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Filed: Country: Philippines
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Garden.jpg

By Lester Brown, Grist

In the United States, there has been a surge of interest in eating fresh local foods, corresponding with mounting concerns about the climate effects of consuming food from distant places and about the obesity and other health problems associated with junk food diets. This is reflected in the rise in urban gardening, school gardening, and farmers' markets.

With the fast-growing local foods movement, diets are becoming more locally shaped and more seasonal. In a typical supermarket in an industrial country today it is often difficult to tell what season it is because the store tries to make everything available on a year-round basis. As oil prices rise, this will become less common. In essence, a reduction in the use of oil to transport food over long distances—whether by plane, truck, or ship—will also localize the food economy.

This trend toward localization is reflected in the recent rise in the number of farms in the United States, which may be the reversal of a century-long trend of farm consolidation. Between the agricultural census of 2002 and that of 2007, the number of farms in the United States increased by 4 percent to roughly 2.2 million. The new farms were mostly small, many of them operated by women, whose numbers in farming jumped from 238,000 in 2002 to 306,000 in 2007, a rise of nearly 30 percent.

Many of the new farms cater to local markets. Some produce fresh fruits and vegetables exclusively for farmers' markets or for their own roadside stands. Others produce specialized products, such as the goat farms that produce milk, cheese, and meat or the farms that grow flowers or wood for fireplaces. Others specialize in organic food. The number of organic farms in the United States jumped from 12,000 in 2002 to 18,200 in 2007, increasing by half in five years.

Gardening was given a big boost in the spring of 2009 when U.S. First Lady Michelle Obama worked with children from a local school to dig up a piece of lawn by the White House to start a vegetable garden. There was a precedent. Eleanor Roosevelt planted a White House victory garden during World War II. Her initiative encouraged millions of victory gardens that eventually grew 40 percent of the nation's fresh produce.

Although it was much easier to expand home gardening during World War II, when the United States was largely a rural society, there is still a huge gardening potential—given that the grass lawns surrounding U.S. residences collectively cover some 18 million acres. Converting even a small share of this to fresh vegetables and fruit trees could make an important contribution to improving nutrition.

Many cities and small towns in the United States and England are creating community gardens that can be used by those who would otherwise not have access to land for gardening. Providing space for community gardens is seen by many local governments as an essential service, like providing playgrounds for children or tennis courts and other sport facilities.

Many market outlets are opening up for local produce. Perhaps the best known of these are the farmers' markets where local farmers bring their produce for sale. In the United States, the number of these markets increased from 1,755 in 1994 to more than 4,700 in mid-2009, nearly tripling over 15 years. Farmers' markets reestablish personal ties between producers and consumers that do not exist in the impersonal confines of the supermarket. Many farmers' markets also now take food stamps, giving low-income consumers access to fresh produce that they might not otherwise be able to afford. With so many trends now boosting interest in these markets, their numbers may grow even faster in the future.

In school gardens, children learn how food is produced, a skill often lacking in urban settings, and they may get their first taste of freshly picked peas or vine-ripened tomatoes. School gardens also provide fresh produce for school lunches. California, a leader in this area, has 6,000 school gardens.

Many schools and universities are now making a point of buying local food because it is fresher, tastier, and more nutritious and it fits into new campus greening programs. Some universities compost kitchen and cafeteria food waste and make the compost available to the farmers who supply them with fresh produce.

Supermarkets are increasingly contracting with local farmers during the season when locally grown produce is available. Upscale restaurants emphasize locally grown food on their menus. In some cases, year-round food markets are evolving that market just locally produced foods, including not only fruit and vegetables but also meat, milk, cheese, eggs, and other farm products.

Food from more distant locations boosts carbon emissions while losing flavor and nutrition. A survey of food consumed in Iowa showed conventional produce traveled on average 1,500 miles, not including food imported from other countries. In contrast, locally grown produce traveled on average 56 miles—a huge difference in fuel investment. And a study in Ontario, Canada, found that 58 imported foods traveled an average of 2,800 miles. Simply put, consumers are worried about food security in a long-distance food economy. This trend has led to a new term: locavore, complementing the better known terms herbivore, carnivore, and omnivore.

