Press

Articles about Long Beach Organic
Miscellaneous Articles about Organic
Organization Helps Turn LB Green With Gardens
Article by Janet Beeler
For Love of the Land
A farmer and conservationist is tired of being on two losing sides.
By Wendell Berry
New Community Garden Transforms Vacant Lot on Pacific Avenue
Downtown Gazette-July 16, 2001
By Amy Bentley-Smith
Natural Systems Agriculture
By Stephanie L. Graham
Helping kids bears fruit
Press-Telegram Local News
April 21st, 2002
 
Organics opt for fresh food, farming
Community: Organization finds
connection with the Earth "very satisfying."
By Tina Page, Daily Forty-Niner
October 7th, 2002
 

Organization Helps Turn LB Green With Gardens
Beachcomber - March 1, 2002
Article by Janet Beeler

Long Beach Organic (LBO), a not-for-profit organization dedicated to greening vacant lots or turning them into gardens, is an urban oasis for communities in Long Beach. A distinguishing feature of LBO is that their four operating sites and nursery are maintained organically-that is, in general, without the use of man-made substances. Only natural materials are used for pesticides, fertilizers, etc. LBO's emphasis on edible landscaping is also unique.

LBO provides Long Beach with a resource for people to learn about and participate in organic gardening, a practice that is beneficial to the environment overall, and for strengthening communities by getting them out in the sun and dirt together!

Charlie Moore founded LBO in 1994 after 20 years experience in studying environmental issues and cultivating his own quarter-acre garden as well as various other vacant-lot-turned-gardens in industrial areas of Long Beach. His vision was a patchwork of green spaces throughout the city for people, especially poor and immigrant families with farming heritages, to grow plants that serve as a food source.

The vision is alive in LBO's new executive director, Amy Lerner, who hopes LBO will be "a landmark for LA County" in terms of greening.

The plots in the community gardens are given out on a "first come, first serve" basis. It is the responsibility of the individual or family who takes the plot to keep it maintained, or the plot goes to the next person on the list. A waiting list is currently forming for the land at First and Elm. "Many Southeast Asian families are interested in growing larger amounts of food plants like bananas, and may need a 30 by 30 foot space," Amy explained. "Then there's just your average gardener who just wants to grow tomatoes and eggplants in the summer and needs a five-by-five-foot space." Amy said she plans on dividing the plots into varying sizes to accommodate different needs at the First and Elm garden.

The nursery at Anaheim and Gladys stocks an impressive selection, from tropical edible plants, a more specialized product, to herbs and more common vegetables. Primarily, plants raised there have some kind of practical use. Almost everything at the nursery is for sale. The typical customer is someone concerned with keeping their garden free of chemicals.

Greening empty land and employing organic gardening methods is helpful in sustaining an urban food source, promoting flood control and water conservation, and cleaning polluted soils. There are also personal benefits, Amy emphasizes. "To take a seed, and then be able to eat what you grow, is incredibly empowering." She points out there are gardening programs in jails, rehab centers, schools, and senior citizen programs. LBO has worked with various Long Beach organizations, as well as a couple of local schools.

Amy plans to start organizing workshops for a low cost on a monthly basis. She warns that one must be ready to work and get dirty, but the 2 or 3 hours will be well worth the time and money. Topics like landscaping, soil, composting and mulching, and even cooking your vegetables will be covered. LBO sends out a newsletter and offers memberships. Please call (562) 438-9000 for more information.

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New Community Garden Transforms Vacant Lot on Pacific Avenue
Downtown Gazette-July 16, 2001
By Amy Bentley-Smith

A long-vacant lot on Pacific Avenue and Sixth Street is now developed, not into a structure but into a community garden.

Wednesday, Pacific Gardens at 618 Pacific Ave. will open with a ceremony at 4:30 p.m. With eight planting beds ready for vegetables, herbs and fruits, a covered seating area and a "Zen" garden, the lot is now a place the community can use and enjoy, said Steve Elicker, a local artist and resident who helped bring the garden to life.

"The opportunity the project presented was one of public awareness of what vacant spaces can look like," he said. "It's a great precedent for pocket parks. They don't have to be huge to be effective."

Whereas community gardens by definition are community-driven once in place, Pacific Gardens was a community garden before it started. Seven organizations joined forces to make Pacific Gardens a reality.

