Sunday, November 30, 2008

Temporal Tango

From Dictionary.com

ecosystem– Noun - a system formed by the interaction of a community of organisms with their environment.

Let’s imbue this word with an extra entendre and connect it to the concept of economy. In fact, the definition for ecosystem comes fairly close to working as a definition of what an economy is. Our connotation of an ecosystem excludes environments so heavily dominated by man (this bit of sexist language is intended; the domination of the environment is masculine in nature) as financial centers. When we speak of the Post Oak Savannah, we are suggesting what the “ecosystem” is as unaffected by people or ECOnomic systems. But by the above definition of ecosystem we should not be excluded. And it makes good sense to have a word that includes the whole ecosystem including economic systems because it is human economy that is most damaging to communities of organisms and it is with human economics that we have the most hope for improving the balance between economic systems and ecological systems.

Like dreams into the psyche, language provides lucid glimpses at cultural meta-forces. The paradigm shift of environmental salvation that most of us seek will places us in the context of the ecosystem and not separate from it. Unfortunately, this will not come with the invention of a word. For such a word, though helpful, would be a measure of our destructive impact and not a measure of an environment in relative balance.

In our nature is a teleological drive to create economic and other forces that separate us from the “natural” environment. This separation is primarily temporal and secondarily psychological. We separate ourselves by creating systems that step beyond nature’s rate of change. We always seek to hasten change. We call this growth. It is this stepping out of “natural” rates of change that forces us to be separated. It is need for growth that causes destruction. Whether we are talking about big boxes or corporate farming we create concepts of growth that outpace natural rates of change and thus destroy natural systems. Interestingly, we seem to have recognized the problem, but rather than adjust our approach to growth we seek GMOs to hasten nature’s rates of change. There are many smart people who believe that we can do this without wrecking havoc on the larger system. This, of course is the very definition of short sightedness and the essence of materialism as expressed through scientific approaches. If you cannot see, predict, or imagine the changes that might happen, they do not yet exist. This despite a clear and willing recognition that we have but a fractional, if not infinitesimal, understanding of the whole system.

There are forces in nature that are intended to purge systems and bring them back into balance. Are we such a force? Like massive algae die off in an over populated pond, are we intended to clear the pallet(te) [to keep with the double entendres] for new growth? Is it within us to fit into a harmonious temporal pace? Is “sustainability” possible if we do not?

Cross posted at http://postoaksavannah.blogspot.com/ and facebook

Saturday, November 22, 2008

John Ikerd on the Real Cost of Cheap Food




See John Ikerd's Books:

Crisis and Opportunity: Sustainability in American Capitalism

Sustainable Capitalism

Small Farms are Real Farms

A Return to Common Sense

Models of sustainable agriculture

In BCS our task is monumental because we lack both supply and demand for locally grown organic foods. Last night we had a healthy discussion of ways in which to build both. We spoke about four basic models and I will add two more that have been discussed but I don’t believe they came up last night.

BUYERS GROUP

This is a model in which members pay a small start up fee and indicate what produce they do not wish to receive. There after they pay a weekly fee for a weekly basket of food that does not include the things that they do not like but otherwise includes a weekly ration of food for however many they are buying for. You are not going to get all potatoes one week and all onions the next. The buyer goes out and gets the best deal possible from local suppliers.

CASA

It was suggested that the buyers group was a “walmartization” in that it encouraged competitive buying and left the farmer little security for his/her efforts. It was suggested that a better option might be CASAs or Community Assisted Sustainable Agriculture. In this model a family pays a farmer up front and then the farmer delivers to the family their share of the harvest based on the number of people who buy into the CASA. Just as the buyers group does not protect the farmer, this system leaves consumer rather vulnerable. What if the farmer sucks and can’t grow anything but potatoes? What if the farmer is greedy and signs up more families than her/his farm will support? What if the farmer is lazy and just wants to sit on a bench and read about farming psychotropic plants rather than actually growing good nutritious food.

HYBRID

In this scenario a buyers group commissions with a group of farmers who work cooperatively to provide a variety of seasonal foods.

FARMERS MARKET

A Bright sunny community gathering where farmers offer up their goods to the masses. This is not the hot dirty parking lot model that we are familiar with in the Brazos Valley, but a community built and managed structure that gathers in the community to support local farmers and small producers of foods and other goods.

RESTAURANTS THAT FEATURE LOCALLY GROWN ORGANIC FOODS

Restaurants that get it are a great way of providing strong demand and educate the public about the nutritional and sensual advantages of slow foods. Thanks to the Village the example is being set.

GROW YOUR OWN

Back yard and community gardens. This becomes increasingly viable as our community invests in good community gardens, free workshops and other means of providing information. Our cities have already started to work on this model with projects such composting classes.

In order to nurture the sort of culture that supports locally grown organic foods it is probably important not to ignore any of these models. What model do you think is most appealing? What ideas do you have for expanding the value of locally grown organic foods in the Brazos Valley? Is the biggest impediment supply or is it demand?

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Why Grass Fed?

From FoodRevolution.org


What About Grass-fed Beef?

Feeding grain to cattle has got to be one of the dumbest ideas in the history of western civilization.

Cows, sheep, and other grazing animals are endowed with the ability to convert grasses, which those of us who possess only one stomach cannot digest, into food that we can digest. They can do this because they are ruminants, which is to say that they possess a rumen, a 45 or so gallon (in the case of cows) fermentation tank in which resident bacteria convert cellulose into protein and fats.

Traditionally, all beef was grass-fed beef, but in the United States today what is commercially available is almost all feedlot beef. The reason? It's faster, and so more profitable. Seventy-five years ago, steers were 4 or 5 years old at slaughter. Today, they are 14 or 16 months. You can't take a beef calf from a birth weight of 80 pounds to 1,200 pounds in a little more than a year on grass. It takes enormous quantities of corn, protein supplements, antibiotics and other drugs, including growth hormones.

