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April 26, 2008

Mark your calendars: kitchen gardener global meetups!

As well as encouraging kitchen gardening at a local level, KGI would like to foster the connecting of kitchen gardeners worldwide, not just through the KGI community website but also in person. To this end we would like to endorse Kitchen Garden Day events run by members where both local and international kitchen gardeners are welcome to come and share what a region has to offer and learn about what makes their gardens and food local.

All travelling KGI members would be welcome to any of these events. The gatherings in South West France (2009) and South Australia (2010) plan to be inexpensive and based around food gardening, markets, local specialties and a lot of fun just getting together, covering a day or two either side of KGI Day.

Unlike the French and Australian gatherings which will coincide with Kitchen Garden Day (4th Sunday of August) in their respective years, the Maine event in 2011 is scheduled for September 17th and 18th in order to give participants an opportunity to attend the Common Ground Fair, the US largest organic agricultural fair which takes place each year in Unity, Maine in late September.

So here are the dates and destinations you can pencil into your long-range diaries:

22-23 August 2009: South West France
21-22 August 2010: In and around Adelaide Australia
17-18 September 2011: Maine, USA

To be perfectly clear, we're not talking about organizing huge international "kitchen garden Olympics" with large carbon footprints to bring the world's gardeners together in one spot. Rather, we're letting you know in the event that you are considering travel to these locations already or have dreamed about it and would like to plan your travel in order to meet up with like-minded people from other parts of the world.

We will be providing more details about these events as we have them. In the meanwhile, you can be in touch with the local organizers directly via the KGI community site: .

France 2009: Ian
Australia 2010: Kate
Maine 2011: Roger and Maya

April 23, 2008

KGI: the toast of the blogosphere

Well, not that kind of toast. We're referring to the bumper crop of blog posts that have been written about KGI over the course of the past several weeks. These include diverse sites such as Take a Bite out of Climate Change, Slow Food USA's blog, Climate Today, and Dwell Magazine. The prize for comprehensive and blogging creativity goes to Kerry Trueman who blogs for EatingLiberally.org and the Huffington Post. She included us recently in a post about groups and individuals who are working to carry out a "Terroirist Plot on American Soil" (yes, that spelling - terroir-ist - is right). And we thought we were clever back in 2006 when we referred to our "Subversive Plot" to encourage more people to grow some of their own food.

To all the food and garden bloggers out there - whether you're a terroirist, subversive or "dirt-y minded" - thanks for covering our work and that of the many other groups and individuals working to shorten the distance from plot to plate.

Photo credit: D'Arcy Norman

April 16, 2008

Kitchen gardening: a "globolocal" phenemenon

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Some people ask us about the global nature of our network of kitchen gardeners. We recently dug deep into our database to see what countries are represented. Here we are:

Afghanistan, Algeria, Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belgium, Belize, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Canada, China, Cote D'Ivoire Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominica, Ecuador, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Grenada, Guyana, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iran, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Kenya, Kuwait, Lebanon, Liberia, Luxembourg, Malawi, Malaysia, Mauritius, Mexico, Myanmar, Nepal, Netherlands, Netherlands, Antilles, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Norway, Pakistan, Paraguay, Philippines, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Venezuela, Virgin Islands, Zambia, Zimbabwe.

February 26, 2008

February 2008 Newsletter

 

Dear Kitchen Gardener,

The envelope please!  We're delighted to announce the winners of our second annual "Grow-Off Show-Off".  We were impressed with the quality, creativity, and diversity of entries which came from gardeners big and small on five continents.  Among them were home gardeners, seed savers, school gardeners, community gardeners, garden bloggers, garden podcasters, garden YouTubers (which is a very different species from the plain 'ol garden tuber) and even a video entry from a Japanese man for whom the term "home-grown broccoli" is literally music to his ears

 

It was a challenge narrowing the field to five winners.  In fact, we didn't manage to do it and ended up picking six with two tying for first place.  So, here they are:

 

1. Centro Escolar Los Gramales (The Gramales Scholastic Center); Gualococti, Morazan, El Salvador (Grand Prize Tie, $250 donated by Mother Earth News).
Gargy Shiksha Sadan; Kathmandu, Nepal (Grand Prize Tie, $250 donated by Mother Earth News).
2. Jennifer Hill; Danbury, Conn. (2nd Prize, a portable tiller/cultivator donated by Mantis).
3. Christopher Brandow; Pasadena, Calif. (3rd Prize, eco-friendly gear from Patagonia).
4. The Hills and Plains Seed Savers; Adelaide, South Australia (4th Prize, a $100 gift certificate to Johnny’s Selected Seeds).
5. The Children’s Garden at Kachina Country Day School; Paradise Valley, Ariz. (5th Prize, organic fertilizer from Neptune’s Harvest).

 

Many thanks to our partners at Mother Earth News for their support and help in getting the word out about the contest.  We'd also like to thank our sponsors for chipping in some great prizes.  We're hoping to make this year's contest bigger and better, so keep your eyes and ears open for information about that later this spring when we announce the launch.

 

One touching footnote to last year's contest came in the form of an e-mail from Kate Flint of the Hills and Plains Seed Savers of Australia who won 4th prize.  Kate and friends were so moved by last month's newsletter about KGI's school garden project in Buenos Aires that they donated their gift certificate to the people carrying out the project so as to give them some seeds to go with their brand new gardens.  It makes for a nice story when a group of Australian gardeners can donate seeds from an American seed company to help out some Argentinian gardeners just getting started with a school garden.  

 

Speaking of that, KGI is looking for other projects where we can put our network to good use.  We mentioned in our last newsletter that we're working to become a "gardeners helping gardeners" network.  We would like to be in touch with groups in need of assistance (or people who are aware of such groups). To be clear, we do not have wheelbarrows full of money, but we do have technical expertise in garden and project planning and would be willing to work with project partners to help develop their projects.  I've included some criteria below for the types of partners and projects we have in mind. Don't hesitate to contact us if you know of a project or a group that you think could be a good fit for us.

