Showing posts with label New Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Mexico. Show all posts

Friday, April 11, 2014

Mora Seed Swap. SEEDS-The Local Revolution.

                                     I appear dead before I am alive
Although often quite small, inside my skin a tree can live
I can survive hundreds of years without food or water
I can be as small as dust or as large as a foot ball
Humans and animals eat me
I can fly, swim and hitch a ride
I can survive freezing, fires and intense droughts.
 What am I?
Local seeds for the Seed Swap
High elevation corn donated by Bevan Williams from Cortez
The 2nd Annual Seed Swap and Gathering was held on April 6th, 2014, at the St Gertrude Parish Hall in the center of the small but vibrant village of Mora, New Mexico.  It was one of those spring days with flurries of snow and cold winds but the local community brought a warmth and resilience into their gathering place by the sharing of precious seeds, local wisdom, food and gratitude.


 After Sunday morning church services people slowly arrived with their carefully hand-packaged seeds, food to share and knowledge. The day was convened by Marleny Alfaro of Mora Grows Seed Library http://moragrows.wordpress.com and Rodger Gonzales of Los de Mora Local Growers' Cooperative. Marleny is a native of the island of Cuba and has land she and her family farm in Mora. Rodger is a native of Mora, is the president of Los de Mora, and is a mover and shaker in his home community.
Marleny and Rodger lead an opening to evoke into the room each of the 50 or so community voices.  We heard from bee keepers, cattle growers, community members wanting to learn a new sustainable way to live their lives, a young couple from Cleveland, who have started a small company to promote healthy living in their village, from Casa de Cultura http://www.casadeculturalvnm.org/ about an upcoming Las Vegas Seed Exchange, from Small Family Farm and about new food growing initiatives for Mora County.

Rodger Gonzales local grower and activist.
The Mora County watershed includes forested uplands, pasture lands and lowland valleys with a high water table that have been utilized for traditional agricultural practices. So this highlands valley has a history of growing and was at one time in the early1900's known as "the bread basket of New Mexico" for its unique variety of wheat.  The present day community came together to sit with this historical knowledge and looked to the future of contemporary growing practices with a collaborative vision.

Nick Morrow talks about his local farm and the importance of hand tools

Throughout the day there were discussions, informative workshops on the importance of bee keeping, seed-saving, soil conservation, use of hand tools, permaculture and encouragement to support the re-emergence of a local economically viable growing community. The Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station was parked outside the parish hall and became the educational attraction for the younger participants.

Seed Wall in the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station.



Marleny Alfaro seed-saving presentation
 Marleny opened her presentation on seed-saving with a loud and clear voice,  "Seed-saving is one of the most important things we can do. To encourage a new economy we must think from a seeds perspective."

 The Mora County Community is surely doing this by looking towards each other to learn, to collaborate and to share. They are holding the seed of their dreams and listening. They are making waves and taking action. They are forming cooperatives, they are planning a new main street, successfully fighting fracking and they are making a difference.  


We can all learn from this unique New Mexican Community. 
So please we invite you to take a moment and listen to the following seed stories:

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Gaia Gardens: the struggle to hold the hope and dreams for a new urban agriculture in Santa Fe, New Mexico.



On August 19th SeedBroadcast spent the morning with Poki and Dominique at Gaia Gardens. They graciously took time out from weeding and collecting seeds to share their dream, hopes and the recent struggle to hold on to their unique urban farm.

Gaia Gardens is the first organic, educational farm within the city limits of Santa Fe, New Mexico. The 3.7 acres of land conveniently slopes towards the Arroyo Chamiso, making it efficient for water harvesting. A well-used bike and walking trail meanders along the bank of the arroyo at the edge of this abundant garden, making this a prime location for a community driven urban farm.
 
Sunflowers, beans and the tomato hoop house

This small farm is the vision of Poki Piottin and Dominque Pozo, who for the past two years have dedicated their hard labor and passion into creating a place of magic potential.  Poki is the vegetable grower and Dominique tends the flowers and is the farms’ seed-saver. The 15,000 feet of gardens are producing an abundance of organic vegetables, squash, beans, corn (the three sisters) seven-foot high sunflowers shade the marigolds and kale, ripening tomatoes grow protected in a small hoop house and basil forms  semi circles around the purple-flowered potato patch.

