Posts from — March 2010
Urban Farming in Florida
Andrew Wolfe keeps beehives on his roof at his Freedom Farm. His Seminole yard has ducks, chickens, tilapia, a greenhouse, a garden and citrus. Wolfe even grows mint in a platform suspended over his tilapia pond. It’s a symbiotic relationship because the herbs filter the pond water.
Seeds of urban farming sprout in bay area
By Jessica Vander Velde,
St Petersburg Times ?March 14, 2010
Excerpt:
A year ago, Andrew Wolfe had a typical yard: a half-acre of grass and a tree.
Now it’s less lawn, more farm.
His Seminole yard houses 16 ducks, 16 chickens, 400 tilapia and seven beehives. He built a greenhouse, started a garden and planted four citrus trees — all near a busy street with restaurants, shops and a Baptist church.
March 18, 2010 No Comments
Food Forward – proposed TV show to explore alternatives to our current industrial food system
We explore new themes like school lunch reform, aquaponics and urban gardening
Food Forward explores alternatives to our current industrial food system through the lives and passions of a vanguard of innovators; educators, scientists, farmers and chefs across America–food rebels who are fundamentally changing the way we eat.
We shot this self-funded pilot episode trailer on Biodynamics in the summer of 2009 at Cynthia Sandberg’s Love Apple Farm in Ben Lomond, CA.
March 18, 2010 No Comments
Major radio media report on Detroit’s rebirth as urban prairie – urban farm

Britain’s BBC and Canada’s CBC report
CBC’s As It Happens March 16, 2010
The city of Detroit is in rough shape. With the American auto industry in shambles, the Motor City isn’t what it used to be. Which is why Mayor David Bing is taking some steps to downsize. Later this month, Mayor Bing will announce his strategy to shrink the city of Detroit, and that plan will include a transformation towards agriculture. Vacant lots will be converted to farmland.
Mark Dowie is an investigative historian. He spent some time in Detroit documenting the new urban landscape of that city for Guernica Magazine. We reached him at his home, in Point Reyes Station, California.
Listen here.
March 17, 2010 No Comments
Motown to Growtown – Home Farming on the Ellen Degeneres Show
Taja Sevelle of Urban Farming shows Ellen how to plant a food garden
“The Ellen DeGeneres Show” is in its seventh season. Since its inception in 2003, “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” has earned an impressive 29 Daytime Emmy Awards. The show continues to prove itself a leader in the daytime talk show genre by blending genuine warmth, humor and unparalleled celebrity interviews.
March 17, 2010 No Comments
88 year old began his love of gardening in the 1920′s
Photo by Bronwyn Smyth
Jim Foort’s garden on 11th Avenue, Vancouver, BC
Audio interview with Jim Foort.
Story by Bronwyn Smyth
A garden, like that of Eden, thrives on 11th Avenue in the neighbourhood of West Point Grey. It is lush and humming with life. The bamboo fencing morphs every so often as the beds change shape. A huge variety of vegetables and fruit are grown here, even in the winter. At the corner of the yard stands a clapboard frame with a wise quote or latest article on square foot gardening. The front door of the small yellow bungalow on the property is always wide open when the weather is good. James Foort, or as neighbours call him, Jim, with his wife Margaret, are the owners and garden extraordinaires of this piece of paradise.
March 17, 2010 No Comments
Beekeeping no longer illegal in New York City
“The real danger is the skewed public perception of the danger of honeybees,” said Andrew Coté, of the New York City Beekeepers Association. Photo by Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times
Big Apple Lifts Beekeeper Ban
By MARIEL SMITH
Associated Press
Mar 16, 2010
Big Apple beekeepers are all a buzz with joy after the New York City’s Board of Health voted Tuesday reversed a long-standing ban on tending to honeybees.
Health officials had previously banned beekeeping because honeybees were considered just as dangerous as hyenas and poisonous snakes.
But the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene unanimously amended the law after research showed that honeybees, specifically the Apis mellifera, are not harmful to the public, citing few bee stings around the city, reported the New York Times.
March 16, 2010 1 Comment
Restaurants get a little greener
Erica Gillespie tends to lettuce growing in planter boxes at Mixt Greens in Los Angeles. (Mark Boster, Los Angeles Times)
Some are growing produce on site, buying from eco-conscious farmers, installing water filtration systems, recycling grease and more.
By Mary MacVean,
Los Angeles Times
March 9, 2010
Excerpt:
When Neal and Amy Knoll Fraser move their restaurant Grace downtown to the rectory of St. Vibiana’s later this year, diners will be hard-pressed to miss the earth-to-table connection.
Fraser intends to plant a garden — and not just a few containers of herbs, but 450 to 500 square feet, right outside, cater-corner from Los Angeles Police Department headquarters. It will be tended by the kitchen staff, and Fraser says it could yield as much as a quarter of the produce for his kitchen. He’s eyeing a parking lot for more garden space.
March 16, 2010 No Comments
Growing biofuels on idle land in Salt Lake City