 

I'll look forward to updating you next month through our usual eclectic mix of topics including a look at gardening during hard economic times.  We'll also tiptoe into US presidential politics by giving some suggestions to the remaining candidates on how they can secure the powerful "garden vote" :-)

 

Until then, happy gardening (or seed starting) and bon appétit,

 

 


 

What we're looking for in project partners:

- Some type of track record, previous experience, references
- Has the minimal technical skills and knowledge needed to carry out and maintain project
- Is able invest own resources - financial and/or inkind - in project
- Has capacity to communicate and provide information as needed
- Is willing to share the grant in some way (i.e. by sharing the knowledge gained with others in their community)

-Can be located anywhere in the world

 

What we're looking for in projects:
- Fits with KGI mission of empowering people to
achieve greater levels of food self-reliance

- Project proposal demonstrates community interest in and need for partnership (demand driven)
- Results in sustainable change (community willing and able to sustain, project is designed for sustainability)
- Generates learning which others can replicate
- Is cost-effective
- Enables KGI to learn about community needs and provides feedback for future projects



February 12, 2008

KGI Annual Report 2007

Description:
Kitchen Gardeners International is a 501c3 nonprofit founded in Maine, USA with friends from around the world. Our mission is to empower individuals, families, and communities to achieve greater levels of food self-reliance through the promotion of kitchen gardening, home-cooking, and sustainable local food systems. In doing so, KGI seeks to connect, serve, and expand the global community of people who grow and prepare some of their own food.

Goals:
-To provide a structure, virtual and real, for kitchen gardeners worldwide to: meet up with each other; share their passion for food, cooking, and organic gardening; and further their skills and knowledge in these areas
-To introduce new people to the joys and benefits of actively participating in one's food production and preparation
-To inform KGI's supporters and the general public about the many ways of participating in and contributing to a sustainable food system and planet
-To help individuals and communities to achieve higher levels of food self-reliance through education, garden promotion, technical assistance and charitable giving
-To promote fellowship, cultural exchange and international understanding via a shared love of kitchen gardening

Main Activities and Achievements in 2007:

1) KGI website and newsletter
The KGI website and electronic newsletter continued to be our main outreach and education tools and both showed signs of strong growth in readership. Traffic to our website averaged 74,000 unique visits per month, up from 56,000 for the previous year. Our newsletter readership rose from 2800 people to 4800 or an increase of 70%.

2) Media and public outreach
KGI continued added to its media portfolio in 2007 with coverage in more than 50 newspapers and magazines. We were accepted into the YouTube’s new nonprofit program and reached thousands of new people with “food for thought” messages and educational videos that way. KGI was also invited to attend and be represented at various food and garden related events, both near and far. These included participation in the “Maine Fare” food festival, presentations to garden clubs in Maine and New England, participation in the Kellogg Foundation’s annual “Food and Society Conference” organized last year in Traverse City, Michigan.

3) International Kitchen Garden Day
KGI coordinated the fifth annual International Kitchen Garden Day on August 27th. The day was recognized and celebrated by a number of groups and individuals from different parts of the world, both large and small.

4) Grow-Off Show-Off
KGI launched this activity in 2006 to increase the visibility of kitchen gardens and gardening in various communities, rechristening it the “Grow-Off Show-Off” contest in 2007. The contest drew a wide range of entries – pictures, PowerPoint presentations, blogs, podcasts, videos - from four continents and was co-sponsored by Mother Earth News.

5) KGI Mini-grants program
KGI launched its mini-grants program in earnest in 2007 through a $1000 grant to the nonprofit group, Vanastree, of southwest India. Vanastree is using these funds to help women gardeners of theWestern Ghats region to get more food and value out of their gardens while protecting biodiversity. As part of the grant, Vanastree is setting up seed-saving groups in nine villages and offering training in bee-keeping, farm journalism, and adding value to gooseberries.

Staff and board updates:
KGI’s board consisted of Jan Maes, Roger Doiron, David Buchanan, and Maya Howard. Roger Doiron continued to staff KGI in 2007 on a part-time basis.

Financial Report:
KGI made considerable strides in its fundraising in 2007 thanks to a growing number of individual donors and the generous support of the Lillian Goldman Charitable Trust, Fulbright Academy, New England Grassroots Environment Fund, Lawson Valentine Foundation, and Helianthus Fund.


Revenues, Gains and Other Support
Foundations and project grants 17,050
Individual donors 5,922
Website-related revenues 626
Total revenues 24,048

Expenses
Program-related costs 20,346
Fundraising costs 2,193
Administrative costs 728
Total expenses 23,266

Change in Net Assets 782

Net Assets, Beginning of Year 4362
Net Assets End of the Year 5144


Report Approved by KGI Board on Feb 11th, 2008

Roger Doiron
Jan Maes
David Buchanan
Maya Howard

December 10, 2007

Fresh, local foods attract fresh scrutiny

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To say that local foods are being attacked would be too strong a word, but there's definitely a challenge under way. Two recent articles about them in the New York Times suggest that we're heading into a new phase of the local foods revolution, a phase where there'll be more questions about the ramifications of more people eating locally-based diets.

The two Times articles say essentially the same thing in different ways: just because a food is more local doesn't make it more sustainable. The first appeared in the business section and cites new, yet incomplete research being conducted in California that is expected to show that some industrially grown produce may have a smaller carbon footprint than its local counterpart. The second appeared in the opinion pages and was, frankly, more annoying in its smug tone and its choice of examples (bananas and potato chips).

Annoying or not, these articles are hopeful in that they show that local foods are continuing to move toward the center of the media's plate. To read KGI's response, see the letter to the editor linked and pasted below. As you'll see, we have our own view of what's next for the local foods movement (hint: it's about to get "localer").

Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/16/business/16backpage.html

To the Editor:

Re “If It’s Fresh and Local, Is It Always Greener?” (The Feed, Dec. 9), about the carbon footprint of food transportation:

If “local” is the “new organic” when it comes to food, then what is the “new local”? I would like to suggest that the next generation of local eaters will not only have green values, but also green thumbs.

The article pointed out the complexity of determining food’s true carbon footprint. No post-graduate degree is needed to calculate the “food miles” of home-grown produce; a tape measure works just fine.

Roger Doiron
Scarborough, Me., Dec. 10

The writer is founding director of Kitchen Gardeners International, a nonprofit network of home gardeners.

KGI founder chosen as "food and society fellow"

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Kitchen Gardeners International (KGI) is pleased to announce that KGI founder, Roger Doiron, has been awarded a Food & Society Policy Fellowship for 2008-2009.

