Relational Foraging Immersion
Plants of the Seasonal Round: Community, Culture, Language, Stories, History, Skill, and Reciprocity
May-September, 2025
Bozeman, Montana





Are you looking for ways to deepen your relationship with this place, beyond outdoor recreation? Are you curious about ancestral relationships with plants? Do you love stories? What about foods that are story-rich?
As we witness the seasonal story of plants unfold, from sprout to seed, together we will remember and strengthen our own ancestral relationships and responsibilities, adding layers to our belonging to this Land that feeds us. Along the way, we will develop identification, harvesting, preservation, cooking, tending skills that will further enable us to honor our relationships with plants. While this immersion is rooted in both cultural traditions of this region, as well as Indo-European (particularly Irish) traditions, emphasis is placed on cultural processes for relationship building. The goal is to give participants tools for exploring and integrating their own ancestral relationships with plants. Special care is taken to protect Indigenous knowledges.
What’s Included?
Five sessions from May-September
All sessions will be held on private land up Kelly Canyon - about 15 minutes from Downtown Bozeman, Montana
Additional educational materials provided to accompany each session
Preserved gathered foods and medicines to bring home
Small meal of gathered foods at the end of each session
Cost: $1000 per person*
*Please contact us at neatnogcommunity@gmail.com if this cost poses a financial barrier and you have plans to use this learning to actively support tribal communties
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To whom do you belong? People, Place, Stories, Languages
Overview of the traditional food system
Foundations of gathering
Reciprocity in action: offerings and tending
Traditional tools for gathering
Early spring gathering
Preservation
Cooking with spring foods
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Reciprocity in action: offerings and tending
Medicines overview
Spring gathering
Preservation
Cooking with spring foods
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Reciprocity in action: offerings and tending
Seed collection and planting
Early summer gathering
Preservation
Cooking with early summer foods
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Reciprocity in action: offerings and tending
Summer plant gathering
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Item description
Dates and Sessions Topics
Instructors
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Jacob Zimmerer is a PhD Candidate in Indigenous and Rural Health at Montana State University and a Land-based educator. He works for Buffalo Nations Food Systems Initiative (BNSFI), supporting cultural knowledge and identity regeneration for Native Students as a coordinator for the BNFSI Summer Fellowship Program. Jacob’s work emphasizes global de-Indigenization processes and ways to reinvigorate Land-based cultures, languages, stories, and relationships. He is a dedicated traditional craftsperson, hunter, and gatherer. He holds a M.A. in Native American Studies and a B.S. in Environmental Sciences, both from Montana State University and is deeply invested in what it means to carry his ancestors with him while also adapting to, and being a good relative on, the homelands of the Buffalo Nations. He has been foraging extensively throughout Montana for nearly a decade, and grew up learning about plants from his mother and grandmother.
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Seth Still Smoking (Blackfeet/Lakota) is a BNFSI Fellow and Culinary Arts student that is dedicated to feeding his People. Driven by love for his homelands, family, ancestors, and delicious food, Seth is not only developing his skills as a Chef, but also as a traditional plant gatherer, gardener, hunter, and story-teller. He has trained with award-winning chef, Sean Sherman (Lakota), interned with the education team at North American Traditional Indigenous Food Systems (NATIFS), and most recently was an intern at FAST Blackfeet, where he used his culinary education to support health and sustainability in his community.
Reflecting on his relationship with food, Seth says,
"Throughout time there have been hardships, things that truly make us human, suffering and sacrifice. These things can be grieved and healed through sharing meals and stories with community. It isn't until we come to the realization that we have been missing something that was so simple, until it's right in front of us. We were the ones that forgot."