Sunday, December 28, 2008

Workday at The Learning Garden

Hello everybody, here on the coast the weather is a little to wet to garden ,but that did'd stop us this last friday at the Learning Garden, we clean the tomatoes beds from this past season in the Hoop House and we prepared the beds with compost and some nutrients to get them ready for the lettuce.
We are having some issues with the birds but Susan work on it by covering the holes around the Hoop House, we see if that work I believe it will.
Happy New Year, and enjoy this rain that is giving to all of us.
Much Love Veronica

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Scenario 2020: The Future of Food in Mendocino County

I was asked to give a presentation to a group called Leadership Mendocino. Every year about 30 people in our County, usually from a mix of businesses, government agencies, and non-profits, meet monthly for a full day and intensively study a particular topic. Nov. 14th 2008 was their Ag day, and my presentation followed the Ag Commissioner’s, who reviewed the County’s history and present. I didn’t want to talk about the future as if I knew what was going to happen, but I did want to highlight the vulnerabilities and tensions I saw building and suggest some alternatives to our predicament. Hence I created a storyline in which I was now the County Historian in 2020 giving a talk to the group about the past decade of change.

While the details are specific to where I live, the general lessons apply to the whole world.

An video of my presentation is available here.

Click on any image to see a higher resolution version


For Mendocino County the key date was December 12, 2009. The trucks didn’t show up that day.
Why weren’t the trucks running? I’ll give a quick overview of what led up to the Little Death.

Let’s start with the credit market break down in 2008. What followed was a plunge in the volume and reliability of global trade. Without access to the free flow of credit, countries experienced food and fuel shortages. People began rioting.



We saw how developing countries were in profound crisis, but most of us didn’t imagine how those awful scenes would so quickly be in our own neighborhoods too.

Everyone knows the story…Pakistan devolved into anarchy and was unable to keep all of its nuclear weapons secure. Several went missing and the world didn't find out where they went until it was too late.

South-Central Asia and the Middle East were on fire.

The nuclear exchange was contained within the region, but the effects spread globally. The world’s largest oil production facilities and ports were destroyed or inaccessible. The daily flow of supertankers from the Middle East was over.



It was common knowledge at the time that crude oil was the lifeblood of our economy, but little had yet been done to reduce our dependency on oil. The modern world was suddenly without sufficient transportation fuels and totally unprepared.

The specific numbers are staggering. Only a quarter of U.S. crude oil consumption was domestically produced in 2009. The trucking system was the key part of what was called the Just in Time delivery system. Warehousing and stockpiling were no longer practiced significantly and so no buffer existed when the trucks stopped. Our Just in Time system unraveled over a period of several weeks.

J-I-T now stood for "Just Isn't There."

As the flow of goods and services slowed dramatically and then in some cases stopped moving altogether, we were subject to cascading, compounding failures in key sectors of the economy. Just a couple of examples…Without constant truck movement, spare parts and basic supplies ran short. Electricity production relied on coal, which relied on diesel.

Most dire of all was that within three days of the halt to trucking, the grocery stores were out of food.

Looking back at historical records it is clear that, while shocking, this was no surprise. Community-based organizations had been warning of this exact possibility for years.



Nowadays we have buffers and resiliency built into our systems, but that was not the case in 2009. Government hadn’t prepared, having placed its faith in the market to provide for basic goods such as food and energy. Global food stockpiles had been declining for over a decade, and in any case they were not under any government control.

Although some people had stockpiled food and essentials, most people hadn't because either they never thought this could happen or were simply distracted. It might be good to remind everyone what life was like in 2009. Most of us tended to spend our free time in front of the television or interacting with various media and communication devices. Gardening, food preservation, community meals and stuff like that wasn’t cool and exciting for the majority of people, although interest in food security had been increasing for a few years preceding the crisis.

After a week everybody became scared, and most started to feel hungry. This was so unthinkable that many also became profoundly disillusioned and angry. This was not supposed to be happening to “us.” The Five Stages of Grief were on full display.



Events began to run their natural course.

Scared, hungry people saw that some households still had food. This led to looting in some areas. A handful of police and sheriffs couldn’t protect private property from a desperate populace. In other areas looting was averted (barely) as neighbors and authorities agreed to pool private food holdings and distribute them evenly.

As the crisis deepened, a triage system was established. Food was preferentially given to those who could work, and the young.

All sorts of questions that had been ignored for decades became very important. “What about the local farms,” the people asked. “Can they feed us?”



“It’s the middle of winter,” the farmer’s replied. “We can plant potatoes and grains in the spring but they won’t be ready until summer.”

“And where are the seeds going to come from? We are hay farmers, cattle ranchers and grape growers. We don’t even have the right equipment for this.”



Three months passed without relief. Clearly, household preparation wasn’t enough, and now the population was starving.

Other problems arose too. Electricity was spotty. Every bit of gasoline and diesel were needed in generators to keep pumps for water and sewer systems going, to keep the hospitals powered, and to cook food in community kitchens.

But by spring these supplies, commandeered from the tanks of gas stations, were gone.

