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THE Farmer's Market Thread (merged)

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby perdition79 » Sat 17 Jun 2006, 22:07:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Vexed', 'T')his recent article claims that most of what we get out of the ground these days is radically different than what we got out of the ground even 50 years ago.

It argues that fertilizers and modern farming practices have leeched the earth's soils of vast amount of nutrients in a very short period of time.

Fruits, vegetables not as nutritious as 50 years ago
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he declines ranged from 6 percent for protein, 15 percent for iron, 20 percent for vitamin C, and 38 percent for riboflavin.


I'm no expert, so I can only wonder: If our fruits and vegetables aren't absorbing nutrients like they used to, what exactly is it that they are absorbing?

And is farmers market produce any more nutritious?


Who needs nutritious fruits and vegetables when you've got multivitamins and enriched bread? :lol:

I guess the only saving grace of produce now is the flavor.

My local free weekly paper did a feature on locally grown produce. I shop at the farmer's market because the food tastes better than it does at the supermarket. I don't know about the nutritional value of their produce, but I can find out; does anyone have a spectrometer I can borrow?
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby JoeCoal » Sat 17 Jun 2006, 22:52:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Vexed', '[')url=http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/health/261163_veggie01.html]Fruits, vegetables not as nutritious as 50 years ago[/url]
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he declines ranged from 6 percent for protein, 15 percent for iron, 20 percent for vitamin C, and 38 percent for riboflavin.


I'll file this under Schopenhauer's Self-Evident Truth...
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby pea-jay » Sat 17 Jun 2006, 23:16:46

Along similar lines, I read that increasing CO2 concentrations also increases plant growth speed, at the expense of nutrient value. Stuff apparently grows faster, but not better. In a global warmed future we may have to eat more food because each bite is nutritionally thinner than today.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby RG73 » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 03:23:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pea-jay', 'A')long similar lines, I read that increasing CO2 concentrations also increases plant growth speed, at the expense of nutrient value. Stuff apparently grows faster, but not better. In a global warmed future we may have to eat more food because each bite is nutritionally thinner than today.


This is really among the least of our problems. This particular problem can be handled with appropriate varieties of plants (using old-school, old-fashioned horticultural techniques, not genetic modification).

I'd be more concerned about having the soil and water to grow anything, rather than the speed of growth.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby pea-jay » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 03:58:56

I am less concerned about soil fertility. Why? Because soil depletion is an industrialized farming problem and not from farming itself. There are well documented, time tested approaches to growing crops with zero artificial fertilizer inputs. These approaches seek to loop plant and animal matter, nutrients and energy in as a closed loop as possible. Instead of a linear approach, you have a circular pattern where the "waste" of one step is the "fuel" for the next. All we do is carefully manipulate the flows at just the right time.

This is not your Monsanto's farm. It is not scalable, does not mass produce and not easily reproduced (it takes skill and practice). However it is eminently sustainable and given the diverse amount of produce and animal products it could yield, it probably would be much more useful for localized agriculture.

The solution to agriculture IS out there. Unfortunately for most of us, it is a labor intensive, high skill production that we are apparently not ready to implement on a large scale.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby foodnotlawns » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 04:18:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pea-jay', 'I') am less concerned about soil fertility. Why? Because soil depletion is an industrialized farming problem and not from farming itself. There are well documented, time tested approaches to growing crops with zero artificial fertilizer inputs. These approaches seek to loop plant and animal matter, nutrients and energy in as a closed loop as possible. Instead of a linear approach, you have a circular pattern where the "waste" of one step is the "fuel" for the next. All we do is carefully manipulate the flows at just the right time.

This is not your Monsanto's farm. It is not scalable, does not mass produce and not easily reproduced (it takes skill and practice). However it is eminently sustainable and given the diverse amount of produce and animal products it could yield, it probably would be much more useful for localized agriculture.

The solution to agriculture IS out there. Unfortunately for most of us, it is a labor intensive, high skill production that we are apparently not ready to implement on a large scale.