It all started at a West End Community Association meeting more than a year ago. The board had invited Long Beach Organic, a nonprofit organization that has created five community gardens in Long Beach, to the meeting to discuss working with WECA on turning vacant lots in the downtown area into gardens.

"Amy Bodeck, who was with RDA (Redevelopment Agency) at the time, sat in on that meeting and said she thought RDA had a piece perfect for the project," Elicker said.

At approximately 50 feet wide by 50 feet long, the land wasn't big enough to attract developers and had been vacant for many years. RDA approved a three-year lease on the land to the community garden project. With that commitment in place, WECA and Long Beach Organic applied for and received a Community Development Block Grant. Elicker wrote a second grant to the School-to-Career Consortium that works with businesses and organizations to give students hands-on work experience. Elicker's idea was to take students from Constellation Middle School through the process of designing and creating a mural for the garden.

"I wanted to bring together the concepts of community gardens and public art," said Elicker, who enlisted the help of artist Joseph Giri for the project. "I wanted to present public art in a more organic form that can be embraced by the community."

It took nearly a year after all the organizations were on board to finally break ground. Elicker and Yooli Choi of Long Beach Organic said there was an "amazing amount" of paperwork to get the permits. They said they consider Pacific Gardens a test case and that hopefully the process to start other community gardens doesn't take as long.

Once permitted, it took about two months to create the garden. There are three elevated garden beds in the middle of the lot for wheelchair-bound people and five beds around the perimeter. Students and officials from Long Beach City College helped fabricate the beds. In one corner is a covered seating area that looks onto a small Zen garden.

The mural is on the lot's north-facing wall. The students painted and tiled the mural in a landscape design. One section is of a tree with its roots spread out in the soil. In the soil are rocks-made of tile-with the names of the organizations that made Pacific Gardens possible.

The dedication ceremony Wednesday is open to the public. First District Councilwoman Bonnie Lowenthal will join the community in the celebration. Parking is available in the Rite Aid parking lot on Sixth Street between Pacific and Pine.

Long Beach Organic will maintain the garden and manage the bed rental, but gardeners will have free reign in their plot. For details, call Long Beach Organic at 438-9000.

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Helping kids bears fruit
Press-Telegram Local News - April 21st, 2002
By Neda Raouf

Volunteer: L.B. Native shares natural knowledge at downtown school.
By Neda Raouf

LONG BEACH-Surrounded by a lush garden with flowers overflowing from plant beds, Natalie Mock basked in the warm sun with a flower adorning her ponytail as she worked alongside a group of elementary school students.

As they all stood in the dirt, Mock washed the dirt off heads of lettuce while students watered plants, tasted edible flowers, and discovered other garden surprises.

"We saw a green bee and its legs were full of pollen," said an excited 6-year-old Trayer Harvey.

Mock, a volunteer at the garden, is accustomed to the enthusiasm.
Working with the group Long Beach Organic for the past 18 months, Mock spends one day a week at the New City School on Pine Avenue, where for the past four months she has taught first-through fourth-graders how to care for a garden.

"They get so excited," said Mock, 24. "They love the bees and the ladybugs, and they love to eat the flowers."

"Working alongside the nonprofit group's executive director, Amy Lerner, Mock sees different groups of 10 students every 30 minutes.
She helps the students learn about composting, planting, weeding and harvesting, said Stephanie Lee, co-director and teacher at the charter school, which has been open for 18 months.

"They look forward to it so much," Lee said. Only two years ago, she said, the garden was an empty lot littered with trash that parents helped clean. Now, the school has leased the property. "It's fantastic. We're really lucky."

Each week, Mock helps students harvest lettuce, strawberries, corn, peas, broccoli and different varieties of flowers that they have planted and cared for, without the use of pesticides, Lee said.

Mock said she enjoys the students' attentiveness. She's also seen them become very protective of the garden plants.

"It's nice to see them enjoy it," Mock said. "Sometimes it's hard to get them to focus."
Gardening is Mock's first experience working with young children. She is considering working toward a teaching credential, the Long Beach native said. She began volunteering with Long Beach Organic after learning about it from vendors at a natural food store where she once worked. Mock is a recent graduate of UC Santa Cruz where she majored in agro-ecology.
"It's important for me to give back to the community," she said. "It's how I want to live my life," she said.

For more information on volunteering with Long Beach Organic, call (562) 438-9000.

