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Girl with food box.

Colorado Gives Day is 12/9

Make your Colorado Gives Day gift and have it MATCHED to help 2X as many neighbors this holiday season.

Your Colorado Gives Day gift DOUBLES for 2X the impact.

Woman and child holding box of food.

Year End MATCH Deadline: 12/31

Now until December 31, every $1 helps provide enough food for SIX meals to our neighbors experiencing hunger.

Year End 2X Match Deadline: 12/31

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Woman and child holding box of food.

TODAY ONLY: 5X MATCH

Until midnight, your tax-deductible gift will be 5X matched! That means every $1 helps provide enough food for 15 meals.

Year End 5X Match Deadline: 12/31

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Community Partnerships Yield Delivery of Chokecherries and Chokecherry Jam Throughout Wind River Reservation for Elder Food Boxes and Cultural Ceremonies

Jackie White picking chokecherries.

Food Bank of the Rockies, in collaboration with Food Bank of Wyoming, Wildlands Restoration Volunteers (Longmont, CO), and Community Fruit Rescue (Boulder, CO), recently led a community-driven chokecherry harvest to support Indigenous families in Wyoming. The initiative, spearheaded by Jaqueline “Jackie” White, Food Bank of Wyoming’s Tribal Relations Specialist, liaison for Food Bank of the Rockies, and member of the Northern Arapahoe Tribe, successfully yielded more than 300 pounds of chokecherries. The berries were cleaned, sorted, and frozen in preparation to be distributed as jam through the Wind River Reservation’s Elder Home Food Delivery Program ahead of upcoming cultural ceremonies. 

The harvest brought together dozens of volunteers, each of whom gathered berries from public parks and the private backyards and gardens of area residents who generously donated the fruit. This year’s collection marked a significant increase from the 80 pounds harvested in 2024.  

chokecherry comb filled with berries.

“One of the harvests took place in Longmont, Colorado, which is the Arapaho homelands, and so it was incredibly significant to harvest our own traditional foods on our original homelands. It was a very special day and hard to put into words, but my heart was so happy to see all these people come together to help harvest the chokecherries,” said Jackie. 

Jackie emphasizes the importance of food to the Arapaho people, with chokecherries holding deep cultural significance for many Indigenous communities. For the Arapaho people, the fruit is a sacred ceremonial item used to nourish mind, body, and spirit. Elders — honored as Knowledge Keepers — are always served first. As such, the chokecherry jam will be distributed to Shoshone and Arapaho Elders ahead of upcoming ceremonies. 

“We even had an Arapaho Elder come down to speak, provide an opening prayer, and tell stories, because when you understand the history of Indigenous People, like our traditional foods, you can appreciate the significance of it that much more,” said Jackie.   

Workers pose showing the chokecherries picked.

This two-day harvest was made possible by the dedicated staff and volunteers of Wildlands Restoration Volunteers and Community Fruit Rescue. Chokecherries have become increasingly difficult to find and access due to overharvesting, and this growing partnership between these organizations, Food Bank of the Rockies, and Food Bank of Wyoming, aims to change that. 

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