Food & Agriculture










Photos: (1) Red peppers overflow at Simple Gifts Farm's booth at the Amherst, MA Farmers Market www.simplegiftscsa.com (2) Astarte Farm booth www.astartefarm.com at Amherst Farmers Market (3) Winning preserves at the 3-County Fair, Northampton, MA (4) Growing Power's "Art on the Farm" garden, Grant Park, Chicago (5) Tomatoes at Atlas Farm booth, www.atlasfarm.com, at Amherst Farmers Market (6) Preserved farmland in Amherst, MA (7) Cabbage field in Amherst, MA (8) Corn silos, Hadley, MA (9) Barstow's Longview Farm, a Local Hero Farm in Hadley, MA http://barstowslongviewfarm.com/ (10) Holyoke, MA Farmers Market in front of City Hall. All photos by Rudy Perkins.
A "Five Colleges Eat-In" and community potluck, Labor Day, September 7, 2009, from Noon to 8 PM, in the Amherst, MA town center, is being held by local food activists, working with the Slow Food USA Campaign, as part of the National Day of Action to get more real food in our schools. The organizers encourage you to "bring real food and real friends" to the event. Area food and beverage companies and organizations like Dean's Beans, Wheatberry, Tabella, and the UMass Dining Services are also participating, according to the organizers. Local musical talent scheduled to perform includes Jay Mankita, The Primate Fiasco, and The Fine and Dandy Trio.
This National Day of Action is part of Slow Food USA Campaign's effort to mobilize parents and communities to get better food in our schools. The national group has helped organize over 300 eat-ins around the country this Labor Day, according to their website. Slow Food USA is organizing around the likely September 2009 re-authorization of the federal Child Nutrition Act, which governs the National School Lunch Program. Slow Food USA is concerned that unless more parents and others speak up, Congress will take a business as usual approach to the reauthorization, missing an opportunity to significantly improve our children's nutrition. You can sign Slow Food USA Campaign's petition to Congress on-line. >>>More
With the 2009 harvest season upon us, nearly every weekend offers an agricultural fair or farm and food event in western Massachusetts. While we won't try to duplicate the other lists of fairs and events out there (for mainline ag fairs in Massachusetts, for example, see the calendar posted by the Massachusetts Agricultural Fairs Association), we wanted to make sure you knew about some of the lesser known or newer events coming up:
* The North Amherst Harvest Festival, Sept. 20th, noon - 6 pm, in Amherst, MA. This is their 4th annual festival, offering music, food, hayrides and more. We're looking forward to checking out this fair for the first time this fall.
* The Festival de la Cosecha / Harvest Festival, Sept. 26th, 1-7 pm, in Holyoke, MA, held by Nuestras Raices at their La Finca farm at Main Street and Jones Ferry Road. Live and lively latin music, activities for kids, great barbecue, all on the banks of the Connecticut River, just off I-391. We went last year for the first time and thought this gem of a fall festival was estupendo!
* The North Quabbin Garlic & Arts Festival, Oct. 3rd & 4th in Orange, MA. We've been to this sweet, alternative-flavored fair nearly every year since it began, and for us it's one of the high points of the fall season. Great music, delicious food, local arts and crafts, oodles of games and activities for the kids, in a smaller fair with a hometown feel sometimes lost now in the bigger events. Don't miss it!
And if you can't get enough of blue-ribbon 4-H projects, quilt raffles, gold-medal cheese competitions, and award-winning tomatoes, then by all means get to the 180+ year-old 3-County Fair in Northampton, MA, Labor Day weekend, the Franklin County Fair in Greenfield, MA, Sept. 10-13, and the 152 year-old Belchertown Fair on the Belchertown, MA town common, Sept. 25-27 -- not to mention the Big E, Sept. 18 - Oct. 4th, in West Springfield, MA.
mp3 audio of Allen's introductory remarks on the 'Good Food Revolution' (9.5 MB download)
mp3 audio of Allen describing Growing Power's history (10.5 MB download)
mp3 audio of Allen describing Growing Power's composting systems and intensive farming methods (35 MB download)
In his inspiring August 8, 2009, keynote address to the Northeast Organic Farmers Association (NOFA), in Amherst, Mass., Milwaukee community activist and grower Will Allen called for nurturing a “good food revolution” in our cities and in our rural areas, a revolution he said was already underway. “To really have a sustainable food system,” Allen argued, “we need small scale production in all areas.” Allen suggested we needed to have 50 million more Americans involved in food production, from backyard gardens to local farms, in order to fundamentally change our current industrial food system.
“We need good food in all of our communities. . . . Everybody should have access to the same safe, healthy, good food. . . . We can’t live in sustainable communities without making sure that everybody has access to good food. We can’t live in a sustainable country, where we have inequities,” Allen reminded us. He said that access to good food was a “basic right” that everyone is entitled to, and that it was our responsibility to make sure everyone in our country had that basic right.
Allen, a former professional basketball player, has for decades been a farmer, organizer and community entrepreneur. In 2008, the MacArthur Foundation selected Allen for one of its prestigious fellowships for his creative accomplishments and promising important future work. Through his organization, Growing Power, Allen is now running six farms and an urban food market, doing bulk compost production from food and brewery waste and integrated greenhouse fish production and hydroponic food cropping (which he refers to as “aquaponics”), generating organic worm casting fertilizer for sale (through vermiculture), running youth gardening programs, launching inner city neighborhood flower plantings and beautification efforts, and consulting with developing countries on low-cost integrated food production and composting systems.
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Ditching the Diesel-Driven Diet
When the price of diesel spiked last summer, and food prices began climbing soon after, the light bulb went on in a lot of people’s heads: it really doesn’t make sense to depend on a food supply that has to be trucked 1500 miles to reach our households. Every meal is hostage to the price of diesel, assuming the food is even available at all. With all the talk about national security, this most basic security, food security, was not being safeguarded. The specter of food insecurity, a specter that already plagues millions of low-income Americans, now haunted middle-class kitchens, and has pushed many more people into action to help rebuild local agriculture.
In the Pioneer Valley of Massachusetts, there are about 685,000 people living in the communities along the Connecticut River, in the three counties at the heart of the Valley. The river valley’s soil is some of the richest in the country, and the river tempers the climate and lengthens the growing season noticeably, compared to the frosty hilltowns east and west. Yet in those three counties there are only 1,960 farms, as of the USDA’s 2007 Agricultural Census count. That’s not nearly enough, although it’s a good base to start from, and the good news is that in Massachusetts, the number of farms is slowly beginning to grow again.
We are far from being able to raise the bulk of our food nearby, however. A 1997 estimate of the food self-sufficiency of the Pioneer Valley (food production in the Valley measured against food consumption), found a regional food self-sufficiency rate of only 17.8%. That number has no doubt gone up some over the last few years, but a look at where the food in any Valley supermarket comes from quickly reveals we are nowhere near the comfort zone for a reliable local food supply. Given the Pioneer Valley’s rich soil, decent climate, relatively abundant water, and excess of enterprising and committed citizens, there is no good reason for this region not to be one of the country’s pioneering examples of how to rebuild a local, sustainable and equitable food system.
Beyond increasing our food security, increasing local food production would have the following added benefits:
Page last modified: 9/5/09
