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For
Immediate Release January 2007
Contact: Barbara
Berst Adams
www.BarbaraBerstAdams.com
High resolution photos available upon request
Welcoming Home
the Farm Next Door:
Small Farms are Returning via the Micro Eco-Farming
Movement
SEATTLE, WA 2007
-- When the harvest moon shines, the faint memory of a nation of
local farms celebrating another season of abundance lingers in the
air.
"But soon,"
says Barbara Adams, author of Micro Eco-Farming: Prospering from
Backyard to Small Acreage in Partnership with the Earth, and
hostess of the Micro Eco-Farming Center at www.MicroEcoFarming.com,
"it may be more than just a vision of long ago. More often
now, if we turn the corner, the farm is real."
Perhaps it is
Singing Brook Farm in Worthington, Massachusetts, where Mariam Massaro
tends certified organic herb, vegetable and flower gardens on less
than an acre. Or maybe its Robert Farr's ten-acre sustainable farm
in Loudoun County, Virginia, where his family grows nearly 70 varieties
of peppers and other fruits and vegetables to produce more than
40,000 bottles of all-natural marinades, barbecue sauces, mustards
and salsas
right on the farm. A new form of farm is becoming
more and more visible.
"Under the
umbrella term "micro eco-farm," says Ms. Adams, "they
thrive from backyards to small acreage, and are prospering in our
new century."
And according
to, Guillermo Payet, creator of LocalHarvest.org which supports
and gathers information on and for sustainable farmers across the
country, "about 45% of our members are 15 acres or smaller."
Indeed, our new
century is prospering because of these farms. For as these small
farms gain ground, the earth is being restored. "In the past
four and a half years," said Robert Farr, "we've seen
our holistic farming practices dramatically increase the bird population."
Each year, along with local wildlife, the land beneath these farms
grows richer, and holds and filters more water instead of becoming
more depleted and causing more polluted water run-off. These farms
are well worth discovering and supporting (if not starting one of
your own).
Where did they
come from? "Well, " says Ms. Adams, "they came from
us. The people. They are fed by new values that we've created which
collectively fuel them forward" These trends include the Slow
Food Movement, the grassroots groups finding ways to reconnect children
with the earth and their food sources; the expanding compassion
for the environment, an increasingly health oriented society, and
humanity's new understanding of the value of strong local economy
and food production. Along with this, a mysterious innate human
desire to eat directly from a garden seems to be a powerful force.
Long ago, neighboring farms' fruits, herbs and vegetables were picked
at their prime and so tender they'd melt in your mouth
but
they didn't ship and hold up in storage well (they didn't need to).
With neighboring farms around every corner, hundreds of locally
adapted and very tender varieties flourished across the land
thin-skinned aromatic tomatoes that grew from Florida to the Northwest,
blueberries adapted from the north to the south, and strawberries-aromatic
and melting-for every backyard. Baby carrots, hand-dug, brittle
and sweet, dozens of potato varieties in a rainbow of colors and
textures were part of the treasures of the land. When we went to
centralized corporate agriculture, the hundreds of locally adapted
varieties that had been chosen over generations for flavor gave
way to a few types that grow in those particular centralized regions
and ship well at the expense of tenderness, freshness and flavor.
But, as described in the book, Micro Eco-Farming, enough
of us have insisted on a return home. The local small farm can now
supply the tender versions again, since theirs more often go from
harvest to table without mechanical harvesting and long distance
shipping of massive quantities of perishable crops. Since such farmers
are not restricted to growing only one crop that must sell in a
rush as a perishable commodity, they can adapt and grow with the
flow of social changes and new ideas.
"But asking
what the new micro eco-farm looks like," says the author, "is
like asking what an artist's painting looks like. Which artist?
And which painting?"
Each farmer weaves
his or her own picture according to bioregion, community, and the
farmer's personality, and the image changes continually. That's
what makes them so magical.
The new micro
eco-farms fill spots of land from less than an acre to small-acre
parcels. World travel and the Internet have allowed them to discover
and merge the most remarkable historical and cutting edge small-space
growing methods, from French royalty to Chinese intensive to new
American methods, and apply them to farms producing more per square
foot than at any other time in history, an opportunity not available
to their forefathers and mothers. In some cases, the farms are the
sole income for both spouses and their family. They may also be
the second household income for one parent, a single person's sustenance,
or an addition to a home cottage industry such as goat cheese-making
workshops or weaving natural fibers from the mini-farm's satin Angora
rabbits. The canvas of their land flows and evolves along with the
earth and humanity with a new display each season.
Since they operate
more like gardeners, entrepreneurs and artists than agribusiness,
they do not invest hundreds of thousands of dollars into combines
and chemicals specific to one huge monocrop. Instead, they can add
a few new herbs, an heirloom pepper variety, or test vintage cutting
flowers in any season with the same gentle equipment they used for
previous crops. They are often diverse, growing many different crops,
noting which ones have more favor with their customers than others.
Therefore, if one crop seems less popular, they simply don't grow
it again. No need to invest in national ad campaigns to manipulate
sales of something humanity has said they will not buy, in order
to pay off investments in combines and chemicals.
Even microfarms
with more permanent crops, such as apples, weave a continually evolving
story, including bringing children back to the farm. As described
in the book, Michael Phillips' original antique organic apple orchard
has evolved into Heartsong Farm of Groveton, New Hampshire, where
he and his wife, Nancy, now also offer herbs and herbal remedies
along with their apples. The orchard doubles as a place for some
of their herbs to grow beneath the trees, a place for children to
explore and a camping place for adults attending their farm classes.
"Many children grow up removed from the natural world,"
said Nancy about the camps their farm puts on for children. "What
delight they show when they finally get their hands in the soil
or wade out in the brook! I simply love having Nature & Spirit
camps for children here at our farm each summer."
"Many beautiful
micro eco-farms are carving their way into our landscape,"
says Ms. Adams. And her book describes dozens of them, along with
growing techniques and methods of micro-farm management. Mini-grass-fed
goat dairies produce artisan cheeses from generational recipes flavored
with local herbs. Miniature pony ranches hold animal camps for kids,
and market gardens sell heirloom and exotic melons such as "Tigger,"
with its fiery red zigzag striped rind and perhaps the most fragrant
flesh on earth, discovered in an Armenian mountain village market.
Hopefully, the harvest moon shines down on a strengthened foundation
of such farms where their growth will continue. So, go ahead and
turn the corner (or go on-line for a local farm near you), and see
what bounty is available.
This press
release is available for authentic, established professional journalistic
media for use as is or modified via arrangement with the contact
person above. For more information on the Micro Eco-Farming Movement,
visit the Micro Eco-Farming Center at www.MicroEcoFarming.com
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