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The “Extinction of Experience” and the Health of Local Foodsheds —exploring foodsheds while dreaming of what could be

June 13, 2024 by Jim Dyer Leave a Comment

Exploring nature and how it is doing—in gardens, on farms and ranches, and throughout the foodshed—links the increasingly overlooked physical and mental benefits of being outside in natural settings to increased awareness, appreciation, and support of healthy ecosystems. HCFS offers three “foodshed field guides” below to help in this exploration.

It’s mid-May, and I’m at the highest point on our farm with a patchwork of snow still remaining on the high peaks above 10,000 feet in the San Juans to our northwest. One of my favorite spots on the farm, it affords a panoramic view of the mountains and valleys that make up what we consider our local and regional foodsheds of the Greater San Juan Mountain Ecosystem. From here, most all I see is an inviting landscape of great diversity and beauty, but how healthy is it up close—the water, air, soils, and plant and animal life of the farming ecosystems and the surrounding wilder ecosystems of the high mountains on which our agriculture depends?

The Extinction of Experience: A few weeks ago, I came across an article, Apathy Threatens the Planet. How Do We Get People to Care? Apathy has become my central focus in our local food work. We need enough people to care about truly good food—and to care enough to act on that conviction. But how to do this? This article explained new research on how getting people outdoors can get them to care—enough, and the term they used, “The Extinction of Experience,” intrigued me.

The Thunder Tree: “The Extinction of Experience” was coined by Robert M. Pyle in his delightful and insightful book, The Thunder Tree, based in part on his childhood adventures many years ago in the semi-wild greenery along the High Line Canal running through the Denver area. Having been able to escape to the High Line Canal trail during a protracted stay in Denver recently, I was drawn deeper into the concept—and was further pleased to see that our Southwest local food colleague, Gary Nabhan, had built upon this idea as well.

In essence, the extinction in question is of our diminishing connection with nature and the outdoors in our everyday lives and the resulting apathy toward nature—as well as the loss of the physical and mental benefits that it can bring. Pyle urged us to escape and pay attention to nature wherever we can find it, as his High Line Canal exploits in the midst of rampant suburban growth attest. This all resonates with my belief that getting people outside in natural and semi-natural settings—from gardens and farms to the broader foodshed and surrounding wilder areas—is critical for people to begin to care enough to step up and support local food and foodsheds and move on to sustainability in all areas of our lives.

The power of curiosity: Interacting with nature seems to be a critical key to greater caring. There is no doubt that just being outside helps us mentally and physically, but I have long felt that time spent outdoors paying attention to nature tends to engage a positive feedback loop of awareness to curiosity to greater awareness, and often—if you believe as I do in a significant measure of inherent goodness in people— to greater caring and taking responsibility to protect and support nature for now and for the future.

Modes of paying attention for people of all ages from unstructured to Citizen Science: In our three “field guides”—Exploring Foodshed Health Field Guide, San Juan Mountain Watch Field Guide, and Wild School Gardens Guide—we explain why and how to pay attention in many ways:
• Unstructured observation—driven by curiosity and aided by quiet time in the setting—perhaps the most critical skill to develop for a lifetime.
• Observations with an objective in mind, such as finding pollinators or birds.
• Measuring or counting.
• Monitoring—observing over time—perhaps from your home or a favorite trail.
• Sharing observations with others—put that social media to good use if so inclined.
• Sharing with scientists and others through citizen science programs to increase scientific knowledge and solutions—a major thrust of our field guides.

The power of citizen science: As Aldo Leopold and others have pointed out, being aware of how nature is doing can certainly bring some disquieting awareness of problems, especially in this age of climate change on top of the biodiversity crisis. Staying engaged and aware can be difficult for many people, but sharing what you see—including the beauty and awe—is a helpful first step. The beauty of citizen science is that you can 1) be working with others and 2) be assisting scientists in seeking solutions—both of which can keep one engaged. Citizen science programs and apps are available for people of all ages and knowledge on a huge number of topics, and you can participate on a national level or on specific issues of local concern.

