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Possibilism & Positivism in a New Political Era

December 7, 2016 by Jim Dyer 1 Comment

greatblueheronThe climate is changing—both physically, and in case you hadn’t noticed, politically. However you voted, you are likely among those who now sense a considerable uncertainty about how things will unfold with the new administration. We would do well to recognize the disenchantment and concerns that pervaded the campaign—over the economy, our health system, our social order, and the ability of government to effect meaningful change. We would do well to hope for the best and redouble efforts to ensure that changes enacted are sustainable and fair for all.

The power of local food: For those of us working to promote local sustainable food, we see the power of healthy local food systems to address health, social justice, local economies, and meaningful public engagement—issues central to the recent presidential campaign. In that sense our work is as important as ever.

What was curiously absent in the campaign was any significant attention to climate change, even though we know it is one of the greatest threats facing us, and that immediate action is needed to avoid irreversible and potentially catastrophic impacts on our world. Biodiversity—I didn’t hear it mentioned once. In spite of inattention to these two critical issues, we remain committed to using the power of the local food movement to address both climate, and biodiversity.

Possibilism and surprises: I admit to being obsessed the last 27 days trying to catch a glimpse of where we are going as a nation. All I have so far are glimpses, profound concerns, and possibilities. As I have mentioned before, I subscribe to the concept of “possibilism” to maintain some sense of sanity—that good outcomes are possible, and therefore we have an obligation to try, to stay engaged. We just may be surprised.

Surprises trend both ways, good and bad. It seems that scientists are repeatedly surprised as glaciers and Arctic sea ice melt faster and faster. My sense is that actually keeping our global warming to 2 degrees C or below would be a surprise—a wonderful one. On the other hand, increasingly competitive solar and wind may edge out fossil fuels even without government assistance. Political will just might move toward a carbon tax, regenerative agriculture, and fairness toward all people, creatures, and the earth. As many people, I swing between pessimism and optimism, but having even the possibility of good outcomes is what keeps me going.

Positivism: To temper those inevitable swings between optimism and pessimism, I find that a deliberate effort to see the good, the positive, and the hopeful helps. We need to be able to see the problems facing us at the same time as we see the wonders to be enjoyed and protected. My favorite example is visiting the Everglades with our daughter in South Florida and knowing that the biodiversity has been cruelly trampled, but reveling in the abundance of birds, reptiles, and amazing ecosystems—much remaining to be enjoyed and protected.

Even better, we can combine learning about the world around us (including the problems), enjoying that interaction, and contributing to solutions. Citizen Scientists do just that, contributing to scientists their observations of pollinators, weather, blossoming times, and all sorts of birds, bats, bees, and bugs. This is relevant in gardens, farms, ranches, and the surrounding ecosystems that make up our local foodsheds. Observing the natural world, in the wild and in the backyard, is therapy in itself. Combining this with reporting these observations to help scientists develop new solutions makes it even more meaningful. Combining this with growing as much of your own food as possible—now we are getting somewhere!

Filed Under: Getting Serious

Map, Monitor, Adapt—Healthy Local Foodsheds & Climate Change

October 4, 2016 by Jim Dyer Leave a Comment

We need to be “doing something” about climate change. There is plenty of talk, more and more people recognizing the problem, but much, much less action than needed. Food, actually local food, is a perfect way to start, and an area that all people can make substantive changes in without hardship. Effort—yes; thought—yes; hardship—not really.

Climate change is hitting food production now, is slated to get much more intense, and urgent action is required to keep climate disruptions from becoming catastrophic. This all comes at a time when the local food movement is calling for more local food, and when Native peoples are trying to revitalize their Native foods and farming. To us, this is an opportunity to harness the power of the local and indigenous food movements to support thoughtful and proactive measures to make our local food systems more resilient, more productive in a changing world, and a truly regenerative force combating climate change.

Map, Monitor, Adapt. We at Healthy Community Food Systems have been working this past year on a number of resources to support this effort. We believe that a concerted effort among farmers and ranchers, local food activists, and consumer-citizens is needed to understand and adapt to climate change impacts on food production, mitigate further impacts by reducing greenhouse gases generated by the food system, all while making their communities healthier as well as their future.

Mapping—who doesn’t love maps? Maps help us visualize patterns and relationships, and if you think in terms of foodsheds, the geographic representation is essential. Local food groups have mapped their food systems as part of local food assessments for some time, but we are suggesting that we pay more attention to the land where this food production occurs and the broader landscape that is ecologically tied to these gardens, farms, and ranches.

We see local foodsheds as the area that we should look to first for our food, and that area we should be most responsible for—such as a county or two to start—so maps help us visualize these landscapes in relation to neighboring foodsheds.