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For Love of the Land
A farmer and conservationist is tired of being on two losing sides.
By Wendell Berry

I am a conservationist and a farmer, a wilderness advocate and an agrarian. I am in favor of the world's wildness, not only because I like it, but also because I think it is necessary to the world's life and to our own. For the same reason, I want to preserve the natural health and integrity of the world's economic landscapes, which is to say that I want the world's farmers, ranchers, and foresters to live in stable, locally adapted, resource-preserving communities, and I want them to thrive.

One thing that means is that I have spent my life on two losing sides. As long as I have been conscious, the great causes of agrarianism and conservation, despite local victories, have suffered an accumulation of losses, some of them probably irreparable-while the third side, that of the land-exploiting corporations, has appeared to grow ever richer. I say "appeared" because I think their wealth is illusory. Their capitalism is based, finally, not on the resources of nature, which it is recklessly destroying, but on fantasy. Not long ago I heard an economist say, "If the consumer ever stops living beyond his means, we'll have a recession." And so the two sides of nature and the rural communities are being defeated by a third side that will eventually be found to have defeated itself.
Perhaps to survive its inherent absurdity, the third side is asserting its power as never before: by its control of politics and the news media; by its dominance of science; and by biotechnology, which it is commercializing with unprecedented haste and aggression in order to control totally the world's land-using economies and its food supply. This massive ascendancy of corporate power over democratic process is probably the most ominous development since the start of the Civil War, and for the most part the "free world" seems to be regarding it as merely normal.

My sorrow in having been for so long on two losing sides has been compounded by knowing that those two sides have been in conflict, not only with their common enemy, but also, and by now almost conventionally, with each other. And I am further aggrieved in understanding that everybody on my two sides is deeply implicated in the sins and in the fate of the self-destructive third side.

As a part of my own effort to think better, I decided not long ago that I would not endorse any more wilderness-preservation projects that do not seek also to improve the health of the surrounding economic landscapes and human communities. Whatever its difficulties, my decision to cooperate no longer in the separation of the wild and the domestic has helped me see more clearly the compatibility and even the coherence of my two allegiances. The dualism of domestic and wild is, after all, misleading. It has obscured for us the domesticity of the wild creatures. More important, it has obscured the absolute dependence of human domesticity upon the wildness that supports it and in fact permeates it. In suffering the now-common accusation that humankind is "anthropocentric" (ugly word), we forget that the wild sheep and the wild wolves are respectively ovicentric and lupocentric. The world, we may say, is wild, and all the creatures are home-makers within it, practicing domesticity: mating, raising young, seeking food and comfort. Likewise, though the wild sheep and the farm-bred sheep are in some ways unlike in their domesticities, we forget too easily that if the "domestic" sheep becomes too unwild, as some occasionally do, they become uneconomic and useless: They have reproductive problems, conformation problems, and so on. Domesticity and wildness are in fact intimately connected. What is utterly alien to both is corporate industrialism-a dislocated economic life that is without affection for the places where it is lived and without respect for the materials it uses.

The question we must deal with is not whether the domestic and the wild are separate or can be separated; it is how, in the human economy, their indissoluble and necessary connection can be properly maintained. But to say that wildness and domesticity are not separate, and that we humans are to a large extent responsible for the proper maintenance of their relationship, is to come under a heavy responsibility to be practical. I have two thoroughly practical questions on my mind. The first is: Why should conservationists have a positive interest in, for example, farming? There are lots of reasons, but the plainest is: Conservationists eat. To be interested in food but not in food production is clearly absurd. Urban conservationists may feel entitled to be unconcerned about food production because they are not farmers. But they can't be let off so easily, for they are all farming by proxy. They can eat only if land is farmed on their behalf by somebody somewhere in some fashion. If conservationists will attempt to assume responsibility for their need to eat, they will be led back fairly directly to all their other concerns for the welfare of nature.