Dreaming: We have suggested dreaming of—or envisioning, or imagining—what we would like our food system and our local foodsheds to be as a first step to a better future. Getting out into our broader foodsheds—the food producing ecosystems and the surrounding wilder ecosystems with which they are intimately intertwined—can be an opportunity to dream of what we would like those ecosystems, and our relationships with them, to be. Might we come a little bit closer to better understanding our appropriate place in this world.

 

HCFS Field Guides: To address the “extinction of experience,” our HCFS field guides are designed to help people of all ages get outside to become more familiar with local foodsheds and to understand how the health of these growing areas and surrounding ecosystems depends in large part on our food choices and food policies.

Our free online 54-page downloadable San Juan Mountain Watch Field Guide focuses on the greater San Juan Mountain Ecosystem’s foodsheds.

The similar Exploring Foodshed Health Field Guide can be used in any location.

Our 7-page Wild School Gardens Guide is aimed at kids as local explorers and eaters.

 

Filed Under: Farm to Preschool, Farm to School, Getting Serious

Let Them Eat Carrots

September 7, 2018 by Jim Dyer 1 Comment

A Simple Back-of-the-Envelope Exploration of Foodability

Foodability—which can be taken to mean the degree to which a community or region could be self-reliant for its food—is at the heart of the local food movement. It is a pursuit; we don’t know how far we can go in that direction, but we know that we have a long ways before we need to worry about trying to go too far. If local food is to live up to its promise of better diets and health, thriving farmers and ranchers, solid economic development, environmental restoration, biodiversity preservation, and a livable climate, we know we must ramp up this effort dramatically and soon.

20% local? A while back we posed a challenge in our high, short-seasoned, water-challenged community located in Southwest Colorado to pursue an initial goal of 20% of all our preschoolers’ meals and snacks coming from local producers. The idea was to think big, challenge ourselves, start with a very important age group, and have a more concrete goal than just “growing as much of our food as locally as possible.” We still, as most all communities, aren’t even close to this goal, so I think it deserves another, more specific yet expansive look. Let’s start with carrots for preschoolers and go from there.

The virtues of the carrot: Not a perfect food nor perhaps a super food, carrots are yet one of our favorites. They are relatively easy to grow in most areas, can be eaten raw, store very well, come with handles (if green tops are left on as kids like), and are in the food group that almost all of us need much more of—vegetables! What if we grew all the carrots our preschools need?

Can our foodshed do this? We start by looking at our foodshed—do we have the land, water, and climate to even consider this? Carrots do grow well here—I have seen a modest-sized field of them here in fact that would go a long way toward this goal. They also store well—local producers here supply carrots to our schools well into the spring. So how much land would this take?

In our case, we happen to have about 1000 preschoolers in La Plata County. A reasonable serving is one medium-sized carrot (about 0.2 pounds or half a cup). A review of yields from seed companies, ag researchers, and local carrot growers leads us to estimate a conservative yield—for back-of-the-envelope purposes—of 16,000 pounds of carrots per acre. This is a very rough estimate taking into account variations in climate, soils, grower skill, field layout, etc. As we will see, it is a good enough estimate though to answer this basic question.

To provide all our 1000 preschoolers one medium-sized carrot each day of the school week through the year would take just three acres! (Depending on yield, it could be closer to 2 acres or more like 4 or 5 acres—but a conservative estimate of just three.) We have the needed climate in our area, and finding three acres with water is quite doable, so our foodshed’s agronomic foodability for preschool carrots looks quite good.

How significant is a carrot a day? For perspective, eating the equivalent of a medium sized carrot each day of the school week is a big deal—in the neighborhood of a third of what USDA recommends daily for veggies for most preschoolers (double that for adults)—and more wouldn’t be bad. We actually need a variety of veggies, but average yields per acre of a diversity of veggies is still in the neighborhood of that for carrots, so do mix and match those colors, tastes, and shapes. And don’t forget that carrots come in different colors, tastes, and shapes as well.

