New Orleans Food and Farm, Inc.

You say Tomato, I say Agricultural Disaster

Op-Ed from The New York Times:

IF the hardship of growing vegetables and fruits in the Northeast has made anything clear, it’s that the list of what can go wrong in the field is a very long one.

We wait all year for warmer weather and longer days. Once we get them, it seems new problems for farmers rise to the surface every week: overnight temperatures plunging close to freezing, early disease, aphid attacks. Another day, another problem.

Read the full article at nytimes.com »

NOFFN in Gourmet Magazine

"On the east side of New Orleans, three-and-a-half years ago, 90 percent of the homes in the Vietnamese community had gardens, says local activist Peter Nguyen. The green onions, Malabar spinach, daikon, cilantro, mint, Thai basil, and countless Asian vegetables that contribute to Vietnamese home cooking were grown there. Every Saturday at dawn, a few dozen growers gathered to sell their produce at the neighborhood market, and for the elders--many of whom were resettled in New Orleans after the Vietnam War--their gardens were a treasured link to the country they had left behind. But the younger generation wasn't much interested in what they considered to be the hard labor of growing, and the elders wondered how they could involve their children and grandchildren so that the traditions would continue. Then Hurricane Katrina blew through, and three decades of work tending the land was lost."

Read the full story on the Gourmet site »

NOFFN and Urban Farming in CityBusiness

"Jeanette Bell, who once taught business classes to high school students, sees a money-making opportunity in her second calling. But for the 65-year-old retiree, her motive is more passion than profit.

Bell has built a garden on a once-blighted Central City lot that she bought from the city in 2003. At the time, the Baronne Street property was so overgrown with vegetation, it resembled something out of South America, Bell said.

Now, visitors are greeted at the entrance by a rose garden sorted according to color in the French style. The back of the lot houses Bell's vegetables and herbs, all organically grown, including a large bay tree she describes as "big enough to service all the restaurants in the Uptown area."

Read the full article in CityBusiness »

NOFFN in Urban Agriculture Magainze

"Over three years have passed since Hurricane Katrina flooded 80 percent of New Orleans in August 2005. While the population of the metro- politan region is close to the pre-Katrina total, that of the city itself is approximately 70 percent of its former level. Flooded neighbourhoods, such as Hollygrove, Gentilly, and particularly the Lower Ninth Ward, are far from their former vibrancy.

Those who have returned, however, are preparing the paths for others to follow. With large government-funded rebuilding projects slow to begin, the physical restoration of New Orleans is being driven by the efforts of many non- governmental organisations. In this context of grassroots activism, urban agriculture advocates have seized the opportunity to create a healthier, better-nourished city. "

Read the full article in Urban Agriculture magazine (PDF) »

Mary Shaw & Joseph Sherman on Nola.com

"In her Hollygrove backyard sprouting with bell peppers, tomatoes, cucumbers and eggplant, Mary Shaw sees more than just a growing cycle reaching completion.

She spent her childhood in Napoleonville, where she watched her grandmother tend a vast garden. Then as the years passed, it seemed, people got away from planting their food. Now 61 and feeling pinched by escalating food and gas prices, Shaw is returning, literally, to her roots.

Shaw and other New Orleans residents are part of a swelling, nationwide corps of backyard cultivators who are taking food production into their own hands for reasons that gardening organizations and enthusiasts describe as mostly economic."

Read the full article on Nola.com »
Watch the slideshow with audio on Nola.com »

Backyard Gardening featured on Where Y'at

"When we think of homegrown vegetables, pastoral images of farmhouses with adjacent gardens usually come to mind. But throughout history, urban dwellers have found ways of producing food for themselves in innovative ways. It is only in recent years that we moved away from those traditions, becoming accustomed to supermarkets and industrial farming. One consequence of the dependence on standardized produce is the endangerment of regional cooking, including the world-famous cuisine of New Orleans. Since produce grown far away is bred for shelf life, we risk losing our appreciation for fresh flavor and unique culinary styles.

Fortunately, there is a growing movement to return to homegrown foods. Across the city, individuals are taking it upon themselves to return to self-sufficiency while simultaneously preserving the highest quality of taste in our food. These people realize not only economic benefits in growing their own vegetables, but are finding an array of other plusses that come with it. Among the advantages often cited is an avoidance of using harmful pesticides, the kind that may lurk in conventional produce and contribute to dangerous pollution. "

Read the full article at WhereYat.com »