Archive for the ‘Farming’ Category

Ulaa Update!

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Here at Enchanting Challenge we wanted to provide volunteer opportunities for people interested in pursuing their challenges.  The objective of Enchanting Challenge is to challenge yourself, your neighbors, and other people aroudn the world to take action…to change the world.  It can be very small actions, or very big ones.   The site is taking shape with personal challenges like “To save energy, I will hang dry my clothes instead of using a drying machine,” or “I will plant a garden in my backyard,”  or bigger actions like “Bone Marrow Donation Registry,” and also developing a longterm Philanthropy Plan to figure out how you can donate your time.  Any challenge is a good challenge, don’t be shy, don’t think that small actions don’t add up to big changes.

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Enchanting Challenge wanted to provide a destination for people interested in taking a personal challenge.  Ulaa is an organic farm located in Patagonia, Chile.  It lies on the border with Argentina, overlooking a beautiful lake.  On the organic farm, Ulaa grows a lot of food: apples, nuts, berries, tomatoes, potatoes, peas, carrots, beans, basil, oregano, plums, and more.  A few months ago the organic farm at Ulaa needed a lot of work.  Martin, Ulaa’s caretaker and farmer, had a lot of work that he couldn’t keep up with.  We decided to try to attract volunteers to come and stay at Ulaa, free of charge, in exchange for their work.  We sent out notice for volunteers, and the response was overwhelming.  Dozens of people from various countries inquired about spending time at Ulaa.  We currently have 6 volunteers at Ulaa from Brazil, USA, Croatia, England, and Australia.  We have other volunteers coming soon from India, Mexico, and France. 

It’s been an overwhelming success for both sides.  The volunteers have loved their experience at Ulaa, getting close to  nature, learning about living simply, growing their own food, eating and living in a healthy and sustainable way.  And, Martin is pleased with all the help he has received.  The farm is growing, developing, and expanding because of all the help from the volunteers. He has been able to undertake bigger projects because of the manpower he now has. 

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Below are a few words from one of our volunteers about his experience at Ulaa.  Geff was separated from his brother for over 15 years and only recently reunited with him.  They wanted to change their lifestyles, and wanted to get closer to nature and really enjoy life:

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My experience with Ulaa Patagonia has been magical and wonderful.  I haven´t never being so in touch with nature and myself as I have being in this new experience of life.  After living apart from my only brother for 15 years Ulaa has being helping us get to know each other in a such great way with a clear state of mind and spirit, in my opinion the way life should be is the way. We are living at Ulla down-to-earth with fascinated new experiences everyday meeting new people with different cultures and countries and not to mention the natives so called (lugareños).
 
I have being volunteering here with my brother for 2 weeks now and I would love to help Sr. Martin to achieve all the goal and ideas to this wonderful place called Ulaa.
Volunteer at Ulaa Patagonia
Geff Alves

 

And his brother, Zaca, agreed.  His experience getting to know his brother again, in a place like Ulaa, has been wonderful.  His words are in Portuguese:

Estava passando por um mau momento, meu unico irmao que nao conviviamos por mais de 10 anos retornou ao Brasil.
Para mudar a rotina, comecamos a buscar uma maneira de vivermos juntos com mais tranquilidade.
Atraves do WOOF descobrimos Ulla e decidimos nos voluntariar.
Fomos muito bem recebidos pelo Sr Martin e um voluntario da Espanha chamado Chavier.
Noutro dia fomos colher batatas e foi muito divertido, conheci um nativo que vive em Ulla chamado Charlo muito gente boa tambem.
Martin nos disse sobre a intencao de mudar o conceito para Ulla Tribe, explicou-nes certinho e achei muito interessante.
E para mim viver em Ulaa esta sendo muito bom, estou aprendendo muitas coisas e para mim sera excelente fazer parte desta nova etapa.

Zaca

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And this is what taking personal challenges is all about.  These people decided to take a risk to improve their lives, lend a helping hand to someone else, and learn from the process.  The volunteers have learned how to farm organically, live off of local resources, and live in a environmentally sustainable way.  They have also met really fun people from different countries, and share laughs together.  And their volunteer committment has been a huge help to Martin in developing and expanding the organic farm. 