You do the math: Now pull out those envelopes and adapt this to your community. Have 2000 preschoolers?—just double the three acres mentioned above. Carrots just one day a week to start?—divide that three acres by five. Want to go all out and grow enough for all three veggies a day (not just carrots of course) at school and at home seven days a week?—multiply that three acres by four for each 1000 kids.

Can our food system do this? The food system looks at all the factors, so we must consider having 1) a distribution system (not too hard in a small community), 2) the preschools’ ability to purchase, prep, and serve these carrots (not too hard for carrots), 3) kids willing to eat these carrots (not too hard, especially with the green tops on from our experience), and 4) enough producers receiving a market price that will keep them in business (not too easy these days!).

Keep in mind, these three acres of carrots could come from a single carrot farm of three acres or 15 market gardens with 1/5 acre of carrots each or a healthy combination of farms, market gardens, preschool gardens, and parents’ backyard gardens. Three acres of carrots is a lot of work, but this could provide these preschoolers with a third of all the veggies they need (as a minimum) during the school week. Is supporting farmers, ranchers, and gardeners to do this too much to ask of our community?

Tackling producer viability: It’s truly a whole community effort. Many preschools are financially strapped, but if those families, restaurants, retailers, and institutions who can pay what it takes to keep local producers in business actually do so and help scale up the local food economy, that food could become more affordable for those with fewer resources. For those families with limited incomes, we need to push for livable wages and find a place in food assistance programs for products from local growers and subsidize them rather than industrial/corporate ag. Policy and financial support for preschools, beginning and struggling farmers, and local food development efforts should increase in order to keep local producers in business.

Looking ahead to a vibrant local food future, as producers continue to encounter more and more problems with extreme weather, a warming climate, more frequent and severe and long lasting drought, pollinator and other biodiversity losses, we all must work to help them adapt to these changes, keep things from becoming worse, and double down on our overall producer support. To help the general public see the need to help producers in all these ways, we believe getting involved in growing some of their own food (and keeping an eye on nature in the garden) will open their eyes. This will be essential to ensure an increasing supply of carrots—and much more—in our children’s future.

Three acres of carrots is admittedly a lot of work, but a feasible and very significant start toward the 20% goal for all our preschoolers. Let them eat carrots—local that is!!!

Filed Under: Farm to Preschool, Farm to School, Getting Serious

San Juan Mountain Watch

June 6, 2018 by Jim Dyer Leave a Comment

Connecting Local Food Systems and Ecosystems in the Greater San Juan Mountain Ecosystem

Citizen monitoring is an integral part of our Looking Forward efforts to help more people become more aware—through direct experience—of the need to protect the health of our food-producing and surrounding ecosystems. That ecosystem, or foodshed, health is critically dependent on addressing not only local conservation issues but the global climate and biodiversity crises as well, so many more people must be involved in developing the public will to address these issues.

This particular project, the San Juan Mountain Watch, centered in the Southwestern portion of Colorado, is aimed at developing a regional model that hopefully can be adapted in other regions.

Helping those who are passionate about local food see the importance of the health of our foodsheds and surrounding ecosystems through participation in monitoring indicators of foodshed health.

The overall goal of this foodshed monitoring project is to 1) highlight current foodshed monitoring efforts, and 2) engage more of the public, through their interest in local food, to join in monitoring the ecological health of our local foodsheds and surrounding ecosystems to generate more public awareness, stewardship, policy support, and protection of the food production capacity and ecosystems of the greater San Juan Mountain region.

Vision: We envision gardeners, farmers, ranchers, school children, and all who value local food actively helping scientists monitor foodshed and ecosystem health. With an eye to both the promise of sustainable local food systems and the critical and urgent issues facing us, the ultimate aim is a climate-friendly, wildlife-friendly, future-friendly region.