City farming initiative at work providing biofuel for local governments
By John Daley
KLS news
March 15th, 2010
SALT LAKE CITY — An innovative collaboration in sustainability is gaining steam in Utah. The goal is to grow, on what was unused city land, a plant that can be used to make a biofuel, which in turn will be used in government fleets.
Near Salt Lake International Airport, KSL News watched Jason Heward steer a John Deere tractor around 20 acres of land that had been idle for years. The project site is located at approximately 500 South and 4500 West.
Heward is the church farm manager of the Urda Church Farm near Tooele. He was readying the land for seeds of safflower, which can be crushed to make oil — a biofuel.
March 16, 2010 No Comments
Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden in Hong Kong

Kadoorie Farm
Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden (KFBG) spreads over 148 hectares of land and is located on the northern slopes and foothills of Hong Kong’s highest mountain – Tai Mo Shan.
Vegetables are produced on a one hectare hillside area at KFBG and there are over 60 varieties of vegetables and herbs grown in our farmland. We have 17 hectares of terraced orchards producing over 25 different varieties of fruit crops, herbs and tea, as well as honey. Our eco-garden displays organic farming practices compatible to urban settings for visitors to learn how to grow their own food.
March 15, 2010 No Comments
The World in a Garden – one of 55 community gardens in Vancouver
The World in a Garden is an Urban Agriculture Project that connects youth and community to the culture, nutrition and production of growing organic food.
“Children working in our garden are getting to experience nutrition instead of just being taught it. Green foods take on a whole new meaning and the children actually enjoy eating their vegetables because they are growing and cultivating them. And, by donating food to the food bank, children are giving back to their community and making a difference in the world,” said Tricia Sedgwick, the Jewish Family Service Agency (JFSA) community garden coordinator and nutritionist. “There are many interactive opportunities for students to partake in, from growing and preparing food for harvest celebrations to fundraising and donating.”
March 15, 2010 No Comments
Georgia legislature’s House Committee on Agriculture and Consumer Affairs has put together an urban farming bill
Handmade Garden in Athens, Georgia.
Editorial: ‘Urban farm’ bill now ready for some votes
Athens Banner-Herald
March 14, 2010
With a word-word here and a tweak-tweak there, the Georgia legislature’s House Committee on Agriculture and Consumer Affairs has managed to put together an “urban farming” bill that is worthy of the full Georgia General Assembly’s support.
In its original version, House Bill 842 – which is designed to pre-empt local ordinances restricting production of agricultural or farm products on residential or other urban property – virtually eliminated the ability of local governments to take any action against people raising chickens, rabbits, goats or food crops.
March 14, 2010 No Comments
Philippine newspaper reports on urban agriculture

Urban agriculture: Growing crops in the city
By Henrylito D. Tacio
Sun.Star Davao – source of Philippine community news
March 14, 2010
Farming is always associated with rural areas, rivers and mountains.
Unknowingly, farming can also be done right in the city. Experts call this practice as urban agriculture.
“Urban agriculture refers not merely to the growing of food crops and fruit trees but that it also encompasses the raising of animals, poultry, fish, bees, rabbits, guinea pigs, or other livestock considered edible locally,” explains Dr. Irene Tinker, an American professor in the department of city and regional planning at the University of California.
March 14, 2010 1 Comment
One city is starting a movement to create 15,000 backyard (and balcony) farmers
The Ritchay family’s garden.
15Thousand Farmers – Planting A Seed To Feed Ourselves – Louisville, Ky
by Greg & Michelle Vittitow,
Impact Dash
March 11th, 2010
The Vision:
15Thousand Farmers helps create, empower, and inspire 15,000 new, organic, neighborhood backyard/front yard farmers in Louisville, KY to feed their families and themselves and to give away! How? By using simple and easy instructions, checklists and materials and ongoing support provided through local organic growers and resources that will provide everything needed to start Easy Farms in our yards, on decks or in community gardens.
March 13, 2010 1 Comment
New York City’s Queens County Farm Museum
Photo by Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times
Urban farming: A growing field
By V.L. Hendrickson
am New York
March 7, 2010
The Queens County Farm Museum’s history dates back to 1697; it occupies New York City’s largest remaining tract of undisturbed farmland and is the only working historical farm in the City. The farm encompasses a 47-acre parcel that is the longest continuously farmed site in New York State. The site includes historic farm buildings, a greenhouse complex, livestock, farm vehicles and implements, planting fields, an orchard and herb garden.
Early morning livestock feedings and cultivating the herb garden aren’t on the daily list of duties for most New Yorkers, but for Leah Retherford, they’re business as usual. As farm manager of Queens County Farm Museum, she oversees 47-acres.
March 13, 2010 No Comments
Are there $$$ to be made in urban agriculture?