FEMA didn’t arrive with supplies of food, fuel and medicines in the major valleys until March 2010. These were barely enough to end starvation and give tractors some fuel.

When the railroad cars arrived in May 2010 we finally had enough of the basics again. Freeways were abandoned for hauling freight. They were in disrepair from winter storms and far too expensive to maintain for the now minimal trucking system.



In addition to supplies of grain and beans (25,000 lbs per trailer load), enough seed potatoes were brought in to plant. Potatoes became our survival food for a few years. As we all know, it is hard to eat enough of them to keep the weight on! Health care providers estimate that the average person lost twenty pounds between 2009 and 2012.



Here’s another graphic from the archives. Food security organizations in the County knew that storage foods with high caloric density were essential, and had even started to import and store them in the County. The grain and bean silos established in Willits in 2009 really helped that area weather the crisis better than elsewhere. Silos were quickly built along the railroad tracks in every town.



All of us began to learn some of the basic facts about nutrition and agriculture, such as how many calories we need per day and how to eke that out of the soil.

Even with farm supplies brought in by rail car, we lacked much of the needed energy infrastructure to irrigate crops as electricity was still unreliable. Few well pumps ran off solar panels. So in most cases, yields weren’t as large as we’d hoped. It was terribly frustrating; we could see the water 30 ft down in the well but couldn’t get it out fast enough to make a difference.

Ever since the Little Death, precious tractor fuel has been limited. Much more is now done with manual labor than in the past. This was a difficult adjustment, both physically and psychologically. Some people were excited by the challenge and adapted well. On the bright side, “unemployment” is nearly non-existent and we are a fit and industrious people.



Explicit warnings of our vulnerabilities, and an alternative vision had been given by local community groups as early 2004. In August 2010, a plan for a local food economy was adopted by local governments based on the research of community activists that preceded the crisis. The food system we have today is by and large based on those plans.



The ranching community was familiar with the concept of carrying capacity, but usually called it the “stocking rate.” Good ranchers made sure not to put more cattle on a piece of land than it could handle. A local food system plan had to think about the sustainable population of humans in the County too.



Some basic facts that were used to frame the plan:
1. The County’s population in 2010 was estimated at 80,000 (down from a peak of 90,000 before the crisis).
2. Somewhere between 35,000 and 50,000 acres of prime ag land remained in the county (after an initial endowment of 95,000).
3. To supply enough food to feed one person requires about one acre.

The plan also recognized that a local food system had to overcome serious capital deficits with respect to: renewable energy, equipment, infrastructure, education and worker skills, business to business relationships, and public law and policy.

In any environment it would be difficult to overcome these deficits, but the crisis was a mixed blessing. Everybody now recognized that a new system had to be built. Nearly all resources were allocated according to this need. Ideology was replaced by practicality. What people were “willing to do” changed overnight.

Now I will shift gears and contrast the food system of 2009 with what we have today. I’ll start with a review of the 2009 food system.

Here are a couple of graphs that summarize data at the national scale when the crisis hit. At that time, one calorie of food energy depended on several calories of fossil fuel energy. Basically, all parts of the system were highly dependent upon fossil fuels, long-distance supply chains, and complex financial markets.



Today’s food system has many features that improve our resiliency and security. Key attributes are:
Diverse. A complete and balanced diet can be had within the agricultural base of the County.

Local. Food produced here is consumed here, and the agricultural landscape is no longer dominated by grapes and cattle for export.

Renewable. Energy inputs for agriculture, transportation and processing are based on solar, wind, hydro and other non-fossil sources.

Non-toxic. Artificial pesticides and herbicides are no longer available and we use biological controls and landscape management to dampen pest cycles.

Cyclical. Soils are improved rather than depleted through conservation tillage, smart land-cover rotation patterns, and composting of all human and animal wastes.

Adaptable. As climate changes and new farmers learn what works best, systems are in place to exchange information and perform needed research.

Buffered. The future is always uncertain. Always be prepared for trouble by storing extra of what we really need.

Today’s food system is completely different. The plan recognized the web of relationships needed for a sustainable system. Fossil fuels are nearly eliminated. Transportation distances are very short. Waste becomes the new fertilizer.

While mechanized to the extent energy availability allows, the farm of 2020 uses efficient hand tools when those suffice.



Compost today is very expensive. Farmers work very hard to create the fertility they need on site as best they can. Food scraps are highly valued and used in vermiculture systems. Human wastes are professionally handled and sold to farmers certified disease free.



Imported chemical pesticides and herbicides are also very costly. More knowledge and labor is now used, including beneficial insect plants that add a lot of color and interest to farms.

Off the farm society has changed just as dramatically. People often use solar ovens to cook, and disposable packaging is rarely seen anymore.

Because a transportation fuel crisis was the proximate cause of the crisis, people were especially keen on eliminating reliance on long-distance supply chains. Households began sourcing as much food locally as they could. In 2009 a trip to the grocery store would mean a 1500 mile diet. Today that could be more like a 150 yard diet. Bikes with trailers can now handle much local transport. Streets are quieter, and the air less polluted.