The program provides a two-year annual stipend to professionals in food and agriculture from across North America, enabling them to use mass media channels to inform public viewpoints in alignment with the goals of creating sustainable food systems that promote good health, vibrant communities and environmental stewardship.

Fellows come from many disciplines: chefs, farmers, nutritionists, activists, public health professionals, fishers, policy experts and academics. 13 recipients of this prestigious fellowship were selected from a highly competitive North American group of applicants.

The fellowship program is coordinated by the Thomas Jefferson Agricultural Institute based in Missouri and is funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Fair Food Foundation and Woodcock Foundation.

September 21, 2007

Kitchen Garden Day 2007 short video

Enjoying good food, good company, learning, teaching, and having lots of fun connecting with other people and the earth. That pretty much sums up what goes into a typical Kitchen Garden Day celebration. Although it's too late to organize an event for 2007, it's not too late at all to see what types of celebrations others organized. Thanks to all who were with us or with us in spirit that day!

August 14, 2007

Kitchen Garden Day Celebrations

For those of you new to Kitchen Gardeners International, we organize a global garden party on the fourth Sunday of August each year which we aptly named Kitchen Garden Day. The day started as a tongue-in-cheek challenge to the snackfood makers of the world who have claimed the entire month of February as "Snackfood Month". Our logic was that if the fluorescent orange cheese-puff makers of the world could have an entire month to celebrate their vision of good eating, home gardeners and cooks deserved at least a day. The video above was some local press coverage we had in Maine.

What started in one backyard in Maine is slowly, but surely spreading to others and a few frontyards too! Kitchen Garden Day this year (August 26th) will be recognized in different places and in different ways: a street parties, picnics , potlucks, gardening workshops, and locally-sourced dinners cooked by area chefs.

Why not join the fun and organize a gathering of your own with friends and good food? But, please, no artificially-flavored bacon snacks or foods containing "blue #40". Those are for another day month.

July 17, 2007

Start a "gPod" in your area

gpod071707.jpg

You've heard of an iPod and a pea pod, but what about a gPod?

The g is short for gardener. A gPod is a group of kitchen gardeners and other garden-variety foodies who get together from time to time, regularly or irregularly, to share information, plants, know-how, their gardening victories and defeats, and delicious, seasonal foods. More than being focused on just themselves, members of a KGI gPod also look for ways of giving something back to their community through their combined knowledge, time, and resources.

In his critically acclaimed book "Bowling Alone", author Robert Putnam writes about how we have become increasingly disconnected from family, friends, and neighbors and how we may reconnect. Kitchen Gardeners International is encouraging its members and supporters to form gPods because we believe that we are better and stronger together than apart. By banding together at the local level, gardeners can help alleviate global problems such as food insecurity, climate change, and tasteless supermarket tomatoes. We can also have more fun!

Efforts to bring about compost-pile-powered community revival are already under way. In the course of the past year, KGI gPods have started forming and their members have worked together to plant new gardens in their communities, behind homes, schools, and churches. They have organized garden tours. They have hosted educational talks. They have helped to raise funds for local kitchen garden projects. They have held tastings and have organized potluck meals made with local ingredients.

As with peas, to start a new gPod, someone has to plant a seed. Why not you?

Below you'll find some resources we're offering to help local organizers start new pods in their areas. Once you have a group of 5 or more people organized, we will help you get your local effort organized by setting up an e-mail list, helping you pick a group name, creating a group logo, etc. Please let us know what additional organizational resources you need and we'll do what we can to help.

-----

1. How to start a KGI gPod. An inspirational and informational guide to local group organizing by John Walker, founder and lead organizer of Kitchen Gardeners Bluegrass (Kentucky, USA).
2. KGI informational flyer for downloading, printing, and posting in your area. Add your name and contact details on the tear-off tabs so that people know how to reach you.

June 26, 2007

KGI Annual Report 2006

Description:
Kitchen Gardeners International is a 501c3 nonprofit founded in Maine, USA with friends from around the world. Our mission is to empower individuals, families, and communities to achieve greater levels of food self-reliance through the promotion of kitchen gardening, home-cooking, and sustainable local food systems. In doing so, KGI seeks to connect, serve, and expand the global community of people who grow and prepare some of their own food.

Goals:
-To provide a structure, virtual and real, for kitchen gardeners worldwide to: meet up with each other; share their passion for food, cooking, and organic gardening; and further their skills and knowledge in these areas
-To introduce new people to the joys and benefits of actively participating in one's food production and preparation
-To inform KGI's supporters and the general public about the many ways of participating in and contributing to a sustainable food system and planet
-To help individuals and communities to achieve higher levels of food self-reliance through education, projects, and charitable giving
-To promote fellowship, cultural exchange and international understanding via a shared love of kitchen gardening

Main Activities and Achievements in 2006:

1) KGI website and newsletter
The KGI website and electronic newsletter continued to be our main outreach and education tools and both showed signs of strong growth in readership. Traffic to our website averaged 56,000 unique visits per month by the end of 2006, double our 2005 traffic and on par with the websites of food and gardening organizations considerably larger and better resourced than KGI. Our newsletter readership rose once again by 30%, reaching 2800 people.

2) Media and public outreach
KGI continued added to its media portfolio in 2006 with coverage in numerous newspapers, magazines, and successful forays into new digital media such as YouTube. Highlights included a TV report on Maine's WGME news 13 and an article about us in the Washington Post. KGI was also invited to attend and speak at various food and garden related events during the year including Maine Fare and the annual Food and Society conference organized by the Kellogg Foundation.

3) International Kitchen Garden Day
KGI coordinated the fourth annual International Kitchen Garden Day on August 27th. The day was recognized and celebrated by a number of groups and individuals from different parts of the world, both large and small. In 2006, we still did not have the organizational capacity to track where celebrations were organized and what types of activities were offered. We therefore relied on participating groups to tell us how they recognized the day.

4) Garden visibility project
KGI launched a new activity in 2006 to increase the visibility of kitchen gardens and gardening in various communities. KGI supporters were asked to come up with creative ways of advertising their gardens which resulted in a garden sign competition. While some people entered yard signs into the competition, the grand prize of a gift certificate to Johnny's Selected Seeds went to KGI member Jennifer Love who painted her minivan with gardening slogans and images.

