Family-led nature learning

Nature-based learning For families, gardeners and curious minds

Meyer Lemon helps families connect with nature through hands-on activities, native plant learning, creative workshops, and gentle outdoor experiences.

What we offer

Simple ways to begin outside.

Bird's Eye View

Drone-supported yard and garden observation to help families see their outdoor space in a new way.

Kokedama Workshops

Hands-on plant-making workshops rooted in care, creativity, and connection.

Growing Through It

Nature-based self-care and ecotherapy-inspired experiences for reflection, resilience, and grounding.

Free family resources

Small prompts for noticing more.

These resources are meant to be easy, practical, and gentle: things a family can try in a backyard, on a walk, beside a window, or anywhere there is something living to notice.

  • Backyard activity ideas
  • Garden observation worksheet
  • Beginner native plant guide
  • Seasonal nature prompts
Download Free Resources
Hands-on family learning with plants and natural materials

About Meyer Lemon

A real family doing meaningful nature-based work.

Meyer Lemon is a warm, family-led nature learning studio. The work begins with care: for children, families, plants, yards, neighborhoods, and the small living systems we meet every day. We keep things hands-on, practical, and grounded so people can reconnect with nature without needing a perfect garden or a polished plan.

Meet Meyer Lemon

Technology + Sustainability

Modern tools should help us pay closer attention.

We explore how tools like AI, drone imagery, and digital resources can support ecological learning, family creativity, and more sustainable choices when used with care.

The philosophy is simple: use technology in service of attention, care, and ecological responsibility.

Learn Our Approach
Meyer Lemon family activity with plants and creative materials

Blog

A place for field notes, experiments, and family learning.

Girl Scout Kokedama Quest

A local Girl Scout troop made kokedama moss ball gardens, practiced getting comfortable with messy hands, and left proud of the living plants they shaped themselves.