What kills me is that no one is even trying. I try to convince every landowner I meet, whether they have multiple acres or a postage stamp, to convert thier lawns and fields to local food production.

I believe that as of this year, I am self sufficient with food. We have enough in the ground to live through the year, assuming no one raids and kills us, or the gov't doesn't simply expropriate our harvest. I have 150 pounds of potatoes growing, and Jerusalem artichokes going like gangbusters, and very healthy onions and garlic, and a quarter acre under cucurbit production (cukes, squash, watermelon). I have 10 fruit trees, many of which are producing for the first time this year, and berry bushes loaded with berries.

Out back I have a 3000 square feet pen with chickens and rabbits. I will make a second pen and rotate animals/gardens between the two pens.

I don't use a rototiller or tractor, but I do hoard horse manure with my Ford Ranger. I get about 4 loads a week. Horse manure just by itself makes pretty decent soil. I don't double dig any more, no time, just dump horse manure level it to about a 6 inch pile. The worms do the rest for me, and whenever it rains, I see tons of worms.

I think my property has attracted and sustains more wildlife now. I see exotic colored birds -- orange birds, yellow birds, red birds and such. There's a fox that visits in the mornings because of my chickens and rabbits, though they haven't got one yet, and my dog chases him or her when it visits. When I see the fox, I don't rouse my dog, but rather I watch the fox. It trots through the yard, goes behind the chicken pen and just into the woods so it can watch the pen from a hiding place. Very clever!

One morning I said to the wife, "Look at the fox" and pointed out the window. She looked, but what was funny was my dog. The dog seemed to understand too! My collie jumped up on the windowsill with her front paws and started barking, then ran to the door to be let out. She tried chasing the fox, but it was long gone as soon as it heard barking.

I know hobby farmers around here and when I tell them about Peak Oil they light up. Just about every hobby farmer I know is a Doomer, and yes, they want it to happen. They are sick of being marginalized nobodies who have to have a shitty "day job," when they know deep down that their farming is perfectly useful and justifiable as a career. So many of them are embittered by modern life, and yearn for global doom.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby SoothSayer » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 06:59:25

I know hobby farmers around here and when I tell them about Peak Oil they light up. Just about every hobby farmer I know is a Doomer, and yes, they want it to happen. They are sick of being marginalized nobodies who have to have a shitty "day job," when they know deep down that their farming is perfectly useful and justifiable as a career. So many of them are embittered by modern life, and yearn for global doom.

Spot on!

However I think that hobby farmers could be disappointed initially: they will have their crops stolen by townies. Their nice neighbours will also steal food, either directly or through begging:
Knock, knock. "Hello. I'm from across the road. As the supermarkets have closed down, I wonder if we could borrow some vegetables - the children need to eat. We'll pay you back as soon as the system gets fixed."

Later on the hobby farmers will either be forced to work for "bosses" ... maybe as "slaves" ... or more likely as respected "village farm managers".

The Powerpoint and Excel experts will have no value to the community - they will be working in the fields for the now respected hobby farmer.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby foodnotlawns » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 07:58:09

<quote>However I think that hobby farmers could be disappointed initially: they will have their crops stolen by townies. Their nice neighbours will also steal food, either directly or through begging:
Knock, knock. "Hello. I'm from across the road. As the supermarkets have closed down, I wonder if we could borrow some vegetables - the children need to eat. We'll pay you back as soon as the system gets fixed."</quote>

Heck, telling the neighbors to screw off will be the best part! javascript:emoticon(':twisted:')

I warned them myself. A couple years ago I was knocking doors and handing out flyers "do a garden, or else" and they laughed at me.

An early Church father, Tertullian, told his flock to look forward to Heaven when all the good Christians would be watching from Heaven all the Roman pagans burning in Hell.

