Shaping Water and Soil at Inspiration Farm
If you grow good soil, everything else falls into place.
If you grow good soil, everything else falls into place.
The key to Chicken Shop’s success and effectiveness is that they work with existing market forces instead of against them.
Grown in Totnes attempts to set a standard for ‘local’.
As land prices soar, and the average age of farmers continues to climb, we desperately need new farmers, or risk having nobody to feed us in the future.
In many Great Lakes “rust belt” cities, urban agriculture has emerged as a productive reuse of vacant land resultant from economic decline, population loss, and home foreclosures.
This post outlines the key elements to this form of eater/producer/middle folk engagement to strengthen their local food systems.
How can communities take hold of their food destiny? How can people-in-community even understand themselves as part of a food system (a permanent culture) they might care about – and reclaim?
“Localization stands, at best, at the limits of practical possibility, but it has the decisive argument in its favour that there will be no alternative.”
“Grass, Soil, Hope is at the same time a challenging book, in that it asks us to reconsider our pessimism about the human engagement with the rest of nature.
In a world where everything is becoming increasingly downloadable, food is the last bastion of the tangible, direct, and purely sensory.
All sub-species of the Cannabis plant were made illegal in 1938, and progress to re-legalize the plant has peaked and troughed for over 20 years.
People coming together to cooperatively grow food can form some powerful ties. And that’s what it’s all about at Peaceful Grounds.