Food Project Home Page What's New
About Us
What's New
Blog
Newsletters
Youth Changing Communities
Sustainable Agriculture
BLAST Youth Initiave
Expansion
Buy Food and Products
Donate and Volunteer
Find Your Welcome Page
Contact Us

 

A Food Plan for Boston
Posted by Michael Iceland on December 15, 2008 at 3:06 pm
Categories:

A long-time supporter of The Food Project wrote this piece recently. A slightly shorter version of the op-ed was published in the JP Gazette (a local Boston paper) a few weeks ago. We thought it insightful and engaging, and hoped that it might be a good read for you as well. Enjoy!

A Food Plan for Boston

When I graduated college in 1971, having lived in cities my whole life, I moved to Vermont to explore a simpler lifestyle, closer to nature and the land. A few days after arriving there, I called to say hello to a college advisor who also had by then moved to the Green Mountain State, for similar reasons. We chatted for a minute, and then he said: “Well, have you planted your garden yet?” “Do you mean flowers?” I said. “No. You live in Vermont now. You need to plant a vegetable garden.” I shrugged my shoulders, but within the next few weeks, there was dirt under my fingernails, seeds in my pockets, and manure on the soles of my shoes.

Several years later I returned to the city. My family and I have lived in Jamaica Plain for thirty years and, with almost religious devotion, we plant a vegetable garden every year. I can’t overstate the fulfillment that comes with being outside, digging in the ground, planting seeds, cultivating, nurturing young plants, following their progress, harvesting, and ultimately enjoying, on the dinner table, the fruits of that labor. During the summer months and into the fall, we buy no vegetables from the market. All the vegetables my family eats — lettuce, beans, peppers, tomatoes, zucchini, yellow squash, beets, chard, cucumbers, carrots, eggplant, onions, garlic, cabbage, pumpkins, winter squash, and more — are products of the soil we till.

And so I find myself almost forty years later, at the end of this year’s harvest and a few days after World Food Day, echoing the words of my college advisor – and the more recent urgings of food activists like Michael Pollan — in crying out to my fellow city-dwellers: Plant a garden!

Why? Because there’s nothing better for your family’s health than organically grown vegetables. Because by growing your own you eat the freshest possible, and reduce the “carbon footprint” left when food is shipped from halfway around the world, or even just a few counties away. Because in these trying economic times, it’s reassuring for families to know they can put their own food on the table, several months of the year – and longer, with canning and freezing — for minimal expense. (Boston Natural Areas Network [BNAN] reported on October 20 that the average Boston community garden plot produced $431 worth of food.) And because the act of gardening itself – the small but meaningful bit of stewardship of the land, the connection to nature’s life cycles, the pleasure of nurturing growing things – is simply so rewarding and renewing.

How to do it? We have about 150 community gardens in Boston – my family plants in one of them — but we need to create many, many more. Large swaths of parkland in residential areas throughout the city — Franklin Park and the Southwest Corridor Park in my area come to mind – can become shared urban farmsteads, with minimal outlay. Workplaces with some greenspace around them (or even a flat roof) can set a portion aside for growing vegetables, that employees can tend before and after work, and during lunch break. And, of course, home gardens, in the front or back yard, are always the simplest option.

Schools should be included as an indispensable part of this urban farming vision. “Food” can become a key part of each grade’s mission and curriculum, with growing vegetables at its core. Classes can start seedlings in the classroom, plant and tend them in the school’s own community garden, care for and harvest them, and cook up tasty recipes together. Parents would be strongly encouraged to participate, weekends or after-school, and during the summer — bonding with other families while gardening together. The students’ curriculum: lots of practical math problems, science galore (biology, botany, chemistry, geology, ecology, meteorology), geography, health/nutrition, the history and geo-politics of water and food, prose and poetry musings on nature: a veritable cornucopia of diverse topics to inform and enrich their hands-on experiences.

As a city boy who was introduced to the joys of gardening many years ago, and has been thankful ever since, I hope we find ways to make urban farming an integral part of civic life in Boston. Several organizations — like BNAN (including their SLUG – “Students Learning Through Urban Gardening” — Program), Earthworks (fruit tree planting throughout the city) and The Food Project (engaging inner city youth in urban farming) — are already working hard to make that happen. Let’s urge our school, public health, and municipal leaders to cultivate their ties to these and other green pioneers, giving every Boston family a chance to “grow their own.”

Michael D. Felsen
Jamaica Plain, MA. 02130

The author is an attorney who gratefully gardens at the South Street Community Garden on the Jamaica Plain campus of UMass Medical School.

2 Comments




2 Responses to “A Food Plan for Boston”


  1. Danielle said on

    I’m a country girl who’s been living in the city for about 5 years. When I say country, I mean that my front and back yards growing up were corn fields. I remember stealing pears from the tree that somehow managed to thrive in the midst of the tilled corn each year.

    I think you’ve captured something here that I find is truly missing from my life in the city – dirt, sunshine, nature, and watching/being part of the natural cycles of life. I’m going to take your advice and try to plant on my deck in the spring.

    Any words of advice or great resources for a novice green thumb?




  2. Margaret said on

    Dear Michael,
    Thank you for the joy you convey and the hope you inspire in me. My dad used to plant a huge garden when I was a toddler, but he stopped some time when I entered grade school. I have hazy memories of walking along lettuce plants and picking beets and carrots. I’ve been a type-A my whole life, and I’ve lived in cities since I graduated from college. I always thought I was to busy to have a garden.
    However, I read “Animal, Vegtable, Miracle” last summer, and life hasn’t been the same since! I got my household signed up for milk from a local dairy this winter(Thatchers in Milton) and just confirmed our first time ever CSA from The Food Project today. I’m reading Pollen this week. Who knows, by this spring I might just be ready to try out a backyard or roof top garden of my own. Any hints for the best veggies for the absolute novice to try?
    Thank you for writing.
    Margaret









SEARCH  |  SITE MAP  |  WELCOME PAGES  |  BUILDING A SUSTAINABLE LOCAL FOOD SOURCE

HOME  |  ABOUT  |  NEW  |  YOUTH  |  SUSTAINABLE  |  BLAST  |  EXPANSION  |  BUY  |  DONATE OR VOLUNTEER  |  CONTACT

Lincoln   PO Box 705, Lincoln, MA 01773  |   TEL 781-259-8621  |   FAX 781-259-9659
Boston   PO Box 256141, Dorchester, MA 02125  |   TEL 617-442-1322  |   FAX 617-442-7918
webmaster@thefoodproject.org