatoes, sweet potatoes, rutabagas, radishes, cabbage, carrots, sage, thyme, oregano

Our Fall Harvest Basket will include: a variety of seasonal produce items, many of which will store well. These shares are larger with 12-14 items, and might include: wild rice, potatoes, sweet potatoes, hominy, dried beans, winter squash, pumpkin, cabbage, carrots, onions, spinach, thyme, sage, dried tea

We have 4 pick-up locations to choose from:

  • Dream of Wild Health Farm 
    16085 Jeffrey Road, Hugo 
    8:30am – 2:45pm (Thursdays and Fridays)
  • Mississippi Market Co-op on East 7th 
    740 East 7th Street, St. Paul 
    9:30am – 9pm (Thursdays)
  • Indigenous Food Lab at Midtown Global Market 
    920 East Lake Street, Minneapolis 
    10am – 5pm (Thursdays)
  • Four Sisters Farmers Market at Pow Wow Grounds
    1414 East Franklin Ave, Minneapolis 
    10am – 3pm (Thursdays)

If you’re unable to pick up within these times/locations, please let us know what you need; we’re committed to working with families on a case-by-case basis. Having someone else pick up your share is always an option (like a family member, friend, co-worker, etc.).

Thursdays (Fridays as well if you pick the DWH Farm Pickup)
Every share, every week. *No shares the week of 7/4/25.

At the start of the season, members will receive a Welcome Kit with information on foods they’ll meet over the season, along with information on basic food storage and preparation. Additionally, each week members will receive a newsletter, which includes:

  • A labeled photo to help you identify each item in your basket
  • Simple Indigenous recipes that are easy to prepare
  • Nutritional highlights on included foods
  • Native language and cultural lessons, whenever possible
  • Information on how to store each item for best quality

All of our produce is grown using blended, multi-Tribal Indigenous farming practices; we believe in reciprocity, and follow organic, relational, and regenerative farming methods – everything we grow is non-GMO, and free from non-organic pesticides and herbicides. We seek to be a part of restoring the health of our soils as well as the health of our human and non-human communities by rebuilding our connections to Indigenous foods.

Unique to our program is a specific emphasis on growing, distributing, and educating the community on Indigenous foods and medicines Native to Turtle Island (North America).