 Check out Ulaa’s Facebook fanpage!

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Community Gardens and Eating Locally

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Yesterday, I talked about the danger of Swine Flu and its relation to the industrial food chain.  Raising animals in dirty conditions will cause those animals to become diseased, and the antibiotics given them end up in the food we eat.  And every now and then certain bacterias will mutate and become immune to the antibiotics and create new disease outbreaks.  This is, of course, simplifying the whole idea, but you get the point.  You could eat all your food from these industrial sources if you like, and you may never suffer from any food-borne illnesses.  But that is a risk that is up to you.  One way of decreasing the odds that you are exposed to such illnesses is by buying and eating locally. 

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There are tons of reasons to eat local food.  First and foremost, you are keeping your money within your own community.  Your neighbors will appreciate you shopping at their establishments and supporting local operations helps your community prosper.  In addition, eating locally cuts down on greenhouse gases.  Typical food travels thousands of miles to get to your plate, releasing pollution into the atmosphere.  Every piece of produce you get from some far away place means more pollution into the atmosphere.  Furthermore, and maybe the point that is the most relevant considering the recent news, eating locally ensures healthier food.  If you are eating food from a small farm in your town or state, there are better chances that the food has not been injected with hormones, pesticides, or antibiotics.  Of course, you may have to do some homework to confirm that, but a typical farmer’s market will be organic food.

Now, who has time to do that?  Who has time to drive around to farms just so that they can eat locally, especially when Safeway has everything you need?  There are plenty of ways that you can eat locally.  First of all, as I said, you can find a local farmer’s market in your area.  And that’s really easy.  Log on to Local Harvest and just simply type in your ZIP code and that’s it, it will bring up a list of farmer’s markets in your area.  You can also filter for eco-friendly restaurants, farms, and co-0ps in your area.  It’s easy and a great way to eat fresh local food and support your community. 

One huge obstacle to eating locally is the change of seasons.  How do I eat fruit in the middle of winter?  Well, I admit, this is difficult, and I often can’t follow this rule myself.  But, if you can commit to eating just some of your meals using local, seasonal ingredients, then you can make some progress.  That means strawberries and tomatoes in summer, pumpkins in fall, and potatoes and in winter.  It’s tough to do, but it also exposes you to different types of fruits and vegetables that you might not have previously known about.  Once again, this might seem like a lot of work, but a great way to facilitate this practice is joining a CSA.  What’s a CSA? Community Supported Agriculture is a system in which you pay a farmer a certain amount of money up front, and then you get a certain amount of produce incrementally throughout the year.  The advantages of this are allowing you to eat fresh, seasonal food throughout the year.  CSAs are also good systems for urban-dwelling foodies.  If you live in a city, chances are farms are not very close.  CSAs allow you to get this fresh, local produce, without the hassle.  It also provides the farmer with capital to work with, and a secure market in which to sell his crops.  Win-Win.vegetables

Home gardens and community gardens are another great way to eat locally.  It has been reported that home gardens are on the rise across the country for a variety of reasons:  save money on food, environmental concerns, and food security concerns.  If you can turn that useless plot of grass in your backyard into a home garden, you can grow your own produce (free and renewable), cut down on pollution (less driving to the store, less mileage on your produce), and your food will be healthy (no pesticides).  Some may think that’s a lot of work, but some might find it fun to see something through from start to finish.  Community gardens are also increasing in popularity.  Unused grassy plots of land within the city limits can be converted into gardens.  There are countless positives that come with community gardens.  The ones I listed before (fresh, eco-friendly, healthy food), but also education.  Teaching people about eating healthy, providing education and work opportunities, and teaching children about ecology and biology.  I just read about the 7th Street Garden in Washington DC, a community garden in the Shaw Neighborhood.  They turned a closed down school into a garden, growing all sorts of fruits and vegetables.  They have gone through 2 growing seasons and produced 70 bags of fresh produce to disadvantaged DC residents, while teaching over 250 local children about gardening and nutrition.  Pretty cool way to use an abandoned plot of land.