I'm not a Christian, but note the analogy. We have a real chance of seeing that now, and we don't even have to die. We can watch arrogant SUV driving McMansion corporate assholes starving in the streets, and hopefully tossing themselves out of high rises on Wall Street like they did in 1929.

That'll make it all worth it, even if my farm does get over-run and we get murdered in a raid. And if we are raided, I promise to put up stiff resistance. I already have a fighting positions built in the swamp out back with overlapping fields of fire (note to any gov't people who may be reading this: I am in total compliance with all laws, especially all laws regarding ownership of firearms).

I have read accounts of farmers in Rhodesia and South Africa who were well armed and got raided by 70 people at once, and eventually the raiders did win. But at least I'll die in a way that honors my ancestors.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby mekrob » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 09:54:22

Why don't you try expanding your area so you can have more people living or working with you (such as fellow PO'ers)? And build some defenses (fences, ditches, creeks, [vicious] dogs, etc) so that if and when you get raided, your 'PO community' can survive. You say that other hobby farmers are with you, they would probably love to help another one out. You should probably work on communications whenever TSHTF so that you can act as your own local defenses depending on how close you guys are to each other. With proper defenses and tactics, you can easily have a 10-1 advantage, depending on your weapons and theirs if they have any.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby SoothSayer » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 10:15:15

I warned them myself. A couple years ago I was knocking doors and handing out flyers "do a garden, or else" and they laughed at me.

They'll be around your house when the SHTF.

They'll have some "valid" reason why they haven't prepared and why you really are obliged to help them out.

It will get tricky if one of them has a cop or local senior civil servant in their family and brings them over at the same time to add "official" support. They'll spout some guff about "Emergency Powers Regulations" etc as they take away half your food and maybe other things they take a fancy to.

A slow decline will allow this sort of semi-official thievery to happen. Only an overnight total disaster would really allow you to seal off your home from outsiders.

I think that many/most of the prepared will lose most of their supplies to "official" authorities and to "desparate" neighbours.

Even the most agressive Doomer is not going to open fire on people if there is the remotest chance of ending up in a court charged with murder.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby pea-jay » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 11:13:45

I guess to hope for the best in this discussion is to have (1) a general sense of recognition that the old system is indeed, doomed and (2) have that happen early enough we can still utilize our still ample energy supplies to effectively transition.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby thuja » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 11:38:34

Foodnotlawns,

As much as I appreciate your efforts and encourage people to do backyard (and front yard) food gardening as much as possible, I also know that household food production is reserved only for homeowners (middle and upper classes) and that many people in this society are forced into working long hour day jobs which leaves them little time to farm.

Intensive backyard food production becomes a class issue. The upper class don't need to, much of the middle class don't have the time, and the working class often don't own their residence.

The same goes for buying local...its an economic issue. Local costs more than buying Top Ramen at Safeway. Buying and cooking bulk beets and kale (as much as I love that) costs more thatn buying a 1 $ burger from Wendy's.

So when you preach, think about class dynamics. I would guess that you have certain financial priveleges that allow you to spend a great deal of time intensively cultivating your land. Most people do not.

The problem of class dynamics and food will only get exacerbated in the years to come as Peak Oil becomes Decline Oil. There will be competition for food supplies, making all food more expensive. Peak Oil observers should think about how the poorest amongst them will get fed in years to come. When there's no food on the table, things can get weird fast---burglary, home invasions, car jackings, bike jackings, murder, riots, etc. These will all increase.

Its not just a matter of buy local- its a matter of developing a local food infrastructure that can adequately feed all local citizens- at a price they can afford.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby SoothSayer » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 12:01:12


Its not just a matter of buy local- its a matter of developing a local food infrastructure that can adequately feed all local citizens- at a price they can afford.

Hah!

We'll simply end up with a mirror image of the big world.

The local government, police and bosses will get the choice food for zero work.

The middle classes will get the boring stuff in return for a lot of hard work.

