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california farm connect

California FarmLink is a nonprofit organization that provides farmers with the tools they need to lease and purchase land, access capital, and improve business and financial management skills.

so, for people looking to start a commune in california, this is a great resource! browse by county and see what sort of land is available for growing food. 

    • #farm
    • #california
    • #food
    • #collective
  • 1 week ago
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love this. i was showing my uncle my garden yesterday—he loved it.  it’s not a very elegant garden, but it’s my place to dig my hands into a better world.
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love this. i was showing my uncle my garden yesterday—he loved it.  it’s not a very elegant garden, but it’s my place to dig my hands into a better world.

(via christinasempre)

Source: rawlivingfoods

    • #gardening
    • #food
    • #collective
  • 1 week ago > rawlivingfoods
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earth is the best
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earth is the best

(via somecatsjustswinglikethat)

Source: johnbohl

    • #earth
    • #mothers day
    • #food
  • 2 weeks ago > johnbohl
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4/2 Metro Share

westsacfarmer:

Hello, hello. In your Metro share you found half a dozen eggs, “Winter Density” lettuce, and “Fordhook” silver chard. Not much news this week. Mostly my efforts are centered on preparing the beds for winter planting and weeding beds that were planted with spring crops.

Your existing year-long commitment is complete in two weeks. I would be thrilled to have your support for another 50 weeks. I am still committed to growing the best food close to where it is eaten. I burn no petroleum for farm production; import no commercial feed or fertilizer from off-site and am very conservative with water use. I raise animals in such a way that they can exhibit natural behaviors including foraging for food; propagate native plants; and select heirloom varieties of my crops to offer outstanding flavors and to protect the genetic integrity of our food sources.

Additionally, the existence of this small working farm in West Sacramento has served to demonstrate the importance of creating a secure local food system. I have partnered with the Eatery in West Sac to collect his food waste and compost it at my farm. I sit on the planning committee for the West Sac Farmer’s Market. I teach urban farming classes for Soil Born Urban Ag and Education Project. My daughter’s kindergarten class will have a field trip to the farm in a few weeks. I can speak out against the use of chemical pesticides and genetically-modified foods because I offer a working alternative.

All this is possible because you have made a commitment to being connected to a farm in your community. You value my time and efforts and I value your support. Thank you for a productive year.

Dan Gannon, Father, Farmer

Humble Roots Community Supported Agriculture

i’m so glad you exist, mr west sac farmer! this is a lovely letter. i am sending you my love and support! 

    • #food for thought
    • #food
    • #farming
    • #urban farm
    • #urban farming
    • #urban agriculture
    • #sacramento
    • #west sacramento
    • #organic
    • #root
    • #roots
    • #local
    • #system
  • 1 month ago > westsacfarmer
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chocolate bunny feet dipped in pink himalayan salt.

yeah.

    • #food for nourishment
    • #food
    • #Easter
    • #chocolate
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Sacramento Urban Agriculture Alliance

do you live in sacramento? do you love food? do you love to grow food? do you love the idea of healthy, clean, affordable food for all?

join the SUAA google group!  based off the SFUAA group, with your help, the SUAA group will become the network for all things agriculture related in the metro area.

 have extra fencing? post it! 

need a garden manager for a school plot? post it!

need advice on what the heck is eating your plants? post it!

this is just getting started—we need you to connect and make it your own! 

    • #sacramento
    • #urban agriculture
    • #urban ag
    • #farm
    • #city
    • #farm city
    • #davis
    • #yolo
    • #suaa
    • #sfuaa
    • #food
    • #garden
    • #gardening
    • #916
  • 1 month ago
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harvestsacramento:

Harvest Sacramento: Connecting Community to Repair Broken Food Systems

Amidst the chaos of food waste and food deserts, the six-county region of Sacramento presents a striking paradox: we export about 98% of what we grow, and about 2% of what we eat is locally produced. 

Here at Harvest Sacramento, we’re working to find the balance.  For more, check out this inspiring video. 

super proud of this video.  if you like it, go follow harvest sacramento on tumblr! 