Do conservationists, then, wish to eat well or poorly? Would they like their food supply to be secure from one year to the next? Would they like their food to be free of poisons, antibiotics, alien genes, and other contaminants? Would they like a significant portion of it to be fresh? Would they like it to come to them at the lowest possible ecological cost? Such questions, if responsibly asked and answered, will influence production, will influence land use, will determine the configuration and the health of landscapes. If conservationists are willing to eat whatever the supermarket provides and the government allows, they are giving economic support to all-out industrial food production: to the animal factories; to the depletion of rivers and aquifers; to crop monocultures and the consequent losses of biological and genetic diversity; to the pollution, toxicity, and overmedication that are the inevitable accompaniments; to a food system based on long-distance transport and the resulting waste of petroleum and the spread of pests and diseases; and to the transformation of the countryside into ever-larger farms and ever-larger fields receiving always less human affection and human care. But if conservationists are willing to insist on having the best food, produced in the best way, as close to their homes as possible, and if they are willing to learn to judge the quality of food and food production, then they are going to give economic support to an entirely different kind of land use in an entirely different landscape. This landscape will have a higher ratio of caretakers to acres, of care to use. It will be at once more domestic and more wild than the industrial landscape. Can increasing the number of farms and farmers in an agricultural landscape enhance the quality of that landscape as wildlife habitat? Can it increase what we might call the wilderness value of that landscape? It can, and the determining factor would be diversity. Don't forget we are talking about a landscape that is changing in response to an increase in consumer demand for local food. Imagine a modern agricultural landscape devoted mainly to corn and soybeans and to animal factories. And then imagine its neighboring city developing a demand for good, locally grown food. To meet that demand, local farming would have to diversify.
If that demand is serious, and if it is taken seriously, if it comes from informed and permanently committed consumers, if it promises the necessary economic support to farmers, then that radically oversimplified landscape will change. The crop monocultures and animal factories will give way to the mixed farming of plants and animals. Pastured flocks and herds of meat animals, dairy herds, and poultry flocks will return, requiring, of course, pastures and hay fields. If the urban consumers would extend their competent concern for the farming economy to include the forest economy and its diversity of products, that would improve the quality and care, and increase the acreage, of farm woodlands. And we should not forget the possibility that farmers might, for their own instruction and pleasure, preserve patches of woodland unused. As the meadows and woodlands flourished in the landscape, so would the wild birds and animals. The acres devoted to corn and soybeans, grown principally as livestock feed or as raw materials for industry, would diminish in favor of the fruits and vegetables required by human dinner tables.

As the acreage under perennial cover increased, soil erosion would decrease and the water-holding capacity of the soil would increase. Creeks and rivers would grow cleaner and their flow more constant. As farms diversified, they would tend to become smaller; the landscape would acquire more owners. As the number of farmers and the diversity of their farms increased, the toxicity of agriculture would decrease-because less and less chemical poison would be used to replace labor and to defray the biological costs of monoculture. As food production became decentralized, animal wastes would be dispersed, and would be absorbed and retained in the soil as nutrients rather than flowing away as wasted nutrients and as pollution. The details of such a transformation could be elaborated almost endlessly. To make short work of it here, we could just say that a dangerously oversimplified landscape would become healthfully complex, both economically and ecologically.

Since we are talking about a city that would be living in large measure from its local fields and forests, we are talking also about a local economy of small, decentralized, nonpolluting, value-adding factories and shops that would be scaled to fit into the landscape with the least ecological or social disruption. And thus we can also credit to this economy an increase in independent small businesses and in self-employment, and a decrease in the combustible fuel needed for transportation and (I believe) for production.

Such an economy is technically possible, there can be no doubt of that; we have the necessary methods and equipment. The capacity of nature to accommodate, and even to cooperate in, such an economy is also undoubtable; we have the necessary historical examples from many parts of the world. The surviving or remembered Indian agricultures of North America are instructive; so are surviving white American traditional practices such as those of the Amish. And proven new ways are coming into use. This is not, from nature's point of view, a pipe dream.

What is doubtable, or at least unproven, is the capacity of modern humans to choose, make, and maintain such an economy. For at least half a century we have taken for granted that the methods of farming could safely be determined by the mechanisms of industry, and that the economies of farming could safely be determined by the economic interests of industrial corporations. We are now running rapidly to the end of that assumption. The social, ecological, and even economic costs have already become too great, and they are still increasing, all over the world.

Now we must try to envision an agriculture founded not on mechanical principles, but on the principles of biology. Sixty years ago Sir Albert Howard, the pioneer of modern organic farming, and, more recently, the Kansas agricultural reformer Wes Jackson, argued for such a change in standards. If you want to farm sustainably, they have told us, then you have got to make your farming conform to the natural laws that govern the local ecosystem. You have got to farm with both plants and animals in as great a diversity as possible, you have got to conserve fertility, recycle wastes, keep the ground covered, and so on. Or, as the economic geographer J. Russell Smith put it 70 years ago, you have got to "fit the farming to the farm"-not to the available technology or the market, as important as those considerations are, but to the farm. It is necessary, in short, to maintain a proper connection between the domestic and the wild. The paramount standard by which the work is to be judged is the health of the place where the work is done.

