Queer + Indigenous +

Two-Spirit Coffee Shop

Turtle Island is a shared, indigenous story of creation. Once, before time and when the world was water, our universe existed on the back of a turtle. Indigenous people call this Turtle Island.

Turtle Island is the place where the land and our world began. Turtle Island is where and when our space began. It speaks to the truth that I am native to this space.

This space is for us. We are native to this space.

Nearby, what is colonially known as “Drake Park” was the gathering place and trading post of native tribes from and beyond this region—it was a space of homage to everyone, a place to share, witness, and support one another. A place to grow, celebrate, create, fall in love, exchange and more.

Turtle Island Coffee honors and continues this ancestral example—it is the only indigenous, queer, and two-spirit owned space that intentionally centers indigenous, brown, and black, queer, trans and non-binary people in all its endeavors.

From our indigenous, two-spirited coffee roaster to our black trans muralist, Turtle Island Coffee seeks to feature, uplift, and honor indigenous, brown, black, queer, and trans makers, artists, and creatives.

We seek to uplift, love, and serve all of them.

Turtle Island Coffee is a space first and upmost for indigenous, brown, black, queer, trans, two-spirit, non-binary folx—those of us who are marginalized and othered in majority white, cisgendered, heteronormative-dominated spaces.

We need, deserve, and are co-creating together: a safe place to congregate that is by and for us. A place to fall in love, flirt, vibe, jive, sip, dip, twerk, work, laugh, play, hatch plans, rest, be at ease, be active, and be activist.

Turtle Island encourages and accepts strong, true white allyship made up of humble individuals who have and continue to do their work while engaging with other white and white-passing folx to do theirs.

Meet the Owners

Beth Brady
(Wrench daddy)

She/Her/They
Owner / Chef

Beth moved to Bend in 2007 with a snowboard and a milk crate of clothes ready for adventure. After 15 years living, loving, and being a small business owner in Central Oregon, the lack of safe space for queer and BIPOC folks became too glaring to ignore. An idea was hatched over an incredibly large bowl of pho: create an intersectional space founded in true allyship. Her deepest passion is to make our community a truly inclusive place for everyone who needs it.

Téh
(Café Daddy)

They/Them
Owner / General Manger

I’m Téh. I’m a member of the Pit River Nation Madesi band. My people are from what is now called Northern California. Being native is a part of my being and I feel like it’s important for me to uphold that in all things I do. I care about community and connection. That’s why I started Queer by Nature and collaborate with other organizations like Out in the Wild. I’m a partner, parent and friend. I noticed when I moved here how much the queer community needs a space. Beth and I dreamed this space up over Pho one day and here we are…

  • Queer Wave Coffee!
    It is cultivated and harvested in Honduras by the Lenca People. It's roasted on Chochenyo Ohlone Land (pre-colonized Oakland California) by an Indigenous Two Spirit Trans Girl. They work toward living and running our businesses in a way that disrupts the colonial supply chain.

  • Turtle Island refers to the continent of North America. The name comes from various Indigenous oral histories that tell stories of a turtle that holds the world on its back.

  • Mon-Friday - 7am-330pm

    Saturday - 8am-330pm

    Sunday - 9am-330pm

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