Switching a cow from grass to grain is so disturbing to the animal's digestive system that it can kill the animal if not done gradually and if the animal is not continually fed antibiotics. These animals are designed to forage, but we make them eat grain, primarily corn, in order to make them as fat as possible as fast as possible.

Author and small-scale cattleman Michael Pollan wrote recently in the New York Times about what happens to cows when they are taken off of pastures and put into feedlots and fed grain:

"Perhaps the most serious thing that can go wrong with a ruminant on corn is feedlot bloat. The rumen is always producing copious amounts of gas, which is normally expelled by belching during rumination. But when the diet contains too much starch and too little roughage, rumination all but stops, and a layer of foamy slime that can trap gas forms in the rumen. The rumen inflates like a balloon, pressing against the animal's lungs. Unless action is promptly taken to relieve the pressure (usually by forcing a hose down the animal's esophagus), the cow suffocates.

A corn diet can also give a cow acidosis. Unlike that in our own highly acidic stomachs, the normal pH of a rumen is neutral. Corn makes it unnaturally acidic, however, causing a kind of bovine heartburn, which in some cases can kill the animal but usually just makes it sick. Acidotic animals go off their feed, pant and salivate excessively, paw at their bellies and eat dirt. The condition can lead to diarrhea, ulcers, bloat, liver disease and a general weakening of the immune system that leaves the animal vulnerable to everything from pneumonia to feedlot polio."
All this is not only unnatural and dangerous for the cows. It also has profound consequences for us. Feedlot beef as we know it today would be impossible if it weren't for the routine and continual feeding of antibiotics to these animals. This leads directly and inexorably to the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. These are the new "superbugs" that are increasingly rendering our "miracle drugs" ineffective.

As well, it is the commercial meat industry's practice of keeping cattle in feedlots and feeding them grain that is responsible for the heightened prevalence of E. coli 0157:H7 bacteria. When cattle are grainfed, their intestinal tracts become far more acidic, which favors the growth of pathogenic E. coli bacteria, which in turn kills people who eat undercooked hamburger.

E. coli 0157:H7 has only recently appeared on the scene. First isolated in the 1980s, this pathogen is now found in the intestines of most U.S. feedlot cattle. The practice of feeding corn and other grains to cattle has created the perfect conditions for microbes to come into being that can harm and kill us. As Michael Pollan explains:
"Most of the microbes that reside in the gut of a cow and find their way into our food get killed off by the acids in our stomachs, since they originally adapted to live in a neutral-pH environment. But the digestive tract of the modern feedlot cow is closer in acidity to our own, and in this new, manmade environment acid-resistant strains of E. coli have developed that can survive our stomach acids - and go on to kill us. By acidifying a cow's gut with corn, we have broken down one of our food chain's barriers to infections."
Many of us think of "corn-fed" beef as nutritionally superior, but it isn't. A corn-fed cow does develop well-marbled flesh, but this is simply saturated fat that can't be trimmed off. Grass-fed meat, on the other hand, is lower both in overall fat and in artery-clogging saturated fat. A sirloin steak from a grain-fed feedlot steer has more than double the total fat of a similar cut from a grass-fed steer. In its less-than-infinite wisdom, however, the USDA continues to grade beef in a way that rewards marbling with intra-muscular fat.

Grass-fed beef not only is lower in overall fat and in saturated fat, but it has the added advantage of providing more omega-3 fats. These crucial healthy fats are most plentiful in flaxseeds and fish, and are also found in walnuts, soybeans and in meat from animals that have grazed on omega-3 rich grass. When cattle are taken off grass, though, and shipped to a feedlot to be fattened on grain, they immediately begin losing the omega-3s they have stored in their tissues. As a consequence, the meat from feedlot animals typically contains only 15- 50 percent as much omega-3s as that from grass-fed livestock.

This is certainly an advantage for grass-fed beef, but it comes with a cost. The higher omega-3 levels and other differences in fatty acid composition contributes to flavors and odors in grass-fed meat that most people find undesirable. Taste-panel participants have found the meat from grass-fed animals to be characterized by "off-flavors including ammonia, gamey, bitter, liverish, old, rotten and sour."

In addition to being higher in healthy omega-3s, meat from pastured cattle is also up to four times higher in vitamin E than meat from feedlot cattle, and much higher in conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), a nutrient associated with lower cancer risk.

As well as these nutritional advantages, there are also decided environmental benefits to grass-fed beef. According to David Pimentel, a Cornell ecologist who specializes in agriculture and energy, the corn we feed our feedlot cattle accounts for a staggering amount of fossil fuel energy. Growing the corn used to feed livestock in this country takes vast quantities of chemical fertilizer, which in turn takes vast quantities of oil. Because of this dependence on petroleum, Pimentel says, a typical steer will in effect consume 284 gallons of oil in his lifetime. Comments Michael Pollan,
"We have succeeded in industrializing the beef calf, transforming what was once a solar-powered ruminant into the very last thing we need: another fossil-fuel machine."
In addition to consuming less energy, grass-fed beef has another environmental advantage - it is far less polluting. The animals' wastes drop onto the land, becoming nutrients for the next cycle of crops. In feedlots and other forms of factory farming, however, the animals' wastes build up in enormous quantities, becoming a staggering source of water and air pollution.

From a humanitarian perspective, there is yet another advantage to pastured animal products. The animals themselves are not forced to live in confinement. The cruelties of modern factory farming are so severe that you don't have to be a vegetarian or an animal rights activist to find the conditions to be intolerable, and a violation of the human-animal bond. Pastured livestock are not forced to endure the miseries of factory farming. They are not cooped up in cages barely larger than their own bodies, or packed together like sardines for months on end standing knee deep in their own manure.