Not only have on the farm practices changed, but farms are cooperating like never before. This creates synergies at the landscape level we all benefit from.

For example, this goat dairy sows a hay crop rich in wildflowers, thereby supporting a local beekeeper. The beekeeper’s hives also service orchards and row crops in the area, ensuring good pollination and food for all of us.



We have much to be proud of now. We made it through very tough times together by mostly keeping our heads on straight and making good decisions when it really counted. But we also live with the pain of loss and regret, asking ourselves over and over, “How did we let this happen?”

What does the last 10 years teach us about the importance of leadership?

I look at this issue in two ways. First, good leaders do their best to prevent crises. This requires the ability to help people accept the reality of unsustainable tensions before they go too far. Just talking to people can establish new conversations that propagate. Only when enough people are having similar conversations are social changes possible.

Of course human history is full of one account after another of societies that failed to recognize their obvious problems before it was too late. When disaster strikes, good leaders manage their shock and the loss of normalcy. They model the proper attitude, reducing panic and heightening clear thinking.

The best crisis leaders are those that combine awareness of the problem before it arrived with a sense of direction and clarity. Because they saw what was coming, they often have a plan to deal with it as soon as the population is forced by circumstances out of denial, distraction and inaction. Since what people are willing to do changes in a crisis, wise leadership can make a lot happen for the good very quickly.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Winter Time Harvest

Brookside Farm is a year-round CSA, even without a greenhouse or high tunnels. How do we do that?

Well, the climate here isn't too harsh, so many vegetables can live in the ground throughout the year. Also, a lot of vegetables do well in storage. And lastly, we work in the summer to preserve excess bounty.

Here's the harvest basket list for December 8th:

Fresh at the farm--carrot, parsnip, Jerusalem artichoke, leek, chard, kale, tree collard.

From storage--onion, potato, winter squash, garlic.

Preserved--dried tomato.

Pretty baskets too!

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Welcome To Las Vegas




What a pleasure to meet Miles and get together with the gals from the Noyo Food Forest. This vision of a county wide effort to grow our own food is the right thing to do, and we can do it. There IS a learning curve to this Internet space. It is not as easy as some will say. There are huge issues of privacy & personal security, but I am taking this leap because there are real opportunities for communication and outreach that are irresistible. Don't be intimidated.

Just to add some spice to this casserole I'm going to throw in a few pictures I took in Las Vegas this year. Please note the water level in Hoover Dam and the dizzying number of cranes on the Las Vegas skyline. Many of those cranes have stopped working (there is no $) and the scarcity of water has driven planners in Las Vegas to propose policies far greener than many we have seen here in Mendonisia.

George

Gardeners Unite


Noyo Come Unity Garden has three rental plots available for Fort Bragg community members, please call Katrina Aschenbrenner at 707-964-3979 or at katrina@mcn.org

FB Head Start Gets Started

On November 22nd Head Start Family Garden Project held our first work day and sheet mulched the new garden site. Head Start families and Noyo Food Forest volunteers laid cardboard, manure, hops and straw that will sit over the winter to decompose, feed the worms and add organic matter to the soil. 

We Love Cafe Vienna


We have a lot of friends in this small town, and one of our favorites is Maria, the owner of Cafe Vienna. Maria hooks us up with organic coffee grounds and provides space for us to meet in her small cafe. Thank you Maria!! Her veggie tostadas will get you through the day!!!

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Big Mamma's buried in the garden

Big Mamma, the prize winning giant pumpkin grown at the Mendocino County Jail, has come to her final resting place back in the compost which nurtured her so well. Along with feeding the soil for upcoming winter and spring plantings, the gentle giant provided the pumpkin meat for 30 pies for the Buddy Eller Homeless Shelter

December activities at the WISC garden

The WISC garden is in winter mode right now.  Cover crops have been seeded and have started to sprout.  The garlic is peeking and the wheat is green and happy.
Some of the fall crops are still in the ground, ready to be harvested, including broccoli and cabbage.
The sheet-mulched area has been expanded, hybernating over the winter until the spring crops will go in.  

Enjoy the holidays!

Preserving without Heat

I have only been growing my own vegetables and preserving them for a few years now. The first thing I thought of was heat canning, and have spent a number of hours getting water to boil. This was not entirely satisfactory to me, however, because it just didn't seem very efficient. Heat intensive processes are inefficient at small scale, such as my kitchen! So this year I ditched the water canning and decided to try other methods.



I recommend the book Keeping Food Fresh and basically followed the guidelines there for drying, lacto fermenting and preserving in olive oil.

While you can't taste the results, here's what they look like.



These are dried veggies and I dried them with the sun. Great way to keep nutrient quality intact and very light weight for storage and transportation. Shown are onions, tomatoes, pears and peppers.



Lacto fermentation is a fascinating process. All you need is salt and chlorine free water. Here are examples of pickles, a vegetable medley including beets, and shredded zucchini.