5) KGI Mini-grants program
KGI program of offering financial and technical assistance in support of kitchen garden projects began on a small scale in 2006 through two projects, one in Scarborough, Maine, the other in Guyana, South America. In the case of the former, KGI provided technical assistance to the Pleasant Hill Elementary School in the design and execution of a new school garden. The project now has the participation of 30 families and has succeeded in securing funds for an expansion. The Guyana project is being carried out by a faith-based NGO called DepTrad that is helping 300 poor families to become more self-reliant through kitchen gardens. KGI provided technical assistance and $300 worth of seeds.

Staff and board updates:
KGI welcomed new board members in 2006: Jan Maes, David Buchanan, Maya Howard. Our six-fold increase in revenue in 2006 allowed us to take the first step in hiring paid staff. It was decided at the July board meeting that Roger Doiron, KGI's founder, would be hired on a part-time basis to help maintain and grow KGI's activities and membership.

Financial Report:
KGI carried out a diverse program of educational and awareness raising activities in 2006 which seems all the more impressive when one considers that our yearly expenses remained under $3000. We saw strong growth in the number of individual and institutional donors, along a new revenue stream coming from KGI's website. What isn't reflected in this report however are the countless hours of volunteer time and other in-kind contributions that made these activities possible. KGI gratefully acknowledges all those who helped our cause in one way or another in 2006.

Beginning Balance (01/01/06) 561

Uses of Cash
Activity and event-related costs 2427
Office and administrative costs 571
Sub-total 2998

Sources of Cash
Member dues and contributions 3582
Website related revenues 217
Grants 3000
Sub-total 6799

Ending Balance (12/31/06) 4362


Report Approved by KGI Board on March 8th, 2007

Roger Doiron
Jan Maes
David Buchanan
Maya Howard

June 17, 2007

How to form a gPod

By John Walker, founder and lead organizer of Kitchen Gardeners Bluegrass (KGB)

First of all, don’t start alone.
You will need a small group (2-4) of like-minded people who can support the vision and help organize and take care of projects.

Find out if there are any groups that already exist. Can you work with them or form a network of organizations? Beware of established gardening groups who may feel that you are intruding on their turf. Do your homework and make connections. I did all of this, but still managed to tick off the local "experts". One of the consequences of organizing 'new' groups is that you will encounter resistance and mistrust.

Don't try and be too organized
But do have hands-on, experiential meetings at a regular day, time and location. Kitchen Gardeners Bluegrass is not organized in that we do not have officers, dues, mission statements etc. We do, however, have regular meetings.

Keep your information and programs simple.
We endorse Mel Bartholomew’s square foot gardening method. Don’t give too much information out at one time.

Come up with a group name, logo, and and an appropriate geographic area to cover.
Our members are based in the Lexington (KY) area, but we chose the name Kitchen Gardeners Bluegrass because it had a nicer ring to it. When thinking about your future group, consider what geographic area you can cover and look for an appropriate name to go with it. KGI can help with this and creating a group logo.

Have a meeting venue that is suitable for a demonstration garden.
We have one at a local church which we use for hands-on work, and KGB has adopted some beds at the arboretum (where my wife is education coordinator). These beds are used for other programs but KGB has adopted them, which means we maintain them and have a say what happens to the harvest.

Try and find public forums at which to get the message across.
I have had booths at our local arbor day, peace fair and peace and justice dinner as well as speaking with other smaller invited groups. Find local experts who will come and talk, so you don’t have to do all the programming.

Set up systems for staying in touch with each other.
Once you have critical mass of about 5-10 people, you'll need to set up an e-mail list (KGI will help with this). Circulate a sign-up sheet at meetings so that you collect information about potential new members.

Make a business card and flyer
I also ordered some bumper stickers, originally for sale to cover cost, though people thought they were free. Lesson, unless you have a lot of spare cash be careful about printing a lot of stuff. (I can send my examples if requested).

Go with the flow.
Though you may have a vision, until you have been together for a while, that vision may not yet resound with the group. Make use of the energies in the group. This process allowed one of the members to organize the making of over 100 tomato cages and 40 pepper cages from 4 rolls of wire concrete reinforcing mesh (600ft). Over 15 people bought into the process who bought the cages at cost much cheaper than they could buy inferior ones at the store. Vision is important, but don't let it drive you to the exclusion of other opportunities.

Find other gardeners.
Use kitchen gardens to open conversations. It is quite amazing how many gardeners are out there. Read about local gardening, make contacts with local papers, especially the free ones.
Connect with county extension agents, local CSAs, food co-ops, college departments, etc.

Final Words
-Conserve energies and maintain a focus. Learn to say thanks, but no thanks.
-Show gratitude, even through clenched teeth.

Finally, don’t give up. Be patient. Don’t be so single-minded you miss good opportunities. But also don’t get hooked to others coat-tails if they seem to be going in a direction that you are uncomfortable with. This process is very dynamic and if you are open to them, resources come at you thick, fast and furious.

May 17, 2007

KGI celebrates NYC Grows 2007

KGI_at_NYCgrows051707_2.jpg

Did you know that there are kitchen gardeners living in high-rise buildings growing food on their rooftops, balconies, and windowsills? We do because we had a chance to meet a few of them last month at the NYC Grows festival organized by the National Gardening Association (NGA).

It's really inspiring to hear their stories and encouraging too. As of next year, the United Nations estimates that there'll be more people living in cities than in rural areas. We're going to need creative ideas for feeding all these veggie-hungry city folks and urban gardens will be part of the solution. Thanks to our friends at the NGA for allowing us to join this great annual event.

KGI_at_NYCgrows051707.jpg

March 29, 2007

Update from Guyana

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Last year, KGI launched its mini-grant program by helping a couple of small food and garden projects break ground. One of these projects is based in Guyana, South America and is working to help single mothers living in poverty use kitchen gardens to feed their families healthier food and to become more economically self-reliant.

We've heard back from the project organizers that the first phase of the project was a success and that they are now looking to expand their efforts to reach more people in need. Thanks again again to all who offered financial support to KGI and to our friends at Territorial Seed who helped make this project possible.

The project organizers would love to acquire a basic digital camera in order to tell their story to potential funders in pictures. Please let us or know if you are in a position to donate one or the funds needed to buy one. Thank you.


March 27, 2007

KGI featured in E magazine

The article below on "co-gardening" appears in the latest issue of "E", the environment magazine. Check it out below and, while you're at, give their rest of their magazine a look via their website. E has won numerous Independent Press Awards and is chock full of everything environmental -- from recycling to rainforests, and from the global village to our own backyards.