(via )

    • #sacramento
    • #harvest
    • #food
    • #abundance
    • #waste
    • #obama
    • #monsanto
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pipperipembo:

Dear Sacramento Urban Agriculture Enthusiasts:
            Spring is here! Time to come out of hibernation and start cultivating growth in our community.  The time is ripe for a coalition of individuals and organizations to unite and discuss what the next steps are for Sacramento to continue its transformation into an edible city with food justice for all.
            I see so many people in my community working toward this vision of food access.  What I see lacking is a solid network that unites everyone already working in this field and attracts more people to dig in.  We need a coalition of all the various groups and people.  We need to get together and assess where we are, what the next steps are, and where we want to be in one year, five years, and one hundred years.   
I propose the formation of the Sacramento Urban Agriculture Alliance.  My inspiration comes from the San Francisco Urban Agriculture Alliance, which “promotes the growing of food within San Francisco and the associated goals of our member organizations, through advocacy, education, and grassroots action.”
            I invite you to gather at the Pocket-Geenhaven Library meeting room on Wednesday, March 27 at 6 PM (a few hours into the full moon). The meeting will begin shortly thereafter.
            Please spread this message to anyone and everyone who eats food in the Sacramento region. 
            The soil is fertile—now is the time for planting the seeds of change.
Thank you.
With love and warmth, 
Lily Rothrock
(916) 320-9658
lilyrothrock@gmail.com
@lilyrhoads
pipperipembo.tumblr.com

meeting this wednesday! sacramento peeps, please reblog this!
today i met with antonio from the san francisco urban agriculture alliance and we talked about all the great things going on in the northern california food scene. there are a lot of great people doing a lot of amazing work—-now let’s bring them together and see what still needs to be accomplished! 
Pop-upView Separately

pipperipembo:

Dear Sacramento Urban Agriculture Enthusiasts:

            Spring is here! Time to come out of hibernation and start cultivating growth in our community.  The time is ripe for a coalition of individuals and organizations to unite and discuss what the next steps are for Sacramento to continue its transformation into an edible city with food justice for all.

            I see so many people in my community working toward this vision of food access.  What I see lacking is a solid network that unites everyone already working in this field and attracts more people to dig in.  We need a coalition of all the various groups and people.  We need to get together and assess where we are, what the next steps are, and where we want to be in one year, five years, and one hundred years.   

I propose the formation of the Sacramento Urban Agriculture Alliance.  My inspiration comes from the San Francisco Urban Agriculture Alliance, which “promotes the growing of food within San Francisco and the associated goals of our member organizations, through advocacy, education, and grassroots action.”

            I invite you to gather at the Pocket-Geenhaven Library meeting room on Wednesday, March 27 at 6 PM (a few hours into the full moon). The meeting will begin shortly thereafter.

            Please spread this message to anyone and everyone who eats food in the Sacramento region. 

            The soil is fertile—now is the time for planting the seeds of change.

Thank you.

With love and warmth, 

Lily Rothrock

(916) 320-9658

lilyrothrock@gmail.com

@lilyrhoads

pipperipembo.tumblr.com

meeting this wednesday! sacramento peeps, please reblog this!

today i met with antonio from the san francisco urban agriculture alliance and we talked about all the great things going on in the northern california food scene. there are a lot of great people doing a lot of amazing work—-now let’s bring them together and see what still needs to be accomplished! 

(via )

Source: pipperipembo

    • #sacramento
    • #urban agriculture
    • #food
    • #policy
    • #foodshed
    • #spring
    • #sac
    • #916
  • 1 month ago > pipperipembo
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harvestsacramento:

tranqualizer:

