Diggers and Digger Wasps

I wasn’t at the free Farm Stand yesterday because I was at the Free Farm working with an architect and others developing a master plan for the site and more specifically seeing if we could come up with plans for a greenhouse, shed, and multipurpose space..

I do know that the van was loaded with forty boxes of figs that were left over from the Ferry Building Farmers market and a lot of Acme bread. Plus we had the usual summer produce from the Free Farm.

I can report on the Free Farm. We are rapidly moving into fall and the harvests are getting smaller. Most of the collard greens we planted got eaten by the Cabbage Butterfly caterpillars and I also think we might  have Cabbage Loopers too. I just learned from Pam Pierce’s excellent book  Golden Gate Gardening, that the Cabbage Looper is the larvae of the Brown Moth and it moves like an inch worm or loops. The Cabbage Butterfly larvae is a caterpillar that looks almost the same,it  just crawls. Anyway  we have been kind of laid back about pests so far in this farm and as a result our crop is mostly gone. I think we need to put reemay plastic (spun polyester cloth) over the baby seedlings in the future).

One of the accomplishments of the farm, besides growing 1,849 pounds of produce in 6 months time, is that more wildlife has started visiting the site. Besides these pesky moths and butterflies, hummingbirds are visiting and I just took a photograph of a native bee that lives at the farm and is nesting in the sandy paths. She is called Bembix sand wasp or digger wasp.

She is a digger wasp and we are a new generation of diggers:

“We come in peace, they said
To dig and sow
We come to work the land in common
And to make the waste land grow
This earth divided
We will make whole
So it can be
A common treasury for all.”

sunflower pollinator plants

We are also building soil with the tons of manure we have brought in and the beautiful compost we are making.

I also have been loving the visitors that walk in or come by for some produce on Saturday. On Saturday I joined a conversation Pancho was having with Mohammed, a man who lived nearby who is from Morocco.  When I told him my name he told me a something Mohammed said. That if you are planting a tree and the end of the world comes, keep planting the tree, don’t stop. I read this quote online which is pretty similar: When doomsday comes, if someone has a palm shoot in his hand , he should plant it.

It seems every week we get new helpers too. They come and go and come back again and they all enrich our lives as they enrich the farm and we all enrich each other. I just read an interesting article in the New York Times (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/magazine/12food-t-000.html) about how summer internships on farms has become very popular with young people these days and the interest in farming has really grown.  Like us, these farmers have been depending on this labor volunteer force to really make their farms successful. I would really love to have an urban house to put up some of our visiting volunteer crew.

Here is a beautiful article by Jason Mark who helps run Alemany Farm:  Bullets and Beets: Murder at the Farm Stand (http://food.change.org/blog/view/bullets_and_beets_murder_at_the_farm_stand).  It made me think about what we at the Free Farm are doing. Jason says, “Distributing food in a low-income area is a nice initiative for an urban farm —and nice is about it. The Alemany residents that pick up organic fruits and vegetables at the stand appreciate and value the food; I know this because they’ve told me, and because they keep coming back. Yet our modest accomplishments to boost food security are wholly inadequate to address the crisis of violence that grips a poor community. No one is under the illusion that growing beets can stop the bullets.In trendy, foodie San Francisco, however, many people seem more interested in the beets — and would prefer to ignore the bullets.” Our situation at Gough and Eddy is different and  I am not aware of the bullet kind of violence in our neighborhood. There is the poverty kind of violence and hardship, and food insecurity. There is also loneliness, isolation, and mental craziness that many struggle with.  People come by all the time wanting to make some kind of connection with what is going on at the farm. Sometimes it is just curiosity or wanting some fresh vegetables. Sometimes people on the street walking by just want to talk and we seem to be a safe space for that to go on. I think any project that serves the poor and disfranchised should contain a component that helps serve the spiritual needs of the people seeking help. Just being closer to nature or gardening can often provide that kind of comfort.

We had a lovely Design Charette led by the architect Vivek Anand and four others where we explored questions like:

Why should we build anything besides what we have on site?
What is your wishlist?
Most important item to build?
Which other groups can we learn from?
How do we need to distinguish ourselves from other groups?
What does the neighborhood need that we can provide on this site?
What can be a spiritual aspect of our design?
What could be an interfaith aspect of our design?
What should be the qualities of the design/landscape/architecture/construction?
What are the important elements of a masterplan for this site?
How should the edges of the site be designed?
What about parking and road access?

We did at the end get into some specifics of shed and greenhouse/multipurpose space design. We came away with the basics of a master plan for the site and plenty of projects we could work on in the future to implement the plan. I think our next month or so will be exploring what we kind of greenhouse/shed can we get built on the site and moving ahead with that project.

One last thing is that a community meeting has been organized on Oct. 7 at 6:30 pm to talk about putting fruit trees in the park where the Free Farm Stand is held every Sunday. The more people I can get to come to that meeting and speak in favor of putting trees there the better. Especially people who use that park (I guess that would include people who come to the Free Farm Stand) or live in the neighborhood). I say this because there is at least on woman who is encouraging people to come to oppose the project. Below are some of her objections:

“… it would reduce the open space used by small kids to run around and play.

