Articles in Backyards
Sometimes it takes years to find your groove, to discover what truly makes you happy each and every day. You think, toil, seek and shift. Some grooves reveal themselves faster than others; providing varying levels of anxiety and unwelcome hiccups along the way. Inevitably, the process to smooth out the hiccups often leads you one step closer to finding your groove.
Asheville, NC prides itself on a thriving farm-to-table scene and flourishing network of family farms. While the city owes that reputation to many active organizations and individuals, one local non-profit, the Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project, laid the groundwork for city’s food future.
Whether you’ll be growing food in a big backyard, a community garden plot, or in a small windowbox, now is the time to plan what you’ll grow this year.
The Future of Good Food Starts with Good Ideas: BK Farmyards from SkeeterNYC on Vimeo.
One of the most important things we can do to support the sustainable food movement is to educate new generations, especially …
New Orleans was full of excitement last week when The Saints came marching in after their Super Bowl victory, but four and a half years after Hurricane Katrina, there are approximately 70,000 vacant lots in New Orleans and nobody is celebrating that.
There has been a huge surge of interest in urban agriculture in the last couple years, and we believe the only way to make urban agriculture a lasting profession is if there is a model for financial sustainability. We never want to hear, ‘Remember in the 2000-2010’s when urban farming was the latest fad?’ Part of BK Farmyards mission is to eliminate barriers for jobs in urban agriculture. We plan to teach intensive, production farming techniques on site and use the production sales to expand the farm to its full acre and employ talented farmers in Brooklyn.
Oysters from waters in the region used to be big business in New York City, and Michael Osinski wants them to be that way again. Mr. Osinski is the protagonist in this satisfying profile of a man obsessed with farming these once-plentiful bivalves. Mr. Osinski’s recent past has a whiff of intrigue that is not covered here. He is a retired software programmer who, in a New York Magazine article, confessed to writing some of the code that played a role in the mortgage meltdown.
Did you know that “Almost 90% of diners say they want restaurants to serve only sustainable seafood, but nearly 75% are unaware which fish are close to extinction.” That is a stunning statistic brought to you by my friend Jacqueline Church. There is a seafood sustainability workshop in Chicago on Monday, October 19th in Chicago. For more details, check this link.