When eating organic was totally uncool
Before hipsters got rooftop gards, my poor, refugee family ate that way because we had to. And we were ashamed
by Pha Lo
To me, the organic food movement has become dizzyingly, surreally chic. Farmers have become rock stars; the most exclusive restaurants name-check them so much you can almost see dirt on the menu. But before organic produce exploded into a $25 billion industry, before city gardening became cool, I grew up in a Hmong refugee community, living the urban organic lifestyle not because it was fashionable, but because we were poor. I couldn’t wait to leave it behind.
I grew up in Del Paso Heights, a mixed-race inner city of Sacramento, Calif. — the kind of neighborhood that had just two grocery stores between endless fast-food and liquor shops, and where we all paid for our groceries with food stamps. It was where we grew organic food and raised chickens in our backyards to survive. And where we did it in secrecy.
Like most Hmong in the United States, our community was from Laos, transplanted here after an alliance with the CIA turned our isolated tribe of farmers into mercenaries — a failed secret war against the Communist Vietnamese that left Hmong as the targets of ethnic cleansing. Lifelong farmers-turned-international refugees, the older generation was ill-prepared to thrive in modern America. They settled into inner cities where many turned to social services as safety nets.
I remember watching grown-ups lose their identities and self-worth, slip into depression and cycles of poverty, illness and suicide. These were clan leaders who once commanded the respect of entire villages, tough guerrilla soldiers trained by the CIA — like my father — and proud providers who had, without writing, committed to memory centuries of the best farming practices. And they were humbled, receiving welfare and food stamps because there was no opportunity then in urban America for their main skill. Still, they farmed in the city for two necessities: food and a wistful connection to the old way of life.
We grew crops in every plot of soil that hinted of fertility — parking lots, front lawns, even inside discarded paint buckets, which made terrific homes for lemongrass and chili peppers. When I was in elementary school, the families in our apartment building worked a farm just outside of Sacramento. Every person, every age, had a job. Meals were planned around what we gathered: We scraped fresh cucumbers, serving them with sugar over ice on hot summer days; we pounded the signature Hmong mix of hand-picked peppers, cilantro, green onions and lime in a mortar and served it as a dip for meat and sticky rice. I remember loving our imperfectly shaped cucumbers because I got to watch each one grow into its own unique shape and thought they all had more character than the “beautiful” ones wrapped in plastic at the grocery store. And I loved mustard greens, which grew in abundance once a year but could be pickled for year-round consumption.
We bartered with each other. We raised chickens in the backyard, letting them out to roam and feeding them by hand. We didn’t have a label for this back then, though now I suppose people call it “free-range,” and it costs more. We slaughtered our own hens, sometimes with rituals honoring the sacrifice of the animal’s life.
With the costs of vegetables offset by our gardens, all the families pitched in to buy a pig or cow from the closest farmer, dividing the meat. This way, we could also afford to buy rice.
But we had to keep our locavore tendencies secret. America’s food rules, which seemed to us to go against nature, left us fearful of punishment. At the time, exactly one person from our clan had attended an American college and became our cultural broker, translating to shamans the world of Western medicine, and to lifelong hunters and fishermen the rules of hunting and fishing. What license was needed for what, how many of what thing could be caught during which season, if you could take fruit from a tree depending on which side of a fence it hung. All of it was too complicated to keep straight, and so it felt safer to keep our food producing regimens to ourselves. I can’t remember how many times my father built, tore down and rebuilt the chicken coop, afraid that neighbors who heard crowing would report us.
“Don’t tell the Americans,” my mother would always say, and, eventually, as I grew into adolescence, I couldn’t agree more. I was afraid of being judged.
My mother sprinkled only fresh-cut grass in her garden, swearing by its ability to grow bigger and tastier vegetables. She often crossed dangerous lanes of traffic to get to a pile of lawn clippings. My sisters and I would jump out of the car to bag the grass, and we did it with the speed of a NASCAR pit crew, terrified of being seen by friends.
The parking lot of our neighborhood Kmart was a regular pickup spot for lawn clippings. In my teens, when merely being accused of shopping at Kmart was an epic embarrassment, you can imagine the horror I felt about being spotted stealing grass from its parking lot. “If anyone sees me, MY LIFE IS OVER!” I’d say. Unfortunately, dramatic teenage declarations of “life being over” didn’t fly in Hmong households, not when there would always be someone around to remind you of the time he narrowly escaped the death camps.
As the adolescent me tried to find her groove, navigating deeper into the treacherous social maze of an American high school, I tried to talk my mother out of picking cilantro and scallions from her garden, cleaning and separating and selling them for 50 cents a bunch at a local Hmong store. It never made her more than $20 a week, but she didn’t care. She was obsessed with the idea of doing something she knew how to do, something that could earn money.
My family searched for new places to grow food while I became increasingly afraid that outsiders would find out we lived in a replica Hmong village, built to resemble what the older generation knew as “home.” Then one day, I was outed by a classmate as a food stamp user as I stood in the collection line to count money for my mother. That was the day that I decided I hated everything about the way we got food — from the paint-bucket chili peppers to the communal pig, cut up in pieces, ready to be bagged and shared. I wanted to run away from this mess. I wanted to be one of the cool kids. I would feed myself like they do.
Now, as an adult, I don’t have a garden. Years after I finished college and was well into the working world, long after credit cards made checks obsolete at the grocery store, I still insisted on writing checks to pay for my brand-name groceries. The defiant child food stamp user in me still needs the validation that comes from putting pen to paper and declaring, in writing, that I earned the right to take this food home.
But who’d know that, just as I finally shed a former life of organic necessity, my mother would be the hip one? Now I go to the market and hear people boasting about the eggs in their backyards, or how much their garden looks like the one on the White House lawn. My best friend, also a former Hmong child gardener, laughs with me about collecting lawn clippings. If only we had had cool recyclable cloth bags with eco-friendly slogans, we joke. If only we could be heroic, claiming to be launching a food revolution. But for us, there was no room to think about glamour. That life just felt backward.
I imagine now how many “I told you so’s” my mother would impart on me if she could grasp the enormousness of today’s food movement: Pesticide-free produce, hand-fed chickens, cuisines boasting minimal ingredients all represent billions of dollars to be made. And, irony of ironies, now people’s food stamps can’t even cover the costs of organic and local produce at our markets.
But I stood recently at a popular farmers’ market in San Francisco, where I now live and where my relatives have a vegetable stall. Surrounded by a flurry of patrons enthusiastic about locally grown food, I felt … proud. Proud that Hmong farmers owned their own stalls, their tradition of necessity now trendy and profitable. That day, my uncle gave me a bag of cucumbers and tomatoes from his stall. He said he had heard all about my schooling and my travels, and that he was proud I had made it. But as I looked at my bag and at all the customers flocking to his stall, I couldn’t help thinking he was making it in his own right.
Pha Lo is a freelance writer/nutrition educator and teaches food budgeting skills to low-income parents.