Poki was fifty-four when he started this farm in the heart of Santa Fe, it was his dream and he says that he could not have done it without the help and dedication of the community.  They started with no financing, not an easy prospect. However this lack of funds became an opportunity rather than a hindrance as they had to find a larger community to help form this venture, and this they did. Many community members came forward with donations of equipment, seeds, plants and materials. They formed a successful recycling project, which expanded to being a clearinghouse for other organizations, which eventually lead Gaia Gardens to receive an award for best recycler from the 
City of Santa Fe. 

All was moving along successfully, with their dedicated hard work and with the help of many volunteers the gardens started producing and they were able to sell their excess of vegetables, seeds and compost tea at the local farmers markets. 


Hubbard Squash

Gaia chard

Then about three months ago the city came down hard on them with a litany of violations, including having too many volunteers, holding educational movie nights, allowing wwoofers (Willing Workers On Organic Farms http://www.wwoofusa.org/) to stay in tents, parking issues from visiting groups and having a farm stand. Now the farm can only have two volunteers at a time, they had to close down the farm stand which had become the neighborhood gathering spot three time a week and also  they had to postpone their educational programs.

“The farm has suffered tremendously by being deprived of its work force and its ability to continue to carry out its mission to educate people and build community. We are accepting the fact that we did not know that we were going to be in the center of a storm and drawn into politics. With a little bit of reflection it makes sense as we are the first urban farm in Santa Fe and it has pretty much happened to every first farm in every city.  I am not sure we can keep going, this is not sustainable any more, I have a huge grief,” Poki uttered as he looked down towards the earth. “The farm is suffering as we do not have enough labor and I am spending most of my time thinking about creative ways to get through this storm of city codes.”

Poki looking at his squash plants
Around the nation there is a growing network of urban farming http://www.urbanfarming.org/
City gardens have become models for new farming practices from truck bed farms to guerrilla gardening, urbanites have found a way to bring small -scale farming into the city. According to the Untied States Department of Agriculture, around 15 percent of the wrolds food is now grown in urban areas.

" A lot of things have come together to make urban farming so popular,'' said Adrian Benepe, a senior Vice President for the Trust for Public Land, a land conservation non-profit in San Francisco.
"The advent of the community gardening movement coincided with the interest for fresh food and even more recently, the interest and necessity to allow people to eat better. But despite all the benefits - from reducing urban blight to teaching kids about where their food comes from - farming in some cities is easier than others."
The idea of supplemental food production beyond rural farming operations is not new and has been used during war times and the Great Depression when food shortage issues arose. There are many social benefits that have emerged from urban agricultural practices, such as improved over all social and emotional well-being, improved health and nutrition, increased income, employment, food security and community social life.
The Sustainable Cities Institute http://www.sustainablecitiesinstitute.org cites "Local governments can use urban agriculture as a tool to address many financial, health, and environmental issues. For example, agriculture in and close to major cities can help the environment by, among other things reducing the distances food travels. Community gardens can keep people active while providing them with  natural, locally grown food. Municipal policies can help community gardeners make money by allowing them to sell excess produce.  More over community gardens can beautify neighborhoods and serve as a focal point that promotes resident interaction".
  


Around the nation many cities have changed or are looking at adapting their city codes and restrictions to accommodate the benefits of urban farms, as the "City Different" Santa Fe is lagging way behind this national growing trend. It is time and essential for the well being of this city to take some big bold strides in order not to be left behind. Lets take a look at these city codes and find a way to support and encourage urban farms. They are the way to a sustainable and healthier future. Lets designate Gaia Gardens, as the first urban Santa Fe farm, a city treasure and not a city problem.

Please wake up Santa Fe, it is time.

As SeedBroadcast was about to leave the farm Poki gathered together a bag full of fresh vegetables and duck eggs, as he handed these to me he looked me in the eye and smiled. On leaving with this abundance of food and compassion I held tight to Poki's parting words:

"I find it really sad that in these times when we so need cooperation and understanding and kindness and to reach out to those that are different, that a city can just impose their might and create such  damage on something so delicate. It's painful, it's interesting, it's insane and it is perfect all at once. There are wars everywhere, there is allot of conflict and a need to reinvent the way we deal with legal systems and city codes that are hindering creativity from doing its work, or people from doing creative work. How can we do this without having to fight and without having to justify ourselves but do it in a way that is resting in the beauty of growing food, taking care of our ecosystems and taking care of our kids and elders? This is a big challenge for me".


Listen to Poki and Dominique tell their stories:


   
Lets find a way to support Gaia Gardens, lets be creative, lets really be the “City different”  time is running out!

Basil garden