Planting vegetables with Native American music

This past week we planted 10,000 sweet potato starts.

It is a ‘one-at-a-time’ hand process….so a number of us spent a lot of time on our hands and knees in the field.

We are done!

Jesse, one of my farmer partners, brings a small speaker into the fields. On an early morning we were planting to Native American music.

We named our property Shewatuck Farm – a name the Narragansett Indians used for the area.

We’ve done a good deal to diversify the landscape…adding bird houses and other conservation improvements.

As we planted there were a variety of birds…..definitely watching our progress! A hawk, plovers (we are reasonably near the sea), and different chirping birds.

It was altogether a lovely experience.

I had a real sense for the early Narragansett Indians.

Hopefully we continue to make the connection between plants, animals, and our preceding human inhabitants.

Issues with creating a sustainable regenerative agriculture in America

Issues (Not in any particular order of importance)

  • Price Manipulation

The price of vegetables and other specialty crops – even certified organic vegetables and specialty crops – is driven by a cheap (in many cases illegal) farm and food processing labor system. USDA in 2017 estimated that approximately 50 percent of specialty vegetables were grown by illegal immigrant labor.

It is, for all practical purposes, a pirate economy – heavily defended by large agri-business enterprises.

There have been recent efforts in Congress to further manipulate this illegal system by granting undocumented farm workers special immigration status (not as an effective method to reform immigration laws, but as a legislative ‘gimmick’ to allow a manipulated and exploitive economy to continue without political criticism).

Small scale certified organic producers using sustainable practices are at a severe pricing disadvantage. Many resort to various forms of volunteer labor to supplement their production systems and allow them to financially survive.

  • Nutrition and Food Health

A major (and inobvious) contributing factor to declines in global biodiversity has been changes in diet (and demand for food by type) driven by the green revolution. The green revolution globally saved many from starvation and nutrition deficient disease. It also narrowed diets and replaced diverse whole foods with foods derived from grains.

  1. Issues with lack of diversity in agro-ecology.
    1. American agriculture (and the political economy of American agriculture) has become narrowly focused – grains and confined animal operations.
    2. Diverse, specialty farming has lacked significant support from both USDA and congress.
    3. Knowledge of diverse agro-ecology has declined precipitously with the concentration of crops and ownership in agriculture.
    4. Issues with nutrition education.
      1. Nutrition education in the early public education system has been neglected.
      2. A large body of historical and current nutritional knowledge seems to find little educational support.
    5. Issues with medicine’s knowledge of nutrition.
      1. General medicine has, until recently, neglected nutrition as part of general healthcare practice.
      2. Historical knowledge of nutrition and the benefits of various plant based remedies has also been neglected.
  • Land Access…Cost of Land…Real Estate Appraisal of Agricultural Land

A major issue limiting the expansion of sustainable, regenerative farm practice has been the cost of land. This varies regionally, but is generally at the top of local ag advocates’ list:

  1. Midwestern lands and western lands have ‘some’ limited standard real estate appraisal methods to evaluate the agricultural qualities of land as a factor in financial valuation. Even in those highly agricultural areas the ability to evaluate agro-ecological factors is severely limited. In many parts of the country agricultural lands receive standard comparable price analysis. For example, the real estate appraisal for our 91 acre Rhode Island purchase in late 2017 compared the property to other open land with vary dissimilar agro-ecological properties (and no comparison of soils).
  2. Most landowners allow lease periods that are too short for agricultural planning purposes. The interest in potential development of land – and a chance to sell property into development at a high price – drive the interest of landowners to constrain lease periods. Also, many times land trusts and governments also constrain their land use leases (I have never researched the underlying issues.).
  3. Much of the national and regional political interest has been with distribution and food hubs. The needs to increase organic, sustainable production and expand value-added processing related to that expansion has been politically and financially neglected in my opinion. I have seen examples of food hubs that immediately have sourcing issues and react by compromising their initial regional mission. Our local farmer’s market organizer and distribution group, Farm Fresh RI, has needed to reinvent both who they serve and how broadly they serve in order to maintain their political role in the community. They are developing a $16M food hub building …in the end It appears to me it will look like a conventional food distributor and real estate lease agent….a completely different ethic than the original intent of the socially responsible Brown University students that founded the organization.
  • Cultural issues

Twenty-five years of work on environmental issues, agro-ecology, ecological economics, and agriculture have led me to the sense that the major impediments to evolving a more robust sustainable, regenerative agriculture are cultural[KE4] .