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7th Street Garden in Washinton DC

Swine Flu and Growing Locally

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

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Swine Flu has taken the world by storm.  Everyone has talked about swine flu for the past month, and there is no shortage of sensational headlines sprawled across the front pages of all the world’s newspapers.  Just a quick search for swine flu yields these results: “Swine Flu Spreading Quickly in NYC”, “Japan Fears Spread of Swine Flu as Cases Rise”, “World Health Organization Raises Threat Level”.  There has been quite a panic over the past month and Mexican citizens were even detained in China as a preventitive measure to keep Swine Flu from spreading in China.  It all seems like a futuristic movie where disease and pandemics spread across the world, destroying everything and everyone, leaving ghost towns where there were formally bustling cities.  BUT, a lot of this is hype and is not the reality.  There have been relatively few deaths compared to other outbreaks, and Mexico has been praised for its response and and actions to deal with the spread of the flu.  But what’s the real story here? 

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Industrial Pig Farm

Reports have come out recently that the outbreak of the swine flu has been traced back to an industrial pig farm in Mexico, owned by Smithfield Farms.  Although this has not been confirmed, the fact remains that it would not be a surprise that a sickness has developed from an industrial pig farm.  Afterall, on industrial pig farms, hundreds of thousands of pigs are densely packed into a building, without the ability to move around too much because they are literally on top of each other.  They stand in their own feces, and when they get sick, which is inevitable in such an environment, they are injected with various antibiotics to keep them healthy.  The problem is that with hundreds of thousands of pigs, and all the antibiotic injections, its likely that every once in a while a pig will contract a sickness where the bacteria develops an immunity to the antibiotic.  And just like that, we have a new strain of disease, a mutated version that cannot be stopped with conventional antibiotics.  This sickness can then spread, and cause havoc. 

It gets worse when people then eat pork derived from these conditions.  Over the course of time, though it’s not totally understood, chances are that such problems might occur in people too.  If we are consuming pork with antibiotics, we may also come across the same problem.  A sickness in which traditional antibiotics are worthless. 

A new movie is coming out called “Fresh.”  It’s about industrial farming versus natural farming.  Joel Salatin of Polyface Farms is featured in the movie and I mentioned him in my blog post about Grass-Fed Cows.  And his comment about the Smithfield industrial pig farm was telling, “I guess you saw where Smithfield has a 950,000 confinement hog operation in the locality at the epicenter of the outbreak.  Strange coincidence.” The movie “Fresh” looks really great, you should check it out. 

All this is further evidence of the need to eat locally and naturally.  Industrial farming may be convenient for packing grocery stores full of meat, but the health concerns are overwhelming.  Swine Flu may have been scary, but with business practices like the one at Smithfields Farms, you can rest assured that future outbreaks are inevitable. 

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Joel Salatin

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Naturally-grazing pigs

If people can buy and eat locally, you can feel comfortable in the fact that your food is not coming from horrific feeding conditions.  If you know where your animals came from, you can know for sure if your animals were living pleasant lives or not.  In in the process, you can feel secure that your food is safe and healthy.  Tomorrow we will discuss this further. 

Business Profile: The Land Institute

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

 

The Land Institute37a747b43-10-1 is a non-profit dedicated to the production of agricultural products in a sustainable way.  They closely follow natural agricultural production that I talked about in my previous post on grass-fed cows.  Many conventional farms have waste and chemicals as a byproduct of their agricultural production.  Manure, pesticides, soil erosion, etc.; these are just some of the various side effects of conventional farming.  However, at The Land Institute, they like to say that conservation is the byproduct of their agricultural production. 

