Food & Agriculture

Amherst Farmers MarketTomatoes at Farmers MarketOrganic banner & produceHadley corn silos photoLocal hero sign with cows photo

Photos: (1 - 2) Farmers market, Amherst, MA (3) Astarte Farm booth www.astartefarm.com at Amherst Farmers Market (4) Corn silos, Hadley, MA (5) Local Hero Farm, Hadley, MA. All photos © 2009 by Rudy Perkins.

NOFA Summer Conference Aug. 7-9

The Northeast Organic Farmers Association (NOFA) is holding its annual summer conference August. 7-9, 2009 at UMASS-Amherst. This is a great annual event for everyone interested in promoting local and organic agriculture. Mycologist Paul Stamets gives the key note address on Friday, Aug. 7th at 7:30 pm, and Milwaukee community activist and urban farmer Will Allen of Growing Power gives the key note address on Saturday, Aug. 8th at 7 pm. Attending conference workshops requires registration. For more details, go to: www.nofasummerconference.org.

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 consumption in the Valley measured against food production), 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:

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Page last modified: 8/3/09