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Posts with tag urban farming

N.C. Museum Opens Über-Urban Farm

Photo: N.C. Museum of History.
Thanks to an agricultural education collaborative that's planted the state's leading crops between the State Capitol and the North Carolina Legislative Building, North Carolina's halls of power are lined with cornstalks and tobacco leaves.

"It's been a great way to take the museum outdoors and let people reconnect with where their food comes from," says North Carolina Museum of History youth and family programs coordinator Emily Grant, who worked with the state's Department of Administration and Department of Agriculture to create a series of agricultural vignettes in decorative planters where maple trees and azaleas once grew.

"Our standard landscape planting was starting to die out from the drought," Grant says. "We thought we could pick out plants from North Carolina to talk about plant use and abuse."

The project this year took more than five planters of varying sizes. "We don't have a big lawn where we can just plow the back," Grant says of the urban museum, sowing seeds for a Three Sisters garden of beans, corn and squash; cotton; tobacco; sweet potatoes and peanuts.

Continue reading N.C. Museum Opens Über-Urban Farm

'Farm City,' Rat Prosciutto and an Urban Rooftop Farm

prosciutto
Prosciutto from Big Boy the pig. Photo: Rebecca Winters.
"What happened to the rats on your property?" someone asks urban farmer Novella Carpenter.

"I have a theory that my pigs ate the rats," Carpenter says. Realizing that her audience has been munching on slices of said pig's hindquarters, she laughed. "So enjoy some delicious prosciutto!"

Farmers are reputed to have a tough streak. They step over piles of excrement, battle gargantuan hogs and, of course, have to earn a living. Carpenter, author of "Farm City: The Education of an Urban Farmer," seems no exception. She lives in the city, not the country, "so I can get Chinese food at 2 a.m."

The two 300-pound hogs she raised in what she calls the Oakland, Calif., "ghetto," also enjoyed Chinese takeout. She read about her adventures in urban farming on a Brooklyn, N.Y., rooftop adjacent to a 6,000-foot, 30-crop rooftop farm built by Goode Green and tended by farmers Annie Novak and Ben Flanner.

Dumpster diving, fish guts and the cost of rooftop farming, after the jump.

Continue reading 'Farm City,' Rat Prosciutto and an Urban Rooftop Farm

Three Chicks a Day - The Charlie's Angels of Urban Farming Are Ready for Their Close-Up

chicks

Josh Elliott is obsessed with chicks.

Three in particular -- Pot Pie, Salad Sandwich and Noodle Soup -- have turned his head. A pro freelance shutterbug turned urban chicken farmer, he has devoted a blog to their adventures (and misadventures) called Three Chicks a Day that will break your heart with cuteness.

It all started when a friend introduced Elliott to home-raised eggs -- "definitely better than store-bought" -- four years ago. When he and roommate Chrissy Morgan finally adopted three dewy little critters last week, he decided to snap their portraits daily until they are old enough to move outside in about four weeks. The blog features photos with brief notes about the chicks' modeling preferences: Noodle Soup, for example, is a "strutter."

Elliott is among a growing number of city dwellers from coast to coast building coops in their yards. They are holding social events and even chat groups where forums range from incubating and hatching eggs to lively discussions about predators and pests.

In Portland, Ore., where he lives, three chickens are the legal limit without having to obtain a permit. With the blessing of his landlord, a teacher who found the idea adorable, he began building a coop and enrolled in a weekend-long seminar called Chicken Fest at a local nursery. Classes included Chicken 101, coop-building and chicken health and boy, was it popular: "I went to one class and there must have been 30 people [there]."

Why is Elliott going through all this?

Continue reading Three Chicks a Day - The Charlie's Angels of Urban Farming Are Ready for Their Close-Up

The Toronto Star in 60 seconds, part two: Burritos, grapes, wines, and more

sliced burrito

Urban farming may become a reality

An urban vegetable garden. With all the talk recently of sustainability and food miles, it's hard to believe that no one's come up with this before, at least not in any meaningful way. There's a big surge behind the idea of developing ways to feed a community among city planners now.

Community food planning, as it's sometimes called, includes planning for all stages of feeding the community from start to finish. Every community has to make its own plans according its own situation, but a lot of places are looking for ways to be self sustaining when it comes to feeding the people who live there. "The nonprofit American Planning Association adopted a policy in May that encourages its members, 65 percent of whom work for state and local government agencies, to help build "stronger, sustainable and more self-reliant" local food systems."

According to the source article, many people are worried about the globalization of food, and the problems that it could cause. It's also better for the people to be able to eat locally grown, high quality food. There seems to be a lot of benefits to this. I personally hope that we find a way to make urban farming, and community food planning in general, a reality. What is your take on all of this?

The 100 Yard Diet

a flock of ducks and geese
These days most folks have heard about the 100 Mile Diet, a style of eating awareness that challenges folks to only eat food that is grown or produced within 100 miles of their home. Novella Carpenter, a writer and filmmaker out of California recently upped the ante and spend the month of July adhering to a 100 Yard Diet. She has a small urban farm in Oakland (who knew that you could farm so close to San Francisco) on which she raises a bunch of vegetables, in addition to pigs, rabbit and some fowl (although most of her flock was killed earlier in the summer by an unknown predator). She also keeps honey bees at a friend's farm a bit further out of the city.

She blogged the whole experience at City Farmer (here's the link to her first entry, then just read forward from there). Other than a very small taste of prosciutto, she stayed true to her diet for the entire month. Her approach certainly takes local eating to an entirely new and impressive level.

Tip of the Day

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