Continue reading "KGI featured in E magazine" »

February 23, 2007

You want bumper stickers? We have bumper stickers!

wegrowfoodbumper022407.jpg

There are many ways to promote kitchen gardening and local foods, not all of which require a spade. Here's a way of getting the word out about food gardens where they may just be needed most: in the urban and suburban jungle!

Click here to order yours online.

February 9, 2007

Help support KGI by using GoodSearch.com

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Now you can raise money for Kitchen Gardeners International just by searching the Internet at GoodSearch.com.

You use GoodSearch.com like any other search engine, but each time you do, you help support KGI's outreach and education activities.

Here's how it works:
-Go to www.goodsearch.com (which is powered by Yahoo! and yields the same search results)
-Type "Kitchen Gardeners International" in the "I'm supporting" box and click "verify."
-Type in your search query like with any other search engine.
-GoodSearch shares advertising revenue with KGI, so every time you search the web at GoodSearch, you'll be supporting our work.

GoodSearch also has a toolbar you can download from the homepage so that you can search right from the top of your browser.

You can keep track of how much we've earned by clicking on the "amount raised" button. The more people who use the site, the more money we'll earn, so please spread the word.

Just 500 people searching four times a day will earn $7300 for KGI this year. That helps plant a lot of kitchen gardens. Think of what 3,000 people searching could do!

January 19, 2007

Circular food logic

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KGI will be meeting with a number of food and garden groups in the course of 2007 and offering them food-for-thought on the role of home gardening and cooking in a sustainable food system. Here's a draft of one of the graphics we've produced. Let us know what you think and what we might to to make it better. You may click on the image to see a larger version.


September 19, 2006

KGI featured in the Washington Post

KGI harvested a bumper crop of media coverage and public awareness this past summer. We were featured in two local papers in Maine, the Maine Sunday Telegram (Maine's largest in terms of circulation), Maine television, two garden radio shows (WXTK - Boston and KDKA - Pittsburgh), calendar listings in many places including the Chicago Tribune and the American Gardener magazine, the progressive website CommonDreams.org, and - as the cherry on top - in Barbara Damrosch's column in the Washington Post (see below). We were also invited to speak by a number of different groups (local foods groups, a peak oil awarness group, gardening clubs, and a culinary group) and have other speaking engagements forthcoming. Please let us know if you are aware of an opportunity for getting our messages out to a larger group.

Continue reading "KGI featured in the Washington Post" »

August 28, 2006

Our beautiful food world

Check out our new "food for thought" video. Please let us know what you think. If you like it, please pass the link on to some others who you feel might find it of interest. Who said "YouTube" is just for the "mentos and coke" crowd?

August 25, 2006

Garden tour to bring people, food together

By Erica Thoits, published in The Current, August 24, 2006

current082406.jpgFresh food is footsteps away for Roger Doiron and his family, who have everything from cucumbers to fennel growing in their backyard.

Doiron is in his third year as founder of Kitchen Garden International, a group that is promoting personal gardens for backyards, front yards and any space available in an effort to reduce the distance between people and their food.

This Sunday, Aug. 27, Doiron will lead a group through his neighborhood in Scarborough to visit various kitchen gardens. The garden tour will include about 25 people, though anyone interested is welcome to show up. The only entry fee is a favorite tomato variety, whether it’s homegrown or bought from a local farm stand. At the end of the afternoon the Doirons will host a tomato testing.

“This is not going back and homesteading it,” said Doiron. “It’s about closing the gap between you and your food. This particular generation is the furthest from its food in American history."
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture that’s been tracking home food production since 1870, last year less than 1 percent of the country’s food was produced locally.

current-2-082406.jpgRight now, said Doiron, in Maine the average person’s food travels about 1,500 miles from field to grocery store using up about 400 gallons of gas.

Related to Doiron’s work for the Eat Local Foods Coalition that promotes local Maine food, Kitchen Garden International goes one step further by teaching people how to garden and how to cook and store what they grow.

According to Doiron, there are now about 2,600 people representing about 50 countries that subscribe to the Kitchen Garden newsletter, which includes tips both on gardening and cooking techniques. “Kitchen Gardening is a universal experience,” said Doiron.

Doiron is also teaching his sons, 6-year-old Sebastian and 9-year-old Maxim, how to garden as well. The boys have their own smaller version of a kitchen garden in the front yard.

Doiron also hopes the idea of gardening and helping to grow local food will spread to schools as well.

“If we’re being responsible parents and members of the community, we need to think about incorporating gardens into some of the schools,” said Doiron.

Sunday’s tour begins in front of Doiron’s house on 3 Powderhorn Drive at 2 p.m. and will run until about 4 p.m. Events like this Sunday are important, said Doiron, because they help to build community. The program not only strengthens the connection between people and their food, said Doiron, but with each other as well.

“Kitchen Garden International is very much about local gardens,” said Doiron. “But it’s also about making a connection with people.”

August 24, 2006

KGI in the news

KGI made the nightly news in Maine a couple of nights ago. Here's how the report turned out:

August 21, 2006

Grow a garden right outside your kitchen door and reap the benefits

by Tom Atwell, published August 20, 2006 in the Maine Sunday Telegram

What could be better than having a garden just steps from the kitchen table, where a kid could go out and grab a tomato or carrots or a handful of strawberries for snacking?

In the United States, people - if they grow food at all - have vegetable gardens, usually in the backyard and quite a distance from the house. But in Europe, kitchen gardens - with vegetables, herbs and fruit - are literally right outside the kitchen door.

Roger Doiron of Scarborough founded Kitchen Gardens International in 2003 and has 2,500 people from 50 countries signed up for its electronic newsletter.

Next Sunday - Aug. 27 - the group is moving from the virtual world to the physical one, holding garden events at what is being called Kitchen Garden Day.

Doiron is holding one in his neighborhood, at 3 Powderhorn Drive, off Pleasant Hill Road. Beginning at 2 p.m., visitors will tour his kitchen garden, walk through the neighborhood looking at a few other vegetable gardens, and then have a tomato tasting. Those who have homegrown tomatoes are invited to bring some in to be tried and compared with tomatoes others bring in. The event is expected to finish by 4 p.m.

The idea is to have similar events on the fourth Sunday of August in future years.