these people are way ahead of the curve. goes to show how perspective is everything. 

do yourself a favor and read this. 
View Separately

harvestsacramento:

tranqualizer:

When eating organic was totally uncool

Before hipsters got rooftop gards, my poor, refugee family ate that way because we had to. And we were ashamed

by Pha Lo

To me, the organic food movement has become dizzyingly, surreally chic. Farmers have become rock stars; the most exclusive restaurants name-check them so much you can almost see dirt on the menu. But before organic produce exploded into a $25 billion industry, before city gardening became cool, I grew up in a Hmong refugee community, living the urban organic lifestyle not because it was fashionable, but because we were poor. I couldn’t wait to leave it behind.

I grew up in Del Paso Heights, a mixed-race inner city of Sacramento, Calif. — the kind of neighborhood that had just two grocery stores between endless fast-food and liquor shops, and where we all paid for our groceries with food stamps. It was where we grew organic food and raised chickens in our backyards to survive. And where we did it in secrecy.

Like most Hmong in the United States, our community was from Laos, transplanted here after an alliance with the CIA turned our isolated tribe of farmers into mercenaries — a failed secret war against the Communist Vietnamese that left Hmong as the targets of ethnic cleansing. Lifelong farmers-turned-international refugees, the older generation was ill-prepared to thrive in modern America. They settled into inner cities where many turned to social services as safety nets.

I remember watching grown-ups lose their identities and self-worth, slip into depression and cycles of poverty, illness and suicide. These were clan leaders who once commanded the respect of entire villages, tough guerrilla soldiers trained by the CIA — like my father — and proud providers who had, without writing, committed to memory centuries of the best farming practices. And they were humbled, receiving welfare and food stamps because there was no opportunity then in urban America for their main skill. Still, they farmed in the city for two necessities: food and a wistful connection to the old way of life.

We grew crops in every plot of soil that hinted of fertility — parking lots, front lawns, even inside discarded paint buckets, which made terrific homes for lemongrass and chili peppers. When I was in elementary school, the families in our apartment building worked a farm just outside of Sacramento. Every person, every age, had a job. Meals were planned around what we gathered: We scraped fresh cucumbers, serving them with sugar over ice on hot summer days; we pounded the signature Hmong mix of hand-picked peppers, cilantro, green onions and lime in a mortar and served it as a dip for meat and sticky rice. I remember loving our imperfectly shaped cucumbers because I got to watch each one grow into its own unique shape and thought they all had more character than the “beautiful” ones wrapped in plastic at the grocery store. And I loved mustard greens, which grew in abundance once a year but could be pickled for year-round consumption.

We bartered with each other. We raised chickens in the backyard, letting them out to roam and feeding them by hand. We didn’t have a label for this back then, though now I suppose people call it “free-range,” and it costs more. We slaughtered our own hens, sometimes with rituals honoring the sacrifice of the animal’s life.

With the costs of vegetables offset by our gardens, all the families pitched in to buy a pig or cow from the closest farmer, dividing the meat. This way, we could also afford to buy rice.

But we had to keep our locavore tendencies secret. America’s food rules, which seemed to us to go against nature, left us fearful of punishment. At the time, exactly one person from our clan had attended an American college and became our cultural broker, translating to shamans the world of Western medicine, and to lifelong hunters and fishermen the rules of hunting and fishing. What license was needed for what, how many of what thing could be caught during which season, if you could take fruit from a tree depending on which side of a fence it hung. All of it was too complicated to keep straight, and so it felt safer to keep our food producing regimens to ourselves. I can’t remember how many times my father built, tore down and rebuilt the chicken coop, afraid that neighbors who heard crowing would report us.