It's important to remember that grass-fed is not the same as organic. Natural food stores often sell organic beef and dairy products that are hormone- and antibiotic- free. While these products come from animals who most likely were fed less grain than the industry norm, they typically still spent their last months (or in the case of dairy cows virtually their whole lives) in feedlots where they were fed grain. Even when the grain is raised organically, feeding large amounts of grain to a ruminant animal compromises the nutritional value of the resulting meat or dairy products and exacts an added toll on the environment.

Just as organic does not mean grass-fed, grass-fed does not mean organic. Pastured animals sometimes graze on land that has been treated with synthetic fertilizers and even doused with herbicides. Unless the meat label specifically says it is both grass-fed and organic, it isn't.

Grass-fed beef is typically more expensive, but I'm not at all sure that's a bad thing. We shouldn't be eating nearly as much meat as we do. While there are surely many advantages to grass-fed beef over feedlot beef, this is still not a food that I, for one, am able to recommend.

It takes a long time and a lot of grassland to raise a grass-fed steer. Western rangelands are vast, but not nearly vast enough to sustain America's 100 million head of cattle. There is no way that grass-fed beef can begin to feed the meat appetites of people in the United States, much less play a role in addressing world hunger. Grass-fed meat production might be viable in a country like New Zealand with its geographic isolation, unique climate and topography, and exceedingly small human population. But in the world as it is today, I am afraid that grass-fed beef is a food that only the wealthy elites will be able to consume in any significant quantities.

We do not yet have studies that tell us what percentage of the health problems associated with eating beef would be reduced or eliminated by the eating of grass-fed beef. I'm sure grass-fed beef is much healthier than feedlot beef, both for the environment and for the consumer. But doing well in such a comparison hardly constitutes a ringing endorsement. While grass-fed beef and other pastured animal products have many advantages over factory farm and feedlot products, it's important to remember that factory farm and feedlot products are an unmitigated disaster. Almost anything would be better.

I am reminded of a brochure the Cattlemen's Association used to distribute to schools. The pamphlet compared the nutritional realities of a hamburger to another common food, and made much of the fact that the hamburger was superior in that it had more of every single nutrient listed than did its competitor. And what's more, the competitor had far more sugar. The comparison made it sound like a hamburger was truly a health food.

The competition, however, was not the stiffest imaginable. It was a 12-ounce can of Coke.

Comparing grass-fed beef to feedlot beef is a little like that. It's far healthier, more humane, and more environmentally sustainable. It's indeed better. If you are going to eat meat, dairy products or eggs, then that's the best way to do it.

But I wouldn't get too carried away and think that as long as it's grass-fed then it's fine and dandy. Grass-fed products are still high in saturated fat (though not as high), still high in cholesterol, and are still devoid of fiber and many other essential nutrients. They take less toll on the environment, but the land on which the animals graze still must often be irrigated, thus using up dwindling water resources, and it may be fertilized with petroleum-based fertilizers.

And there are other environmental costs. Next to carbon dioxide, the most destabilizing gas to the planet's climate is methane. Methane is actually 24 times more potent a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, and its concentration in the atmosphere is rising even faster. The primary reason that concentrations of atmospheric methane are now triple what they were when they began rising a century ago is beef production. Cattle raised on pasture actually produce more methane than feedlot animals, on a per-cow basis.

Plus there is the tremendous toll grazing cattle takes on the land itself. Even with U.S. beef cattle today spending the last half of their lives in feedlots, seventy percent of the land area of the American West is currently used for grazing livestock. More than two-thirds of the entire land area of Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, and Idaho is used for rangeland. Just about the only land that isn't grazed is in places that for one reason or another can't be used by livestock-inaccessible areas, dense forests and brushlands, the driest deserts, sand dunes, extremely rocky areas, cliffs and mountaintops, cities and towns, roads and parking lots, airports, and golf courses. In the American West, virtually every place that can be grazed, is grazed. The results aren't pretty. As one environmental author put it, "Cattle grazing in the West has polluted more water, eroded more topsoil, killed more fish, displaced more wildlife, and destroyed more vegetation than any other land use."

Western rangelands have been devastated under the impact of the current system, in which cattle typically spend only six months or so on the range, and the rest of their lives in feedlots. To bring cows to market weight on rangeland alone would require each animal to spend not six months foraging, but several years, greatly multiplying the damage to western ecosystems.

The USDA's Animal Damage Control (ADC) program was established in 1931 for a single purpose-to eradicate, suppress, and control wildlife considered to be detrimental to the western livestock industry. The program has not been popular with its opponents. They have called the ADC by a variety of names, including, "All the Dead Critters" and "Aid to Dependent Cowboys."

In 1997, following the advice of public relations and image consultants, the federal government gave a new name to the ADC-"Wildlife Services." And they came up with a new motto-"Living with Wildlife."

This is an interesting choice of words. What "Wildlife Services" actually does is kill any creature that might compete with or threaten livestock. Its methods include poisoning, trapping, snaring, denning, shooting, and aerial gunning. In "denning" wildlife, government agents pour kerosene into the den and then set it on fire, burning the young alive in their nests.

Among the animals Wildlife Services agents intentionally kill are badgers, black bears, bobcats, coyotes, gray fox, red fox, mountain lions, opossum, raccoons, striped skunks, beavers, nutrias, porcupines, prairie dogs, black birds, cattle egrets, and starlings. Animals unintentionally killed by Wildlife Services agents include domestic dogs and cats, and several threatened and endangered species.

All told, Wildlife Services, the federal agency whose motto is "Living with Wildlife," intentionally kills more than 1.5 million wild animals annually. This is done, of course, at public expense, to protect the private financial interests of ranchers who wish to use public lands to graze their livestock.