While Doiron formed Kitchen Gardens International as a volunteer, he works professionally at the Eat Local Foods Coalition of Maine, a group that urges people to buy food from local farms. He said kitchen gardens are sort of an extension of that, in that nothing could be more local than food grown right outside the kitchen door.

Doiron likes kitchen gardens for a variety of reasons: health, quality cuisine, financial benefits and environmental concerns.

"It's a little bit strategic," he said. "It is not always the easiest thing to get people, no matter what age they are, to eat their vegetables. But if you frame the whole idea of eating vegetables in terms of cuisine, by deciding what are those vegetables going to be combined with to be put on the family table, that becomes a powerful notion."

Doiron said he spent 10 years living in Europe, mostly in Belgium but also in France, working for Friends of the Earth, and found that people were more conscious of what they were eating and how it affected the world around them.

He said Kitchen Garden Day and Kitchen Gardens International are an attempt to get more people to give gardening a try.

"If people can see that it is not rocket science - or even really soil science - they can learn as they go," he said. "Dig up a patch of lawn, get the kids involved."

I have always said I have a garden because I get a kick out of creating food and watching it appear in my garden, and because I like the taste of freshly picked produce, but that I don't expect to save money.

Doiron said - and he is probably right - that I am doing my price comparison with imported, mass-produced vegetables, and that if you compare the right sorts of vegetables, you can save money.

"We do some things where I am sure I am getting a very good deal," he said. "We plant successive planting of different lettuce mixes, including Johnny's All-Star Mix, which is a cut and come again from Johnny's Selected Seeds, and out of a single packet of seeds we have had multiple salads. Compare that to what it would cost at a natural food place where you get salad greens for $6 a pound. I am definitely beating that."

Flavor is another reason for a kitchen garden.

The best-tasting tomatoes do not survive shipping well, he said, and commercial farms grow tomatoes that look good and ship well. If you pick your tomato varieties for taste, let them ripen on the vine and eat them fresh, there's no food like it.

As a parent of children ages 6 and 8, Doiron uses his gardens as a teaching tool. He had the children plant the smaller of his two gardens. He grows an organic garden, and the children are free to take and eat anything that is growing in it.

"Even though they have permission, it seems like they think they are getting away with something when they do that," Doiron said. And they get healthy snacks in the bargain.

I do the same thing with my grandchildren, who often come over Sundays. I purposely leave at least part of the strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, peas or beans unpicked, and they love snacking in our garden. And it certainly is better for them than potato chips or other typical snack foods.

Doiron said his kitchen-garden effort is about more than growing food.

"I want to educate people about how to cook again," he said. "We are a couple of generations away from people who know what growing food is all about and about what home cooking is all about. They think home cooking is opening a jar of tomato sauce, because that is what people think they can afford in terms of time. But the average American finds time to watch four hours of television a day."

Kitchen gardens and local foods also have an environmental impact.

Food on average travels 1,500 miles from ground to table, and it requires 400 gallons of oil per year - in oil to produce chemical fertilizer and to transport food - to feed the average American each year. Locally produced food uses, on average, 1/17th as much petroleum.

In 1870, 35 percent of food was grown for home consumption. That figure is now 1 percent.

"Those types of statistics will bring to kitchen gardening some populations that we are trying to reach - those who are tuned in globally, are politically aware and want to know what they can do to play a positive role as a mother or father."

Doiron said that no kitchen garden can be too small. In cities, a lot of the kitchen gardens are done in containers on balconies. For a beginning gardener, he said, a 10-by-10-foot garden or something equivalent would be as large as he would advise going. You can get a lot of food from 100 square feet. And only if you have success with that, should you go larger.

"Nothing is too small," he said. The trick is to get started somewhere."

August 7, 2006

Kitchen Gardeners Unite!

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With the planting, harvesting, canning, and sharing of our gardens' bounty, August is already a busy month for northern hemisphere kitchen gardeners and we're asking that you make it a little bit busier by doing one or two of the following things:

-Organize a small garden-get-together in your area in celebration of Kitchen Garden Day on August 27th. It need not be big or complicated: bringing a few friends and neighbors together into your garden to see what's "growing on" is what the day is all about.

-Add yourself to our group map, if you haven't already.

-Sign up for our monthly newsletter, if you haven't already.

-Print out and post our one-page flyer (available as a pdf file or word document) somewhere in your community.

-Sign up as a dues-paying member to keep this organization growing.

Thanks for your support!

May 25, 2006

KGI in the media: Going Global for Local Food

By Rick Churchill, published in People, Places, and Plants magazine, May-June 2006

(SCARBOROUGH, MAINE) - Roger Doiron spent his youth in Maine, then headed out to explore the world. He ended up in Belgium, where he began a long tenure with Friends of the Earth, an international organization of grass-roots groups that since the 1970s has had a stated mission of creating "a healthy and just world".

In 2001, Doiron and his Belgian wife, Jacqueline, left Brussels and brought their children to Maine so they could experience American culture. But what would he do to continue a life dedicated to worthwhile causes? Being exposed to the European penchant for gardening, Doiron decided to create Kitchen Gardeners International, a non-profit organization related to the local production of food.

Most people wouldn't think of Scarborough as the headquarters of what the WorldWatch Institute has called "the intellectual and political meeting place" of the world's kitchen gardeners. KGI, with more than 2,200 members in 45 countries, celebrates "home-grown, homemade foods in their many global forms" and promotes their role in building "a healthier, tastier, more sustainable and secure food system.'

Continue reading "KGI in the media: Going Global for Local Food" »

March 16, 2006

KGI Annual Report 2005

Description:
Kitchen Gardeners International (KGI) is a non-profit network whose mission is to celebrate home-grown, home-prepared foods in their many international forms and to promote their role in building a healthier, tastier, more sustainable and secure food system. In doing so, KGI seeks to connect, serve, and expand the global community of people who grow and prepare some of their own food. As believers in and practitioners of local, small-scale food production and processing, we support others doing the same thing in our regions including family farmers and producers of artisanal and craft foods.


Governance:
KGI is registered as a 501c3 nonprofit organization under US law and is governed by a small board of directors coming from the United States and Europe.