“Don’t tell the Americans,” my mother would always say, and, eventually, as I grew into adolescence, I couldn’t agree more. I was afraid of being judged.

My mother sprinkled only fresh-cut grass in her garden, swearing by its ability to grow bigger and tastier vegetables. She often crossed dangerous lanes of traffic to get to a pile of lawn clippings. My sisters and I would jump out of the car to bag the grass, and we did it with the speed of a NASCAR pit crew, terrified of being seen by friends.

The parking lot of our neighborhood Kmart was a regular pickup spot for lawn clippings. In my teens, when merely being accused of shopping at Kmart was an epic embarrassment, you can imagine the horror I felt about being spotted stealing grass from its parking lot. “If anyone sees me, MY LIFE IS OVER!” I’d say. Unfortunately, dramatic teenage declarations of “life being over” didn’t fly in Hmong households, not when there would always be someone around to remind you of the time he narrowly escaped the death camps.

As the adolescent me tried to find her groove, navigating deeper into the treacherous social maze of an American high school, I tried to talk my mother out of picking cilantro and scallions from her garden, cleaning and separating and selling them for 50 cents a bunch at a local Hmong store. It never made her more than $20 a week, but she didn’t care. She was obsessed with the idea of doing something she knew how to do, something that could earn money.

My family searched for new places to grow food while I became increasingly afraid that outsiders would find out we lived in a replica Hmong village, built to resemble what the older generation knew as “home.” Then one day, I was outed by a classmate as a food stamp user as I stood in the collection line to count money for my mother. That was the day that I decided I hated everything about the way we got food — from the paint-bucket chili peppers to the communal pig, cut up in pieces, ready to be bagged and shared. I wanted to run away from this mess. I wanted to be one of the cool kids. I would feed myself like they do.

Now, as an adult, I don’t have a garden. Years after I finished college and was well into the working world, long after credit cards made checks obsolete at the grocery store, I still insisted on writing checks to pay for my brand-name groceries. The defiant child food stamp user in me still needs the validation that comes from putting pen to paper and declaring, in writing, that I earned the right to take this food home.

But who’d know that, just as I finally shed a former life of organic necessity, my mother would be the hip one? Now I go to the market and hear people boasting about the eggs in their backyards, or how much their garden looks like the one on the White House lawn. My best friend, also a former Hmong child gardener, laughs with me about collecting lawn clippings. If only we had had cool recyclable cloth bags with eco-friendly slogans, we joke. If only we could be heroic, claiming to be launching a food revolution. But for us, there was no room to think about glamour. That life just felt backward.

I imagine now how many “I told you so’s” my mother would impart on me if she could grasp the enormousness of today’s food movement: Pesticide-free produce, hand-fed chickens, cuisines boasting minimal ingredients all represent billions of dollars to be made. And, irony of ironies, now people’s food stamps can’t even cover the costs of organic and local produce at our markets.

But I stood recently at a popular farmers’ market in San Francisco, where I now live and where my relatives have a vegetable stall. Surrounded by a flurry of patrons enthusiastic about locally grown food, I felt … proud. Proud that Hmong farmers owned their own stalls, their tradition of necessity now trendy and profitable. That day, my uncle gave me a bag of cucumbers and tomatoes from his stall. He said he had heard all about my schooling and my travels, and that he was proud I had made it. But as I looked at my bag and at all the customers flocking to his stall, I couldn’t help thinking he was making it in his own right.

Pha Lo is a freelance writer/nutrition educator and teaches food budgeting skills to low-income parents.

these people are way ahead of the curve. goes to show how perspective is everything. 

do yourself a favor and read this. 

(via )

Source: salon.com

    • #sacramento
    • #food
  • 1 month ago > tranqualizer
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harvestsacramento:

“Falling Fruit is a celebration of the overlooked culinary bounty of our city streets. By quantifying this resource on a map, we hope to facilitate intimate connections between people, food, and the natural organisms growing in our neighborhoods.”
“The map is free for anyone to use and edit, the entire database can be downloaded with just one click, and our code is open-source.”
how awesome.  these are public trees that anyone can harvest.  here at harvest sacramento, we gather and distribute food from abundant private sources.  this is the flip side, the public side. together, we illuminate the food forest producing generosity all around us. 
so what can you do? add a tree to the database! let’s fill in the holes, building bridges that connect individuals with trees, creating food access for all. 

do you like community projects that spread generosity and abundance while highlighting the resources available in the urban food forest? give harvest sacramento a follow! i’m helping them with social media presence.  such fun ‘work.’ :)
also, this is a map of public fruit trees via falling fruit.  check them out and add a fruit tree to their database! 
Pop-upView Separately

harvestsacramento:

“Falling Fruit is a celebration of the overlooked culinary bounty of our city streets. By quantifying this resource on a map, we hope to facilitate intimate connections between people, food, and the natural organisms growing in our neighborhoods.”