Olive oil is a more expensive preservative. But the oil isn't lost, just borrowed while preserving and becoming a flavored oil when the vegetables are consumed. Many vegetables are sauteed briefly in vinegar before storage in oil. Shown are sweet pepper, tomatoes and a vegetable medley including carrots. Onions and garlic and herbs are often mixed into these.

December Newsletter

Greetings CSA Family and Friends!

Once again, this heralded newsletter appears a day early in order to remind you that TOMORROW is harvest day! With the wonderful weather produce pick up will certainly be at the farm, so I hope to see most of you there. It is getting dark a bit early now, isn’t it, so keep that in mind when coming for your produce. (I will look into some artificial lighting apparatus).

In the previous installment of “What’s Cookin’…at Brookside” I reported on the trouble with deer incursion. My boys and I became “trackers” one morning and found and abundance of hoof prints along the fence line near the northwest corner. You may now witness our technological prowess at thwarting the forest creatures--sticks woven through the fencing to extent its height. This seems to be working!

Just in time for the holiday season, your Brookside Farm basket includes, for the first time ever, a jar of solar-dried tomatoes. Otherwise, you get pretty much what you got last time. Personally, I was very fond of the leeks. They sublimely flavored a potato soup.

Joining us at the farm this week is Adam Gaska, who operates a winter only CSA in the hills above Redwood Valley. Because Adam is growing at a lower elevation than Willits, and near the top of a southwest facing slope, frost is nearly unknown on his winter farm. The result is luscious development of cool season crops (and a good deal of jealous admiration from another farmer whose identity will remain secret). I am almost sure he would be happy to sign you up for future deliveries if the Brookside baskets are currently insufficient. His CSA ends about the same time Brookside Farm begins to deliver weekly in the late spring.

This month has been light on the farm as I am doing more research and writing. I am helping with the Mendo Food Futures project and you can find information about that at the Willits Farmers’ Market each Thursday at the Community Center. Look for Cyndee Logan’s table. There’s also this piece on the Brookside Farm blog: http://gardensproject.org/blog/blog.php?id=4726298678258680356. The magazine “Touch the Soil” has made me a regular contributing writer after publishing two articles from me in the past two issues. You can hear an interview I did with the publisher of this magazine here: http://globalpublicmedia.com/reality_report_ben_gisin_of_touch_the_soil_magazine

The electric tractor won’t materialize until spring. I am now scrambling to get a small regular tractor at the site to quickly perform some light disking so I can sow a cover crop in the fallow sections for next year. We have had unusually warm and dry weather lately so cover crops might establish just fine still, although the weather people forecast snow next week.

And Now for the Most Important Part. Shares for 2009 go on sale in time for Christmas, Hanukkah, Muharram, Kwanzaa and the Winter Solstice. The Brookside Farm Advisory Team decided to do the following:
1. Current members are offered a full share for 2009 at a cost of $750 due by January 9th.
2. Starting January 10th, shares will cost $800 and up to 16 will be sold.
3. The $800 share amount may be paid in full or in two equal installments, an initial one and a second due in July.

Look for 2009 Membership Forms when you get your basket tomorrow. I will gladly accept checks any time and if you don’t find me at the farm (perhaps because of the bitter cold and dark), you may come by my warm and well lit home.

Happy Eating!

Jason

Friday, November 21, 2008

Household Food Security Handout


I am busy working with a group of folks in Willits and other parts of the county on educational materials for public outreach. Here's the first of a set of handouts I have put together.

Mendo Food Futures


During times of economic instability more attention is paid to the very basics in life, such as food. Food is grown and moved from farm to fork by what is called the “food system.” The current food system in the United States depends on energy intensive agriculture, food processing, and long-distance transportation. Few of us get our food from the land we live on, or even from the state where we live. If any one of several potential external threats, such as an earthquake, economic collapse, fossil fuel depletion, or disease pandemic, were to occur we would lose access to affordable, reliable food.


Our security and local economy will be improved by developing a local food system, but this will take time. This handout addresses, in general terms, what steps households can take to be more resilient during a crisis, save money, improve family health, and help build a local food system. For details, look for topic specific handouts, and see the list of resources at the end.


Step 1. Create a food buffer

A person needs, on average, about 2400 food calories per day, most of which come from staples such as grains and dry beans. Plan to store at least about ¾ pound of grains and ¼ pound of beans per person per day. In addition to the grains and beans, store dried or canned fruits and vegetables, cooking oils, honey or sugar, and seasonings. Some people like to include powdered milk, sprouting seeds, multivitamins, and “treats” in their food buffer.


Step 2. Tend a Garden

The best fruits and vegetables you could ever eat will likely be those harvested right outside your home. While fresh produce isn’t dense in calories, it does provide essential vitamins, minerals and the flavors that make food enjoyable. If you don’t have the space where you live, perhaps a neighborhood or community garden is possible. To maximize the return on your efforts and provide for a diversity of food year-round, the following crops are recommended for the Willits area: kale, tree collards, chard, lettuce, potatoes, beets, carrots, radishes, green beans, winter squash, zucchini, tomatoes, peas, garlic, potato onions, walking onions, common storage onions, table grapes, apples, raspberries, and strawberries.