The urgent point is that this is not a transformation that we can just drift into, as we drift in and out of fashions, and it is not one that we should wait to be forced into by large-scale ecological breakdown. It won't happen if a lot of people-consumers and producers, city people and country people, conservationists and land users-don't get together deliberately to make it happen.

Those are some of the reasons conservationists should take an interest in farming and make common cause with good farmers. Now I must get on to the second of my practical questions.
Why should farmers be conservationists? Or maybe I had better ask why are good farmers conservationists? The farmer lives and works in the meeting place of nature and the human economy, the place where the need for conservation is most obvious and most urgent. Farmers either fit their farming to their farms, conform to the laws of nature, and keep the natural powers and services intact-or they do not. If they do not, then they increase the ecological deficit being charged to the future. (And I had better admit that some farmers do increase the ecological deficit. But they are not the farmers I am talking about. I am not asking conservationists to support destructive ways of farming.)

Good farmers, who take seriously their duties as stewards of Creation and of their land's inheritors, contribute to the welfare of society in more ways than society usually acknowledges, or even knows. These farmers produce valuable goods, of course; but they also conserve soil, they conserve water, they conserve wildlife, they conserve open space, they conserve scenery.
All that is what farmers ought to do. But since our present society's first standard in all things is profit and it loves to dwell on "economic reality," I can't resist a glance at these good farmers in their economic circumstances, because these farmers will be poorly paid for the goods they produce, and for the services they render to conservation they will not be paid at all. Good farmers today may market products of high quality and perform well all the services I have listed, and still be unable to afford health insurance, and still find themselves mercilessly caricatured in the public media as rural simpletons, hicks, or rednecks. And then they hear the voices of the "economic realists": "Get big or get out. Sell out and go to town. Adapt or die." We have had 50 years of such realism in agriculture, and the result has been more and more large-scale monocultures and factory farms, with their ever larger social and ecological-and ultimately economic-costs.

Why do good farmers farm well for poor pay and work as good stewards of nature for no pay, many of them, moreover, having no hope that their farms will be farmed by their children (for the reasons given) or that they will be farmed by anybody?

Well, I was raised by farmers, have farmed myself, and have in turn raised two farmers-which suggests to me that I may know something about farmers, and also that I don't know very much. But over the years I, along with a lot of other people, have wondered, Why do they do it? Why do farmers farm, given their economic adversities on top of the many frustrations and difficulties normal to farming? And always the answer is: Love. They must do it for love. Farmers farm for the love of farming. They love to watch and nurture the growth of plants. They love to live in the presence of animals. They love to work outdoors. They love the weather, maybe even when it is making them miserable. They love to live where they work and do work where they live. If the scale of their farming is small enough, they like to work in the company of their children and with the help of their children. They love the measure of independence that farm life can still provide. I have an idea that a lot of farmers have gone to a lot of trouble merely to be self-employed, to live at least a part of their lives without a boss.
And so the first thing farmers as conservationists must try to conserve is their love of farming and their love of independence. Of course they can conserve these things only by handing them down, by passing them on to their children, or to somebody's children. Perhaps the most urgent task for all of us who want to eat well and to keep eating is to encourage farm-raised children to take up farming. And we must recognize that this only can be done when the economics are fair. Farm children are not encouraged by watching their parents take their crops to market only to have them stolen at prices less than the cost of production.
But farmers are obviously responsible for conserving much more than agrarian skills and attitudes. I have already told why farmers should be, as much as any conservationist, conservers of the wildness of the world-and that is their inescapable dependence on nature. Good farmers, I believe, recognize a difference that is fundamental between what is natural and what is manmade. They know that if you treat a farm as a factory and living creatures as machines, or if you tolerate the idea of "engineering" organisms, then you are on your way to something destructive and, sooner or later, expensive. To treat creatures as machines is an error with large practical implications.