“The map is free for anyone to use and edit, the entire database can be downloaded with just one click, and our code is open-source.”

how awesome.  these are public trees that anyone can harvest.  here at harvest sacramento, we gather and distribute food from abundant private sources.  this is the flip side, the public side. together, we illuminate the food forest producing generosity all around us. 

so what can you do? add a tree to the database! let’s fill in the holes, building bridges that connect individuals with trees, creating food access for all. 

do you like community projects that spread generosity and abundance while highlighting the resources available in the urban food forest? give harvest sacramento a follow! i’m helping them with social media presence.  such fun ‘work.’ :)

also, this is a map of public fruit trees via falling fruit.  check them out and add a fruit tree to their database! 

    • #food for thought
    • #food
    • #sacramento
    • #harvest
    • #abundance
    • #generosity
    • #fruit
    • #season
    • #local
    • #map
  • 1 month ago >
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think for yourself

there’s been a lot of vegan talk on my dash and at the same time, people keep reposting stuff i write about the failure of education to teach people how to think for themselves. 

people are very good at arguing why something is not vegan, but they’re not good at stepping outside the vegan program and seeing the whole picture. i know they can reprogram themselves to a certain degree, because vegans have stepped out of the program of the typical industrial diet. but, why stop at vegan?! i’m all for baby steps, but it just seems like people have decided to sit down and not try to see where they’re going anymore when they declare they are vegan. just as long as the toffuti ice cream sandwiches and dayia don’t get too expensive, they’re happy. 

how about eating naturally? we’ve destroyed the genetics of so many animals and plants on earth through human interaction.  check out botany of desire by michael pollen, which is on hulu and it’s a book. it’s about how none of the stuff we eat anymore is natural. and i don’t need to tell the vegans of tumblr what human interaction has done to animal populations…

we need to try and find the balance! go with the flow of equilibrium! eating mass amounts of soy is not natural. eating protein powder is not natural. eating processed oil is not natural. 

growing your own food, getting food from the farmer’s market, buying locally and organically is as close to natural as we have in today’s society.

here’s my advice for everyone: get rid of mine, get rid of yours. get rid of right, get rid of wrong. open pollinate your plants. let nature run it’s course. i planted some wild lettuce mix in a plot 3 years ago and didn’t touch it very much…now i have some vigorous self-seeded greens that are BEAUTIFUL and something completely new. what if we pushed over all the fences in the world and let all the breeds cross their genes? we’d have some crazy cool diversity and the ones we’ve created with factories would fall to natural selection.  

i’m gonna plant 3 kinds of corn right next to each other when the frost date passes. and i don’t give a fuck that everyone tells me not to. i want to create a new kind of corn that is right for my exact microclimate! because honestly, it’s the do as your told mentality that got is into our current mess.

so i’m gonna do what i want. i’m not going to let the vegan box dictate my life. or the society box. the only box i live in is the lily box—the box i created, the box i create every second with my thoughts and perceptions of the world. and i’m gonna fill the lily box with so much love that everyone will see my box and start creating their own boxes with all their love. and then all of a sudden the entire universe is just a bright shining box of love.

yeah. 

    • #wall of text
    • #tldr
    • #prose
    • #vegan
    • #diet
    • #health
    • #food
    • #natural
    • #life
    • #nature
    • #earth
    • #raw
    • #industry
    • #food for thought
    • #my words
    • #garden
    • #gardening
    • #gaia
    • #monoculture
    • #urban agriculture
    • #agriculture
    • #create
    • #design
  • 2 months ago
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what are we going to do: Not afraid to admit anymore: I'm a vegan who loves raw honey.

knowledgeandlove:

havocados:

knowledgeandlove:

knowledgeandlove:

Because one thing I’ve discovered is being vegan means different things based on our own personal beliefs, morals, ethics, and depth of research . I don’t think the term vegan will ever be able to be properly defined because of this, and I don’t think vegans should hate on other vegans because of this.