Step 3. Know how to cook with whole foods and local produce

Getting accustomed to a diet based on whole foods and seasonal fruits and vegetables may take some time and learning. Doing so, however, usually pays off in terms of improved health and lower food expenses. The grains and vegetables are often accompanied by meats. One way to make a single purchase of meat last a week is to buy large, unprocessed cuts and use them as parts of many meals. For example, a whole roasted chicken can also become chicken pieces in a stir fry and a chicken soup base.


Step 4. Support local farmers

A local food system needs local farmers. Currently, most local produce can be found at Farmers’ Markets and through farm subscription programs, often called CSAs. Some of us can’t garden, and most of us won’t satisfy all our needs from household gardens, but we can support the livelihoods of those who do farm in our area by buying local food.


Step 5. Learn a useful skill

Aside from gardening and cooking, there are many skills that could be performed as enjoyable hobbies that would enhance food security. Food preservation comes to mind, including the arts of drying, fermenting, and cheese making. But opening a book on home economics or homesteading reveals ways to usefully occupy time, save money, earn income in work or trade, and improve community self-reliance.


Step 6. Join and share

True food security requires broad participation. Just imagine if yours is the only household on the block to be healthy and prepared for a crisis. Encourage others to take these steps, and better yet, do them together. Save money and time by sharing resources. Friends and neighbors can be great morale boosters and problem solvers for each other, which is especially important during stressful times. How might places you work, and the restaurants, stores, churches and clubs you frequent be part of the solution?


Resources

Web: For comprehensive information related to Mendocino County see: http://gardensproject.org/ and for more background on food security and related links see: http://www.foodsecurity.org/ and http://www.kitchengardeners.org/.


Books: For seasonal cooking a great start is Full Moon Feast by Jessica Prentice. For gardening, see titles by John Jeavons, Carol Cox, Steve Solomon, and various practitioners of permaculture. Keeping Food Fresh and Preserving Summer’s Bounty will guide food preservation. An encyclopedia of preparedness is When Technology Fails by Matthew Stein.


Community Groups: In Willits, the primary groups planning and organizing work towards a local food system are the Willits Action Group (WAG), and Willits Economic LocaLization (WELL). Look for their events in the local paper, find them at the Willits Farmers’ Market booth on Thursday afternoon, or call their offices at 456-9005 and 459-7076 respectively.


Document version November, 2008

November 17, 2008

Greetings CSA Family and Friends!

The newsletter appears a day early in order to remind you that TOMORROW is harvest day! With the wonderful weather produce pick up will certainly be at the farm, so I hope to see most of you there.

A friend called this morning to tell me that deer were gobbling away inside the fence. I rushed down and shooed them out. Didn’t see a lot of damage, but they were partial to a few tree collards. In their meanderings they didn’t do a great job staying on the paths, but the ground isn’t too soggy so the impacts are minor. In thwarting the furry beasts, I attempted to look and sound scary, waving the arms hysterically, and making growling, barking and clapping noises to condition them away from the place. If they don’t stay away perhaps you’d enjoy a little venison with your parsnips?

Novelty items for this harvest include the much adored leek, the reliable tree collard, and the Jerusalem Artichoke, considered by many to be a “survival food.” Roasting these with parsnips and potatoes isn’t a bad way to go. Slice and dip a little, but don’t make a meal out of them, especially when eating them raw, and avoid entirely if you are going to be spending a lot of time in crowded elevators the next day. Really, I am serious about the J-choke “issue” and can offer some referrals and testimonials to back me up, but only confidentially.

Life at the farm has been pretty mellow lately. The cover crops are in where beds are planned for next year. I am still awaiting an electric tractor to help sow cover crops in the areas that will be fallow for 2009. This warm weather after the rains will allow for good seed germination, so I am very much hoping that this can all be done within the week. My downtown pick up of food scraps continues, and the worm bins are crawling mad with worms and their fine excrement.

The weather has been great for cover crop establishment and the over-winter vegetables. Garlic is sprouting vigorously and so are the potato onions. I highly recommend potato onions for home gardens. You were getting them in the spring baskets and much earlier than the green onions from seed were available. They are of the same species as shallots and so are propagated from bulbs and grow best over winter here.

Extremely Important Concluding Information. The next date of Brookside Farm harvest will be December 9th. Note that this is a week earlier than previously advertised. This will be the last delivery for the 2008 season and I will give all current members an opportunity at that time to buy shares for 2009 before I advertise to the general public. Details to follow…

Happy Eating!

Jason

Monday, November 17, 2008

Fall Actions Update


Greetings Food Foresters!

I hope this note finds you healthy and happy. As always, there's alot
going on with the Noyo Food Forest, and I wanted to let ya'll know whats
happening!

In this newsletter you'll find information about:
-Groundbreaking on Nov. 22nd at the Head Start Family Garden Project
-Three Available plots at Noyo Come-Unity Garden
-"Seed to Plate" Afterschool Program at the Learning Garden
-Mendocino Coast 2020 at Caspar Breakfast
-Noyo Food Forest Volunteer Appreciation Party, First Friday, Dec. 5th
-Outreach to wanna-be farmers!