  1. We now have acutely deteriorated rural communities and rural community institutions –decline in societal institutions that maintain social cohesion (decline in churches, small business and small business organizations, etc.)
    1. Public educational institutions have focused on ‘measured’ education…at the expense of a deeper understanding of civics, culture, home economics, etc. My older daughter at this point in her life is a third grade teacher in a public school system. She graduated from Skidmore College with a double major in child development and American studies. She did her teacher training in a Waldorf school…then began a community school in a poor area of Providence with four other women. She loves her work at developing young minds and bodies – she tolerates all the ‘measurements’ and finds it harmful in certain cases.
    2. State and local governments have become increasingly materialistic and bureaucratic – utilizing statutes and law to counter profound cultural issues. This becomes sadly troubling and petty in many cases. They are, governmentally, sincere attempts to encourage healthier behaviors – the problem is the ethical dilemma that occurs with legislating personal behavior.
    3. I am a strong advocate of free, just markets – but do not see how we survive long as a society with our current concentrations of politico-economic power.
    4. All of the above has led to a significant number of culturally narrow and poorly educated citizens with little ability to make thoughtful, healthful decisions.
  • Equipment issues

Because of the small scale of organic certified vegetable and specialty crop farming there is limited innovation in equipment (not enough demand for equipment manufacturers to invest).

Needs

  1. A large capital pool for landholding – a partnership between farmers and pool management – structured as some form of quasi-governmental ‘charity’ because it will need for many years to subsidize land costs.
  2. A national effort to reform land grant universities and other technical colleges – to broader their curriculum, reevaluate their applied science education, and expand healthy methods for their experimental/trial farms and nutrition programs. Some have made changes to their trial farms and nutrition education…which is great…but I do not think it broad (this needs a study). As an aside, for two years I have been engaged with my undergraduate engineering and science school to utilize the food program… expanding it to a working farm…as an early stage method to broaden engineering education.
  3. Equitable Compensation Methods…breaking through a pricing structure based upon cheap (and in many cases illegal) labor. This is an extremely complex political issue with much of the agricultural capital invested in maintaining the status quo of concentrated ownership.
  4. Seasonal capital for farms and seasonal value added food production.
  5. A subsidized capital pool to provide incentives to equipment manufacturers and technical colleges to develop a new generation of farm equipment.

A Final Observation

There are two current societal positions I find false:

  1. That the best wealth creation occurs by limiting ownership and driving down costs. I believe broad ownership – and dynamic interaction between owners – creates the best environment for wealth creation.
  2. That an agriculture based upon small scale landowners cannot ‘feed the world’. There are a number of studies that show diverse, distirbuted farm operations can feed an ex0panding population with a more resilient, disease resiilient, disease resistant agriculture.

The Problem with Agriculture in Rhode Island

On March 10, 2015 I sent the following commentary ( and the link to the Dan Barry article) to a number of Rhode Islanders with whom I’ve had professional association:

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/25/sports/baseball/through-years-of-change-pawtucket-ri-always-had-mccoy-stadium.html?_r=0

To all,

I’m an old baseball kid…grew up playing sand lot, little league, municipal ball in Louisville, Kentucky.

I know and understand round ball kids.

This morning I listened to two guys in their 50s standing in the Newman YMCA discussing high school basketball (about their children) as a mother would lovingly discuss the attributes of their newborn.

When I heard the Pawtucket Red Sox organization was sold to a group of investors that ‘wanted’ to move the team to Providence from Pawtucket – and saw subsequent articles where the Governor of Rhode Island and Mayor of Providence make studied ‘politically calculated’ statements – I knew….

Rhode Island was, to me, culturally tone deaf.

As Thomas Merton said ‘ if you want to study the social and political history of modern nations, study hell’….I guess that goes for cities and states also.

Dan Barry has written a lovely article (See Above) that captures the cultural meaning of McCoy Stadium, the community value of the place, and the ‘business’ that is baseball.

Moving the PawSox’s organization from Pawtucket is economically insane. I live in a state – in a nation – where many, many communities struggle for their economic existence.

I have no doubt that our economy ‘robs Peter to pay Paul’ in a manner that has destroyed much in America. That same modern American economy also concentrates wealth in a manner that shocks mindful people.

…Back to being that old round ball kid – I’m always looking for the bright spot. I also wonder if I’ve just grown old and cranky.