…There’s actually a really clear definition of vegan, and it does not include the consumption of honey. In fact, not only does it exclude honey (raw or otherwise), but it also excludes any other animal products. HONEY=/= VEGAN. There is no debate about that. The best you can call yourself is a melletarian, or a person who consumes no animal products except those which come from bees.


And, as a by the way, very often vegans aren’t “hating” on other vegans about this. They are informing non-vegans who falsely call themselves vegan about this. This is because it often confuses meat-eaters about what veganism actually is, and how it is carried out in daily life. Why do you think so many vegans get the “Do you eat fish?” question—because similar people are saying that they are vegan when they are pescetarians.

If you want to get into depth of veganism, such as what is in tires, or medication, etc., there are stipulations in modern society as to “how” vegan you can be. However, if you live in a westernized country, it is very easy to be vegan, even if you are homeless or have no money, or are boycotting capitalism. That means that not being vegan is a conscious choice.

While you are right, that veganism is based on personal beliefs, morals, ethics, I think what you have said about depth of research is most important in this case. Because you have taken the time to read this, here are some resources:

Why honey is not vegan

Why Honey REALLY Isn’t Vegan

There was a really grand infographic that I can’t seem to find, however, it came down to this: the queen is artificially inseminated using syringes (which, if you believe that forceful artificial insemination of cows on the “rape rack” is rape, then this is a similar process), to get the semen, male bees’s heads are smashed—direct killing for honey, the queen’s wings are clipped so that she cannot leave the hive, and many larger farms actually torch the hives during winter because they are too expensive to keep up. I know that there was more, but that was all I could remember from that one. And, even if for some reason you don’t believe that bees can feel pain (like from having their wings clipped off, or a needle shoved up the who-ha or their heads smashed in and killed), you still have to ask, is it right? Is it right that I take their food that they have worked, spent their lives, collected away from them?

I had a boyfriend who made this joke:
How would you feel if someone gassed your home, then came in and took all of your food?

Listen, I don’t hate you. I don’t think anyone but the bees right now could hate you, but they are too good for that. I don’t mean to sound mean in this post and I’m sorry if it comes out that way. I just think you’re uninformed.

I’m interested in why you think it’s wrong to use other animals for your whims but not bees and why you think that is still vegan. Because, by definition, it’s not. Get your terminology right. You’re a melletarian, not vegan. But there’s no reason that you couldn’t be. Honey is such a small thing to give up. Other animals lives and work mean as much to them as ours do to us. If the facts about honey, and the ethics behind not using it alone are not enough, then think about the golden rule. Empathize. How would you feel if someone did just even one of those things to you?

THANK YOU finally a respectful response. I literally loved everything you had to say. You eloquently did get through to me that I was in fact misinformed. I’ve never heard of the term melletarian and this is why I love Tumblr. 

However I already am aware about the harmful practices of conventional bee farming. My honey is not from anywhere like that. We have a family friend who supplies our honey for us, and if I can’t get that the honey my local co-op provides is on-par with my family friend. They do not harm their bees or take on any of those awful practices, the honey is just produced and when there’s an excess, they collect it. They let the bees be bees and do their job, and I just have a difficult time in seeing the harm in that. 

Although your boyfriend did put that nicely, too. But because I know for a fact that my family friend only takes the excess and not their entire stock, still I can’t see the harm. I would do further research on my co-op’s, though.

We don’t need honey at all. Bees don’t produce enough of an excess to make a marketable product.

It’s exploitation. Plain and simple.

Why go through all the trouble for something that is completely unnecessary?

Honey is no more vegan than cows milk or eggs that were taken from a friends “pet”.

I’m really tired of people punching holes in the belt to make it fit.

HONEY IS NOT VEGAN.

But … milk and eggs have been proven to be detrimental to us, while honey is beneficial. Another reason I haven’t given up honey - a honey/cinnamon combination is what kicks my cold every single time. I haven’t been able to find anything else that works :( maybe some suggestions? You might have an idea I’ve never tried before. 

I guess I should look into the impossibility of an excess/over production. I don’t think anyone understands what my family friend does. It’s a tiny little bee-keep set up. For himself. *edit* do not automatically apply the practices of conventional bee-keeping (smoking, etc.) to what this guy does, because he doesn’t do any of that crap.* If he notices there’s extra honey, he asks his friends if they want any. If they don’t, he has a little stand at the edge of his driveway where he just leaves the honey with a price list and a jar to collect the money in. Nobody has ever screwed this guy over or stolen from him - isn’t that amazing? I kinda think it is.