…concerns about putting fruit trees in the space where railroad tracks once ran through this former industrial-use site. [she is saying that the fruit from the trees may be contaminated]

…concern about flies and odors from the fruit on the ground. There is also a good possibility that fallen fruit could attract more rodents that already can be found in and around the compost bins. Also, the open space feel of the park would be lost if the area behind the gazebo is fenced off.

Here is the information about the meeting coming up:

The Recreation and Park Department invites you to participate in a community meeting regarding a proposal to expand the community garden at Parque Ninos Unidos for a fruit orchard.  Parque Ninos Unidos is located at 23rd Street and Treat Ave.  Your input is very important!  Everyone is invited to attend!  Pass the word around! The meeting is scheduled as follows:

DATE: October 7, 2010 (Thursday)
TIME: 6:30 P.M. to 8:00 P.M.
PLACE: Meeting Room at Parque Ninos Unidos – Clubhouse
At 23rd Street and Treat Ave

Weighing In

Cherry tomatoes, one trombone squash, a lot of lettuce, a few collards, some broccoli, and some zucchini is what was on the hecka local table all from the Free Farm. Also, I picked 3 pounds of rocoto pepper from Treat Commons that were so beautiful (I myself find the peppers too hot). Neighbors brought oranges, rosemary, and lemons. Mike returned from Burning Man and brought some jam he made from blackberries he picked in Golden Gate Park. Someone else brought some apple sauce from that huge amount of apples last week. Our crowds remain big and it is kind of crazy that we get two shipments of food… so some people line up again to get some of the bounty that comes in around 2:30pm.

Rocoto Peppers and cherry tomatoes

I just updated our spreadsheet with the totals of how much hecka local produce since 2009 and we are up to 11,738 pounds.  Since this April the Free Farm has grown 1,750 pounds, almost a ton of food. Sometimes I wonder what my fixation is with weighing everything we grow or glean or that people bring us to share. Someone new that came by with produce to share yesterday actually asked me why I weigh things. For one thing I think I am the only one documenting this kind of information in San Francisco. I guess I am doing it mostly out of curiosity, kind of like why I got into trying to be a farmer. I just wanted to see how much food I could grow and give away in San Francisco.

I am not really a produce quantity queen.  I think what turns me on is the people that come and can get some great food . I like it even more when people who show up with some food they have grown too or picked from their backyard tree to share. I think we really need to put up a sign explaining what we are about, because we have so many new people who think the stand is just about giving away produce, and don’t understand that we are also promoting do it yourself gardening efforts.

By the way talk about food giveaways, from reading the Facebook entry for the Wigg Party, it seems that their food giveaway are still happening, after they took a break one week. It happens between 3-5pm on Sundays at Hayes Valley Farm. If anyone goes I would love a report.

I received some feedback on the words I wrote last week about the 18th and Rhode Island Permaculture Garden.  I really appreciated Chris Burley’s comment that he published which makes a lot of good points about Permaculture and the importance of soil building. I have to disagree though, I think that the long term strategy of growing soil and a food forest is not in conflict with growing a lot of food in the meantime that can be distributed to people in need.  One positive thing that came out of last week’s blog is that Ian read it and went to visit the garden for himself (he was originally involved in the initial work there). I didn’t make it to the garden this week because I was finishing the grant proposal, so Ian harvested 3 ½ pounds of cherry tomatoes and a few zucchini and brought them to the stand.

I finished sending in a proposal for a grant from the San Francisco Park’s Trust to plant fruit trees in the park where the Farm Stand is. Soon I think there will be a community meeting where neighbors and park users can vet their feelings about this project and I am hoping I can get a lot of people out to the meeting to show their support. I think the main issue needing addressing is do we really need a fence around the area (a lot of people especially parents want to keep the area open for kids to run around in that area and most of us do not like fences). Park and Recreation wants the orchard to be under the control of the community garden adjacent to the area so the gardeners will maintain the trees not the under budgeted park staff. I think they want some kind of fence or way of making it seem part of the garden. So there might have to be some compromise, like a small fence with a gate that is always open. I will let everyone know when the meeting happens.

Also, check this out:
Saturday, September 18th, 2010
LIVING ON
Feel the Earth presents
A dance performance embodying the Iroquois Legend of
Las Tres Hermanas: Corn, Bean, and Squash.
A look at how nature and human move in symbiosis with one another.
Two Free Dance Performances:
The Free Farm
Gough and Eddy
@ 3:30pm
Esperanza Gardens
Florida St and 19th St
@ 5:30pm
“Let nature be the power that propels art, spirit, and creativity”’

Faith based Farming

During the recently passed dark years of our political system something faith based was given a bad rap in my opinion. These days all I am living on is faith (and grace).  Sometimes I feel like things are way out of control in my life, that things are out of my hands. I have to keep the faith.  I love that phrase. We have to reclaim the idea that faith is all of ours and that loving our neighbor is the simple practice we are engaged in.