In this case, I don’t think I’m overreacting. The PawSox sale is a BIG deal!

I am sad about this ‘deal’. I am sad for Pawtucket. I am sad for little children who saw a wonderful game with their family for a reasonable price. I am sad for the Governor and the Mayor of Providence that they do not see and defend our State’s cultural values. I am sad for a group of wealthy buyers (some of whom are Rhode Islanders) who do not seem to respect local communities.

I received perhaps ten responses. Several were very supportive (two were highly complementary, both from senior executives in substantial Rhode Island institutions). One was harshly critical and requested I remove them from my distribution list (which I did…by the way she was my former companion).

I want to tie this letter to comments on the state of agriculture in Rhode Island.

Wendell Berry in The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture in America (1977), states:

… we and our country create one another, depend on one another, are literally part of one another; that our land passes in and out of our bodies just as our bodies pass in and out of our land; that as we and our land are part of one another, so all who are living as neighbors here, human and plant and animal, are part of one another, and so cannot possibly flourish alone; that, therefore, our culture must be our response to our place, our culture and our place are images of each other and inseparable from each other, and so neither can be better than the other.

Mr. Berry is telling us the state of our land is a cultural statement – and how we use land reflects the current state of our culture. My point with the PawSox commentary was to explain, in my opinion, that a land use decision to move the PawSox to Providence was culturally thoughtless land use – for the reasons I (and Dan Barry in the New York Times) described.

The Rhode Island Food Economy

98% of our food comes from ‘somewhere else’.

Rhode Island farmers – even the few that have cash flows above $1M (a few vegetable operations and a few nursery/sod operations) – have very low profit margins. The smaller ones (the majority) work very hard for little money.

In my opinion, state and local governments have responded to the increasing demand for high quality local food with only marginal economic improvement programs. The State, with some private foundation support, provides $200,000 each year for competitive grants to small farmers. Good hearted as it is, it is a trivial amount of money if our communities are serious about improving the agricultural economy.

A large part of the problem is a national problem. The food economy is large – and concentrated – in many and complicated ways. Large growers of grain, livestock, and specialty crops; large food processors; and large aggregators, distributors, and brokers dominate the market.

98% of the State’s food, therefore, has nothing to do with our local economy, other than some local retailers and processors have businesses that resell out-of-state food. Even the local retail, processing, and distribution are dominated by non-local companies (Whole Foods Market, Stop and Shop, Shaw’s).

Also, much of that large scale national farming and food processing industry makes use of poorly paid ‘illegal’ immigrant labor.

As a final economic thought, it is my intuition that numerous Rhode Islanders hold equity stocks or bonds (through personal portfolios or pension/annuity accounts) in some of those ‘somewhere else’ food corporations.

What agriculture is appropriate in Rhode Island?

 Rhode Island is a glacial landscape full of rocks and soil deposited by a past ice age. The soils vary broadly – and much of the soil is rocky with qualities that make it inappropriate for agriculture. The weather can be harsh, so the growing season is narrow in comparison to more temperate places.

There are, however, areas with important agricultural soils.

It appears, from my work with a number of local farmers, that those important soils make very good ground for specialty vegetable crops.

Other areas of the State provide good pasture for livestock and good land for orchards and other fruit production.

Rhode Island is not the ‘fertile delta’, but it is hospitable to very good production of vegetables, livestock, and certain kinds of fruit.

From our research, it appears there are several thousand additional acres of land that could provide a good home to farmers and their diverse crops.

Developing a Culture that Supports Expanded Local Agriculture

My own experience over the past twenty years indicates, to a very large extent, the barriers to significant expansion of local agriculture are primarily cultural.

Let me first list some economic and agro-economic principles I believe critical to an expanded agriculture:

  • The environment is not a minor factor of production – but rather is ‘an envelope containing, provisioning, and sustaining the entire economy’ (Paul Hawkin).
  • The limiting factor to farm economic development is the availability and functionality of life-supporting natural services that have no substitutes (many also have no market value –‘public goods’ – air quality, etc.).
  • Misconceived or unintelligently designed business systems, historically poor population settlement patterns (mostly as a result of a lack of knowledge), and wasteful patterns of consumption are the primary causes of the loss of life-supporting natural services.
  • Farm and food economies can be best managed in democratic, market-based systems of production and distribution in which human work, manufactured goods, finance, and life-supporting natural services are all fully and adequately valued.
  • A key result of knowledgeable, effective and empathetic employment of people, money, and life-supporting natural services is a significant increase in resource productivity – farm methods emphasizing practices that promote enhanced resource productivity utilizing new agro-ecological knowledge and practice experiences from the past twenty (20) years with organic, biodynamic, permaculture, and traditional agriculture.
  • Community welfare is best served by improving the quality and flow of desired natural services delivered – plainly, we best serve the community by improving the environmental qualities and agricultural productivity of the State’s farms.

