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Archive for the Opinion Category

Food!

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Rock Ridge Farm

peas

I’m so glad I decided to attend the Brooklyn Food Conference last weekend, which was co-sponsored by the Park Slope Food Coop among others. There were workshops on food issues, like organic farming and roof top gardening, and exhibits and kids’ events and even dancing! There were local chefs giving workshops and actully cooking! In fact for a mere $20 you could have a 4-star dinner prepared by these chefs.

 

Blue Hill


One of the chefs was Dan Barber and that is how I learned about the Blue Hill restaurants. Dan has a web page that tells the history of Blue Hill Farm, which has been in his family for 3 generations. He now runs 2 restaurants named Blue Hill, one of them right here in NYC in the West Village! The other one is Blue Hill at Stone Barns, on the old Rockefeller estate, 30 miles up the Hudson River, in Pocantico Hills, New York. Dan cooks locally grown seasonal produce at his restaurants. and in the future more and more organic food will be coming from Blue Hill Farm.

I was always enchanted by Blue Hill Road, which is actually in Great Barrington, but close enough to Monterey. When I was growing up, my favorite activity was exploring the backroads of the Berkshires with my mother Alice, an amateur mycologist and naturalist. There was nothing more fun than discovering mushrooms, wildflowers, wild creatures, abandoned houses and other surprises as we drove along the old dirt roads. And of course magical Blue Hill Road was always on our itinerary. Being near Benedict Pond, a haven for wild mushrooms, added to its allure, but it didn’t really need any additional attractions. Mere words do not suffice to describe this road, you had to experience it yourself, as I’m sure those of you who have been there know. That being said, Dan Barber does a more than decent job of it at http://bluehillfarm.com/farms/blue-hill-farm

 

Food Conference

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The food conference was all about food - the food we buy and grow and eat - and it was one of the most stimulating events I’ve attended in a while. The growing agro-ecological movement is gathering steam in direct proportion to the growing economic depression. In fact, current events may just give it the push needed for it to go mainstream. As young people are finding their job prospects in cities diminishing, they are finding burgeoning opportunities for homesteading. The conference was full of people from across the U.S who are becoming engaged in one way or another in farming the land. Some have bought acreage, others are leasing land from owners who want to see their property used in good and productive ways, while others are salaried workers, on farms for example of older farmers who are not ready to give up their farms, but who can no longer do everything by themselves.

 

The Farm at Rock Ridge

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I thought of my parents. Arthur and Alice Somers were once again so ahead of the curve, with their large and lovely organic garden at Rock Ridge in Monterey Mass. Years ago they were following their Rodale books and Farmer’s Almanac, and ordering their seeds and rotating their crops and experimenting with organic manure and natural means of controlling pests. All the things that the young people were so excited about at the conference, with their CSAs (community supported agriculture) and intercropping - is what my parents were setting the model for long before there was a movement.


Arthur and Alice grew just about everything you can imagine — peas, beans, stringbeans, tomatoes, various types of lettuce, onions. golden beets, carrots, squashes, pumpkins, yellow watermelons, different varieties of potaoes — remember Dad’s blue potatoes? They were always a big hit. There was even a corn field, with different varieties of corn (nonGMO of course). Because the soil was so fertile after lying fallow for so long, it was like a Findhorn, the spiritual community where the vegetables grew so large. And Alice’s herb garden provided a sensory counterpart to the succulent, fresh-from-the-garden vegetables.

There was a “bean man” at the exhibit proudly showing off his varieties of beans, which reminded me of Dad’s colorful bean display atop the pot belly stove in the kitchen. Even Bessie was organic. Remember Bessie? They drove me over to meet her once before she was “harvested” to become the winter’s beef supply. I must admit I had trouble eating her.

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Arthur Somers with harvest from Rock Ridge Farm

 

 

Agroecology


Speakers at the Food Conference included Anna LappĂ© (daughter of Frances Moore LappĂ©) and Raj Patel. Raj Patel explains that “rather than being temples of choice, supermarkets are in for lots of the same in different packaging. Add marketing to limited choice and we’re really being driven to what the supermarkets want us to buy. At the end of the day we are the people who put food in our mouths, but a lot of that actually isn’t chosen.” His recipe for a modern global diet is to stay out of supermarkets and instead do what your parents used to do: shop at the local butcher shop and green grocer and the farmers markets. I’ll eat to that!

Yes folks, if like me, you have become tired of the “choices” being offered in your supermarkets, it’s time to do something. I’d advise everyone who wants to get up to speed to check out Raj Patel’s “Stuffed and Starved” youtube videos.

Here’s a short summary of what he says. He explains how it was a political decision taken in the 1960’s that the majority of the world should use fossil fuel intensive agricultural chemicals to produce what was called “the green revolution”. But modern industrial agriculture does away with a miillenia of knowledge that we have learned about intercropping - it destroys ecosystems, because monocultures are about selectively growing one thing and then having to replace all the ecosystemic functions that you’ve lost by monocropping and substitute for those by using chemicals, by using inorganic soil fertilizers and relying on pesticides instead of relying on natural predators. The companies who supply these chemicals are the ones who at the end of the day are the winners - companies like Monsanto and Syngenta and Dow - they are rebranding themselves as the “life science” companies, which is a painful distortion of the truth. These companies are not just fertilizer and pesticide manufacturers - they are also now the world’s largest seed companies - and that control of the basic tenets of the food system is another symptom of this concentration of power that happens under modern industrial agriculture. Monsanto’s genetically engineered “terminator seeds” for example, are seeds which cannot be replanted and must be bought over and over again (from Monsanto) each season.

We are now in the process of finding new ways of feeding the world, through agroecological science. This is not about going back to the bucolic past - no one wants to go back to the dark ages - we want to go forward, but we want to draw on the lessons of the past, bringing to bear the most cutting-edge science. And one of the ways of doing that is through agroecological science - building soil fertiltity using the ecology, using nature, using life’s own infrastructure, to selectively bring out of the soil the best kinds of things, and to put into the soil the possibility of sustaining life in the future. This is the very antithesis of modern industrial agriculture.

Raj Patel


So once again I applaud my parents, Arthur and Alice Somers, for providing seeds for this exciting new model of sustainable agriculture.

Pamela

Post Script: We’re delighted to report that this article was published in the June 2009 edition of Monterey News

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