Good farmers know too that nature can be an economic ally. As Sir Albert Howard and Wes Jackson have told us, nature's way of preserving the health and fertility of the soil is the only correct model for agriculture. And nature works cheap. Natural fertility is cheaper-often in the short run, always in the long run-than purchased fertility. Natural health, inbred and nurtured, is cheaper than pharmaceuticals and chemicals. Solar energy-if you know how to capture and use it: in grass, say, and the bodies of work animals-is cheaper than petroleum. The highly industrialized factory farm is entirely dependent on "purchased inputs." The agrarian farm, well-integrated into the natural systems that support it, allied with nature, runs to an economically significant extent on resources and supplies that are free.

Are we to suppose, then, that good farmers are interested in the natural world only for reasons that are utilitarian or economic? I don't think so. I think we must go on a little further.
It is now commonly assumed that when humans took to agriculture they gave up hunting and gathering. But hunting and gathering remained until recently an integral and lively part of my own region's traditional farming life. People hunted for wild game; they fished the ponds and streams; they gathered wild greens in the spring, hickory nuts and walnuts in the fall; they picked wild berries and other fruits; they prospected for wild honey. There is no denying the fact that these activities contributed to the economy of farm households, but a further fact is that they were pleasures; they were wilderness pleasures, not greatly different from the pleasures pursued by conservationists and wilderness lovers. Most of the farmers I have known, and certainly the most interesting ones, have had the capacity to ramble about outdoors for the mere happiness of it, alert to the doings of the creatures, amused by the sight of a fox catching grasshoppers or by the puzzle of wild tracks in the snow.
As the countryside has been depopulated and the remaining farmers have come under greater stress, these wilderness pleasures have fallen away. But they have not yet been altogether abandoned; they represent something probably essential to the character of the best farming, and they should be remembered and revived.Those, then, are some reasons why good farmers are conservationists, and why all farmers ought to be.

What I have been trying to do is define a congruity or community of interest between farmers and conservationists who are not farmers. To name the interests that these two groups have in common, and to observe, as I did at the beginning, that they also have common enemies, is to raise a question that is becoming increasingly urgent: Why don't the two groups publicly and forcefully agree on the things they agree on, and make in good faith an effort to cooperate?
I don't mean to belittle their disagreements, which I acknowledge to be important. Nevertheless, cooperation is now necessary, and it is possible. If Kentucky tobacco farmers can meet with antismoking groups, draw up a set of "core principles" to which they all agree, and then support one another, then something of the sort could happen between conservationists and certain land-using enterprises: family farms and ranches; small-scale, locally owned forestry and forest-products industries; and perhaps others. Something of the sort, in fact, is beginning to happen, but so far the efforts are too small and too scattered. The larger organizations on both sides need to take an interest and get involved.
If these two sides, which need to cooperate, have so far been at odds, what is the problem? The problem, I think, is economic. The small land-users, on the one hand, are struggling so hard to survive in the money economy controlled by the corporations that they are distracted from their own economy's actual basis in nature. They also have not paid enough attention to the difference between their always-threatened local economies and the always-thriving corporate economy that is exploiting them.

On the other hand, the mostly urban conservationists, who mostly are ignorant of the economic adversities of, say, family-scale farming or ranching, have paid far too little attention to the connection between their economic life and the despoliation of nature. They have trouble seeing that the bad farming and forestry practices that they oppose are done on their behalf, and with their consent implied in the economic proxies they have given as consumers.
These clearly are serious problems. Both of them indicate that the industrial economy is not a true description of economic reality, and moreover that this economy has been wonderfully successful in getting its falsehoods believed. Too many land users and too many conservationists seem to have accepted the doctrine that the availability of goods is determined by the availability of cash, or credit, and by the market. In other words, they have accepted the idea always implicit in the arguments of the land-exploiting corporations: that there can be, and that there is, a safe disconnection between economy and ecology, between human domesticity and the wild world. Industrializing farmers have too-readily assumed that the nature of their land could safely be subordinated to the capability of their technology, and that conservation could safely be left to conservationists. Conservationists have too-readily assumed that the integrity of the natural world could be preserved mainly by preserving tracts of wilderness, and that the nature and nurture of the economic landscapes could safely be left to agribusiness, the timber industry, debt-ridden farmers and ranchers, and migrant laborers.

To me, it appears that these two sides are as divided as they are because each is clinging to its own version of a common economic error. How can this be corrected? I don't think it can, so long as each side remains closed up in its own conversation. I think the two sides need to enter into one conversation. They have got to talk to one another. Conservationists have got to know and deal competently with the methods and economics of land use. Land users have got to recognize the urgency, even the economic urgency, of the requirements of conservation.
Failing this, these two sides will simply concede an easy victory to their common enemy, the third side, the corporate totalitarianism that is now rapidly consolidating as the "global economy," and that will utterly dominate both the natural world and its human communities.