Anyways. Thank you for giving me something to further research on the topic, I really do appreciate it. 

i’ve been waiting for the day the people identifying as vegan on tumblr talk about honey. let me explain…

food is meant to unite us—it is tangible energy in the third dimension that we all share. when we label ourselves, we accentuate duality instead of uniting in one existence. i hope that whatever you eat, it makes you happy. 

that being said, i have never understood why bee pollen is vegan but honey is not. so using animals as slaves for plant products is okay. from what i understand, bees do produce more than they need, and if everyone had their own hive and responsibly harvested, wouldn’t that be much better for earth because it’s a renewable source of sugar that isn’t shipped and refined? and everyone would have a connection with bees, and i’m sure we’d be much happier. 

and…i am going to say why i object to veganism. not using animals for human profit is a great thing, but when you have to replace products of human-animal relationships with synthetic or processed man-made crap, then i object. for example, i love leather. it lasts, it’s natural, and it’s versatile. i object to the chemicals used in processing and the torture currently taking place for global leather demand. 

however, in california, native peoples did not have fiber from animals, so they made everything from hides. they honored the life of the animal and understood that living together with respect for each other is the only way that both can survive. 

so is it better to buy a shoe made from chemicals and rubber that was shipped all across the world and releases crap into the environment with every step you take, or is it better to buy chemically treated leather that has an angry spirit? one is vegan, one is not. but that’s not the point.

the point is: we need to all live together as one if we want peace, respecting all life. being vegan and pretending that humans can exist without animals is a step in a better direction than where most of humanity is headed, but without seeing the bigger picture and aiming to live at the harmonic center of nature, there can not be peace for animals, humans, plants, fungus, bacteria and every other part of nature. 

so eat your goddamn honey if it makes you happy. 

    • #vegan
    • #honey
    • #rant
    • #food for thought
    • #raw
    • #food
    • #nature
  • 2 months ago > knowledgeandlove
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dear people of the internet: let us cultivate a better world.

just wanted to say thank you to everyone for the love i’ve received in response to my little film.

i am thrilled to have even a little influence with my immediate network for friends and family, but this is a message for everyone.  please, share this if you are inspired! 

Source: vimeo.com

    • #Vimeo
    • #internet
    • #consciousness
    • #food
    • #agriculture
    • #local
    • #web
    • #life
    • #earth
    • #abundance
    • #occupy
    • #dance
    • #seasons
    • #cycles
    • #flower
    • #world
    • #love
    • #amazon
    • #peru
    • #bolivia
    • #spain
    • #nature
  • 2 months ago
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Seeds - The Buried Beginnings of Food: Simran Sethi at TEDxManhattan 2013 (by TEDxTalks)

“Of the 80,000 plant varieties that are edible, we only coultivate about 150 of them…rice corn wheat and potatoes comprise half our caloric intake.”

watch this. plant a seed, start a revolution.  

huge idea here: food availability does not equal access.  we need to remember models of food sovereignty, not ownership, such as public community gardens. 

we need to eat plants to save them.

like seed, all is contained within us.

note: farming is not backbreaking work. fighting with nature, disrupting natural systems and the flow of equilibrium of the earth is back breaking work. nature grows naturally, humans just have to let nature in. 

Source: youtube.com

    • #food for thought
    • #seed
    • #food
    • #sovereignty
    • #abundance
    • #access
    • #revolution
  • 2 months ago
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i hope to inspire you, people of tumblr! please share if you are inspired and then go get off your computer and make the world a better place. 

    • #abundance
    • #world
    • #peru
    • #amazon
    • #my photos
    • #my words
    • #bolivia
    • #spain
    • #occupy
    • #another world is possible
    • #cultivate
    • #food
    • #local
    • #local food lab
    • #agriculture
    • #san francisco
    • #usf
    • #university of san francisco
    • #garden
    • #community
    • #food forest
    • #forest
    • #dinner
    • #earth
    • #light
    • #love
  • 2 months ago
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human earth dweller searching for truth, love, beauty, and the divine. on the path to health, preferring loving and shared nourishment. believing in nature, pachamama, and interconnectedness of all beings.

right now i am working toward manifesting a communal living situation that is run as a cooperative collective. check out my collective toolbox tab.

this is my place for dreams and questions. i encourage you to read with an open heart and mind, but listen and adapt to suit you as you wish.

currently residing in the central and northern california region. check out the hello, nice to meet you tab for more about me and what i do.

most of the photos and writings are my own, unless reblogged or otherwise stated. please ask for permission before sharing/modifying them.

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