Please contact us to get involved with our work here in Fort Bragg. Our
dreams are big and we need YOU to help make them happen! There are plenty of
ways for you to engage with the Noyo Food Forest, like helping out at the
gardens, harvesting food for the Food Bank, bringing flowers to Sherwood
Oaks, painting signs, writing songs, translating information, and offering
up whatever skills you have to helping build a healthier, more sustainable
community. Your ideas and input are important! Please contact me if you'd
like to learn more about the Noyo Food Forest and how you can participate!
Call me at 964-0218. Mornings are the best time to reach me.

Okay, here's the info:

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GROUNDBREAKING AT HEAD START FAMILY GARDEN PROJECT:
Saturday November 22nd
11am-2pm.

This new garden is a collaborative project with North Coast Opportunities.
It will be a school garden for the Head Start Preschool with beds for
Head Start Families to grow their own produce in a healthy, collaborative
environment. Now Fort Bragg students will have exposure to gardening from
preschool through high school! We will be sheet mulching the garden site-
layering manure, hops and straw to decompose with the winter rains and
create beautiful soil to plant in in the spring. Come lend a hand and
support this new project...and wear your rubber boots!
Head Start is located next to Redwood Elementary School on the corner of
Lincoln a Chestnut in FB.
Contact Kim Morgan for more info 937-0113 morgankimberlina@gmail.com

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PLOTS AVAILABLE AT NOYO COME-UNITY GARDEN

The Noyo Come-Unity Garden on South Harbor Drive in Fort Bragg is
beautiful. We opened the gates in May of this year and the gardeners were
blessed with fertile soil and bountiful harvests. There are three new
plots available this fall. The rental rates are extremely affordable at
$45/year for the large (8'x20') family plots and $25/year for the small
(8'x10') plots. The
prices are retroactive from May; what a deal! Don't hesitate to call. I am
sure they will go fast.

Contact Katrina at katrina@mcn.org or 707-964-3979

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"SEED TO PLATE" TEEN AFTERSCHOOL PROGRAM STARTS WED. NOV. 12TH

The Noyo Food Forest has teamed up with the Mendocino Coast Parks and
Recreation District and Fort Bragg High School to offer an afterschool
enrichment class at The Learning Garden on Wednesdays from 3:15 to 5:15.
Susan Lightfoot will be leading the class on an adventure from "Seed to
Plate" where students will learn how their food choices affect the world
we live in. This unique class will be designed by the students themselves
and they will select projects to work on and share at our Earth Day
Celebration in April 2009. Please let your teenage friends know about the
class and encourage them to join up. Call Susan Lightfoot for more
information at 964-0218.

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MENDOCINO COAST 2020 CONVERSATION CAFE AT CASPAR BREAKFAST

Mendocino Coast 2020 will host a social networking gathering at the Caspar
Community Fourth Sunday Breakfast on November 23rd, the Sunday before
Thanksgiving. Join us for breakfast at the Caspar Community Center
anytime between 9:00 and 11:00 AM, for good food and networking. At noon,
after breakfast, an informal ‘conversation cafe’ will commence, focusing
on the question “What is something happening in our community that gives
you hope for the future?” Contact Charles Bush for more information at
964-9232.

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NOYO FOOD FOREST VOLUNTEER APPRECIATION PARTY December 5th!

Thanks to you, we exist, so let's party! Join us on the First Friday of
December at Living Light for sangria, snacks and a special song by one of
our most committed volunteers, George Reinhardt. The party will be from
6-9pm during the First Friday Art Walk. A short slideshow and George's
Garden Song will happen at 7pm. Call Susan for more info at 964-0218.
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OUTREACH TO NEW FARMERS:

There's alot more land available here for farming than there are people
who are willing to farm! We have a list of willing landowners who want to
see their land in production and there are countless markets ready and
waiting to buy local produce. If you or anyone you know is interested in
becoming a farmer or production gardener, please contact Susan Lightfoot
at 964-0218.

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Thats all folks. Thanks for reading! Hope to see you soon,
In peace, love, and lots of hope,
Susan Lightfoot
Noyo Food Forest

School Garden Coordinators on the web

Garden coordinators from throughout Mendocino County schools are now on the gardensproject.org website! Right on gardeners!

Friday, October 31, 2008

Cold Frames Donated!


Thanks to Jim Xerogeanes of Mendocino College's Agriculture Department for donating two cold frames to The Gardens Project. The gardens at Nokomis Elementary and Head Start and Talmage State Preschool are already using them to get their Fall and Winter starts off to warm beginnings! Jill Peacock, Nokomis Garden Coordinator shows off the cold frame.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

October is the Month to Combat Star Thistle!

Dizzle Star Thistle

The Star Thistle migrated to California from Chile in contaminated alfalfa seed. Today it is said that Star Thistle has spread over 15 million acres in California. It is in 56 out of 58 counties. Human activities spread the seeds the most. The seeds can be carried up to 16 feet by the wind. Star Thistle also has a very long tap root and soaks up much of the soils water. It takes 21 days for Star Thistle to start it's germination process. They are most active from May to September. Leaving October the time to get out there and get rid of them. There are two ways to get rid of this pesky plant, the first is by mowing and then picking up the debris and the second is manual removal.