Wendell Berry, author of The Unsettling of America (Sierra Club Books, 1996), is a writer who farms in Henry County, Kentucky, where both his children and five grandchildren also farm.

This article can be found at www.sierraclub.org

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Natural Systems Agriculture
By Stephanie L. Graham

In an age of super-sized fast food and all-you-can-eat buffets, it's difficult to fathom widespread food shortages. But the agricultural industry is in trouble, Wes Jackson said, and the root problem is dirt.

"Soil is as much of a nonrenewable resource as oil, maybe in some respects, more non-renewable," he said. "In the long run, soil is more important than oil."
Jackson, a plant geneticist and co-founder of The Land Institute, a 278-acre research and education center in Salina, Kansas, described his vision for the future of agriculture at an event in October. His talk was sponsored by the HMC Center for Environmental Studies, an interdepartmental medium for creating and coordinating programs related to environmental studies.

Jackson, a MacArthur Fellow, winner of the 2000 Right Livelihood Award and author of numerous books on the reform of agriculture, spoke with students and other community members about the sacrifices the earth has endured for eight to ten thousand years.

"Wherever we have been on sloping land since the beginning of agriculture, our way of doing things has caused the erosion of ecological capital toward the sea," Jackson said. "On a global basis, about 38 percent of the soils of the planet are seriously degraded." This degradation has been caused by our use of annuals as farming mainstays. Every year the soil is planted and plowed for grass family members wheat, rice, corn, rye and barley, which, Jackson said, account for 70 percent of all human calories. Convenience dictates that they're planted as monocultures. But this has created two problems which largely define, as Jackson puts it, the Problem of Agriculture: soil erosion resulting from annual plowing and pests that a monoculture invites.

"The Problem of Agriculture is both a failure of history and prophecy and the failure of organizations," said Jackson. "Even on Amish and Mennonite farms-so-called stewards of the land-there is soil erosion beyond replacement. This is a failure of stewardship. Worst of all, perhaps, is the failure of success. We tend not to learn much it. We're producing more food now than we ever have. People wonder 'how can that be bad?'"

Jackson was born on a farm in Kansas in the 1930s, the decade in which American agriculture developed methods for adding ammonia directly to the soil as fertilizers. This development was enabled by the Haber-Bosch Process, which Jackson calls the "most important invention of the 20th century. Without it, 40 percent of humanity would not be here now." The process, which directly converts atmospheric nitrogen to soluble nitrogen compounds, has changed the way nitrogen fertilizers are produced and has increased the availability and use of fertilizers.
But the dependency on fossil fuels for agricultural input has increased the brittleness of agricultural economies, explained Jackson. "The incredible yields that we have are dependent upon an extracted economy, which means high yields offset the consequences of lost soil. We are taking fossil carbon to substitute for soil carbon, what one might consider the young, pulverized coal of the soil."

So, rather than continue to strip the soil into oblivion, we need to look to nature for a solution, since, "we've yet to build an agriculture that is as sustainable as the nature we destroy," said Jackson.

"The Land Institute explores the areas where agriculture has not penetrated nature's ecosystems (the native prairie, being one) to discover how nature readily and effortlessly manages nutrient recycling and runs on contemporary sunlight," said Jackson. "We asked, 'Can we mimic nature's solutions?' In nature there are perennial mixtures, not annuals in monoculture. The perennial roots hold the soil and the diversity of species presents a formidable chemical barrier to thwart insects or pathogens that might otherwise cause an epidemic."

The feasibility of Natural Systems Agriculture is predicated on four crucial questions:

1. Can perennialism and high seed yields go together without any trade-off costs to the plant?
2. Can a polyculture of perennials outyield a monoculture?
3. Can the system adequately manage insects, pathogens and weeds?
4. Can the system sponsor enough of its own nitrogen?

Scholarly papers published by scientists affiliated with The Land Institute have
answered the first three questions in the affirmative. There is indirect evidence in the affirmative for the fourth.

"We wanted to get at the question of whether perennialism and increased seed yield could go together at no trade off cost," said Jackson of the Institute's research. "The idea prevalent among biologists was that a plant either allocates its resources to the root or to the seed but can't do both. We said, it may not be absolute."

