Jemez Mountain Bloom Story, Soil, and Stewardship in the Jemez Bioregion Jemez Mountain Bloom is a community-led initiative that strengthens regenerative culture, ecological stewardship, and local participation throughout the Jemez Mountains watershed. Our work weaves together storytelling, natural farming education, watershed awareness, local food systems, and place-based gatherings to help communities reconnect with the living systems that sustain them. At the center of the project is a quarterly print and digital publication that documents local knowledge, highlights regenerative practices, and amplifies the voices of growers, educators, artists, water protectors, and community builders working throughout the region. The publication serves as a catalyst for a broader ecosystem of community engagement that includes educational events, demonstrations, workshops, local business partnerships, and collaborative projects focused on soil health, and food resilience.
Project story
The Story of Jemez Mountain Bloom
Jemez Mountain Bloom began as a local Bloom Network Hub, but its origins lie in a deeper question of how do we learn to see what is already present within a place?
The project emerged during a Signal Craft workshop, a process originally developed to help people discover the essential story beneath a project, organization, brand, or life path. At first, Signal Craft appeared to be a storytelling and branding exercise.
Over time, however, it evolved into a method of observation.
The process consistently returned to a simple set of questions:
What is here?
What is valuable?
What is needed?
What tensions exist?
What already works?
What wants to emerge?
These questions became foundational not only to Signal Craft, but also to the development of Bloom Network impact reports, the Natural Being Framework, and the evolution of N2R as a way of understanding living systems.
As work unfolded looking across Bloom’s global network of projects, it became clear that the impact reporting often struggled to capture the tensions that effect day to day operations within communities. Metrics could measure activity, but they frequently missed th nuances of relationships. Outputs counted rarely revealed the needs being met, the tensions being navigated, or the conditions that allowed value to emerge.
The development of N2R helped shift that perspective.
Here is a link to familiarize with N2R as a working model: https://osf.io/q7gmd/overview
Here is a link to an article within Bloom Network, highlighting the use of th N2R within regions as an internal facing report: https://bloomnetwork.earth/view/when-people-can-eat-land-can-recover-d1ef43ba706c
Rather than asking only what succeeded, N2R asks what tensions were present and how they were transformed. It looks for the relationship between needs, resources, participation, and the conditions that support resilience over time. In doing so, it creates a way of seeing communities as nested living systems rather than collections of isolated projects.
This approach began shaping Bloom’s impact reports, helping continuing the move toward place-based narratives that reveal how value is created, exchanged, and sustained. It also encouraged greater attention to the specific human needs being met through community activity, complementing quantitative measures with a fuller picture of lived experience.
A link to Signal Craft, the Bloom facing incubated class that started it all… https://bloomnetwork.earth/view/how-signal-craft-ii-helped-birth-the-jemez-springs-hub-and-a-regenerative-storytelling-model-for-bloom-worldwide-b294c5d7123f
When the Jemez Mountain Bloom Hub emerged, it felt natural to apply the same lens locally.
The result was not simply a magazine.
The result was Jemez Mountain Bloom.
A link to the first edition of Jemez Mountain Bloom: https://canva.link/g7a6pvcsrhe8eff
The publication functions as a quarterly magazine, but it also functions as a map, an impact report, and a tool for increasing regional coherence. Each issue seeks to make visible the relationships that already exist between land, food, water, culture, business, history, and community.
Rather than inventing an ecosystem, the publication helps people recognize the ecosystem that is already here.
This became especially important in the Jemez Mountains region, where remarkable assets exist alongside equally real challenges. The area contains deep cultural history, artistic traditions, scientific knowledge, regenerative projects, local businesses, and community initiatives. Yet many of these efforts remain disconnected from one another. Communication gaps, geographic distances, limited food access, affordability challenges, and the constant turnover of projects can make it difficult for people to recognize how much value already exists around them.
The role of Jemez Mountain Bloom is to help reveal those connections.
The second issue, All Is in the Small, embodies this approach directly.
