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!