Goals:
-To provide a structure, virtual and real, for kitchen gardeners worldwide to: meet up with each other; share their passion for food, cooking, and organic gardening; and further their skills and knowledge in these areas
-To introduce new people to the joys and benefits of actively participating in one's food production and preparation
-To inform KGI's supporters and the general public about the many ways of participating in and contributing to a sustainable food system and planet
-To help individuals and communities to achieve higher levels of food self-reliance through eduaction, projects, and charitable giving
-To promote fellowship, cultural exchange and international understanding via a shared love of kitchen gardening


Main Activities and Achievements in 2005:

1) KGI website overall
The KGI website continued to be our main outreach and education tool. It became clear in the course of 2005 that we were outgrowing our previous website and that a new type of site was needed that would allow for easier updates and the creation of new desired features. Starting in the summer, we started transitioning our site to a new host and a new web development strategy using Movable Type, a flexible blogging software. Visits to the KGI website increased by 30% in 2005.

2) KGI Blog Project
One reason for making the shift above was to incorporate more voices and expertise into KGI’s development and work. Starting last fall, KGI began recruiting food and garden bloggers. By the year’s end, roughly 20 people had signed up for the project roughly half of which were actively blogging while the rest had either made no posts or very few. While still quite new, the project breathed some new energy into the organization in 2005 and helped make the KGI website both more interesting and more comprehensive in its coverage. By the year’s end, nearly 100 entries had been added to the site from places as diverse as Australia, Canada, the US and Turkey. The website saw a significant increase in traffic in the last couple months of 2005, a large part of which can be attributed to the blog project.

3) Member/Supporter Development
The long term viability of KGI depends on its ability to reach out to and resonate with kitchen gardeners. We continued our efforts in 2005 to reach out to our support base to find out how we’re doing from the user/supporter vantage point and what we might do differently in the future. The results of our 2005 survey are available here: http://www.kitchengardeners.org/2006/01/survey_results_1.html . In October, we launched our first ever coordinated membership development drive with the goal of raising $1000 by the end of the year. We got up to about $750.

4) International Kitchen Garden Day
KGI coordinated the third annual International Kitchen Garden Day on August 28th. The day was recognized and celebrated by a handful of groups and individuals from different parts of the world, both large and small. Currently, we do not have the organizational capacity to track where celebrations were organized and what types of activities were offered. We therefore relied on participating groups to tell us how they recognized the day. Prior to the day, we did media outreach which resulted in having the date included in event calendars in newspapers, newsletters, and websites. We had less capacity this year to coordinate this event.

5) E-mail newsletter
KGI produced twelve monthly newsletters in 2005 covering a wide array of topics related to cooking, gardening, and the global food system. KGI maintained its policy of offering this information free of charge and free of advertising as a way of reaching new people and populations. Readership of the newsletter grew by over 20% in 2005, going from roughly 1800 to over 2200. We continue to receive very enthusiastic feedback about this.

6) Real Food for Real People public awareness campaign
Although there were no new developments with KGI’s “real food” internet campaign, the site (www.eatrealfood.org) continued receiving visits (roughly 5000) without any effort on our part.

7) KGI Mini-grants program
We had hoped to launch this program in 2005, but decided to hold off on this until we were in a better position financially.


Financial Report:
Our accomplishments seem all the more impressive considering that they were achieved with less than $600 in out-of-pocket expenses. What isn't reflected in this report however are the countless hours of volunteer time and other in-kind contributions that made these activities possible. KGI gratefully acknowledges all those who helped our common cause in one way or another in 2005, including writers and photographers who donated their work to us, translators, and a number of individuals and companies who helped spread the word about us by word of mouth advertising and through their newsletters and websites. Thanks.

We also want to give special thanks to those of you who saw a small seed of hope in what we were doing and agreed to support our work financially.


Beginning Balance (01/01/05)                             201.63

 

Uses of Cash  

    Outreach (website, e-newsletter costs)            484.20

    Supplies (software)                                         74.95

    Sub-total                                                       559.15

 

Sources of Cash 

    Member contributions                                    918.87

    Sub-total                                                       918.87

 

Ending Balance (12/31/05)                                 561.35

Report Approved by KGI Board on March 15th, 2006

Roger Doiron, President
Gary Donaldson, Treasurer
Colin Shaw, Vice President
Jean Schanen, Non-recording Secretary