Basic agro-ecological economic principles:

The innovations occurring in the ‘sustainability sector’ of agriculture take three interwoven and complimentary paths:

  • Increase the resource and ecological effectiveness of all forms of farming, seeking new ways to enhance production utilizing fewer resources – both through direct increases in productivity and through biomimicry and closed loop non-toxic practices.
  • Design agricultural practices so that the farm restores, sustains, and expands life-giving natural services with only limited, no-harm external inputs.
  • Regenerate the farm’s economy by utilizing innovative customer/financing arrangements such as community-supported agriculture and collaborative farm/value- added food business relationships to leverage increased productivity – providing additional asset and enterprise growth.

These principles are the work of many practitioners of sustainable agriculture. They are based upon traditional ‘settled’ agriculture, the work of indigenous farmers, and the work of modern agro-ecologists.

If the people of the State want to implement these practice principles, Rhode Island is perhaps fortunate that it is not dominated by commodity crop farmers and concentrated animal feeding operations. We, therefore, do not have the direct friction of those agricultural lobbies.

We are, however, dominated by financial industries and financial industry lobbies – as is the rest of the country. The access to any significant capital for the development of a robust local food economy is not available through traditional banks. Farm Credit East helps as it can, but they also have standard credit protocols and collateral requirements that make any start-up farmer ineligible.

The result is little capital for food economic development.

Now I need to return to the PawSox for a moment.

The other HUGE problem is that our State’s monetary economy is also largely ‘somewhere else’. It appears that a large number of our citizens are either satisfied with that economy or resigned to its workings.

The great ‘satisfier’ for the larger population appears to be the pension plan or annuity….and the hope of retirement. The great ‘satisfier’ for many wealthy individuals appears to be they have won, and others have lost – somehow the economy becomes a contest for domination and bragging rights.

Pension plans and annuities would be helpful if they were the result of healthy economic practices. Unfortunately, they have become an abstraction of real honest money management. Large investment pools like pension funds also have allowed financial brokers and ‘just clever’ executives to concentrate wealth through very large fee and compensation packages.

This is a cultural problem and leads to deals like the PawSox sale – where a group of ‘winners’ do not truly consider the losers. It also leads to enormous problems for those economic ‘losers’ – in this case Pawtucket, Rhode Island.

That same cultural problem is also the primary constraint to a more robust local food economy. In essence, there is no real ‘monied’ interest in creating that larger local food economy because the lack of an aggregated existing local food economy does not provide a means for the financial industry to extract a portion of a large cash flow through profit sharing agreements, large fees or compensation packages.

Thus little money for local farm, food, and nutrition businesses…and a pricing structure dominated by large national companies using poorly paid ‘illegal’ workers.

Are there practical and feasible ways to encourage significant change in the agricultural economy?

Solving the problems of the national/international economy are complicated, difficult, and impossible to conceive.

Creating just, intelligent, and productive farms and food businesses seems more sensible and feasible. It also only requires the cooperation of a small number of like-minded local investors, farmers, food companies…cooperation is the key.

Short Creek Farm in New Hampshire

http://www.shortcreeknh.com/about/

Short Creek Farm was founded in Northwood, New Hampshire in 2015 by friends Jeff Backer and Dave Viola. Situated on 200 acres of field and forest, we produce pastured pork, grassfed beef, and heirloom vegetables in an ecologically conscientious manner. From our home-grown meats and vegetables, we create delicious, distinctive products that reflect season and are instilled with a sense of place. We look to traditional techniques for inspiration in the field and kitchen while also embracing innovative practices that move agriculture and food culture forward. We aim to be good stewards of the land, to add vitality to the community, and to make good, real food more readily available.