Jackson's daughter, Karen, a biology professor at the University of Northern Iowa, completed a five-year study showing that some perennials can achieve substantially higher yields without losing their strength. One of the subjects of the study was Tripsacum dactyloides, or eastern gama grass, whose mutant form produces twice the weight of seeds as its dominant variety with no negative side effects to the rest of the plant.

"With Tripsacum dactyloides a very important principle was established," said Jackson, who likened the experiment results to the Wright brothers' flight at Kitty Hawk. "We can now begin to think about perennializing the major crops at no trade off costs to the plant in terms of yield."
"Over the last 20 years (The Land Institute) has shown the possibility of melding the virtues of the prairie with the requirements of human food production to solve the Problem of Agriculture by early next century," said Jackson.

He believes that in addition to a greater monetary commitment on behalf of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, solutions to the Problem will require a partnership among the scientific disciplines.

"It is time to begin a new agricultural paradigm in which evolutionary ecology and biology inform natural systems agriculture," he said. "A combination of ecology and some biotechnology-given the tremendous computational power of our times-makes us optimistic that we can do it."

Jackson hopes to find more young researchers to work on mixes that mimic the prairie. It is these researchers, he said, who will live long enough to see fruits of their labor since making a transition to a more sustainable system could take 15 to 25 years.

"It's more than just about food," Jackson asserted. "The industrial model is essentially bankrupt."

This article on Wes Jackson appeared in the Spring 2002 issue of the Harvey Mudd College Bulletin, the college's alumni magazine. HMC is a coeducational institution of engineering, science, and mathematics that also places strong emphasis on humanities and the social sciences. HMC aims to graduate engineers and scientists sensitive to the impact of their work on society. Check it out: http://www.hmc.edu

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Organics opt for fresh food, farming
Community: Organization finds connection with the Earth “very satisfying.”

By Tina Page
Daily Forty-Niner
October 7th, 2002

Every bite of produce that is bought from the grocery store has changed hands six times since its original grower.
In the United States, 80 percent of the groundwater has been polluted by pesticides and chemical fertilizer, according to Amy Lerner, executive director of Long Beach Organic.
Lerner hammered out these statistics in order to demonstrate the need for an increase in personal organic farming and food consumption.
Charlie Moore founded Long Beach Organic in 1994. The organization’s first endeavor was to turn privately owned vacant lots into organic gardens.
Since that time LBO has grown to include three community gardens and a nursery. The organization is also currently working with teachers from various schools around Long Beach to implement more school gardens, according to the organization’s Web site.
“It is important for children to be aware of the living world around them,” Lerner said. “We have separated ourselves from the process of taking care of our own bodies. With the school gardens, kids get to actually take part in growing their own food and learning about the living world around them.”
The New City School on Pine Avenue garden boasts a 2,500 square foot lot where children learn gardening once a week.
Constellation Community Middle School, located on First Street and Elm Avenue, offers a garden elective to it students thanks to LBO’s efforts.
Those efforts are not only confined to schools. Three community gardens have been planted since the organization’s founding.
“Our Signal Hill garden used to be just 16 empty lots,” Lerner said. “It has been transformed into an organic garden where mostly Southeast Asian immigrant families have a place to be somewhat self-sustainable.”
Self-sustainability and a connection to the land is part of what LBO teaches.
The Web site stresses the importance of a connection to the food, water, air and natural environment that people are exposed to.
Some of the ecological benefits of creating gardens throughout Long Beach include flood control and water conservation, bioremediation of polluted lands, and reduction of solid waste to land fills.
LBO could not have been successful in reducing some of the pollution in Long Beach or in educating people about the benefits of chemical-free produce without the help of its member volunteers.
Mara Gendel, a recent graduate of Humboldt State and a native of Long Beach volunteers, at the downtown nursery once a week.
“I volunteer because I like getting my hands dirty,” Gendel said. “I learn a lot about myself and I learn even more about the Earth.”
Karen Thompson, another volunteer and Long Beach resident, said she feels strongly about LBO’s mission.
“The connection that one gets with their earth is vital,” Thompson said. “Growing your own food and actually witnessing the life cycle is very satisfying. This organization is vitally important for people in the community to be in control of their lives and their health.”
Lerner said she is willing to do workshops for interested schools, organizations and people on demand.
She asks for a small donation in exchange for providing information on organic gardening methods and implementation of these methods, as LBO is funded through donations.

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