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ENVIRONMENT-US:
Organic Gardens vs. Chem-Fed Lawns
By
Enrique Gili
SAN DIEGO, United States, Mar 27 (IPS/IFEJ) -
Sandalistas are on the march here to create a
homegrown organic food movement, encouraging
gardeners to tear up their lawns for healthier, more
natural alternatives.
In
doing so, they're advocating the re-greening of the
urban landscape for the sake of food security and
social justice.
About 400 people attended a recent conference titled
"Cultivating Justice" under the aegis of "Food Not
Lawns", a grassroots organisation that combines
gardening with political action. On a sunny
Saturday, the guerilla gardening wing of the social
justice movement broke bread with foodies to network
and share information with other like-minded people
who are concerned not just with what people eat, but
how they go about procuring food.
The participants belong a growing demographic of
Californians dubbed "cultural creatives" who are
focused on putting progressive ideals into action
not only through social change but by dedicating
themselves to healing the planet. Many believe the
road to ecological restoration begins with changing
their own personal habits.
"People are hungry for information," said Kate
Hughes, one of the event organisers. With workshops
on a wide range of topics, the well-attended
conference attracted a broad cross-section of San
Diego county residents from back-to-the-land hippie
types to young campus activists who see a connection
between U.S. oil dependence and factory farming.
The San Diego chapter of Food Not Lawns is an
offshoot of similar groups based in Northern
California and the Pacific Northwest, a region that
is home to much of the organic foods movement
gaining popularity around the U.S.
Paul Maschka is a local gardening guru, having spent
much of his adult life working as a horticulturalist
caring for and cultivating thousands of varieties of
plants for the San Diego Zoo. The self-styled "dirt
cheap gardener" is an enthusiastic proponent of
locally raised produce, and grows a wide variety of
edible plants in his own backyard, ranging from
artichokes to sunflowers.
Maschka's lecture on organic gardening included a
heavy dose of social commentary. "Organic gardening
techniques and methods are not taught in Southern
California," he said. To obtain first-hand
knowledge, he has sought guidance at demonstration
gardens in Santa Cruz and San Louis Obispo, where
organic farming practices are far more prevalent.
According to Maschka, the average lawn is a flat,
featureless, artificially maintained environment
heavily dependent on synthetic chemicals. The
chemicals used in lawn care also have a seedy
history. Pesticides, for example, are little more
than nerve agents derived from stockpiled toxins
developed during World War Two, he says.
Lawns are holdovers dating from the Middle Ages when
the French aristocracy began converting otherwise
productive fields into pleasure grounds, he says. In
gardening-mad England, later generations of the
bourgeoisie displayed their newfound wealth in
similar fashion, planting rose beds and establishing
luxuriant green lawns.
This historical trend would have far-reaching
repercussions for middle-class home owners in the
21St century who are willing to spend hundreds of
dollars every year on the upkeep and maintenance of
their lawns. According to a 2002 economic impact
study published by the University of Florida, the
lawn care and turf industry generated a staggering
57 billion dollars annually and employed
800,000-plus people.
Using satellite and aerial imagery, research
scientists from the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration have calculated that approximately
162,000 square kilometres of the United States is
covered in turf -- an area roughly three times
larger than any irrigated crop currently under
cultivation. And lawns are thirsty, consuming
approximately 270 billion gallons of water a week in
the U.S. -- enough to irrigate 327,000 square
kilometres of organic vegetables.
For Maschka, lawns represent a paradox, having the
outward appearance of vitality when in fact most of
the microorganisms that support plant growth have
been killed off. Lawns are fed something on the
order of 10 times more pesticides and herbicides
than commercial crops, he adds.
"Things have got to change," agreed Issa Esperanza.
The daughter of missionary parents, she grew up
running wild in Latin America, climbing trees and
harvesting her own fruits and vegetables. Upon
returning to the United States, she was shocked to
discover the lack of fresh produce. She now has come
to rely upon her green-thumbed friends and local
farmers' markets to obtain her greens.
That it doesn't have to be this way was a sentiment
echoed throughout the day. Chef Ron Oliver is a bona
fide foodie. As chef de cuisine at the Marine Room,
one of San Diego's preeminent dining establishments,
his business is based on pleasing people. The
restaurant relies heavily on locally grown produce
and the organic output of the 40-acre Blue Sky
Ranch, where food and New Age mysticism go
hand-in-hand.
"We're lucky," Oliver said. At Blue Sky, full-time
residents and volunteers consider themselves to be
caretakers of the land. Fruits and vegetables are
grown according to the season and without the use of
synthetic chemicals for the benefit of the Blue Sky
community and paying clients.
Oliver says he had own "whole foods" epiphany when
his own children reached school age. School lunch
programmes follow strict federal guidelines based on
caloric intake rather than nutritional value, he
says. He decided to participate in the conference to
enlist the support of other like-minded people in
the hope of building a kitchen garden for the Chula
Vista elementary school, where his kids aged 8 and
10 attend.
"If anything, gardening will teach them patience,"
he says.
Oliver sees a close connection between the ideals of
Jeffersonian democracy and nutrition. He believes
people vote with their forks, and if given the
opportunity, they would prefer organic. "We're
empowering the companies damaging the planet," he
lamented.
(*This story is part of a series of features on
sustainable development by IPS and IFEJ -
International Federation of Environmental
Journalists.) (END/2007)
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=37108 |
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