January 18, 2006

January 2006 Survey Results

1. We're interested to learn from our members and supporters what they see to be best way of starting a "kitchen garden revolution" that brings individuals and communities in closer contact with nutritious, earth-friendly food and its origins. What, in your view, are the main obstacles to starting this revolution?
Respondent Number Response
1 laziness...we've grown accustomed to packaged,high-sodium, fast food
2 I filled in this box and apparently submitted it before editing ...
3 On a small and personal scale, I always tell people I am not in it for financial reasons but because the food I produce is the BEST food in the world. I grow varieties that are simply unavailable for purchase at any price and know that they are absolutely fresh and organic. These qualities are questionable at most major food sources and not guaranteed even with "organic" labelelled foods. On a larger scale, I see home gardening looked at with some disdain by many. Getting ones hands dirty and willingly sacrificing oneself to the vagaries of the natural world, ie insects, heat, cold, rain(gasp) etc are thought foolish by people who prize comfort above all else. The only way I see this large segment of mainstream modern society changing their views of the process is to have gardening be "glamorous". During the "great wars", Victory gardens were common and it was considered to be ones patriotic duty to support the national effort. It may take something drastic of this nature to popularize home gardening on a large scale.
4 Chain restaurants, fast food and grocery stores. Cost of financing new unconventional businesses.
5 Too many folks feel a veggie garden will be detrimental to their landscape and that it is easier to shop the local store than to grow their own fresh veggies
6 Time. People have little to no time to cook, much less to gardent to grown their own food to cook.
7 Lack of awareness about the importance of eating locally grown foods.
8 mainly busy lives, stress and pressure of work, lack of time
9 Laziness. And most people don't understand how depleted the soil is and why the food they buy that they don't grow or which is not grown organically probable contains little if any nutritional energetic value.
10 Grocery stores selling cheap food
11 the competition w/ the big guys, commercial farming, offering lower prices to people who don't know better. I would suspect it would take A HUGE amount of continuous ongoing consumer education to make a difference.
12 People know so little about food and producing food. So few are interested in gardening. Here in Lubbock TX there were 25 community gardens and now there are 4.
13 I think that a perceived obstacle for the general public is that a kitchen garden demands a lot of expensive preparation with added soil amendments and organic fertilizers as well as expensive planting beds like raised beds using costly lumber. That is what is often pictured in magazines and on the media. Gardens look more like plantings in the local botanical garden than somebody's backyard vegetable plot and there is the feeling that fruits and vegetables are difficult to grow. and that a fleet of gardeners are required to handle the hard physical work. Potential gardeners are also troubled about their lack of horticultural knowledge and worry that an incorrect pruning cut will destroy their fruit tree or that an unknown pest or disease will infect their vegetables. They don't know what seeds to buy or when to plant them. There is a perception that gardening is best left to experts like the organic farmers they encounter at the local farmer's market. I am old enough to remember when gardening magazines mostly featured gardens grown on a shoestring by people that looked like my grandparents or my neighbors. "If they could do that, well so could I!" seemed like the motto. Growing fruits and vegetables for the kitchen is just not as difficult as magazines, books, media sources, advertising, and home improvement stores make it appear. It is a lot more like growing those lima beans in a mason jar in the second grade. Put them in, water, and watch them grow.
14 the extra money it takes to shop and the time from the scedule of the homemaker.
15 the established food distribution system, so entrenched that it is hard to break out, and allied with that is the perception of consumers that they want to be able to buy anything, whether in season or not.
16 Ignorance
17 Time & creating the interest from others
18 So many people are overextended, they may think they just don't have the time for gardening.
19 Time, and people's imagined lack of it to start something as 'time-consuming' as a garden. It can be something that takes over your summer or it can be as simple as a few tomatoes in containers. Getting a person started is the first obstacle and educating them that it can be simple and small, even no brainer simple like joining a CSA, can conteract the no time! no time! march hare whine.
20 Time and cost
21 In my community, (Northern NJ) people say they have no time, or no skill at growing. The suburbs where I live, there may be also the problem of not enough land for gardening, (everyone loves their lawns) and there is a lot of deer. My solutions, personally, have been that I grow my stuff in the community garden in my town. And I grow some things (raspberries, herbs, greens) at home in spite of the deer and shade issues. Urban or community gardening is a good solution for local food issues. And it builds community, too. One other way of growing a revolution is to have children's programs-- I have taught in a local "Sprouts" that teaches kids gardening, weather, cooking, nutrrition, even counting and measuring seed rows for the littlest ones. They are enthusiastic to eat carrots or peppers that they grew themselves. ( Plus i had fun)
22 American public apathy from having lost contact with where food comes from, and the corporate "need" to keep us ignorant.
23 Lack of educational opportunities for potential kitchen gardeners
24 lack of space for gardens for some people. lack of interest/time in gardening.
25 I let people taste my produce and then tell them how to grow their own tasty food.
26 Joining a local, organic foods co-op is an excellent way to meet other like-minded kitchen gardeners, support local organic growers, and share ideas on growing, cooking, and eating good wholesome foods. I think the main obstacle to starting a "kitchen garden revolution," is inertia, another word for laziness. ;-)
27 Lack of knowing who is like minded.
28 Not part of culture, don't see characters on tv or in movies growing their own food. Children's books don't show families like theirs growing vegetable gardens.
29 Price is an obstacle. Many people cannot afford to spend more for organic or non-grocery store food. Also, it is not always convenient to visit the farm markets or to grow your own food. Time is of the essence.
30 The apathy and disassociation of the american public from the realities of their consumer driven indoctrination
31 Educating people about the health benefits of growing your own vegetables.
32 letting the consumer taste & experience the difference between home grown & store bought.
33 time and money
34 Probably the general addiction to processed 'convenience' food. Also a general lack of knowledge about plants and nature,and a fear that gardening is complicated, laborious and time-consuming. The farmers' markets in areas of the country where I've lived (Providence, RI, Rochester NY, Ypsilanti/Ann Arbor MI) are extremely popular, but since they are typically only one or two days a week, it takes more planning than some people can do, to get there on a regular basis.
35 People aren't exposed to the joys of gardening; food is relatively cheap in dollar terms; not everyone has the capacity to follow through on a complex task like a vegetable garden
36 Motivation,awareness, opportunity.
37 time constraints on the typical Ameriacn family-instant is easier
 
2. What role do you feel that Kitchen Gardeners International as an organization could or should play in helping to bring about this change?
Respondent Number Response
1 maybe a scare tactic, as to the sodium content, its effect and environmental issues
2 Those who could be helped probably wouldn't be persuaded even if they visited the site :-(
3 Education and exposure. People need to know the benefits of gardening--primarily improved health.
4 Education - how to:start a market garden, organic catering service, get financing fora restaurant or store, etc. Publish success stories- develop a network of people who have suceeded and would like to help others do the same.
5 Develop plans for attractive gardens that include veggies of various color, texture and interesting foliage. Veggies among your flower beds and foundation plantings can be quite beautiful
6 Focus on promoting the kitchen garden as healthy, good for the environment, etc.
7 Seek nation exposure in 'print'magazines in order to reach consumers.
8 ideas for little steps in the right direction
9 Keep it simple. The more ideas people can replicate easily, the more likely they are to try them. Also, promoting ways to cook collectively or garden colletively. Here in albuquerque, we have a group of people scouring neighborhoods for alley space they can turn into gardens. The owners get some produce, the gardeners get some produce and everyone wins.
10 Letting folks know the importance of getting off the couch , pave a new path work with others to seek out real local foods and start gardens
11 I'm not sure. But I must say, I did not realize your committment & involvement in these matters until I subscribed to this email newsletter. I have found it to be very educational for me. Before I probably viewed you as one of my many seed catalogs, but one I have learned to rely on for quality seed and offerings of varieties in just the last yr or two.
12 I do not know how to solve the problem. I guess just keep talking.
13 Publicize how easy gardening is and how anyone can grow a seed or plant a fruit tree. And how a vegetable garden doesn't have to look aesthically beautiful but can still bring great joy and satisfaction.
14 something that everyday people could do successfully like container tomatoes.
15 Education sure helps, I was also interested in adding to my delemas the seed origin quandry mentioned in this newsletter. Which brings to mind the emerging problem ofmaintaining and continuing the organic standards we know when the large companies will shoulder their way in if the popularity of this new gardening takes hold.
16 Go to the public school system to educate, not indoctrinate, our children
17 Easily implimented directions for a small raised garden plot (4 x 8)with suggestions for several companion plants.