On the surface, the issue focuses on independent grocery stores and local food systems throughout New Mexico. At a deeper level, it is an exploration of subsistence infrastructure, or those often-overlooked systems that support daily life. Through interviews, stories, advertising relationships, and community partnerships, the publication maps the ecology of food access, local economies, transportation routes, regional exchange, and the small businesses that help sustain communities.
This mirrors a process commonly found within emerging Bloom Hubs. Before new solutions are proposed, there is first an effort to understand what already exists. Resources are identified. Relationships are revealed. Existing strengths become visible. The publication folds that inventory process into storytelling, journalism, advertising, and community participation, creating a stacked function that serves multiple purposes simultaneously.
In this sense, each issue becomes a distributed impact report. Every interview, article, advertiser, organization, and community partner becomes part of a larger narrative about how a region functions and what allows it to thrive.
The publication documenting reality as a participant.
By increasing visibility between people, projects, organizations, and businesses, Jemez Mountain Bloom acts as a form of community infrastructure. It strengthens awareness of local value, supports collaboration, and helps communities recognize both the needs they share and the resources already available to meet them.
This service-first approach reflects the broader philosophy of Bloom Network itself. Rather than asking people to join a movement or adopt a particular ideology, the work begins by creating value, strengthening relationships, and supporting what is already emerging within a place.
The goal is to help existing ecosystems become more visible, more connected, and more resilient.
What began as a storytelling exercise has evolved into a practice of observation. What began as a local Bloom Hub has become a publication. And what began as a magazine continues to reveal itself as something more: A living map of a region learning to see itself.
The first year of Jemez Mountain Bloom has focused less on creating new programs and more on revealing existing relationships. Through Signal Craft, N2R-informed observation, Earth Day organizing, and the publication of the first magazine, the project has functioned as a process of regional asset mapping. The result is an emerging Bloom Network Hub that helps residents recognize the people, organizations, businesses, knowledge, and ecological resources already present within the Jemez bioregion. The magazine serves as the most visible artifact of that process, but the deeper work is increasing regional coherence and strengthening the conditions for long-term resilience.
Project updates
Team
All is in the Small: Jemez food and land resilience
Jemez Mountain Bloom Story, Soil, and Stewardship in the Jemez Bioregion Jemez Mountain Bloom is a community-led initiative that strengthens regenerative culture, ecological stewardship, and local participation throughout the Jemez Mountains watershed. Our work weaves together storytelling, natural farming education, watershed awareness, local food systems, and place-based gatherings to help communities reconnect with the living systems that sustain them. At the center of the project is a quarterly print and digital publication that documents local knowledge, highlights regenerative practices, and amplifies the voices of growers, educators, artists, water protectors, and community builders working throughout the region. The publication serves as a catalyst for a broader ecosystem of community engagement that includes educational events, demonstrations, workshops, local business partnerships, and collaborative projects focused on soil health, and food resilience.
Project story
The Story of Jemez Mountain Bloom
Jemez Mountain Bloom began as a local Bloom Network Hub, but its origins lie in a deeper question of how do we learn to see what is already present within a place?
The project emerged during a Signal Craft workshop, a process originally developed to help people discover the essential story beneath a project, organization, brand, or life path. At first, Signal Craft appeared to be a storytelling and branding exercise.
Over time, however, it evolved into a method of observation.
The process consistently returned to a simple set of questions:
What is here?
What is valuable?
What is needed?
What tensions exist?
What already works?
What wants to emerge?
These questions became foundational not only to Signal Craft, but also to the development of Bloom Network impact reports, the Natural Being Framework, and the evolution of N2R as a way of understanding living systems.
As work unfolded looking across Bloom’s global network of projects, it became clear that the impact reporting often struggled to capture the tensions that effect day to day operations within communities. Metrics could measure activity, but they frequently missed th nuances of relationships. Outputs counted rarely revealed the needs being met, the tensions being navigated, or the conditions that allowed value to emerge.
The development of N2R helped shift that perspective.