The price that western lands and wildlife are paying for grazing cattle is hard to exaggerate. Conscientious management of rangelands can certainly reduce the damage, but widespread production of grass-fed beef would only multiply this already devastating toll.
"Most of the public lands in the West, and especially the Southwest, are what you might call 'cow burnt.' Almost anywhere and everywhere you go in the American West you find hordes of cows. . . . They are a pest and a plague. They pollute our springs and streams and rivers. They infest our canyons, valleys, meadows and forests. They graze off the native bluestems and grama and bunch grasses, leaving behind jungles of prickly pear. They trample down the native forbs and shrubs and cacti. They spread the exotic cheatgrass, the Russian thistle, and the crested wheat grass. Even when the cattle are not physically present, you see the dung and the flies and the mud and the dust and the general destruction. If you don't see it, you'll smell it. The whole American West stinks of cattle." - Edward Abbey, conservationist and author, in a speech before cattlemen at the University of Montana in 1985
While grass-fed beef certainly has advantages over feedlot beef, another answer is to eat less meat. If as a society we did this, then the vast majority of the public lands in the western United States could be put to more valuable - and environmentally sustainable - use. Much of the western United States is sunny and windy, and could be used for large-scale solar energy and wind-power facilities. With the cattle off the land, photovoltaic modules and windmills could generate enormous amounts of energy without polluting or causing environmental damage. Other areas could grow grasses that could be harvested as "biomass" fuels, providing a far less polluting source of energy than fossil fuels. Much of it could be restored, once again becoming valued wildlife habitat. The restoration of cow burnt lands would help to vitalize rural economies as well as ecosystems.

And there is one more thing. When you picture grass-fed beef, you probably envision an idyllic scene of a cow outside in a pasture munching happily on grass. That is certainly the image those endorsing and selling these products would like you to hold. And there is some truth to it.

But it is only a part of the story. There is something missing from such a pleasant picture, something that nevertheless remains an ineluctable part of the actual reality. Grass-fed beef does not just come to you straight from God's Green Earth. It also comes to you via the slaughterhouse.

The lives of grass-fed livestock are more humane and natural than the lives of animals confined in factory farms and feedlots, but their deaths are often just as terrifying and cruel. If they are taken to a conventional slaughterhouse, they are just as likely as a feedlot animal to be skinned while alive and fully conscious, and just as apt to be butchered and have their feet cut off while they are still breathing - distressing realities that tragically occur every hour in meat-packing plants nationwide. Confronting the brutal realities of modern slaughterhouses can be a harsh reminder that those who contemplate only the pastoral image of cattle patiently foraging do not see the whole picture.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Whole Foods Discussion

Recently there was a discussion on the Progressive email list about the prospect of Whole Foods coming to town. The progressive email list is for announcements. When discussions flair up many complaints are made and some unsubscribe from the list. Nonetheless, discussions are important, especially this one. So, I have copied the discussion below.
But first I feel compelled to point out that this discussion was promulgated by someone who is decidedly not progressive. David R. Hart is a property rights, pro-sprawl , vocal supporter of the development community. Though he is welcome both here and on the betterdays list, I am suspect of his motivations for posting this and also of its veracity.
_____________________________________________________________
From David R Hart
Recently there was a good discussion on the progressive email list motivated by the prospect of a Whole Foods coming to town. The betterdays list is an announce list not intended for discussions. When discussions flair up, inevitably complaints are made and people with overactive inboxes understandably unsubscribe and we become less connected to progressives in the Brazos Valley. I have reposted the discussion in the comments section here in hopes that the discussion will continue.
This is a forward of a forward of a forward, but AFAIK it is legitimate,
so please complete the survey if you are interested in perhaps attracting
a Whole Foods Market to our community.
-drh

==========================================================================

Professor Wesson,

As you know, my team and I are conducting a market research project
investigating the demand for Whole Foods supermarket in the Brazos Valley.
Would you please take a moment to fill out our survey? Also, please
forward this email to any other 'foodie' friends you can think of.

Here is the link: http://www.zoomerang.com/Survey/?p=WEB228GVVN2Q77

Thanks!
______________________________________________________
Plankey Videla, Nancy
to betterdays
show details Nov 14 (1 day ago) Reply

Hello fellow progressives,

I send this out as a piece of information. Whole Foods has historically
been a union-busting outfit. While I would love more variety and I am
guilty of having shopped at Whole Foods, I think it is important to
think about the effect of a Whole Foods on our own Brazos Natural Food
store and on worker-labor relations. See the following for more
information:
http://coopamerica.org/programs/responsibleshopper/company.cfm?id=309

Nancy
___________________________________________________________
Cody Marx Bailey
to Progressives
show details Nov 14 (1 day ago) Reply

I am in favor of going local, sometimes at any cost even when it doesn't make sense. I'd love to tell Whole Foods to take a hike, but at the same time I'm wanting more than just what Brazos Natural Foods has to offer. This is one of my biggest complaints with locally owned businesses - sometimes they do not step it up when things get tight.

My own little dream is to see the/a Brazos Natural Foods expand to a larger store and begin to offer more variety. Whole Foods would surely put them out of business, but at the same time they offer a great deal more than BNF. That said, I will support BNF even if WF were to move here, that is until they went under and so long as no other comparable store existed.

-Cody
____________________________________________________________________________
Katalin Takacs
to Cody, Progressives
show details Nov 14 (1 day ago) Reply

I really didn't want to say anything, but alas, I can't keep my mouth shut. I agree with Cody.

1) I am all for supporting local foods and locally owned businesses. I used to be a small business owner myself and understand the problems faced by such.

2) Competition is good. It makes businesses become creative, lean and mean. Customers are also better off with more choices. I don't think that WF is going to drive BNF out of business. There are many things small businesses can do if they truly want to stay in business that large mega-corporations like WF can't. I would love to see BNF grow as well.

