Item 2 is a quick report from the bicycle tour my family of four took for Labor Day weekend. My kids, aged five (on a trail-a-bike) and seven (on his own bike) pedaled the 11-mile length of the Minuteman rail-to-trail, and enjoyed a visit to their grandparents in the suburbs. My wife and I also biked over to visit the weekend and evening garden business of Jennifer Hashley, whose day job is directing the New Entry Sustainable Farming Project at the Friedman School of Nutrition at Tufts.
At their home just west of Boston, Jennifer and her fiance Pete, who were featured in a great article in the Boston Globe this summer, raise chicken for eggs and meat and are starting up some hogs. Ever since reading about Polyface Farm in Omnivore's Dilemma, I had wanted to see in person these mobile chicken coops that are moved each day to deposit fertilizer in a new part of the pasture. The pigs' joyful meal of tomatoes, similarly, highlights the synergies from traditional diversified farms that get lost in monoculture. My wife and I left with our bicycle pannier full of wonderful produce and eggs and our heads spinning with ideas we look forward to trying.
2 comments:
If you have not already read "You Can Farm" by Joel Salatin of Polyface Farms, I recommend it. I, with my black thumbs and irregular routine, have no desire or talent for farming, but I derived HUGE inspiration from the book. His voice is clear and intelligent, and he reminds me of my grandfather, the son of farmers in Georgia. I can bestow no higher compliment than that.
It,s a very interesting experience. We are a group in Aragón that work in ecologial and well-done products.
http://www.sabor-artesano.com
My blog:
http://daroca-lorien.blogspot.com
Regards.
Luis
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