Here is a link to familiarize with N2R as a working model: https://osf.io/q7gmd/overview
Here is a link to an article within Bloom Network, highlighting the use of th N2R within regions as an internal facing report: https://bloomnetwork.earth/view/when-people-can-eat-land-can-recover-d1ef43ba706c
Rather than asking only what succeeded, N2R asks what tensions were present and how they were transformed. It looks for the relationship between needs, resources, participation, and the conditions that support resilience over time. In doing so, it creates a way of seeing communities as nested living systems rather than collections of isolated projects.
This approach began shaping Bloom’s impact reports, helping continuing the move toward place-based narratives that reveal how value is created, exchanged, and sustained. It also encouraged greater attention to the specific human needs being met through community activity, complementing quantitative measures with a fuller picture of lived experience.
A link to Signal Craft, the Bloom facing incubated class that started it all… https://bloomnetwork.earth/view/how-signal-craft-ii-helped-birth-the-jemez-springs-hub-and-a-regenerative-storytelling-model-for-bloom-worldwide-b294c5d7123f
When the Jemez Mountain Bloom Hub emerged, it felt natural to apply the same lens locally.
The result was not simply a magazine.
The result was Jemez Mountain Bloom.
A link to the first edition of Jemez Mountain Bloom: https://canva.link/g7a6pvcsrhe8eff
The publication functions as a quarterly magazine, but it also functions as a map, an impact report, and a tool for increasing regional coherence. Each issue seeks to make visible the relationships that already exist between land, food, water, culture, business, history, and community.
Rather than inventing an ecosystem, the publication helps people recognize the ecosystem that is already here.
This became especially important in the Jemez Mountains region, where remarkable assets exist alongside equally real challenges. The area contains deep cultural history, artistic traditions, scientific knowledge, regenerative projects, local businesses, and community initiatives. Yet many of these efforts remain disconnected from one another. Communication gaps, geographic distances, limited food access, affordability challenges, and the constant turnover of projects can make it difficult for people to recognize how much value already exists around them.
The role of Jemez Mountain Bloom is to help reveal those connections.
The second issue, All Is in the Small, embodies this approach directly.
On the surface, the issue focuses on independent grocery stores and local food systems throughout New Mexico. At a deeper level, it is an exploration of subsistence infrastructure, or those often-overlooked systems that support daily life. Through interviews, stories, advertising relationships, and community partnerships, the publication maps the ecology of food access, local economies, transportation routes, regional exchange, and the small businesses that help sustain communities.
This mirrors a process commonly found within emerging Bloom Hubs. Before new solutions are proposed, there is first an effort to understand what already exists. Resources are identified. Relationships are revealed. Existing strengths become visible. The publication folds that inventory process into storytelling, journalism, advertising, and community participation, creating a stacked function that serves multiple purposes simultaneously.
In this sense, each issue becomes a distributed impact report. Every interview, article, advertiser, organization, and community partner becomes part of a larger narrative about how a region functions and what allows it to thrive.
The publication documenting reality as a participant.
By increasing visibility between people, projects, organizations, and businesses, Jemez Mountain Bloom acts as a form of community infrastructure. It strengthens awareness of local value, supports collaboration, and helps communities recognize both the needs they share and the resources already available to meet them.
This service-first approach reflects the broader philosophy of Bloom Network itself. Rather than asking people to join a movement or adopt a particular ideology, the work begins by creating value, strengthening relationships, and supporting what is already emerging within a place.
The goal is to help existing ecosystems become more visible, more connected, and more resilient.
What began as a storytelling exercise has evolved into a practice of observation. What began as a local Bloom Hub has become a publication. And what began as a magazine continues to reveal itself as something more: A living map of a region learning to see itself.
The first year of Jemez Mountain Bloom has focused less on creating new programs and more on revealing existing relationships. Through Signal Craft, N2R-informed observation, Earth Day organizing, and the publication of the first magazine, the project has functioned as a process of regional asset mapping. The result is an emerging Bloom Network Hub that helps residents recognize the people, organizations, businesses, knowledge, and ecological resources already present within the Jemez bioregion. The magazine serves as the most visible artifact of that process, but the deeper work is increasing regional coherence and strengthening the conditions for long-term resilience.
Project updates
Team
Location
United States