3) One of the benefits of competition that many people might not be aware of is the increase in demand due to consumer education. I know several people in CS who don't shop at BNF at the moment, however they drive to Austin to shop at WF. If we had WF in BCS, over time some of these people would learn about BNF and start spending money there too. BNF & WF could organize events together, etc. that again, would drive business to BNF.

4) On a previous post: it is beneficial to understand the impact of unions on consumers and the economy, both national and local, rather than repeat the mantra "Unions are good, big businesses are bad". It's not all black and white, there are many shades of gray.

Thanks, happy weekend to everyone.
Kati
____________________________________________
Renee Bork
to Brazos
show details Nov 14 (1 day ago) Reply

I support Brazos Natural Foods as well and will continue to support them. They are dear personal friends as well as friends of the community.

A few weeks ago it hit the news that Jim Lewis, who owns the building that the Appletree Market operates from [as well as the Galleria Building next door to it on Briarcrest Drive near 29th Street in Bryan] is opening a natural foods store called Village Foods (slated to open in February 2009) in the Appletree building.

In other towns I’ve visited where big stores like Whole Foods or Wild Oats move in, it seems as though the “Mom & Pop” stores survive and people still buy there and support them. I hope this is the case in our town. There’s a lot of room for growth in the natural foods industry. Hopefully two natural foods stores in our town will have a synergistic effect and all will survive.

From what I’ve heard, I was under the impression that Whole Foods has opted not to come into smaller markets like ours and has gone towards very large metropolitan markets. Since Jim Lewis is a businessman I would guess that he’s done his market research here in the Brazos Valley.
For what it’s worth,
Renee

Monday, November 10, 2008




What a wonderful time we had on Saturday at Sand Creek Farm. Thanks to Ben and Alysha Godfrey for sharing their wisdom and their beautiful farm with us. The picture is of their daughter riding like the wind on her pony. You can see more pictures here. If you would like to be included in future trips to local small scale farms and ranches send me an email and you will be added to the information list.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Focus

One thing that I am working on is developing a series of field trips out to local producers. I have found a list of local producers from across the country and we have a good number fairly close by. We will start close in and work our way out. This will give us a chance to meet the producers and pick their brains about a farmers market and promoting local agriculture. It will allow us to learn their stories so that we can do a better job of promoting them. It will provide an opportunity for at least a few people to get an intimate view of local production which will turn them into meme pollen. There are already several folks interested in participating in this. I will be promoting it a little more widely. If you have not already done so let me know if you want to be a part of this effort so that I can put you on the email list.

I am assuming that the group that is meeting for Monday happy hours is a working group. That is that everyone involved is willing to be involved at the level of taking on tasks. There are several different arguments that we will be looking at making. I am clear on some of them and less so on others. Those arguments are:
• To the University – for community garden space, sustainable production facility as many other universities have. I’m un clear of what we are looking for here and also what the nature of the argument that needs to be made. I’m also unclear who the argument gets made to. I suspect that, as most things at the university, this hinges on funding. In looking over UCSC stuff, I have to guess that the most likely source of funding is the US government. I suspect that by taking a “save the family farms”, economic approach that we might also be able to wrangle some bucks out of old ags in time. This is all beyond my knowledge base. It seems to me that we need to define exactly what we want and then devise a plan for how to fund it.
• To the city – We want to put together a long term plan for a complex that includes a farmers market, a community garden, an arboretum, and a sustainability center. We need to define this in a way that allows city council people to understand a dollars and cents value, as well a the value from a green perspective. We also need to provide a plan that will allow this to happen over the span of about ten years. We currently have a very receptive City Council and we need to act quickly to take advantage of this.
• Community gardens in Bryan – Cody has started looking into a couple of potential plots for community gardens in his neighborhood. What is involved in starting a community garden? What are the cost involved? How do you get people who are truly willing to work a garden?
• Locovore Ethos – this is the underlying push of all of this. How do we develop a culture that understands and values local agriculture? One of the ways we do this is by having local restaurants, health food store and farmers markets who sell this value. To do that we have to make local foods abundant and easily obtained. If a restaurant is promoting local foods and can’t find anything to sell in January we will loose them. We have to do what we can to promote our local producers, our farmers market, BNF and restaurants. We could be at the forefront of a significant awakening in our community, or we could be pissing in the wind. Which it is, is completely dependent on our level of commitment and creativity.

Please fill in the blanks of what I have left out here.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Master Naturalists

If you have not checked out our local chapter of the master naturalists program, you should do so. Not only do they do a great job of educating folks about our local bioregion. They have one incredible publication, which you can link to off of their website.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Producers

I found a good resource for starting to collect local producers. This is a great site with lots of good information including local producers.

I'm going to start calling producers and going to see one a week on Sundays. All are welcome on these field trips.

One of my goals is to wean my family from non-local non-natural foods. We will start buying grass fed natural beef, goats, turkeys and chickens.

cognitive update: We should sign people up for local agriculture 101. This would be an effort to get people eating more locally. The focus would be these Sunday field trips and a collaborative effort to eat more locally. So, for example, several folks might go in together to by a locally raised cow for slaughter. Maybe we would have weekly egg deposits, milk, cheese etcetera. Each person participating would be given an assignment such as lining up a local producer to go visit.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Peconic Land Trust: Farm, Steawardship, Community

here is a link to the Peconic Land Trust Website:
http://www.peconiclandtrust.org/

I'm not going to speak too much on the Peconic land trust, one just needs to view their website. This project is truly remarkable. This program has worked, directly to protect 9,000 acres of land, they have reclaimed a former shell fish farm (in coordination with Cornell University) and now manage the site sustainably and open it up to small scale aquaculture companies, they have a CSA, support farm to market, farm to school, and much more!

Peconic Land Trust was founded in 1983 and is run as a 501 (C) (3) nonprofit organization. The trust generates 60% of its operating revenue from donations and 40% is from services provided to clients. Fascinating model.