Submitted by: MCOE Youth Garden (E.J)

Garden Work Parties!

The Gardens Project would like to acknowledge and thank all of the community volunteers that participated in Garden Work Parties over the weekend of October 25th. On Saturday, numerous organizations and individuals dug into the earth at the newly renovated and expanded school and family gardens at the Nokomis Elementary and Head Start School Garden and the Talmage State Preschool Family Garden. Our thanks go to the smiling, dedicated work of volunteers from the Solar Living Institute Interns, Ukiah High School's Interact Club and Agricultural program, volunteers from the UC Cooperative Extension, Principal John Mcann and Teacher Liz Lovejoy of Nokomis, Teacher Pam Chiriboga and parents, Jaime, Servando, and Dustin from Talmage State Preschool, and the numerous individuals and children who participated during the day.

Additional thanks go to Dave Koball of Fetzar vineyards who organized the delivery of over 100 yards of organic grape pumice compost to the gardens. Thanks to these wonderful community members, the two gardens now have freshly prepared and amended garden beds ready for their first Fall plantings!

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Bats Are Beneficial

From Smithsonian magazine, October 2008, page 33:
Making History, Dark Knight
Kenneth R. Fletcher

Bats are a big help to plants because they devour leaf-munching insects, according to researchers at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama. The scientists conducted their investigation by covering plants with plastic and wire-mesh structures that let insects in but keep large bug-eating predators out. The research team then compared three groups: plant that were covered during the day (when birds are looking for food); plants that were covered at night (when bats are awake and hungry); and a control group of uncovered plants (open to all comers). The result? Plants sealed off from the bats had more leaf damage and were more infested with insects than the other two groups. While previous studies have extensively documented the beneficial relationship between birds and plants, scientists “have completely overlooked the important ecological role of insects-eating bats,” says Margareta Kalka, the study’s lead author. The Smithsonian research reveals that bats might do more to help sustain forests than we previously thought, says Kalka.

Brookside Farm newsletter Oct 21, 2008

Greetings CSA Family and Friends!

I am having more and more trouble waking up bright eyed and bushy tailed these darkening days. As a farmer I am a big follower of the sun, and when it is pitch black at 6:30 am I want to rebel. But my life must still follow certain schedules. The kids must go to school. My pretty little missus heads off to work so we can have a home to live in and I can remain her happily kept man. I am not inflexible and must make accommodations.

Plants and soil, however, can’t easily be forced. They abide by the season and we must either accept the situation or fight it using energy and technology. Greenhouses, artificial lights, hydroponics…methods we can employ locally to overcome the limitations imposed by a planet with a tilted axis of rotation. Alternatively we can ship the produce between the hemispheres, using copious quantities of fuel of course.

I say relax, take it easy, sleep in and hunker down. Go into torpor if you can! Summer was sometimes insanely busy and now’s the time to give the adrenals a break and savor the melatonin.

News Flash!

Date of Release: Oct. 21, 2008

Suggested Headline: Local CSA successfully captures sunlight and converts it into human food in the form of winter squash.

Begin Text: Brookside Farm in Willits, CA releases its 2008 winter squash today. The varietal for the fall season is Delicata, a delightfully sweet, well proportioned bush type squash with a soft skin and unobtrusive center. Seeds may be roasted and salted to fully enjoy the harvest bounty.

This is the second year the farm has sown winter squash seeds, they germinated, and through weeding and watering were able to flower, set fruit and grow to maturity.

Farm Manager Jason Bradford was circumspect regarding the harvest. “I remember them as little seeds just four months ago,” he mused, “We did some watering once or twice a week and had to knock back the chicory and bindweed a bit, but the plants did most of the work. I am just happy the sun keeps shining because without that solar energy nothing would work and we’d all starve. And starving would be bad because I still have a strong will to live. You ever think about where that comes from, the will to live? The weeds certainly have it too…And don’t forget the bees,” he droned on, “Without bees servicing them, squash flowers don’t set fruit. Now that’s interesting! Even with a powerful will to live themselves, the squash wouldn’t survive without the bees having a will to live also. Hmmm….We have a set of bee hives over here, you want to see them?”

Be Like a Squirrel.

I am not asking you to scurry around in the trees and puff up your fur, but to consider what these hyperactive rodents do for the winter. They prepare for lean times by storing food. This week you are going to get your chance to do the same. The baskets will have potatoes, cured onions, winter squash (see press release above), and garlic. If you can find a cool, dark, dry place for these they will keep well for a few months. More of these will be available in November. The green onions, carrots, beets, parsnips and hearty greens are best in the fridge. The last of the tomatoes are on the table too. Some are ideal to throw at a bad stage act, but I can usually find okay parts out of the mushy bits.

Remember we are going to monthly pickup for November and December. The current plan is to distribute from the farm. If rains are pouring down or a hard freeze is on the way these plans may alter.