Concerns about the climate effects of consuming food transported from distant locations has also led Tesco, the leading U.K. supermarket chain, to label products with their carbon footprint—indicating the greenhouse gas contribution of food items from the farm to supermarket shelf. Sweden is a recent pioneer in labeling food with its carbon footprint along with nutritional facts.

As agriculture localizes, livestock production will likely start to shift away from mega-sized cattle, hog, and poultry feeding operations. The shift from factory farm production of milk, meat, and eggs by returning to mixed crop-livestock operations facilitates nutrient recycling as local farmers return livestock manure to the land. The combination of high prices of natural gas, which is used to make nitrogen fertilizer, and of phosphate, as reserves are depleted, suggests a much greater future emphasis on nutrient recycling—an area where small farmers producing for local markets have a distinct advantage over massive feeding operations.

In combination with moving down the food chain to eat fewer livestock products, reducing the food miles in our diets can dramatically reduce energy use in the food economy. And as world food insecurity mounts, more and more people will be looking to produce some of their own food in backyards, in front yards, on rooftops, in community gardens, and elsewhere, further contributing to the localization of agriculture.

http://www.grist.org/article/the-localizat...of-agriculture/

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: China
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Posted

People are too lazy to grow their own food. Economics of scale (large farms ) cannot be beaten.. As the present administration wants to drive us out of the coal and oil business be prepared to spend a lot more of your income on food. As the dollar crashes and burns countries overseas can buy our farm produce (beef,chickens,pork,corn, wheat ,soybeans )on the cheap. This means less in the terms of acreage and bushels of grain that will be used by this country for food. Community gardens rarely work because people won't work. When it is a 90 degree day these people will refuse to be working pulling weeds. It is troll the mall time. How many people would take the time to can food. I read a blog about a food pantry. They advised no dried beans. They have shelves full of them and no one knows how to prepare them to be edible. Sad.

If more citizens were armed, criminals would think twice about attacking them, Detroit Police Chief James Craig

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The liberal elite ... know that the people simply cannot be trusted; that they are incapable of just and fair self-government; that left to their own devices, their society will be racist, sexist, homophobic, and inequitable -- and the liberal elite know how to fix things. They are going to help us live the good and just life, even if they have to lie to us and force us to do it. And they detest those who stand in their way."
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Democrats>Socialists>Communists - Same goals, different speeds.

#DeplorableLivesMatter

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Russia
Timeline
Posted
People are too lazy to grow their own food. Economics of scale (large farms ) cannot be beaten.. As the present administration wants to drive us out of the coal and oil business be prepared to spend a lot more of your income on food. As the dollar crashes and burns countries overseas can buy our farm produce (beef,chickens,pork,corn, wheat ,soybeans )on the cheap. This means less in the terms of acreage and bushels of grain that will be used by this country for food. Community gardens rarely work because people won't work. When it is a 90 degree day these people will refuse to be working pulling weeds. It is troll the mall time. How many people would take the time to can food. I read a blog about a food pantry. They advised no dried beans. They have shelves full of them and no one knows how to prepare them to be edible. Sad.

I can, have a garden, and know how to prepare dried beans. I guess I will be in demand when the economy crashes.

Posted
People are too lazy to grow their own food. Economics of scale (large farms ) cannot be beaten.. As the present administration wants to drive us out of the coal and oil business be prepared to spend a lot more of your income on food. As the dollar crashes and burns countries overseas can buy our farm produce (beef,chickens,pork,corn, wheat ,soybeans )on the cheap. This means less in the terms of acreage and bushels of grain that will be used by this country for food. Community gardens rarely work because people won't work. When it is a 90 degree day these people will refuse to be working pulling weeds. It is troll the mall time. How many people would take the time to can food. I read a blog about a food pantry. They advised no dried beans. They have shelves full of them and no one knows how to prepare them to be edible. Sad.

As it is, anything corn based, which includes half the products in the supermarket is already subsidized. We put corn into just about everything as we can produce it in large quantities and for very low prices.

Meat products are also less efficient in terms of land area that it takes to produce. it takes 10 pounds of grains to produce just a single point of meet.

keTiiDCjGVo

 

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