Getting to Work

This group has been spewing ideas-a-plenty. Beautiful though that is, it is time for us to start working toward something more concrete. But, as we all know, concrete cannot be placed until it has been mixed. Let us now gather the ingredients that will go into that mix. Specifically, at this time we need information. But even before that, we need to have the containers that we will put this information into.

Here are some containers that we might think about using:
Why Local Agriculture?
Dollars, Cents and Nutrition: What is the Economics of Organic?
What is the Value of Community Gardens?
What is the economic value of investing in a farmers market?
What is the value of having a farmer laureate and what would she/he do?
What is a sustainability center and why should we want one?
What is the value of a community arboretum?

We need quantifiable and primarily monetary information that will help answer these questions. While quality of life reasons are wonderful, they are less persuasive for most people, especially those in a position to make a difference. What questions have I left out or not phrased properly? Which question(s) do you want to work on finding answers for?

Once we can fairly persuasively answer these questions then we can start thinking about who to make the argument to.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Grants

UCSC's Center for Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems recently got a grant for $355,000.00 to "study and develop integrated, model programs for improving health, ecological, sustainability and agrifood system literacy within college and community environments."

This project seems to be most heavily focused on campus. While I'm sure that this is a worthwhile endeavor it may be somewhat misplaced. USCS proably has a fairly aware campus population to begin with and while the cloistered environment of a college campus may be condusive to conducting studies in a population, it is probably not as conducive to generating results. A similar study, conducted in a less informed population, which focused more heavily on real world agricultural relationships might be worth pursuing.

Agrifood? Maybe that is not completely redundant but it comes pretty close. It might be good to get some real farmers plugged into a program like this. If nothing else, a farmer would be unlikely to get all gussied up with an expression like "agrifood system literacy."

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Wonderland Gardens

Looks like the City of Bryan (CoB) is interested. I met with Martin Zimmerman and we discussed the hurdles that may be involved. This definitely fits in with the CoB's sustainability initiative. Zoning and land acquisition are going to be the largest hurdles.

Zoning-

We're going to need to rezone the property from multi-family residential to either some sort of agricultural use or something under the parks system.

Agricultural use is not our best option as it opens it up for cattle, sheep, etc. even though we are not looking to do that, it still doesn't look good on the books so going the park route would be the best.

Land Acquisition-

This is going to be tough if the city doesn't have the funds to acquire the two plots I'm looking at. They are priced (by the city) at 15k each. I'd like to have both of them, but one would do. Another method of obtaining them may be through grants. If we wrote to the federal/state government and got the money that way, we could purchase the land and hand it over to the city as a park then use neighborhood funds to pay for the construction of the garden.

Making the Arguement

Our task is difficult because we are looking at convincing several fundamentally different groups of the value of our shared and overlapping visions that are, at this point, largely idealistic. We must convince people who might contribute to building the ideas and resources. This includes various disciplines of academics, city leaders, producers and hopefully grant providers. Each of these discussions is as fundamentally different as are the people in the various groups.

Like term paper writers, we must collate information and indicate on our index cards, figuratively speaking, which group this information is relevant to. For many of us, the saliency of this argument is axiomatic. It would be a mistake for us to proceed beyond this point with only axioms. We must collect facts and figures on fuel consumption, nutrition, supply, demand, top soil depletion, water conservation, obesity, carbon emissions, revenue streams and much more.

I know that for me this represents a shift in the way that I approach the discussion. I do not need facts and figures to be convinced of the value of connecting more directly to the bounty of the earth and less directly to corporatization. No matter how fervent I may be, such idealism will not convince most people. Even for people most directly impacted such as producers, we must convince in dollars and cents terms that we can substantiate. I don’t know if we have an agricultural economist who works in local and sustainable markets, but this is information that we will need.

Please use this blog to post studies, books and other sources of information.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Integration: A Case for Local Agriculture

The items discussed in this post are more or less derived from Patricia Allen's book: Together at the Table. Allen makes many great points concerning local agriculture and social movments. In particular, I enjoyed her distinction between sustainable agriculture and community food security. Both of these movements, have seen sucess in the public and private arena. And I agree with Allen that both are necessary to making local agriculture work. Bryan/College Station needs a community resource center that embraces the ideals of food security and provides markets for sustainable agriculture. We must encourage the growth of sustainable agriculture by area farmers and providing resources to further the knowledge base of sustainable agriculture both on the part of the producer and consumer.

If both, Food Security and Sustainable Agriculture are pursued in such a fashion we will find a resurgence in not only the quality of food produced but a new placed emphasis on the importance of developing a positive food culture. This culture will lead to keeping money in the community, money to support local farmers, a more environmentally friendly community, and ultimately a strengethening of the community in manifold ways.

Allen, speaks specificially to agriculture, but she also hits on the import of social movements wedding themselves with one another. "If social movements are to be more than ephemeral, they must become part of the fabric that organizes and mediate social relationships...(52)" It is tantamount to the success of local agriculture in BCS to wed itself with supporting bicycle partipation, the success of bikes is directly related to success of community gardening, and so on and so forth. We must create mechanisms for linking persons and projects that work to build community.

Our community has failed on two accounts; either the groups (the movement portion) themselves become focused striclty on their individual projects and or ideology seperates and then ultimately severs local collaboration (individual/social relationships.) If we can find a way to mitigate this scenario we will all be better off.

Lick Creek Park

In College Station we are fortunate to have a somewhat natural park. Lick Creek Park is a treasure for those interested in experiencing the Post Oak Savanna. I would like to thank my friend Lucy Decker for passing along this wonderful resource on lick creek park. This will certainly motivate anyone to go take a walk in this wonderful park.

Also Lucy passed along this nice collection of photos.