In Fondness of Food,

Jason

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

La Cosecha Se Acabo

"style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 1px 0pxLa cosecha del jardin de Cleveland Lane Community Garden se esta acabando y estamos preparando el jardin para el Otono. Vamos a tener un dia de festejar y trabajar en el jardin en las proximas semanas. Busca mas informacion y vengan a ayudarnos a echar composto, limpiar las camas, y sembrar nuevo legumbres.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Brookside Farm newsletter Oct 14, 2008

Greetings CSA Family and Friends!

I greet the first frost with sadness and relief. Too bad so many green tomatoes, unripe peppers and nearly the whole corn crop were smote by fall’s wrath. But I am ready to put it all into cover crops and get fully invested in the season.

Over the weekend I tried to save as many tomatoes and peppers and summer squash as possible. The quality is poor as these dear plants have had to deal with a lot of rain, which tends to burst the fruits and dilute their flavor, then huge temperature swings and shortening day lengths. Anyhow, you get what you get and that’s all we’ve now got!

Most of the storage onions have finished curing. Onions are bulbs, which means modified leaves that act as storage organs. Curing is a process where the sugars are converted to starches and preservative aromatic compounds are concentrated—essentially a hibernation form that will keep until spring. They like to be kept cool with decent air flow around them. The cabinet dryer was a great place to set them for a few weeks and now I have them at my house on a big hanging rack in the shop. You’ll start getting these in the November baskets.

Announcement Making. Miles Gordon of North Coast Opportunities roped me into contributing to www.thegardensproject.org, which is a Mendocino County affair. You’ll see a link to a Brookside Farm set of pages, where I’ll post newsletters, general information, and other stuff I could concoct during the winter.

Looking Ahead. Brookside Farm is currently the only Willits area CSA, and I don’t like the idea of telling people they can’t be members. Given the small size of the farm, however, capacity is very limited and our shares sell out fast. One way to expand capacity is to find another piece of land to grow more food. But how could I manage another site? Well, I can partner with other farmers so I don’t have all the responsibility. Also, I would only grow a few crops that take up a lot of area but are generally low maintenance, such as winter squash, potatoes and storage onions. Something like this is in the works and I’ll give you some details if it pans out.

Important Information. Given the demise of the summer veggies, we are entering the end of the weekly delivery season. Next week (Oct 21st) will be as usual, but then we are switching to monthly. Your baskets next week will therefore be rather large, as I’ll stock you up on potatoes, onions, garlic, carrots, winter squash and parsnips. I will also get back into the hearty greens, which include kale, chard and tree collards. So, please mark your calendars for November 18th and December 16th as future pick up days.

Yours in Plant Husbandry,

Jason

Monday, October 13, 2008

Growing Community.....One Garden at a Time

"style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 1px 0pxIts a beautiful morning here on the Mendocino Coast in Northern California. The ravens woke me up with their rantings over last night's compost additions.....corn cobs, tomato skins and other random bits of yesterday's harvest. There's a tiny bit of frost on the ground, and I'm a little worried about the baby spinach and peas at The Learning Garden. While its a little sad to see the end of an amazingly productive growing season, I am stoked to have a few months to slow down, check in with myself, and get ready for next year.
Its a perfect time to reflect back on the year and review what we've accomplished here in Mendocino County. There are gardens popping up all over the place! Its amazing to see our motto manifesting all over the county. The Gardens Project certainly has alot to do with all the progress we've seen in 2008. Good job Miles and everyone who has picked up a shovel and got down and dirty with the earth! There has been a ton of effective organizing happening this year too, from the STEPS meetings, to the Coast Farm Futures meetings, to Earth Day celebrations and Harvest Gatherings and community workdays at countless gardens. I feel honored to be a part of this revolution in the way we sustain ourselves and our communities. It gives me so much hope for the future, that we can get ourselves out of this mess we've created and move forward into a more just and sustainable world. Its just a matter of time.
Peace!
Susan Lightfoot

Friday, October 3, 2008

How to combat Aphids

You know when you wake up in the morning and step out into your garden and BAM! Your amazing chard looks like Swiss cheese with a colony of little bitty sized bugs munching away. These bugs are known most commonly as Aphids. Did you know that Aphids are monogamous, they typically will only eat one type of plant in their short lifetime, their young will also feed on that particular plant.

So, you ask yourself, WHAT?!? can I do to combat these little munch machines?
Here at the River School Garden Project we are very conscience about using any type of pesticide on our plants. So, we came up with an Earth friendly alternative that is very effective.
So grab an empty spray bottle and follow the recipe below:
5 tbsp Dr. Bonner's Magic Soap
3 tbsp Cayenne Pepper
Fill spray bottle with warm water.
SHAKE, SHAKE, SHAKE!!!

Now fully armed your are ready to go back out into your garden and spray those aphids at Dusk. This way the water droplets on your leaves won't get burned by the Sun.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Welcome to the Youth Garden Blog

"style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 1px 0pxWe are just finishing are harvest of tomatoes. Check them out for sale at MCOE's Administration Office lobby.