Being curious and observant is the foundation: Paying attention to nature and how it is doing is the underlying awareness needed. Time spent outdoors, away from screens and other distractions is essential—for toddlers and preschoolers to adults of all ages.  Observing Options for All Ages

Monitoring or observing over time is essential to identifying trends, both good and bad. Observing and monitoring changes when one is growing food is especially useful in this project—as gardeners, farmers, and ranchers. Monitoring by others in the community can support these growers in coping with increasing challenges. For foodsheds, Ecosystem and Wildlife Services for Food Production in addition to weather and climate are the focus. We actually include surrounding ecosystems in our foodshed definition since they are so interdependent with agricultural ecosystems.

Suggested foodshed indicators to monitor: Here in Southwest Colorado, for example, some indicators are already monitored by agencies and others including water quality, water supply/snowpack/dust on snow, air quality, soil protection, and regional weather and climate, but they may need help especially in keeping track of more local variations—local precipitation, hail, and frost dates would be good examples. Other indicators, such as pollinators and beneficial insects, birds, pikas, and phenology (seasonal happenings like blossoming dates, etc.) are well suited to citizen monitoring. If scientists and agencies knew that people would help, they would likely have much more we could monitor for them, in addition to what is happening now. See our expanding lists of Current Professional Monitoring and Citizen Science Opportunities for those who live in the greater San Juan region to consider.

Citizen Science activities aid scientists and agencies in understanding and helping solve serious problems we face such as species decline, climate change, ecosystem disruptions, and phenology or seasonal timing changes. Bumblebee Watch, CoCoRaHS, Lost Ladybug, Vegetable Varieties, eBird, Dragonfly Pond Watch, Great Sunflower Project, and Nature’s Notebook are a few of the rigorous but accessible programs free and ready to use by observers of all ages—see them on our Observing page and our Suggested Observing Targets for 2018.

Just for kids: Engaging students from PreK-12 in observing and monitoring in natural settings, especially in school gardens, is key to their education, emotional development, and in developing a healthy relationship with nature. Our Wild School Gardens program shows how.

Wild farms, ranches, and gardens: Most of the monitoring activities in our Wild School Gardens program are well suited to adults as gardeners, farmers, and ranchers—and those who support these growers. In fact, coordinating the observations, monitoring, and Citizen Science between school gardens and adults throughout the community is the ideal. For example, community experts can help in school garden monitoring projects, and farmers and ranchers who sell food to schools can coordinate monitoring with kids in those schools.

What if??? What if farmers, ranchers, gardeners, school children, local experts, science/conservation/sustainability groups, and citizens of all types were much more aware and engaged in monitoring food-producing and natural ecosystems surrounding our local communities? What if they were connected with each other and with other communities across the greater San Juan Mountain region? What if we had more data showing ecological trends across elevational and latitudinal gradients—weather, pollinators, wildlife indicators? What if people were much more informed and involved in protecting and restoring the foodsheds and other ecosystems of the region and the climate and biodiversity of the planet? Our kids might just thank us some day.

Getting involved: We need partners of all types to make this happen. If you are in this region, here is how you can help. If you are from elsewhere, consider this approach tailored to your own issues and needs.

  • Scientists and Agencies: What data could citizen scientists gather to help you here?
  • Citizen Scientists: What are you monitoring here now and how can we support you?
  • Environmental & nature groups, schools, etc.: Can we help you do more Citizen Science?
  • Those wishing to become Citizen Scientists: Let us know—we will help you get started.  Check out our Citizen Science Opportunities page.

Paying attention to nature and how it is doing—especially in, under, over, and around our farms, ranches, and gardens—can build the community-wide awareness and engagement to protect and restore our foodsheds and surrounding wild areas and ensure a steady supply of healthy local food into the future.

Filed Under: Farm to Preschool, Farm to School, Getting Serious, Uncategorized

Gardens for the Future

December 12, 2017 by Jim Dyer 1 Comment

Keeping the future in mind as we garden is essential to reaping the many benefits that can come from growing at least some of our own food, not the least of which is action on climate change and biodiversity.

