Growing Food is Power

Food sustainability in an urban world.

Leavin’ Austin…. February 23, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — urbangrower @ 5:05 am

We are leaving in ONE WEEK!  It’s finally come.  We are FINALLY doing a farm internship, where we will live in a converted barn and grow food on a real, working CSA farm!

Work doesn’t actually start until April 1st, so we’re taking a while driving up to the woods of Southen Wisconsin.  It’s going to be a sort of road trip!  A very cold road trip, though.  Ah well.  We’ve had our 70 degree weather….now we’re ready for more arctic conditions.  Or so we tell ourselves.

Right now our apartment is a major disaster zone from collecting things to sell and packing boxes upon boxes of books and clothes.  And homemade beer.  Packing time!

 

I am voting for Obama, FYI. February 16, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — urbangrower @ 10:12 pm

And not Hillary.  And since this is a food-activisty blog, I’ll talk about it relating to food.

First of all, Hillary is pretty much owned by corporations.  Corporations are pretty much machines, which makes Hillary a robot.  One of the biggest sponsors funneling money into the Clinton robotic system is Rural Americans for Clinton, care of Monsanto.  Corporations giving Hillary money are also very much for NAIS, which, if you are familiar with my second to last post, is fascism at its finest.

Obama is not corporate-owned.  And I feel more of a reasonable person in general.  Like, if he’s on the fence about NAIS when the time comes, I feel like he’s someone I can sit down and talk to about it.  What can I say, he’s likeable!

 

Happy New Year! December 31, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — urbangrower @ 3:39 am

peace23.jpgI am sick and slightly dazed. These are the days where I sort of wish I vetoed that whole I’ll-never-own-a-TV-again thing. There’s only so many choppy youtube videos I can watch before I lose my mind. I have apparently not only a real fever, but cabin fever as well. Maybe that’s why I went all drooly over this image I found…but I don’t care, it’s PREEETTY!

 

NAIS: pure, unadulterated evil. December 21, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — urbangrower @ 4:21 am
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If you have any time at all, please read this article.   It’s just a big fat reminder that the people in power have no idea what they’re doing and are completely out of touch with the way the world works.

Or they just really don’t care.

The NAIS is basically an microchip animal identification system, and among many other horrors it’s going to provide, it’s going to be murder on the small farmer. Perhaps the most unsettling thing about it is that it’s proposed as a tool of protection for the people, which is a complete lie. It’s actually all about money. Of course.

I’ve been hearing about the proposed NAIS plan for a while, but, silly me, I thought to myself, that’ll never happen! Pff, that’ll never fly! But the proverbial radio-chipped chicken has flown the coop in some states already, folks.

And this isn’t me just being some radical leftist, either: the public outcry of disgust blurs both the left and right wings together. Because the NAIS basically says that the government owns you. You have no freedom with this. You have no rights.

NAIS is facism, pure and simple.  It defines facism.  We can not let this happen.  It has to stop in its tracks!

Visit here for information and ways to take action!

 

I am back from Goddess Camp. September 5, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — urbangrower @ 7:03 pm

By Goddess Camp, I really mean Herb Pharm’s apprenticeship program, a program I would only semi-recommend to people.  The classes were great, which is the only real praise I can say. 

And I mean no disrespect by calling it Goddess Camp–hey, I like paganism and find myself aligned with many of its ways of thinking!  Days of work would begin with a chant or song of some sort, usually thanking mother sun or father sky while holding hands in a circle.  And our lectures (by renowned health professionals, I’ll have you know) would be peppered with anecdotal stories about faeries.  Like, faeries like to do this, but don’t do this, you’ll upset the faeries. 

Which, let me say, I am fine with.  Sometimes I feel a little jealous, even–I mean, I’ve been dabbling in herbalism for years and I’VE never seen a faery!  But there are many things in this world I haven’t seen concrete evidence of and still believe in.  I can believe there are faeries in some sense or another living under an elderberry bush or something, sure.   

My only bone to pick with pagan ideology is that it takes itself so damn seriously.  Like, that mother sun/father sky song.  It was worthy of being made fun of, really, at least a little.  At least exchanging a few knowing glances, ones that say, “this is sort of funny, isn’t it?”.  But no.  Nope.  Instead, we just sang in these super-serious voices with these deadpan faces!  You know, the super-serious pagan way! 

I guess one can argue that religion is serious.  Period.  But I don’t think that’s really a great idea all of the time, and I’m sorry, but especially when you’re pagan!  Because when you’re pagan….things are just.  Sillier!  And I think it might be more beneficial for a little humor to be incorporated.  But maybe I’m way off base and that’s a totally offense thing to say to a pagan.  See, I didn’t find out, because I didn’t want to ask one of the humorless pagans in fear that their super-serious pagan face would become even more serious and would explode because it was overloaded with seriousness. 