Synergistic Diversity

Okay, I'm fairly sure that this is a previously unused term, but it is a good one. Synergy, by its nature implies diversity. But it is more than a random collection; it is a rather precise mix. Understanding the mix is an important science.

As we think of affecting a culture of localism in the Brazos Valley, the synergistic diversity is crucial. What are the components that will allow the concepts of localism to transform from an abstract idea into a value broadly embraced? I am working from the perspective that those components are the market, the arts and an increased understanding of our bio-region.

Projects like developing an enhanced farmers market, developing a community garden and creating festivals that are a celebration of our local community, bring these components into what we hope will be synergies of shifting paradigms.

Saturday, October 4, 2008

From Barbra Kingsolver

From:
Animal, vegetable Mineral

"If every US citizen ate just one meal a week, any meal, composed of locally and organically grown meats and produce, we would reduce our country's oil consumption by over 1.1 million barrels of oil every week. That's not gallons, but barrels."

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Dream it, Plan it, Promote it, Integrate it, Build it and They Will Come

Synopsis: We need land and a small investment to begin building a farmers market that has a sense of space.
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Roll up your sleeves, this is no easy task. Building a sense of place takes sweat, hard work and the joy of community building. This project is starting with an effort to develop a more mature farmers market than what the area currently has. This is perfect starting point because a farmers market, more so than any other aspect of this larger project, contains the requisite components of direct connection, not just to place, but to the actual land. It also invites a recognition that we are connected to the land because it nourishes us, mind body and soul. This is an endeavor that will require manifold functional bonds of community.

Amazingly there is a farmers market here that has survived for years despite little support, few suppliers and the disrespect of having been shoved into a dirty and crowded parking lot. The Brazos Valley can do better than this. We have tremendous resources from the university and beyond. We have a wealth of consumers from across the Brazos Valley who, when informed, will embrace our local produce, the people who bring them to market and the community that grows out of this endeavor. The fact that we all eat, makes a community farmers market ultimately inclusive.

A farmers market provides us with a strong sense of place, but it needs a sense of space to do that. So, what is the difference between a sense of space and a sense of place, you might ask. It is scale. A sense of space is contained by the space what you sensually experience where you are in the moment. A sense of place is a composite that includes the various spaces and the social and environmental constructs that link those spaces. So, for example, you might have a nice sense of space sitting under a water oak, but your sense of place would have included everything as you walked to that nice location and everything in the Post Oak Savanna biosphere. Sitting in front to the old Carnegie Library in downtown Bryan looking across at the Howell Building one has a wonderful sense of space. That space is contained in, and largely defined by, a sense of place that is the Brazos Valley which includes our identity in history, culture and environment.

It is connection of space to cultural and environmental history that creates profound meaning and context. This is why tomatoes on the back of a tailgate in a hot and dirty parking lot on a Saturday morning does not a farmers market make. A farmers market must be composed of the identity of our area and it must be nurtured in a space that highlights the connections that build a sense of place. It is for this reason that the city of College Station in conjunction with the county, the city of Bryan and the university should dedicate land and resources to began design on a campus setting that would include community gardens, an arboretum, a farmers market, a sustainability center, and a community resources center.

Such a campus would help educate farmers and consumers on a wide range of information including food production, landscaping, rain water harvesting, green building and much more. This center would not just serve the city of College Station, it would serve all of the Brazos Valley and even draw from across the state as we provide a unique setting and information that can not be acquired anywhere else. In a center like this our local farmers could learn about intensive production methods and how to better recognize and serve their market. Our residents would grow into an appreciation for our natural and rural settings that would motivate preservation.

Such a community master plan could be built in pases. The first phase might be a community garden and a section of built space for a farmers market that could be expanded on over time. A farmers market is dependent on exposure and accessibility. Exposure can come from being on a busy street where real estate is pricey and parking is dicey. A better approach is to create exposure by connecting the facility in community, which we do by providing nice space, classes in sustainability and local crafts, community gardens and by the cities making it the sort of priority that gets promoted at every level.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Local Agriculture

There are few things as profound as locally grown food to give folks a connection and a sense of place for where they live. There is something very basic about consuming food that was grown in local soil. Compelling as that essential connection is, there are many corollary connections to a sense of the place that we live that are to be made by eating locally grown food. Eating locally grown foods provides a profound sense of season. Eating locally means eating the foods of the season that you live in. Luckily, we live in a place that provides food the year round. Locally grown fruits and vegetables are allowed to ripen in the field providing more pronounced taste.

Best of all, when locally grown foods are bought in a farmers market from the farmers themselves, the direct connection to the producers provides an intense sense of connection to the place that we live and what grows from its soil. As a bonus, open air farmers markets tend to be a place of community gathering attracting a broad cross section of the community. A trip to the grocery store is a chore to be rushed through; going to a farmers market is an enjoyed event that lends itself to the sort of leisure that builds community.

In the Brazos Valley local agriculture is largely about big production: cotton, sorghum and cattle operations that sell their goods in the world market. For several generations there has been very little agriculture, outside of back yard gardens, that has connected or nourished local residence. But due to changing conditions, such as the cost of fuel and global warming, there is an increased demand for locally grown produce. Unfortunately, the supply is lacking. It is lacking because we do not have a tradition of the sort of small intensive production methods that make production for local consumption more possible. In the absence of this sort of production we have not evolved the methods and plants specific to our climate and soils as has been done in other areas of the country.

These obstacles will be overcome and the demand will be met. The only question is how this will happen. The potential of local agriculture as a means of reducing stress on the environment, providing improved products, and building community is too great not to deal with this intentionally, as the precious resource that it is. Without intentional planning and design, this will happen more slowly, haphazardly and without the full benefit of community development. To make this happen we must take a holistic approach that includes all stake holders.

This is a process that is anathema to the prevailing reductionist paradigm of compartmentalization and specialization. As such the process itself provides heuristic and an opportunity for community building, as matters of necessity.