Looking Forward: As mentioned earlier, we at HCFS “look forward” to ensure an increasing supply of healthy local food in spite of the daunting challenges facing us, especially climate change and biodiversity losses—the two interconnected crises we see as demanding much more and more urgent attention. Engagement of far more of the public in supporting and taking action to address these issues is critical. We believe that there is a promising opportunity to build on the impressive public interest in healthy local food to engage more people in caring for their foodshed’s health and thus the environment. We have done our share of sharing facts and “educating the public,” but social science research into climate action tells us that is not enough. Engagement is more likely when people experience the impacts of climate (and we would add, of biodiversity losses).

Growing Food While Watching Nature: We have come to the conclusion that getting people gardening and helping people to pay more attention to changes in the natural world around them are two strategies to pursue without delay. When these two strategies are combined, and people observe and monitor changes in natural processes such as weather, pollinators, birds, etc., while growing food, the effect should be highly synergistic—a greater impact than either activity done alone. What gardener, especially one that takes the time to pay attention to nature in and around the garden, doesn’t become acutely aware of climate changes and biodiversity issues.

Gardening is a Powerful Climate Action: The simple act of growing one’s own food is a fundamental action that nearly everyone can engage in to adapt to ever increasing impacts from extreme weather and climate change on our food system, and at the same time to help reduce climate impacts not already locked in. Even if one grows only a small portion of their food needs, it gets one started on a path of greater individual and community self-sufficiency, a path of seeking the most sustainable foods possible beyond what is grown oneself, and a life more in tune with slow-food rather than fast-food values. In those rare cases where backyard or community gardening or even a small container garden on the patio is not feasible, helping or bartering with neighboring gardeners, or buying from local producers you get to know well, is the next best thing.

Gardening with an Eye to the Future is Even More Powerful: As we grow our food, if we keep climate and biodiversity in mind, the importance and irreversibility of these two crises should strengthen our resolve to make gardening the norm throughout the community. Gardens—in backyards, front yards, community gardens, schools, preschools, hospitals, and other institutions—could be a central part of our sustainability efforts, with an urgency and importance reminiscent of the Victory Gardens of years past. If we are good observers in our gardens, we will see the importance of protecting and restoring biodiversity as a key tool for biologically based food production that we will need to shift to in our overall food system. Keen observers will likely see the ethical imperative of coexistence with nature as well.

Gardening for the Future Actually Supports Local Producers: Rather than cutting into local producers’ sales, the more people that grow gardens, the more likely they will insist on the freshest and most sustainable sources for the food they do not grow themselves (likely a majority of their food). They will see the value of good food and recognize the work it takes to grow it well, so they are much more likely to be loyal customers willing to pay neighboring farmers a fair price for their work. They will see how important it is to support existing and prospective farmers and ranchers in the community and in local, state, and federal policies. We see the promotion of gardening as one of the best pathways for creating greater support for local producers.

What Does Gardening with the Future in Mind Look Like? If we are truly observant and aware of what is in store in our future, we will make serious gardening a priority. We see several elements of future-oriented gardening:

  • Get serious about producing food. It admittedly depends on your location, time, and resources, but striving to grow as much food as you can will serve you well whatever changes are in store. Don’t wait until you feel sure of yourself to start to garden—learn what you can, talk to fellow gardeners, and be ready to make a few mistakes, but start growing! Support gardens at all schools, preschools, and other institutions as well.
  • Be observant. “Watch while you work.” Keep track of pollinators, soil organisms, birds, beneficial insects, and seasonal occurrences (phenology). Share your observations with kids, fellow growers, and even with scientists through Citizen Science programs.
  • Grow with the Wild. Following Wild School Garden approaches for kids (and for any gardener) and Wild Farming and Ranching strategies combines astute observation with enlightened management for profound ecological, educational, and production benefits.
  • Support local producers. Get to know local farmers and ranchers, buy from them what you don’t grow yourself, learn from them, and support them as loyal customers and as voters so we have a reliable food supply into the future. Get more of their food into all our schools and preschools.
  • Care for others. Share food and seeds with others, and consider “growing a row” for the needy. Respect and nurture wildlife and the natural processes that make growing food possible. Show our children we care about them and their future.
  • Adapt. Start now looking at seeds, fruit tree varieties, water use, fertility, and management techniques that will work well as our climate changes.
  • Mitigate. Make sure we are reducing greenhouse gasses as we garden—much less fossil fuel use, fewer trips to the grocery, efficient water use, healthy soils, less food waste, etc.