The Land Institute believes that farms don’t have to sacrifice ecology in order to produce food.  If nature is taken into account when planting crops, keeping in mind how the local ecosystems functioned before humans, then agriculture can produce food while protecting soils, water, and biodiversity.  They think that nature provides the blueprints for what needs to be grown, using perennial crops to accumulate “ecological capital,” or improve the quality of land.  But the two largest crops grown in the United States are annual crops: corn and grain.  They provide the majority of calories for our citizens.  However, those two crops take away “ecological capital,” they degrade the land, contribute to soil erosion, and emit greenhouse gases. 

What’s an annual crop versus a perennial crop?  Annual crops are those that grow from seed to plant and die out within the year.  They are not as renewable as perennials and they degrade the soil and water.  Perennial crops grow year after year, continually producing food.  They are a much more sustainable and ecologically friendly way of farming.

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As in my previous blog post, perennial crops can produce food while contributing “ecological capital.”  I talked about how grazing cows naturally contributes to the soil, increases the biodiversity of the grasses, and produces more biomass.  In fact, The Land Institute insists that farming in this way, perennial crops can produce more biomass year after year than conventional farming, without the need for fossil fuels, and without degrading the soil and water systems.  Moreover, diverse species of crops protect against food shortages, pandemics, and overdependence on a single crop.  Here are a few examples of the perennials they are working on: perennial wheat, intermediate wheatgrass, grain sorghum, Illinois Bundleflower, Sunflower, and the potential use for maize, chickpea, Eastern gamagrass, rice, millets, and flax.

So, what exactly does The Land Institute do?  A variety of things.  They research the viability of different perennial crops and test them to see if they can be produced on a large scale.  They publish research in scientific periodicals like Bioscience and Popular Science, as well as a variety of books.  And they also have educational classes for those who want to be trained in natural farming.  The overall goal of The Land Institute is to create a whole new way of farming, based on ecology and sustainability.  Here is their mission statement:

When people, land, and community are as one,
all three members prosper;
when they relate not as members
but as competing interests,
all three are exploited.
By consulting Nature as the source
and measure of that membership,
The Land Institute seeks to develop an agriculture
that will save soil from being lost or poisoned
while promoting a community life at once
prosperous and enduring.

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Grass-Fed Cows

Monday, May 4th, 2009

Michael Pollan’s book, The Omnivore’s Dilemma, is fascinating.  Most of the information I will talk about in this post comes from his book. 

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Grass-fed cows

The objective of industrial farms is the highest quanity in the least amount of time.  To produce vast quanities of beef, massive resources are injected into the process.  It’s a process that begins at one point (industrial corn) and ends at another point (Double Quarter Pounder with cheese).  You need petroleum and synthetic pesticides to grow the corn (and you occasionally need a military presence somewhere in the world to secure petroleum, and you also occasionally need to fund unfriendly regimes to purchase petroleum).  The corn is processed into industrial feed for the cows.  The cows are injected with hormones and antibiotics to grow faster and also to avoid sicknesses.  They are slaughtered quickly and turned into industrial meat for distribution.  The meat is processed into the food you eat.  In sum, beginning at point A, lots of resources needed along the way, and a finished product at point B.  An assembly line if you will, like any mechanized process.  Efficiency.

From CAFOs we move on to the small farm.  Small grass farms with grass-fed cows are not about quantity, but quality.  And unlike the linear process of industrial farming, grass farms operate in a circle, letting nature do the work.  That’s right, grass farmers use resources from nature for the whole process, not needing any of the things that go into industrial farms (oil, pesticides, hormones, antibiotics).  And as the farmer Michael Pollan interviews in his book says, he’s a grass farmer first and foremost. 

It all starts with grass.  Grass sucks up carbon dioxide and light from the sun, and spits out oxygen.  Of course, this is called Photosynthesis (as you might remember from 7th grade science class).  The cows eat the grass, which provides valuable nutrition, and they grow bigger and stronger.  The cows leave behind seeds and nitrogen for the grass in the form of manure.  The chickens then go through the manure and further spread out seeds and nitrogen.  In the end we are left with healthy and happy chickens and cows. irrigation-photosynthesis

But what’s really interesting is that the cows and chickens are not subtracting from the land.  They are making the land healthier.  When the cows take a bite of grass, the grass sheds its roots, in an effort to balance out from its newly shortened blade.  The roots then die out in the soil, and bacteria, fungi, and worms breakdown the roots and turn it into humus, or compost.  After time and rainfall, this process creates more biomass, i.e. more soil.  This makes the ground healthier.  So, in effect, the ground is much healthier after the cows have eaten it than it would have been had the cows never been there. 

