Harvesting the campus


|

Since 2008 the ASU Campus Harvest has organized the sour orange harvest on the university's Tempe campus. The harvest lasts over three days as more than 100 volunteers collect over 6 tons, or 12,000 pounds of oranges, from across the campus.

The oranges are then transported to Sun Orchard juicery in Tempe, where they are juiced and bottled to be used for cooking and making "devil ade" — which is served as part of ASU's Aramark campus dining rooms. 

Read more about it here: "Putting the squeeze on sustainability."

More Environment and sustainability

 

Mother and child polar bear at the endge of a glacier in the Last Ice Area of northern Canada.

New study on Arctic’s ‘Last Ice Area’ highlights the urgency for reducing warming

The Arctic’s “Last Ice Area” — a vital habitat for ice-dependent species — might disappear within a decade after the central Arctic Ocean becomes ice-free during summer, which is expected…

A helicopter douses a wildfire with water.

ASU fire expert Stephen Pyne on learning to live alongside fire

Stephen Pyne is having a busy retirement. On top of caring for chickens, sheep and citrus on his urban farm in Queen Creek, Arizona, the Arizona State University professor emeritus is being called on…

Burned desert vegetation

New interdisciplinary research highlights wildfire impacts on water and ecosystems in arid regions

As wildfires increasingly threaten arid regions, a new conceptual framework developed by a team of researchers offers a fresh perspective on the relationship between fire, water quality and ecosystem…