The poor will get the scraps and will have to slave in the fields.
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Re: Food movement encourages buying local

Unread postby thuja » Sun 18 Jun 2006, 13:20:30

Hey I'm just as much of a doomer as you Soothsayer- and I agree that's probably the most likely outcome. However, I think we should be working towards adequate food distribution in our local communities, not just out of altruism, but out of self-protection. Unless you live in a locked guarded palace with decades of food supplies, you can't divide yourself for those who will become unemployed and will need assistance.

Federal plans such as food stamps and welfare may fall apart and local communities need to develop ways for helping the destitute and the newly destitute.

The New Deal was developed in the 30's in part out of fear that the poor would rise up and overthrow the government. Unions, socialist and communist organizations sprung up as a way to combat the huge disparities in wealth that developed out of the Great Depression.

It is highly doubtful that the federal government will be able to institute anything as massive and broad-reaching as the New Deal to mitigate the economic effects of the post-peak Decline.

Therefore, local communities need to come up with individualized plans to deal with the impending disaster. First and foremost, this means finding a way to shelter and feed those who are hit the first and hardest by the crisis.

Yes I agree that this may be unlikely and we may just fall into a Russian style grab and horde corrupt model in many different locales. However, I think there is potential for some communities to respond more proactively and less corruptly.

If as a Peak Oiler, though, you think you can escape the chaos by grabbing and hording, I think you are mistaken. Either we all float or we all sink.
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a step towards re-localizing food....

Unread postby gt1370a » Sat 26 Jul 2008, 16:01:39

I found this really interesting - it is now in vogue to hire someone to grow an organic garden in your yard. A number of people on this board have talked about this as a possible post-peak career, and I think this is evidence that they should seriously pursue it. Not just the gardening itself, but also training other people to be employees for your gardening company.

This is also an encouraging step towards re-localizing food production, as Kunstler, Simmons, and others have stressed for some time now. However, it may also be evidence of a returning trend to sharecropping or something similar, where the rich own plantations and the recently unemployed mortgage brokers and real estate agents go out and get their hands dirty.

Who would have imagined reading something like this on a Yahoo finance headline even just a year ago?
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Re: a step towards re-localizing food....

Unread postby Novus » Sat 26 Jul 2008, 16:09:30

Sounds rather Orewellian to me.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')The highest form of luxury is now growing it yourself or paying other people to grow it for you,"


Eat like a peasant but it is called luxury.
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Re: a step towards re-localizing food....

Unread postby dinopello » Sat 26 Jul 2008, 16:46:58

Ha, I saw one of those around here. It had a little sign that mentioned the grower. The plants looked in good shape. It's better than paying some landscape company to grow non-natives for aesthetics. Maybe the people hiring will learn something and it helps start and keep a group of people with organic gardening skills around and that can't be bad.

I was at a party last week where I met a kid who had graduated from Sterling College in Vermont . This seems like it would be a good job opportunity for someone like him.
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Re: a step towards re-localizing food....

Unread postby WildRose » Sat 26 Jul 2008, 17:35:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dinopello', '
')I was at a party last week where I met a kid who had graduated from Sterling College in Vermont . This seems like it would be a good job opportunity for someone like him.


If I could find a college like that one in Alberta, I'd sign up for a few courses.
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Re: a step towards re-localizing food....

Unread postby Ludi » Sat 26 Jul 2008, 19:34:04

I don't see how it is more orwellian than a lawncare service...

step in the right direction = orwellian? 8O

I'm not good at reading darkness and despair into everything, I guess....
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Re: a step towards re-localizing food....

Unread postby pedalling_faster » Sat 26 Jul 2008, 20:46:22

this sounds a lot like being a gardener. with a marketing twist, "have your own CSA in your own backyard - no muss, no fuss !"

but this guy is marketing gardening in SF, to a clientele that can afford to pay $888K for a small house.

i like to see people use the term re-localizing. Silicon Valley had local manufacturing in the '70's & '80's, and there were even apricot orchards around then. local manufacturing & local food production !
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