Saturday, September 20, 2008

---- Young Farmers, a call to arms! ----

co-written by Severine v T Fleming and Zoe Bradbury.
posted on Grist.

Coast to coast, thousands of people are inspired to dig in and grow food! Yet access to the land, capital, market savvy, and skills requires for successful farming is available only to a dauntless few. Those few are brave, strong, and delightful advocates of the purposeful life, but it will take more than a few to reclaim a food system of industrial monocultures, labor abuse, and toxic factory conditions. This is the injustice our movement seeks to repair.

Indeed, it will take the muscle and heart of a large-scale, young-farmers movement: thousands upon thousands of hands on the land -- the hands of women and immigrants, the hands of fourth-generation farm kids, the hands of college graduates and former farmworkers-turned-farmers. It will take thousands of new growers of fruits, nuts, vegetables, grains, dairy, and livestock to transform the landscape of sprawling development and corporate control into a dignified, livable, and culturally rich mosaic of ecological farming.

The young farmers now emerging onto the land seek to reclaim, restore, and resettle the deserted rural towns of America. We are similarly poised to revive the fabric of urban life with markets, gardens, bees, corn patches and waterways. Motivated by a force of intention that cannot be rationalized economically, with lives driven by an instinct for direct action and stewardship that honors the planet, people, and place, we are the allies of every American. Our instincts are emboldened by the mercury shatter of dew on the broccoli plants at dawn, by the roar of pollinators in a flowering crop of buckwheat, and by the river of neighbors streaming through the farm-gate clamoring for "real" tomatoes and happy chickens. The hands of young farmers on the land seek to push forward an agenda of sustainability on a human scale.

There is much to learn, and there is much, as a culture, that we risk forgetting. We need these bodies, we need their work, we need their food and their protagonism. We need young farmers to succeed and we need that success to be rewarded.

As fledgling farmers and activists within this community, we see these to be some of the key political, economic, and cultural requirements for that success:

* A hospitable policy environment that prioritizes a next generation of food producers -- not massive corporate subsidies, not cheap imports from across the world

* A regulatory framework friendly to smaller producers

* Affordable credit for capitalization of diversified farms

* Public-private partnerships to give aspiring farmers better access to farmland

* University research focused on low-input, resilient, sustainable production

* Practical, school-based, agricultural training programs (hands in the soil)

* Reformed land-use proscriptions at the community and state level -- some land and soil should never be developed

* Incubator farms to rear and train fledgling farmers and an Agricultural Journeymen program to help people navigate the path from aspiring farmer to successful new farmer.

* Processing infrastructure and facilities for fruits, meats, dairy, etc. at the local scale

* State-sponsored direct-marketing venues -- covered markets, public markets, and friendly zoning for farmers markets and farm-stands

* Comprehensive, affordable health insurance for farmers and food-workers

* Improved state-sponsored nutrition programs for at-risk, elderly and civic establishments.

* Start-up grants and an expansion of Individual Development Accounts, matched-savings program for qualified young farmers, to afford irrigation, tools, equipment, fencing, land, production infrastructure, etc.

* A cultural revaluation of farming as an ambitious, worthwhile life-venture, celebrated by family, church, and society

* Fiscal underwriting of farm-supportive NGOs and programs

* Songs, dances, parties, and festivals for young farmers in the countryside

* High-speed internet connectivity in rural places

* New farmer forums for networking, marketing, resource-sharing, processing, and farmer-to-farmer exchanges

* Access to locally grown seed and protection from transgenic pollution

* Fair wages and equal labor rights for all farmworkers, even those with "illegal" status

* Consumer education about the realities and true cost of food production

* More consumer/producer alliances such as community supported agriculture and community food cooperatives

And what is success? Success is an edible future, when local populations are fed by local fields and sensible nutrition is affordable and accessible. Where we address poverty and hunger, not with biotechnology, but with long-term access to the means of production, and with proximity to that productive plenty which we can achieve only with careful stewardship of our soil and land base -- a wealth immeasurable in dollars. Success is a smooth energy transition, a satisfying daily bread, a culture in which we have restored honor, and respect to the profession of farming.

Call to arms

Arms strong and hands calloused, eyes open to the beauty of every morning. Our spirits are prepared for the long row still to hoe, our hearts full with the support of family and community. Let us unite, young farmers! Let us fight for the right to farmable land! To the pursuit of an equitable marketplace, and for recognition from society. We are here, we are indispensable, we are a cornerstone of the future of food. Let us welcome many new entrants into agriculture, striving to share our lessons, seeds and stories with generations to come. Now is the time for action.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Friday, June 13, 2008

so it's not just me

I get up every morning determined both to change the world and to have one hell of a good time. Sometimes this makes planning the day difficult.--E.B.White

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

manifesto

this wonderful manifesto comes from the think again conference team. i think these are some good principles for life...

1. Blow your mind – Think Again. Think big, open your mind and imagine the possibilities. Allow yourself to be changed in ways you could never engineer.
2. Soak it up. Blink and you'll miss it. Be present, in the moment and absorb it all.
3. Make Connections. Take advantage of this great network. Find common ground, build friendships and take ideas home.
4. Collaborate. Work together, share ideas and pick the brains of your peers. You are some of the best leaders in the country. Allow yourself to be surprised by those you would normally pass by. Conspire to change the world together.
5. Pump up the volume. Speak your mind. Agree, disagree and ask absurd questions. Voice your curiosity.
6. Walk a mile (or 1.6 km) in someone else's shoes. Listen deeply and seek to understand. Explore what you don't know. Allow listening to deepen into learning.
7. Go deep. Go beyond the rhetoric and get to the core of the issue. Harvest ideas and their meanings. Be bold and take risks.
8. Own it. This is your conference. Show up and take the opportunity. You can shop another time.
9. Be the fun you wish to have in the world. Life is serious enough as it is. Laugh from your belly. Find the humour. It's essential for gaining perspective.
10. Celebrate. Recognize your efforts and those of your peers. Build off your successes and value your mistakes. Every step counts, dance as you move through the world.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

bridgewater

some time last fall, i received an email from a canadian exchange student predecessor to bridgewater, who told me that she missed it dearly and considered it 'home.' at that point, i remember smiling and thinking, i can't imagine feeling that way after only 9 months. but here i am at the end of it all thinking exactly the same things.

i have neglected to post anything much over the last couple months, in part because i had been very busy with finals and projects, and in part because i was so busy living the life that there was hardly time to write about it.

so here goes nothing...