But what’s really really interesting is that not only are the cows making the ground healthier, but they are also contributing to biodiversity.  Here’s how.  There are many different species of grass.  And some grasses grow much faster and taller than others.  Since the cows aren’t too picky about what types of grasses they are eating, they equally trim all grasses.  If they didn’t trim all grasses, the tall grass would block out the sun for the short grass, and the short grass would die out.  But the cows keep the tall grass from getting too tall, and the short grasses (like little clovers) can survive.  (Read a BBC article from this week about the negative effects of fast growing plants here).  When comparing a regular field of grass with a field that has cows on it (grazing responsibly), the cow field is much more biologically diverse. 

Many types of grass

Many types of grass

So what?  Why does that matter?  Well, essentially, a field that has many different types of grasses can suck up the most solar energy.  And that’s important because the grasses can store the maximum amount of carbon.  Just like trees, grasses store carbon dioxide, but instead, they do it underground in the form of soil humus.  This is infinitely important for combating climate change and for life on Earth in general.  Michael Pollan illustrates the seriousness of this, “if the sixteen million acres now being used to grow corn to feed cows in the US became well-managed pasture, that would remove fourteen billion pounds of carbon from the atmosphere each year, the equivalent of taking four million cars off the road,” (P198). 

And as I said before, nature and the animals are doing all the work, and using all their own innate resources and natural processes.  The grass-farmer does not need to buy any chemicals, antibiotics, hormones, or pesticides.  And since the cows are eating grass, and grass is possible because of the sun (which is free and infinite) he doesn’t even need to buy food for the animals!  I talked about how industrial farming is all about efficiency…using all of nature’s resources, feeding the animals while at the same time improving the quality of the land, contributing to biodiversity, and removing pollution from the air.  Getting all your resources for free from what nature provides, thus no need to purchase anything.  How’s that for efficiency?  Even the animals’ waste contributes to the land, instead of polluting it, like in CAFOs. 

Of course, it’s highly unlikely we could ever convert all industrial farming land into responsible pasture, too many people think Big-Macs are just so delicious.  But, our diets, farming, the environment, and ”efficiency” do not have to be competing interests. 

*Joel Salatin of Polyface farms in VA was the basis for Michael Pollan’s research

Efficiency In Your Burger

Friday, May 1st, 2009
In a continuation of a series of posts on farming and food, I’d like to compare industrial-cattle versus grass-fed cattle.  (See next post on grass-fed cattle).  In recent years, the appalling conditions on industrial feedlots have come to light with various documentaries and books.  McDonald’s is probably the most notorious villain in this saga, sandwhiching corn-fed, hormone-induced, low-quality beef between a sesame-seed bun.  While these conditions have become common-knowledge and many people have fled to the safety of “organic” food, the practices continue. 
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Where's that tastey beef coming from?

The fast-food industry is a phenomenon that began in 1940 when Dick and Mac McDonald opened its first location in California, serving burgers, milkshakes, potato chips and pie.  In 1949, potato chips were replaced by french fries.  In 1955, McDonalds got their signature golden arch, pulling in $316 at their new location in Illinois.  And for Fiscal Year 2008, McDonalds raked in a jaw-dropping $5.5 billion.  But who can resist?  Two all beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions on a sesame seed bun?  Add in some crispy french fries and a cold coke to wash it down…it doesn’t get any better. 

But how do they do it?  A franchise that began with the humble beginnings of a single restaurant in Bernadino, California, has mushroomed into a global monster.  Located in over 120 countries with over 31,000 locations, with 54 million visiters per day, how do they do it?  Where’s all that beef coming from?