Maps, simple or complex, help us consider the health of the land that our food production depends on, so we not only map out economic disparities, food security and access, food production areas, and personal health indicators—but the environmental health as well. For example, in our Four Corners/San Juan Mountain region, we consider water quality (we think of the yellow river here last year), water supply (snowpack changes in our mountains), air quality (Four Corners power plants), climate (heat, drought, floods), and biodiversity (pollinators, bats, sage grouse, and pikas), and more. All must be considered for truly sustainable and healthy foodsheds.

Monitoring—what’s changing? Without tracking the changes in these indicators of health, we simply would have little idea what we have accomplished or how to set priorities. The food system and specific projects need monitoring over time or we can’t catch longer term changes and outcomes. Economic development, health, agriculture, and environmental agencies and groups are logical partners in this effort.

Is anyone watching? What we see as an excellent opportunity to engage people of all ages in this effort is to get them involved in citizen monitoring of foodshed health. It can start with kids learning to be observant of nature in their school and backyard gardens—worms, bees, birds, weather, pollinators, etc.  This is our Wild School Gardens project—deeper ecological learning in school food gardens.

What if these kids shared their observations with the farmers and ranchers that sell local food to their schools, and asked these producers what they were seeing on their farms and ranches? What if they needed local experts from the community to help? We envision a whole community effort that raises awareness of the connection between the health of the land, food, and people.

An elegant solution. Citizen Science programs allow the public to submit their observations to help scientists understand these issues and develop improvements. While environmental degradation, climate change, and biodiversity losses can be so worrisome that there is a tendency to be paralyzed into inaction, straightforward observations of the indicators of these problems shared with scientists is an elegant way to be aware of the issues while helping to improve them. Our Observing Indicators of Foodshed Health guidelines are for observers and citizen scientists of all ages.

Adapting—as if our future depended on it. Much of what needs to be done is already known—things we have known that we should be doing as part of a sustainable and wise agriculture. What we have now with climate change is an even more critical need for these changes and a greatly enhanced urgency. In addition to what might be called mainstream sustainable agriculture is a need to revisit systems-changing approaches such as forest gardens, permaculture, traditional knowledge, and biomimicry as Gary Nabhan promotes in his outstanding guide: Growing Food in a  Hotter, Drier Land.

Mitigation is the most important adaptation. As we compiled information on current impacts, possible solutions, and the prospect of much greater climate change, a need became clear. We don’t at all suggest that adapting to withstand climate change is not important, but that unless we act now to reduce greenhouse gases, we face the prospect of catastrophic impacts that we will be hard put to withstand. In this sense, we see mitigation as the most important and urgent change we can make in our local to global food systems. The silver lining is that many if not most adaptations to be better able to withstand climate change will also help mitigate it.

Looking Forward—to more healthy local food from healthy local foodsheds. We currently face the certainty of challenging times ahead for food production, but also the uncertainty of exactly how and when these impacts will unfold. We need to envision the future (we present scenarios that can help), make the changes that will address what we think is likely (especially no-regrets strategies), and be ready to adapt to the unexpected. With this mindset and resolve, we should be able to look forward to more healthy local food as we strive to keep our foodsheds healthy and productive.

Filed Under: Getting Serious

Farm to Preschool for All Colorado Kids—and For Their Futures

July 26, 2016 by Kelsey Reeder Leave a Comment

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Farm to Preschool, Farm to School, In the News

Mobile Garden for Preschools

July 7, 2016 by hcfs Leave a Comment

Planter Finished
The mobile garden bed’s location by the playground.

My son’s preschool, Riverhouse Children’s Center, has limited space for a garden, but there were some nice, sunny spots on the playground.  My husband and I thought that if we could build a garden bed that could be easily moved, his class could have the best of both worlds. Last spring, my husband, 3.5-year-old son, and I built a raised bed on wheels and donated it to my son’s preschool class.

We constructed it out of non-treated, rot-resistant redwood and screws, left some small cracks between the boards in the bottom for drainage, and lined the bottom with weed fabric to hold the soil in.  We secured swivel casters on the bottom side of the bed and filled it with a mixture of compost and potting soil.

My son’s class planted carrots and lettuce in the mobile bed.  The teachers moved it into the sun during indoor classes and moved it out of the way when the children were on the playground.  The children loved being able to see the progress the seedlings made each day and helped water the plants.  They harvested and ate the carrots and lettuce at the end of the season.

A raised bed on wheels such as this can be a variety of shapes, sizes, and heights.  The larger pieces of redwood we used ended up being a bit heavy for the completed project, but the wheels still make it a snap to move.  We made it deep so that if bigger plants like tomatoes were planted in it, the roots would have plenty of room to grow.

This year, the preschool is planting carrots in the mobile bed again and has begun work on a new stationary raised bed in front of the school, along with soft fabric grow pots in various locations, for beets, carrots, peas, salad greens, tomatoes, pumpkins, cucumbers, and more. The infant area will even feature a planter with an edible sensory herb garden.