Urban Farm Hub tries to answer the question
Urban Farm Hub is launching a series of articles addressing the long-term economic viability of urban agriculture. We know commercial agriculture enterprises pencil in shrinking midwest cities such as Detroit, Pittsburgh and Cleveland, but what about thriving metropolitan areas such as Seattle where there’s a shortage of developable land?
We’ll be interviewing small business owners, design professionals, urban farm entrepreneurs, and commercial developers in rapidly growing metropolitan areas to see what they have to say about reaping the green from urban agriculture.
March 13, 2010 No Comments
Growing Sustainable Communities: Urban Farming
Urban Farming Summit: Panel Discussion
Panel: February 19, 2010, The University of Michigan – Dearborn
Ashley Atkinson, The Greening of Detroit
Oran Hesterman, Fair Food Network
Susan Schmidt, The Henry Ford
Kami Pothukuchi, SEED Wayne
Malik Yakini, Detroit Black Community Food Security Network
Moderated by Bruce Pietrykowski, Professor of Economics, UM-Dearborn
March 12, 2010 No Comments
Urban agriculture: multi-dimensional tools for social development in poor neighbourghoods

E. Duchemin, F. Wegmuller, and A.-M. Legault
Institut des sciences de l’environnement, Université du Québec à Montréal, Succ. Centre-Ville, C.P. 8888, Montréal, Québec, Canada
2009
Abstract.
For over 30 years, different urban agriculture (UA) experiments have been undertaken in Montreal (Quebec, Canada). The Community Gardening Program, managed by the City, and 6 collective gardens, managed by community organizations, are discussed in this article. These experiments have different objectives, including food security, socialization and education. Although these have changed over time, they have also differed depending on geographic location (neighbourhood).
March 12, 2010 1 Comment
Stephen Colbert mocks crisis garden advertisement
Watch Crisis Garden Mock in Entertainment | View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com
The Huffington Post excerpt:
March 10, 2010
Said Colbert: “Glenn’s advertisers know nothing moves product like the hot stink of fear.” Case in point: a commercial for a product called Survival Seed Bank, in which the spokesman claims nonhybrid seeds will be more valuable that silver and gold, and thus save you from the impending economic meltdown.
March 11, 2010 2 Comments
Design Project – Charlotte, NC Urban Farm

By Aaron Newton
Powering Down
March 11, 2010
Excerpt:
Today we’re designing an urban farm. This one will become real if we can get the funding necessary to start the program. The specific location of the farm will have to remain a secret for now but it’s in Charlotte, NC near uptown. Todd Serdula did most of the excellent graphic work on this proposal.
To start with we break down the design considerations into 4 categories.
Physical Components
Programing Elements
Transition and Construction
Marketing and Distribution
March 11, 2010 2 Comments
Wall Street Journal talks to urban farmers
A Cabbage Patch for City Hall. Last year, Baltimore City Hall replaced its traditional flower gardens with vegetable beds to help serve a local soup kitchen. But not all went as planned. Anne Marie Chaker reports on lessons learned and plans for this year’s crop.
Attack of the Rotten Tomatoes
By Anne Marie Chaker
Wall Street Journal
March 10, 2010
Excerpt:
The city of Baltimore replaced its flower beds in front of city hall with vegetables last year. The goal, says designer Angela Treadwell-Palmer, was to show that vegetable gardens could be attractive and to grow harvests to donate to a local soup kitchen. But the local charity reported that some crops—particularly beets, kohlrabi and eggplant—weren’t appetizing to people.
March 11, 2010 No Comments