Local food is the low-hanging fruit for broader citizen engagement in serious action on climate and biodiversity—and “Gardening for the Future” is a great way to start.

Filed Under: Farm to Preschool, Farm to School, Getting Serious

Gardens Aren’t Just for Kids

May 22, 2017 by Jim Dyer 1 Comment

A garden for every school and preschool—of course! As I said before, we should consider a garden essential for every school and preschool, with container gardens or visits to nearby gardens as a temporary stop-gap measure to give every child time outside growing food. Everyone in the community can help, and these gardens should be integrated into the entire school and the whole community. We are making good progress in making this vision a reality, but as many schools remain without this essential feature, there is much we can all do—8 Ways You Can Help Get Kids into School Gardens!

But that’s not enough. If we are serious about providing the best for our children—the best food, the best knowledge of it, and the best future—we need to do more. Children need to see gardens throughout the community, their role models growing food, and people caring about their food and the land and people that provide it. They need to see people appreciating nature in the garden and protecting it as we grow our food. They need to see that gardens aren’t just for kids!

A garden at home for every kid—or a community garden nearby. A garden at home—even a few container tomatoes and carrots or a family plot at a nearby community garden—can give children a place to show their parents what they have learned in their school garden and a sense that this is a family endeavor and a life-long skill to develop.

This is especially important for schools and preschools not in session for much of the summer growing season. The model of school kids bringing home vegetable starts for the home garden or caring for a few container veggies from school during the summer break can make a solid connection between home and school for these children. Grandparents lucky enough to live nearby can help busy parents on the home front.

What if we had gardens throughout the community? What if kids saw food gardens wherever they went in their hometown or neighborhood—places for people to grow, to meet, to relax, to learn. Not just ornamentals, but real food crops as well. What if, in addition to school and backyard gardens, we had gardens at:

  • Libraries
  • Hospitals
  • Senior Centers
  • Museums
  • Churches
  • Granges
  • Nature Centers
  • Restaurants & Hotels
  • Government Offices

Getting Serious about our children’s future. Gardens are fun and rewarding on many levels, but they can also be seen as a responsibility—part of our responsibility to make this world and our children’s future better. We could use a public attitude similar to that of the wartime Victory Gardens. One could argue that we currently face serious threats from obesity, climate change, political unrest, and the economy that would justify a similar approach.

With such a community attitude, our public gardens would have deeper ranks of leaders, champions, and supporters, and be more sustainable over time. Local policies would eliminate any unnecessary obstacles to community or backyard gardens, and make marketing of excess produce as easy as possible. The oft-mentioned idea of requiring space for community gardens in low-income housing developments would become a reality.

Neighbors would be willing to care for the gardens of those who are travelling (one of the more common reasons I hear for not gardening). Procrastinators waiting until they fully understand how to grow food would see this as an elusive goal; they would dig in with the help of fellow gardeners and local garden support groups. Not having a garden would be the exception, rather than the rule.

The overall obstacle, as I see it, is not a lack of time, money, growing season, water, space, or know-how—although these can be real impediments that require creative solutions. The biggest underlying obstacle, in my opinion, is in not making this a priority—for schools, for preschools, for one’s own family, and for the community as a whole. Hopefully as we see the amazing benefits of school and preschool gardens for our kids, we will realize that all of us need to be gardening in some way—for ourselves, our kids, and their future.

Filed Under: Farm to Preschool

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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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Setting a Green Table

Addressing Climate Change with Local Food

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Our Mission: To help communities build healthy sustainable food systems through effective systems … Read More

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