Jeff Backer, Farmer
Before coming to Northwood, Jeff started Potter Hill Farm, in Grafton, Massachusetts, where he grew a wide variety of heirloom vegetables and flint corn and raised pork and beef on pasture. Over five seasons, both he and Potter Hill became a fixture in the lives of many families in the community. Jeff brings the same ecologically-rooted agricultural management he practiced at Potter Hill to Short Creek with the goal of improving the quality of the land while at the same time producing nourishing foods from it.

sausage_coil.jpg

Dave Viola, Chief Sausage Maker
Dave has had a hand in progressive food companies throughout New England; notably, he developed well-respected charcuterie programs at Farmstead in Providence, Rhode Island and at Moody’s Delicatessen and New England Charcuterie in Waltham, Massachusetts. In conversations with Jeff over many years, Dave recognized the need for farmers to be able to turn their goods into higher quality finished products. This is his role at Short Creek and it basically entails taking the incredible meats and vegetables that Jeff grows and making them last longer, making them easier for you to turn into a delicious meal at home, but most of all, trying not to screw them up.

Evaluating Ideas and Methods in Agriculture

One of the partners and I have been engaged in a discussion that starts to take our farming methods work and determines a protocol to evaluate the integration of a ‘new idea’.

The exchange began because of a concern about genetic manipulation… but could easily extend to any agricultural innovation.

My anxiety arises based upon the broad question of ‘How do we know?’ the impact (both short and long term) of any new method.

As a general statement, I would hypothesize that agricultural science has been severely underfunded in comparison to medical science. I also think it is fair to hypothesize that agricultural science research has been severely anthropocentric.

From a bit of Internet research:

U.S. healthcare research spending in 2016 appears to be approximately $50B (Federal government portion). The only statistic I found on industry investment was from 2010 for $76.5 B.

U.S. agricultural research spending in 2016 appears to be approximately $3B (Federal government portion).

Given our society and the Earth are suffering from 20th Century anthropocentric ideas and methods, I’d also hypothesize there would be enormous social, environmental, and cultural benefit to broadening the ‘human centered’ perspective that drives research spending in America.

Now comes the BIG question…how to develop a research protocol for agriculture 1) intelligently linked to other disciplines, 2) free of species biases, 3) sustainably funded, and 4) capable of answering sophisticated scientific and cultural question.

 

More on Undocumented Farm Workers

I’ve read a couple articles on the issue of undocumented workers in agriculture. Both articles took the perspective of ‘look what will happen to your food prices’.

Yes, we have inexpensive food because of a farm labor system built on ‘workers without a voice’.

Is that culturally acceptable?

It is not for me. It is a form of slavery – a criminal system allowed by the government – to satisfy the labor needs of mostly big farms.

My cynical side keeps telling me this will not be solved because the interests of agri-business will bury the problem.

My religious side works toward finding solutions that rebuild the economies of local food production and family farms.

Feeding the World

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/02/170222105236.htm

‘Food production must double by 2050 to feed the world’s growing population.’

This truism has been repeated so often in recent years that it has become widely accepted among academics, policymakers and farmers, but now researchers are challenging this assertion and suggesting a new vision for the future of agriculture. New research suggests that production likely will need to increase between 25 percent and 70 percent to meet 2050 food demand.

Undocumented Immigrant Labor

According to USDA over 50% of farm labor in America is provided by undocumented immigrants.

Think about it…over 50% of our agricultural economy operates illegally.

This has obviously come to the forefront recently over President Trump’s new immigrant policies.

We are a nation of immigrants.

BUT, we are also a nation of laws.

If I am asked to obey the law, then I expect to be competing and living with folks whom also obey the law.

The psychological damage that we have done to our agricultural economy by not addressing the issue of undocumented (illegal) immigrants is enormous.

As an aside, I find a great irony in organizations like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s emphasis on international agricultural development at the same time our American agricultural economy is built on workers without a voice.

We need to solve this problem. If we do not, we will become the plutocracy that is already on the horizon.

The Ergonomics of Specialty Farming

Farming is hard physical work….particularly the planting and harvesting of vegetable crops.

Given we are developing an investment fund that will own both farm and value-added production facilities, I’ve begun thinking how we might diversify any given farmer’s work – diversify it in a manner that is healthier for the farmer and increases productivity.

Thinking of this opens a number of business structure questions:

How can a farmer own parts of diverse enterprises? (Co-op, Shareholder, etc.).

How to analyze improvements in farm and food enterprise operations that result from diversifying work and tasks?

How to manage such a structure?

What are the farming opportunities and limitations?

We will put together some financial models for this for investor conversations.