New Farmers
It’s been one month since Jon and I started working at Earthlands and in this month we’ve planted over an acre of vegetables and herbs to feed the Earthlands community. We had been training to be farmers for months and now we are putting what we learned into practice and feel pretty good about it. It’s not brain surgey, it’s growing food, plants want to grow. Someone said that to me once and while it does seem like a daunting task, growing enough produce to feed yourself and ten others, jumping right into the thick of it as we have done was probably the best solution to our fears.
We started everything there is to do with our small farm operation, and I mean everything just four weeks ago. In that time we have worked out the general planning; how much to plant of what, where and when, starting seeds, prepared beds using the no-till method and built up the soil with compost and sheet mulch as well as organized a small community csa-like structure. I am super excited to see what comes of our many hours spent in the gardens at Earthlands, but even more excited for next year becuase by then we will have learned what was done right and what needs to be done different and we will actually get to start our plants early and give away spare seedlings to friends as friends did for us.

Me weeding

A Friend wears his weeds

Jon praises the sun in the Porcupine Garden

View of Sun Ray Garden and Y2Y Garden

Jon brews Earthlands first batch of Rhubard Wheat beer on a rocket stove
Sustainable Food Jobs
This is a great job search site for work related to the kind of things I discuss on this site
SUSTAINABLE FOOD JOBS
Depletion and Abundance
After spending the last three months living a somewhat sustainable lifestyle: off-the grid, camping, eating mostly organic and local foods, using a composting toilet and solar pumped water for showering in an incredibly beautiful tropical place, that required I fly there via a fuel guzzling jet, I have come to a point where I feel at once with my world depletion and abundance. It also happens to be the name of the current book I am reading by Sharon Astyk.
I say I feel a sense of depletion and abundance because now that I have been back on the mainland for about two days (after a brief rendevouz to Vieques and Puerto Rico, more guzzling) I am disturbed by the world I thought I once knew and the one I know now, the way most Americans behave in relation to the place that supports their life is nothing more than destructive, however, today I feel equipped to act differently and this brings me a sort of abundance that I never felt before.
It took me a long time to make many of the connections that I do today. Happiness is linked to our connection with nature, self-subsistence and regard for the future. I’m not sure you can achieve it any other way. Who knew that littering was related to pollution but has more to do with human consumption? That environmentalism doesn’t just mean we need to save our trees and dying species, it means we need to save each other, the humans, because otherwise none of our actions will matter in a world that no longer supports human life (and have no doubt that the planet will maintain any life it chooses to just fine without us). Who knew that making sustainable choices like growing our own food, reducing our energy consumption and consuming less stuff in general will make us happier than we can ever imagine?
Today what I am faced with is communicating my findings and my experiences to my peers and friends, family and community. I think this will be challenging because it took someone like me a long time to get it, and I’m still working on getting it. My partner Jonathan and I are about to make our next move- still unsure where- but surely in a direction that supports more learning and offers more education to those around us. Our first initiative is to get more and more people growing their own food, even if they only have the smallest plot of land, or even fire escape to do this on. Over the next few weeks we hope to finish, publish and print the small hand book on this subject that we wrote and designed in St. Croix. It called the mini Food Forest. Keep visiting to learn more.
Please read this book. It is excellent for families or individuals that want to know what steps that can take to lead a more self-subsistent lifestyle that places emphasis on doing so in a mentally comfortable state.

r2r days 21-25: SLOW FOOD
Numbering the days of this course, I realize, has very little meaning to you or me for that matter. So let me go on by saying that this week we have explored slow food. It’s Slow Food week here in the Ridge to Reef course at the Virgin Island Sustainable Farm Institute. This means that we are looking at all the ways to remind ourselves of where our food comes from and lean how we can invest in local, culturally connected food that is connected to us beyond that fact that we purchased it from a mega super market. The concept was originally founded by Carlo Petrini in Italy to combat fast food. Here in St. Croix we looked at ways the farm has embraced slow food such as introducing and implementing an edible garden at two elementary schools, hosting Slow Down dinners, and striving to feed its staff and students a majority of food directly from the farm.
During this week we also looked at different ways to cook and preserve food including fermentation with Sandor Katz, author of the Wild Fermentation and The Revolution will not be Microwaved. Sandor was a lot of fun to work with and especially to learn from. We made lots of interesting krauts and several fizzy beverages including a ginger beer and sorrel carambola soda. We also learned how to make tempeh and I learned to like tempeh. We canned tomato sauce and served a dinner for forty people during one of the farm’s Slow Down Dinner, a donation-based six course meal of farm fresh ingredients. I had a lot of fun helping to organize this dinner and think I’d like to host one my self one day.
Ag Fair
This past weekend we participated in the 40th annual St. Croix Agricultural Festival. This felt like the West Indian festivals we would go to back in New York, except now we’re in the West Indies.





Organic Cropping Week Photos

Amaris tests some soil.

Our group overlooks the bean crop we planted on the first day of the course to seek out possible pests.

Turning a six week old compost pile made from kitchen scraps, plant matter, fish guts, animal manure, wood chips and straw.

Making compost tea.
r2r days 19 and 20