While we seek an organic and holistic process that seeks permeability of specialization and compartmentalization we must, nonetheless, categorize the components of the process in order to manage details. But we first we must define the boundaries of the system that we seek to affect. That system, as I see it, is contained by the intersection of agriculture for local consumption and community.

In terms of the categories by which we might look at this system, there is supply (farmers and ranchers,) demand (consumers,) the market and community. To be sure, there are other ways to categorize this system, but if development in, and connection between, these categories can be achieved then success is likely.

The matrix of success would include increase production of foods grown locally; a clearer demarcation of urban and rural land; increase public investment in local agriculture in terms of education and the development of public space to provide and support market; increased public awareness of the value of local consumption; Increased and broadened activities happening in conjunction with the sell of local produce.

Development along each category is inherently nonlinear. Demand cannot be met without supply and the market will not grow outside of the context of community. Success will depend on the integration of a wide range of entities including, educational, production and civic each working together and informing the other.

A&M has the ability to provided unique resources in this effort. But universities are uniquely geared to a reductionist and protectionist paradigm that tends to punish cross fertilization even within departments much less across disciplines. This project would be well served by input from programs in agriculture, public policy, sociology, anthropology, cultural psychology, architecture and many others. This project provides value in its ability to provide real word applicability and cross discipline collaboration.

Similarly, we will seek cooperation from various municipal entities that are not well practiced at collaboration. City, County and even state interests should be brought to bear on this project.

While the scope of this project presents difficulties, reducing the scope would diminish its effectiveness and sustainability.

Funding sources for this project should include the university, municipalities, the state, community and philanthropic outreach as well as self funding.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

What Is Social Entrepreneurship?

From Wikipedia:
Social entrepreneurship is the work of a social entrepreneur. A social entrepreneur is someone who recognizes a social problem and uses entrepreneurial principles to organize, create, and manage a venture to make social change. Whereas a business entrepreneur typically measures performance in profit and return, a social entrepreneur assesses success in terms of the impact s/he has on society. While social entrepreneurs often work through nonprofits and citizen groups, many work in the private and governmental sectors.

Localism is Not Provincialism

There is an important distinction to be made between localism, which the Post Oak Savanna Project promotes, and provincialism, which he project does not support. For example, while we may work with the Arts Council to celebrate art that reflects our area, we would not discourage outside art. And while we will work to encourage locally grown food, we would not discourage imported foods. We seek local identity in a global community.

Wondering what the Post Oak Savanna is?

http://www.scpr.com/tfs/Postoak.aspx

The Post Oak Savannah Project

The Post Oak Savannah Project is an effort to bring recognition to the beauty and diversity of the Post Oak Savanna of Central Texas and to encourage community that reflects and celebrates this subtlety beautiful part of the world. We seek to build this project with various components that will focus our uniqueness through art, commerce, natural history, agriculture, architecture history and other aspects that reflect our unique character.
By embracing the unique aspects of our area we build value in our quality of life and we build stock in our ability to be a destination of interest.
This project seeks to be a resource providing communication and collaboration among the various groups that embrace its mission. We also seek to provide outreach to promote the Post Oak Savanna of central Texas.

The Alchemy of Place

Some of the components that go into creating a unique sense of place are:

• Natural History
• Cultural History
• Art
• Commerce
• Custom
• Community

What we wish to identify and create is a unique sense of place. Sameness is created by a lack of diversity. A corn field in Iowa is pretty similar to a corn field in Kansas, just as a McDonalds in Bryan is similar to a McDonalds in Boston. Creating a sense of place is a process of discovery of diversity and a celebration of that diversity. Here in the Brazos Valley we have all kinds of diversity including biodiversity, cultural diversity, ethnic and racial diversity... in fact we are diverse in our diversity.

To the degree that it is assumed that we have a mono-culture that is because we have failed to fully celebrate our diversity.
More than a quarter century ago my wife and I left the University of Texas where we were Freshmen and set out for the Northwest to find natural beauty, progressive community, independence and rugged individualism. We set out to find the rest of our lives. We chose Moscow Idaho because it was somewhat more remote. Our adventure was a beautiful failure.

The plan had been to work for a year before we started school so that we could get instate tuition. But in Idaho we found an economy that had busted. The lumber mills that made up the biggest part of the economy had shut down. As a young carpenter from Texas I was competing for work with people who had connection in the area that was generations deep. I worked full time just scrounging small jobs that provided less than 20 hours of work a week. I was happy for a long, miserable, cold winter because not everyone was willing to shovel snow off of roofs and crawl under houses to thaw pipes when they frozen, but I was.

To make matters worse we had been wrong about finding progressive community. Idaho turned out to be isolated, provincial and it lacked diversity. We had not so much escaped the red neck mentality of Texas as we had traded it for the backwoods mentality of Idaho.

In a dark and bleak winter of despair what is one to do but read dark and bleak Russian novels. I read Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Gogol and Turgenev by the light of the fire that we used to heat our house. The Russians, after of being tied to the same land, found new opportunity when the industrial revolution came to their western cities such as Moscow and Saint Petersburg. Having left the land and its people these adventurers found great opportunity, adventure and isolation. The connection to their land and their past had been more profound than they had anticipated. But they could not go back because the land would no longer support them in their new knowledge of the world and material wealth.

Fortunately for my wife and I, no matter how analogous our plight was to these displaced Russians, right down to the name of the city that we were in, there were no such barriers to us returning home. It was snowing as we pulled out of Moscow Idaho in early March. Three days later as we crossed Texas the blue bonnets were in full bloom and we knew that we were home.

Few things are more profound than a strong sense of place. It is something that we hold inside our being where memories, like synaptic connections, build context in our lives. It is also very external, where the transcendence of shared context builds community from mere proximity.

Places that are blessed with a strong sense of place have authenticity.