There are many creative ways to find space to grow food, as long as you have some sun, and a will, there is a way!  Please see our web page on “Ideas for Small Spaces and Small Gardeners in Colorado” for more ideas.

Helper Quinn
Under construction.
Construction
The best construction crew!
Deb Learning Moment
Learning about the carrot and lettuce seedlings.

Filed Under: Farm to Preschool

The Lloyd’s Scenario

May 18, 2016 by Jim Dyer Leave a Comment

IMG_8616.JPGI have felt lately like I have joined a “preppers book club” as friends discuss books looking to an uncertain future, not as survivalists but as preparers or preppers. Concerns for the future range from electromagnetic pulses frying our electronics, our fragile electric grid, even that subtle and far-off specter of climate change. Preparing for the unknown is not a bad idea—if done strategically and with a clear view of relative risks. In fact this is what we at Getting Serious Now have been urging for some time.

A scenario from Lloyd’s articulates a very real concern for our future that we should all prepare for. Yes, Lloyd’s of London, the venerable insurance company that adds an air of authority to projections into the future. Their recent report is getting some much-deserved attention lately with an excellent synopsis and climatological backgrounder from Jeff Masters of Weather Underground, alarmingly called, “Food System Shock: Climate Change’s Greatest Threat to Civilization.”

Master’s synopsis of the Lloyd’s Scenario is well worth reading. They see “uncomfortably high odds,” pegged at an 18% chance over the next 40 years, of catastrophic disruptions rippling through the global food system, and then to the world economy and international affairs. Crop losses, food price spikes, food riots, stock market drops, famine, civil wars, terrorist attacks, and failed states.

“Yes, we have heard these warnings”—but let’s listen again with some real-world projections from Lloyd’s scenario: Crop losses (corn and soybeans down 10%), food price spikes (four times prices seen in 2000), food riots (Mid East, Latin America), stock market drops (European loses 10% value), famine (one million starve in Bangladesh), civil wars (Nigeria), terrorist attacks (US), and failed states (Mali). For a relatively fragile world system, these are shocks indeed.

“Still, just projections”—not so fast! Masters calls up the most extreme weather year of recent times, 2010, to illustrate how realistic these projections are. A stagnant jet stream brought Russian grain failures and a heat wave killing tens of thousands, food price spikes, riots in the Mid East and North Africa tied by many to the Arab Spring—among other disruptions across the globe. What strikes me as so alarming is that at the beginning of 2010, the USDA projected good global harvests and low prices. These experts seemed to have little inking in January what that very year would bring!

The key to the catastrophic global disruptions in Lloyd’s specific scenario is a few things happening at one time, a strong El Niño causing a US corn crop failure along with failures in two other regions of the world, coupled with two well-known diseases attacking global wheat and soybeans. The nature of our global food system and of global climate connections, such as when warm Pacific waters of an El Niño cause droughts and floods around the globe, makes the deadly combination of crop failures just a matter of time. These odds will grow if we allow population to surge, industrial agriculture to remain the norm, and if we don’t reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Not a pretty picture. Yet, I find curious solace in a haunting poem from Wendell Berry, that gives me a literal and figurative direction.

February 2, 1968 
In the dark of the moon, in flying snow, in the dead of winter,
war spreading, families dying, the world in danger,
I walk the rocky hillside, sowing clover.

Certainly we need to prepare, to be smart preppers. But even more important is to work as hard as we can individually and collectively to reduce the chances of the Lloyd’s Scenario. The beauty is that decoupling as much as possible from the global food system (heresy for sure), localization of our food systems (naïve indeed), and depending on our local foodsheds and keeping them healthy (idealistic to say the least) will help us prepare for the worst and make sure the worst doesn’t happen.

It isn’t all about local solutions though, we need to have wise national and international policies. Not the corporate, industrial, business-as-usual solutions predictably springing up, but “whole solutions” as Wendell Berry would propose—those that don’t create new problems along the way. As much as we might want to retreat politically into our local shell, we need to elect and support wise, compassionate, and clear-thinking leaders, in spite of the odds, who are willing and able to pursue these whole solutions.

Scythe-gardenAs the day warms this beautiful May morning, I need to wrap up this piece, plow through all the other so-important pressing work on my desk, and get out to the garden I have been neglecting and get working on some of Berry’s truly whole solutions.

Filed Under: Getting Serious

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Being Proactive—as a Community—About Climate Change in our Local Food Systems and Foodsheds

May 6, 2026

Fickle Monsoons, Summer in March, and Hot Summer Nights: Climate change is here, has been seriously affecting local agriculture, and will certainly get worse. It will take some serious effort to adjust our local food production and local food systems to the extent needed, so why not ramp up efforts now to adapt and help […]

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