For all those hungry people out there, you need a massive operation to churn out enough beef. 

Feedlots, often called CAFO’s for short (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations), are the way to maintain “efficiency” for industrial farming.  By feeding cows massive amounts of corn (food which cows are not equipped to digest) they can be fattened up rapidly in order to be processed rapidly, in order to be served with a supersize fries, at a drive-thru near you.  The cows are not moved from their lots, often standing in their own feces.  Of course, this causes disease, but fortunately, they can be injected with drugs and antibiotics to avoid such nuisances.  Since time is money, this sounds like a very efficient way to serve as many quarter-pounders as possible, as quickly as possible. 

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CAFO cows

But, I guess, “efficiency” can be measured in a couple different ways.  Sure you can mass produce meat quickly.  But an efficient operation would take into account not just the quanity produced, but the costs of doing so.  And at what cost do industrial farms operate?  There are hidden costs that don’t get included in your combo meal.  First of all, the subsidies for the corn that’s fed to the cows, paid for by the taxpayer.  Then, the eventual healthcare costs for the consumers eating the product (see: madcow disease; obesity).  Furthermore, the environmental pollution as a result of the operations.  Mountains of feces runoff into streams and rivers, thousands of acres of land are contaminated, not to mention the greenhouse gases emitted.  When you pay for your cheeseburger on the dollar menu, these costs remain hidden.  Just because it seems cheap, doesn’t mean it is. 

Now, when you look at it like that, maybe it’s not such a good deal.  But when you need to maximize profits, and you have shareholders to answer to, these issues are not factored in.  And it’s easy to see why.  Uncle Sam picks up the bill for the corn.  Ditto for the healthcare costs.  As for pollution?  Someone else’s problem.  And as for the cows themselves…well cows can’t sue for damages.   

A manure-filled stream, contaminated by CAFO waste

A manure-filled stream, contaminated by CAFO waste

So, I guess we are back to time is money.  Grass-fed cows typically take 4-5 years before they are ready for slaughter, versus a short 14-16 months for corn-fed industrial raised cows.  I guess it’s hard to argue with that when there are a lot of hungry people out there.

The Small Farm

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009
Industrial Farming

Industrial Farming

In my previous post, I discussed the health benefits, the environmental benefits, and the financial benefits of eating more local food that included less meat and more fruits and vegetables.  By eating local, you are investing your money in people in your community, you are reducing the energy and environmental costs associated with your food, and you are more than likely getting a healthier diet.  By eating less meat, which is very energy-intensive, you are also contributing to these causes. 

Challenge yourself to change your diet.  Can you reduce meat from your diet a few times a week?  Can you cook a few more times a week rather than eating out?  Can you buy more local ingredients for your meals?  There is always room for improvement. 

I am currently reading The Omnivore’s Dilemma, by Michael Pollan.  In his book, he discusses the endangered species that is the small farm, now replaced by industrial farms owned by huge corporations.  They seek to extract as much as they possibly can from their industrial farms.  The crop of choice is corn.  It’s easy to grow, and by drenching it in synthetic fertilizer, they can grow massive amounts, year after year.  As a result of this, you can see the omnipresence of corn in our lives.  The snacks, packaging, sodas, frozen dinners, candy, and fast food, all derived from corn products, and thus…fossil fuels.  For every calorie of food produced, it requires on average more than a calorie of fossil fuel.  As Michael Pollan aptly puts it – if it were possible to do, it would be more efficient to just drink fossil fuel. 

And this is the problem facing us today.  Farms are disappearing.  People ingest food and they can’t tell you where it comes from or what it’s even made from.  More preservatives, more corn syrup, more chemicals, more hormones, and more fossil fuels than ever before.  According to climateactionprogramme.com, food and agriculture produces around 20% of greenhouse gas emissions, mostly from industrial farming.  The dirt cheap price of corn has lead to the erradication of family farms, and the erradication of diversity on farms.  You will be hard pressed to find any farm in the midwest that has a diverse selection of crops.  No broccoli, bell peppers, carrots, lettuce, etc.  Industrial farms specialize in corn, and corn only. 