So the Free Farm Stand and the Free Farm are faith based organizations. I am an advocate of a faith based society and economy. Sharing the wealth and all eating at the same table is what it is all about. It is all about the heart (and maybe keeping our spine fine too).

The other day Angie hung up an orchid plant in our bathroom and it had no soil just roots. I am amazed by it’s beauty and wonder how it works. Being a gardener a plant without soil is a mystery to me. But it reminds me of faith, that it does work somehow.

I really don’t know how our Free Farm Stand works or the Free Farm either. I am humbled by the scene though. We are at the end of summer and we had the largest harvest yet in terms of weight at the Free Farm (164 lbs). It  partly had to do that we harvested a lot of squash (45 lbs of zucchini and 49 lbs of winter squash). One winter squash weighed 30 lbs. It was  from seed brought back from Peru from a friend who grew them in Santa Rosa. He called them zapallos (there is a photo of one he gave me last year in the post for November 23, 2009).   When we set up the table at 1pm there seemed to be more food on the hecka local table than the left- over farmer’s market table. For one thing, Produce to the People gave me 209 lbs of apples they picked from local trees and a friend picked about the same amount from a house on York Street. Neighbors also brought by lemons and more apples. It was too hard for me to weigh everything that came in that day. Yes it is apple season. We have a regular visitor from Vallejo who comes by and brings us fruit from her yard. This week it was apples. What is mind blowing is that she just drops off her fruit that is usually in some beautiful basket and then takes off without getting any vegetables (she did take a loaf of bread). Danny from Sour Flour brought two warm loaves of his freshly baked and delicious whole wheat bread. People dipped it in fresh salsa from tomatoes I think from Esperanza Garden that Alana brought.

So I know this is my weekly mantra by now, that I am also graced out by all the fabulous volunteers that we get every week that make this faith based operation work. And the people that come for food, waiting patiently in a line that goes down the block on Treat and around the corner on 23rd St., are pretty wonderful too.

One disappointing thing that I am trying to direct my faith to and channel some grace upon, is the Permaculture Guild run garden on 18th and Rhode Island.  I think I harvested the last four pounds of produce from that place that we will probably be getting for this year (maybe a few more pounds of cherry tomatoes). I put a lot of energy into that place (and so many others did too) and now it seems neglected and underutilized. It may take some guerilla garden action or something to get it back on track. At least most of the trees are doing well and the apricot tree has a few late apricots.

Talk about underutilized and neglect land. I suggested to the people teaching a Permaculture class at least two years ago that the land next to our community garden in the park where we run the farm stand would be a great design project for one of their students. A few student followed through with that suggestion and came up with a design for an edible landscape there. The plan has changed since then, but the basic idea is the same, to plant fruit trees and edible bushes in the neglected and unused spot against the south facing fence next to the garden in Parque Niños Unidos.  The idea behind this plan is to increase food security in our neighborhood. The organic yield of fruit will be freely distributed through the Free Farm Stand on Sundays as well as to local residents and volunteers that help implement and maintain the fruit orchard. Additionally, the orchard will be a demonstration and educational site for the neighborhood.

I am trying to apply for a grant due at the end of this week and I need a letter of permission from Park and Recreation in support of the project. I sent out a letter to neighbors last week that I needed them to send letters of support for the project, because it looked like I wasn’t going to get that letter from Park and Recreation until I hold a community meeting on the project, to get neighbors support. Now it looks like Park and Recreation is going to approach SF Park Trust about signing the grant application to indicate RecPark support conditional on the outcome of a community meeting to be scheduled shortly. One interesting thing happened as a result of writing to neighbors. A friend who runs a business in the area offered to match the grant with $1500 if we are able to apply.

I really feel like this is an exciting opportunity for all of San Francisco to move towards a more green and sustainable city, where fruit trees and bushes are more commonly planted, in backyards as well as in more city parks. Any letters of support would still be useful, especially if you live in the neighborhood and frequent the park. Please write the people below soon if you feel motivated (and if you don’t mind BCC me a copy). Thanks

MARVIN YEE, Landscape Architect
Capital Improvement Division
Recreation and Park Department
tel:  415.581.2541
fax: 415.581.2540
e:    marvin.yee@sfgov.org

Eric Andersen
Neighborhood Service Area Manager
Neighborhood Service Area 6
Mission, Bernal Heights
Tel: 415-831-6818
eric.andersen@sfgov.org

Joaquin.Torres@sfgov.org (415) 554-6723    (Mayors Office of Neighborhood Services-liaison to District 9)
david.campos@sfgov.org (415) 554-5144     (Board of Supervisors for District 9-Mission)

A sample email would be something like this:

I support the expansion of the fruit orchard that is in Treat Commons Community Garden into the neglected unused space adjacent to it. Please do everything you can to make this project move forward as quickly as possible.