GROWERS AND PRODUCERS FORUM: Gardening Basics for Vegetable and Fruit Production, Today

Community members interested in gardening and local food production are invited to attend the next Growers & Producers Forum today Thursday, March 12 from 4:00–5:30pm at the Community United Methodist Church on Lewis Street. This session will focus on Gardening Basics for Vegetable and Fruit Production, with practical guidance for starting or improving a garden in Archuleta County’s high-country climate.

Topics will include selecting and preparing a garden site, building healthy soil, choosing between in-ground gardens and raised beds, composting, irrigation and fertilizing, protecting plants from wildlife and weather, and deciding what to plant and when throughout the growing season.

The forum will also explore strategies such as container gardening, companion planting, harvesting and storage, and growing perennial fruits, herbs, and vegetables. Whether you are new to gardening or have years of experience, the Growers & Producers Forum offers an opportunity to learn practical techniques, share experiences, and connect with others working to strengthen local food production in Archuleta County.

To join the conversation, please send Healthy Archuleta an email at fsfearchuleta@gmail.com to confirm your participation.

Additionally, registration is now open for the 2026 Archuleta Food Summit on Saturday, April 18, at Pagosa Springs High School. The Summit will bring together residents, growers, organizations, and partners to explore ways to strengthen the county’s food system and improve nutrition security, including an interactive simulation of the Archuleta Community Food Hub and Food Hall. Learn more and register at: https://www.foodcoalition4archuleta.org/archuleta-food-summit.html.

Archuleta Rural Health Network Aligns Around Access, Equity
On February 25, 2026, leaders from the Archuleta Rural Health Network gathered with a shared purpose: ensuring that residents of Archuleta County, especially those who are uninsured or underinsured, or who are navigating Medicaid eligibility, have meaningful access to care. Representatives from Pagosa Springs Medical Center, Axis Health System, the Archuleta County Public Health Department, and Healthy Archuleta came together to reaffirm two guiding priorities for 2026: improving cultural responsiveness in healthcare delivery and strengthening advocacy, education, and navigation supports to increase access to preventive care.

The conversation highlighted both progress and pressure.

Across the system, partners shared encouraging steps forward in bilingual capacity and culturally responsive care. New bilingual providers have joined the community, interpretation services are being strengthened, and a newly secured health equity grant will support improvements in clinic practices. Organizations are also refining how they ask about social factors related to health outcomes and ensuring that materials and workflows are accessible to all residents.

Workforce development emerged as a central theme. Community Health Workers (CHWs) continue to play a vital role in helping patients navigate insurance, appointments, and follow-up care. Currently, there are three credentialed CHWs in Archuleta County, two of whom received training support through Healthy Archuleta’s efforts to expand Community Health Worker credentialing in Archuleta County. Monthly gatherings of navigators and care coordinators are further strengthening collaboration and shared problem-solving across agencies.

At the same time, leaders spoke candidly about the growing instability in insurance. Providers are seeing an increase in self-pay patients as Medicaid coverage shifts, and some families lose Marketplace subsidies. Seasonal employment patterns and rising private insurance premiums are creating difficult gaps for middle-income households that do not qualify for sliding scale programs yet struggle to afford coverage. These trends raise concerns about delayed preventive care and long-term health impacts in a rural system already operating under tight margins.

Throughout the meeting, one theme remained clear: collaboration is essential. In a rural community, no single organization can solve these challenges alone. By aligning around shared goals, strengthening workforce pipelines, and listening closely to community feedback, the Archuleta Rural Health Network continues working to reduce barriers to care and ensure residents have access to the services they need.

The Network will carry this work forward throughout 2026 with a continued commitment to access, equity, and the long-term sustainability of rural healthcare in Archuleta County.

The Archuleta Rural Health Network entered a formal planning phase during 2024–2025 with support from HRSA funding, bringing partners together to assess needs, define shared priorities, and build a coordinated framework for rural health collaboration. The Network was formally established in June 2025 and continues to serve as a cross-sector table dedicated to strengthening access, reducing barriers, and improving health outcomes across Archuleta County. To learn more about the efforts of the Archuleta Rural Health Network, please visit https://www.foodcoalition4archuleta.org/archuleta-rural-health-network.html.

Post Contributor

The Pagosa Daily Post welcomes submissions, photos, letters and videos from people who love, and care about, Pagosa Springs, Colorado. More information available at 970-903-2673 or pagosadailypost@gmail.com