Patagonian Chile

Patagonian Chile

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But as food awareness increases and climate change concerns become more mainstream, this has to change.  Organic food is now easily found across the US, and the local food movement is also increasing in popularity. 

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As I discussed in March, The Enchanting Group has its own organic farm, in Patagonian Chile.  The farm, Ulaa, grows potatoes, berries, lettuce, tomatoes, herbs, nuts, beans, apples, and many other fruits and vegetables.  We initiated a volunteer program for anyone who is willing to work on the farm.  Volunteers can come and stay on the farm for free, in exchange for a committment to work.  It’s a great way to learn about organic farming, and live just a little bit closer to nature.  Volunteers know exactly what they are eating, since they are picking the food themselves from the Earth. 

We currently have 3 volunteers at Ulaa.  They have all had professional careers in the past, but desired a simpler life, removed from the rat race of city life, one that was closer to the land.  The volunteers, and Ulaa, are doing their part to keep alive the idea of a small organic farm.

Food – Health, Envrionment, and $$

Friday, April 24th, 2009

fresh-organic-foodAs I mentioned in the previous post, Enchanting Challenge provides a forum where people can exchange ideas on how to improve their communities.  You can also post your own challenges, in which you challenge yourself (and others) to do things in your daily life to improve your community, the environment, the lives of other people…and thus – the world.  Little changes in your habits can go a long way.  That’s the mindset that’s important to remember – small efforts by many people = big change.

A great place to start for a personal challenge is food.  Diet fads have come and gone for decades; each new diet proves that the previous one doesn’t work, and promises that finally we have found the one that actually works.  High-carb diets, low-carb diets, low-fat diets, low-calorie diets, vegan diets, organic food diets, raw food diets, etc.  We have all heard it before.  People militantly follow one of these diets for a 2 months and quit for various reasons.  Now I’m not here to confirm the validity or absurdity of any specific diet, just to talk about the consequences of our food choices. 

Organic food and locally grown food have been becoming ever more popular this past decade.  After documentaries describing the shabby conditions of fast-food chains, the environmental impact of industrial farms, the health concerns with preservative-laden food, and the carbon footprint of importing food from across the world.  Farmers markets are popping up across the US, the popularity of organic food has skyrocketed, and even growing food in our own backyards is no longer seen as the work of left-wing tree-huggers. 

0597Slow-Food International is an organization that was started in Italy in to preserve the idea of cuisine, to counteract the growing influence of fast-food, and to spread the idea of food that is good for the planet, as well as our bodies.  (Sarah talks about it more in her blog). 

There are a couple changes that you can make that will make your diet healthier, more environmental, and save you money. 

1.  Eating more fruits and vegetables, and less meat.  Industrial feedlots, where cows are raised for slaughter, are extremely energy-intensive.  More than 1/3 of all fossil fuels used in the US go to the meat industry. 

2.  Cooking more meals at home and eating out less.  It’s difficult to know for sure the ingredients in your menu choices, and they are often imported - more fossil fuels required. 

3.  Buying local ingredients.  This is a big one.  Eating locally ensures freshness, the food is most likely more healthy, and it will seriously cut down on the required energy.

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An interesting article from NPR details an interesting approach to a more healthy and environmentally-friendly diet.  Eating vegan before 6PM.  That’s right.  All food consumed before 6PM must be vegan, but you’re free to eat whatever afterwards (with responsible discretion of course).  It’s not easy, but it would force you to change some of your meals.  And that’s what’s important.  Not to be radical about it, but just make some changes that you can keep up.  I sure as heck couldn’t be a strict vegan, no way.  But I could eat fruits and vegetables for lunch, or beans, and healthy pastas.  If vegan is too difficult, try vegetarian before 6PM.  You can have your meat dish for dinner, but you could cut out the bacon at breakfast, or the burger at lunch.  This approach might not be a cure-all, but it sure will improve your diet, and cutdown on carbon emissions.  And if you are forced to get more creative in your meals, you will have to cook more, and eating in is much cheaper than eating out.  So, more money in the bank.  Win-Win-Win.

