Farmers’ Markets Play a Vital Role in America’s Changing Economy
Drive across America today, and there’s one thing you’re guaranteed to see more of: farmers’ markets.
Drive across America today, and there’s one thing you’re guaranteed to see more of: farmers’ markets.
Brian tells the story of one early morning on the farm.
I am a great fan of Colin Tudge, not least because he is an original thinker, as amply demonstrated in his latest book, Six Steps Back to the Land.
We say that every square meter of land that is worked with agro-ecology is a liberated square meter.
With planning permission for a permanent rural worker’s dwelling hot off the press, we now have the green light to develop the farm long-term with security of tenure.
I believe the New Urban Agenda has the potential to start a whole new conversation about food and cities and bring a whole lot of new people up to speed with where the early adopters have been — left out standing in their field, looking for someone to talk to – for some time.
It was my first experience of wild mushroom foraging, and it was magical.
In the same way forts have armies to protect themselves against invaders, plants growing in disease-suppressive soil have beneficial bacteria to defend themselves against parasites…
“This is a female moment in time,” observes Rev Dele, founder of the Virginia-based, Soil Souls. “The Earth and society are about to give birth to a new culture. It’s women who give birth to that which is yet unseen.”
SRI is open-source. It does not belong to anyone, but is shared as a commons. Nobody “owns” either SRI theory or practice.
Community gardens and urban agriculture projects are a powerful way for people to connect with others for healthy, enriching experiences in their neighborhoods.
Can simply changing how and what we grow really make a difference to a changing climate?