And I know what some of you are thinking.  Isn’t she the one who’s planning an Enchanted Forest-themed wedding, complete with faery wings and everything?  Yes.  I am.  But see, I know it’s silly and that our wedding is going to be sort of weird.  Believe me, there aren’t deadpan faces involved in this planning. 

 

Just when I think it’s going too slow, the local food movement becomes more mainstream. March 17, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — urbangrower @ 4:16 pm

Even TIME has caught on, a cover exclaiming “Forget Organic, Buy Local”.

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1595245,00.html

 

When Veganism is Counter-Productive March 11, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — urbangrower @ 6:29 am

Now, I am all about going vegan if that’s your thing.  Heck, I WAS a semi-vegan for a very short time, before a block of cheese came and pulled me out of the animal product-free cave.  But lately, especially that I’ve been reading and thinking so much about what this world needs, food justice-wise, some vegans are beginning to irk me.  That said, I think going vegan can be very effective in terms of helping with environmental and world hunger issues.  But when veganism and its righteous opinions go sour, it can truly be more harmful than anything else, such as a disturbing piece I read in Herbivore Magazine.  Luckily, the vegetarian mag didn’t disgust me entirely, since neighboring the disturbing piece was a critical article about the overtly sexist and tired PETA ad campaign, which I thought was a fairly good critique.  (Seriously, is a fourteen-year-old boy in charge of their ad department?) 

The disturbing piece–at least, to me, as a person trying to be the best sustainable food activist I can be–was an “open letter to Whole Foods”.  Open meaning an angry letter.  Now, Whole Foods deserves angry letters.  That much is for sure.  But for reasons least of all for the one written and printed in Herbivore Magazine.  In it, the writer talks about her disgust of walking past the meat section, glancing in the stretch of glass casing several types of meats, and seeing, besides pink and red abstract blobs of beef and chicken, a seemingly skinless rabbit, body intact.  That is, in the shape of an actual rabbit instead of a semi-rectangle or something.  It might have even had eyes still.

Ok, fine, I know, vegans, this might seem sort of disgusting to see.  Especially if you think killing animals is wrong.  But wouldn’t a vegan think this is actually good for a meat eater to see?  As more and more shoppers are practically starting to believe that potatoes grow in a produce aisle in Albertson’s, and that chicken is nothing more than slab of pink wrapped in plastic, it’s plain to see that our connection to food is deteriorating.  A person eating a rabbit should know they’re eating a damn rabbit.  See those bunnies hopping under your fence in your yard?  Well, recognize it and see it in the shape of the dinner you’re buying.  Be aware!  A seemingly more rational vegan response should be one of progress:  if it disturbs people to eat rabbit that looks like a rabbit, maybe they wouldn’t do it.  Connection and knowing what food you’re eating is the first step of many in food sustainability. 

A better letter would be how the “organic chicken meat”, also behind the glass, is hardly organic by any eater’s standard.  The pink blobs are made from chickens in crowded factories that are swamped with disease and reek of ammonia; they’re “organic” by letting them eat certified organic grains.  Lucky them.  And lucky us too:  I mean, yum, ya know?  But seriously, vegan activists, I’m down with not eating meat, but the fact is, there will always be meat eaters.  And shouldn’t we concentrate on alleviating the suffering of animals and the well-being of the enviroment by creating sustainable and healthy conditions for them, pre-butchering?

 

Planting Seeds and Praising the Lord–(i.e., my experience at the World Hunger Relief Farm thus far..) February 25, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — urbangrower @ 1:15 am

So, this is my first entry.  Welcome, welcome to my blog.  My first entry will be short and sweet.  My name is Alison.  I am embarking on a sort of organic farm odyssey, if you will.  Right now I live in Waco, TX, where I am a live-in volunteer at the World Hunger Relief Farm, a Christian organization whose mission is to learn sustainable agriculture methods and teach them to poverty-stricken areas.  I live in an old, gusty converted barn with a composting toilet and cake-eating rats that come out at night.  Ah, it’s paradise.  Just kidding, but I actually do like it.  It’s not exactly worthy of a spread in Wallpaper Magazine, I know, but I got used to showering with  multiple roaches in Nicaragua every morning, for pete’s sake.  Hearing the pitter-patter of tiny rat feet is alright as long as it stays in the kitchen.

My plan is to stay here for two months.  Pictures of the farm–dusty road, baby goats and top-heavy kale plants galore–are coming soon.