Ecotourism

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

Continuing with the theme of conservation, and relating to last weeks posts about agri-tourism, today I wanted to talk about Ecotourism. With rapid deforestation, and the equally rapid loss of plant, animal, and marine life worldwide, it is more important than ever to step up preservation and conservation efforts. Some of the richest areas in biodiversity are under threat from pollution, climate change, and human interference. Trying to keep people away from these sites as much as possible may seem like the logical solution, but that will remain a losing battle. By responsibly allowing rain forests, coral reefs, mountain ranges, and tropical islands to become tourist destinations, we can not only protect these threatened habitats, but provide incentives to permanently preserve them.

*Conservation International Photo

*Conservation International Photo

As Sarah talked about in her blog on March 10, in 2008 the human race has officially become predominantly an urban people. For thousands of years the majority of people have lived in rural areas, growing food, living off the land. But no more. Megalopolises are springing up at an ever faster pace. To keep up with satisfying the needs of our mega cities, more and more of the Earth’s resources are being plundered. More and more trees are being cut down for timber; more and more forests are being cleared by property developers; more and more fish are being extracted to feed the world’s growing population. Quenching the thirst of our crowded planet comes at the expense of our most valuable habitats. Conservation International, a leading international NGO specializing in biodiversity preservation, estimates that one species goes extinct every twenty minutes.

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Conservation International Photo

Ecotourism is one way to help preserve these habitats. Tourism is a massive industry will only grow in the future. The idea behind ecotourism is to encourage responsible travel, educate people on the value of our ecosystems, protect these ecosystems, and provide income for the local populations – and thereby creating incentives to preserve these ecosystems. Governments can prohibit deforestation all they want, but if the local population will earn more money by chopping down trees than they would by leaving them untouched, then laws will do nothing. Preaching about the environment to the poor who live in Brazil’s rain forest, for example, will do absolutely nothing unless they are provided with an alternative livelihood. Ecotourism can create these alternatives.

According to Conservation International, ecotourism has provided income, management, and care for more than 33,000 protected areas. They are actively creating opportunities for local populations and preserving areas across Africa, Central America, and South America. One such project is the Chalalán Ecolodge located in Bolivia’s Amazon Rain Forest. Logging and hunting was destroying parts of the rain forest there and the local populations wanted an alternative. With the help of Conservation International, they built an ecolodge, made out of local materials and owned by the local population. Tourists can visit the forest, and participate in activities like birdwatching, canoeing, hiking, swimming, and more. They receive about 1,000 tourists a year and it provides income to more than 70 local families. Logging and the destruction of the forest has not continued in this area.

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In an effort to promote my latest experience in Ulaa, Chile, I wanted to talk about the Alerces. Located in the rainforests of Chile, the Alerces are trees that resemble sequoias. ulaa-010They are some of the tallest and oldest trees on Earth, often over 5,000 years old. Historically, in Chile these trees were chopped down and used for wood, and because the wood was of high quality, it was often used to build houses. But, the Chilean government outlawed the cutting down the Alerces. Ulaa is located near these trees and it provides a unique opportunity to visit them.  For volunteers on the farm (read the post about volunteering in Ulaa), you can visit the Alerces by horseback, upon the completion of your volunteering experience. It is a day long horseback trip, with stunning views of the forest and the mountains that you ride through. Since these trees are often 5,000 years old, it is truly a virgin forest, having never been touched by man or even forest fire.  Preserving the Alerces is historically and environmentally important.  By attracting tourists to see and learn about the Alerces, Ulaa hopes to raise awareness for this cause. 
For those who are interested in conservation and biodiversity, you can find a wealth of information at www.conservation.org. For those who wish to volunteer on an organic farm, Ulaa is the place. Not only can you volunteer on an organic farm, but you can do so in the beauty of Chilean Patagonia AND you have the opportunity to travel, by horse, to visit some of the oldest trees on Earth.

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