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Fresh Ideas Blog

Six Farm Labor Recruiters Charged in Largest Human Trafficking Case in US History
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From the Digest

When Local Governments Give Carrots for Urban Agriculture

News of cities changing zoning and land use policies to support urban agriculture is growing. Seattle provides a fantastic model for city policies that support a thriving local food system.
By Erin MacDougall

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Digest archives

  • April 2010
    Exploring the Cuban Food System
    Although we fully understood that four days in Cuba would barely let us scratch the surface in regard to the functioning of this nation’s food and health systems, our recent trip with the Kellogg Fellows Leadership Alliance exposed us to a dramatically different model for nourishing and providing medical services to a nation’s people.
  • February 2010
    Child Nutrition
    Research continues to support the assertion that unhealthy food environments are detrimental to the long-term health and educational success of children. Each dollar well spent on our children can provide enormous returns. It's time we take advantage of tremendous opportunities available to support healthy kids.
  • September 2009
    Fresh Ideas
    The policies, technologies and industries that drive what is on our dinner plate have a profound impact on our collective well-being and culture. Here are ideas for making our food system work better.

Meet the Fellows

Debra Eschmeyer

Debra Eschmeyer, food justice and school food maven, promotes access to healthy food for all.

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Home » Digest

June 2010

Digging In: The Garden Revolution

Chris Carmichael Multimedia

Chris Carmichael Multimedia

Planting a couple of tomato and basil plants can do far more than simply enhance a late summer meal. In this month’s Digest, fellows describe how the gardening revolution is providing the foundation for stronger communities, while also developing solutions for some of the forthcoming global challenges. Read more from the editor

Gardeners Have the Power!

Video highlights from Kitchen Gardeners International.
By Roger Doiron

Teach Your Veggies: Five Tips for Better Eating Through Gardening with Kids

After eight years of gardening with her son Liam at their Wisconsin farm and bed and breakfast, Lisa Kivirist has found that kids will eat anything they have a connection to growing or harvesting themselves.
By Lisa Kivirist

Detroit: The Business of Urban Agriculture

Alethia Carr reports from the Business of Urban Agriculture Summit in Detroit and some controversial proposals for the city's vacant land.
By Alethia Carr

A Garden Becomes a Protest

The story of Anathoth Community Garden in rural North Carolina shows the powerful synergy of faith and gardening...and its potential for healing a broken community.
By Fred Bahnson

Introducing FoodCorps

The vision for FoodCorps is to recruit young adults for a yearlong term of public service in school food systems.
By Curt Ellis Debra Eschmeyer

Garden Podcasts from the Food Sleuth

In her weekly radio show as the Food Sleuth, Melinda Hemmelgarn has been digging into a number of garden-related topics.
By Melinda Hemmelgarn

Truck Farm Picking Up Speed

Truck Farm, brainchild of Curt Ellis and Ian Cheney, is is picking up speed and moving far beyond being the "world's tiniest CSA" to status as a public art and education project and forthcoming documentary film.
By Curt Ellis

Gardening: A National Call to Action

Over the next 50 years, the U.S. and the international community will face health, food security and environmental challenges more daunting than any civilization has faced before. Here are nine reasons why gardening should be part of the solution.
By Angela Tagtow Erin MacDougall Fred Bahnson Lisa Kivirist Roger Doiron Rose Hayden-Smith

Victory Gardens a Boon in Hard Times

In hard times, Americans have always turned to gardening. Dr. Rose Hayden-Smith discusses modern lessons from the Victory Garden movements of World War I and World War II.
By Rose Hayden-Smith

When Local Governments Give Carrots for Urban Agriculture

News of cities changing zoning and land use policies to support urban agriculture is growing. Seattle provides a fantastic model for city policies that support a thriving local food system.
By Erin MacDougall

Gardening for the Next Generation

From Farmville to FoodCorps to the Obama Administration's Let's Move campaign, the time is ripe for getting young folks off the couch and into the soil.
By Debra Eschmeyer

From the editor

I came to work at the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy several years ago because I have a passion for working on the big picture issues impacting our food system.  I relished the opportunity to work on national agricultural policies and international trade – issues that impact the lives of people across the planet. I remain in awe of the infrastructural and logistical challenges to grow, fertilize, transport and process the volumes of food necessary for the growing global population.

We need to continue to monitor and advocate for sound food system decisions to be made in the halls of Congress, in the board rooms of agribusiness corporations, in the financial industry of Wall Street, and the global institutions of Geneva.  But the fellows featured in this Digest have convinced me and thousands of others that you don’t have to be a power broker to develop solutions. Planting a couple of tomato and basil plants can do far more than simply enhance a late summer meal.

First, gardeners are providing an example of what is possible. Without the model of so many gardening gurus, I probably never would have realized that my postage stamp-sized backyard was well suited for a raised bed garden and chicken coop. Thanks to the exposure to gardening neighbors and the outreach of advocates, our national mindset has shifted dramatically about gardening in recent years – what is very old has become new again.

Second, think about the scientific knowledge that is gained by the millions of gardening experiments that are occurring around the country. Backyard scientists are trying different seeds, soil amendments, companion plantings, pest controls, harvesting methods – an incredible number of variables that USDA and land grant researchers could never afford to duplicate. This is creating a knowledge base that will advance food production in ways that we can’t yet imagine.

And third, the gardening revolution has given a whole new twist to the persistent question of “who will feed the world?” Urban and peri-urban agriculture can potentially produce an enormous volume of food and will be an increasingly important source of food in a people-rich and fossil fuel-scarce world. Ending world hunger is not just about increasing yields on the large grain farms of the Midwest, Brazil, Ukraine, South Africa and other regions, but is also about providing the resources and technical assistance to allow gardens to thrive in small plots around the world.

In this month’s Digest,  Roger Doiron and Lisa Kivirist inspire us to get our hands dirty with the nitty gritty of kitchen gardening and practical tips for gardening with kids. Alethia Carr and Erin MacDougall’s articles about gardening efforts in Detroit and Seattle, respectively, illustrate how local government impacts gardening and urban agriculture. Our collection of podcast interviews by the “Food Sleuth”and Fred Bahnson’s description of the impact of a faith community’s garden are sure to inspire, and we hope you’ll be as excited as we are about the national movement that is exhibited in the development of FoodCorps, and Curt Ellis’s forthcoming Truck Farm documentary. Or maybe you’ll be motivated to policy action by Deb Eschmeyer’s analysis of the policy work that is needed, or Rose Hayden Smith’s eloquent request that President Obama summon us to service.  As we endure the heat of summer, we hope you’ll start rolling up your sleeves in one way or another.

Happy Gardening!

—Mark Muller, editor

Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy