Category Archives: Consumption

SOIL: why we need to stop treating it like DIRT

by Kate Patterson

Spring is here. Gardens are being planted, everywhere plants are flowering and the world is once again becoming green, so I thought it would be a fitting time to share some of my favorite things about one of the most dynamic, yet underappreciated systems on Earth, soil.  First, it’s important to have a bit of a background on how and why soils formed and what that has meant to the evolution of modern human civilization.  I’ll then describe some of the not-so good (and the good) news about what we have been doing to our soils in the recent past that is jeopardizing our ability to feed our growing world population and what many amazing soil scientists, farmers, gardeners, and involved citizens are doing about it.

Soil is a complex living, breathing system.  It’s packed with tons of cool organisms and is an extremely complex mixture of inorganic and organic processes, without which life on Earth could not exist.  Through industrial agricultural practices, urbanization and deforestation we are in danger of degrading our healthy soils by stripping off nutrient rich layers that are necessary for functioning ecosystems, and from a more anthropocentric perspective, for our ability to grow food.

To get a sense of just how important soil is we have to backtrack to the to the beginning of the first life on Earth, about 3.8 billion years ago, when the Earth’s average temperature was too hot and anoxic for anything except extreme cyanobacteria to survive.  The presence of bacteria on rock surfaces helped to enhance weathering rates through chemical reactions, which sped up the breakdown of rocks and formation of soils.  Carbon dioxide, an important greenhouse gas, diffused into soils to be used for various reactions, which helped to decrease its warming effect in our atmosphere.  The slow breakdown of rocks and formation of soil minerals also created a suitable nutrient rich substrate necessary for the evolution of land plants.  Through photosynthesis, plants further decreased carbon dioxide and increased oxygen levels in the atmosphere and then died and contributed organic matter to the soil.  It wasn’t until about 400 million years ago that the first land plants appeared, and only a little while before that when soils came to be as we know them today.

Fast forward to about ten thousand years ago, when humans first began transitioning to more stationary, agricultural civilizations.  Without any knowledge of genetics, we bred and domesticated plants to achieve higher yields.  It was no longer necessary for everyone to grow food.  People began to establish urban centers where new professions emerged and food was obtained from surpluses produced by a small subset of the population.  Farmers have always understood that maintaining fertile soils is imperative to successful agricultural practices.  But the advent of the Green Revolution in the 20th century led us astray, convincing us that science and technology were capable of going beyond the limits of traditional farming techniques.

The Haber-Bosch process, discovered in the early 20th century, led to the production of synthetic nitrogen fertilizers and drastically increased crop yields worldwide.  That, along with the introduction of other technologies and the use of higher yielding crops led to the establishment of larger, industrialized agricultural systems.  Our reliance on synthetic fertilizers to increase crop yields has so far allowed us to overlook the exquisitely complex systems in which plants grow best.  Sure, for now we can give them lots of nitrogen and phosphorus and they will grow.  But, without adding other forms of organic matter or manure to supply plants with nutrients and to feed bacteria, fungi and other organisms in the soil that provide essential ecosystem services, we are running a thin line between high yields and an inability to sustain the level of production that we have become accustomed to.

It seems like somehow in our urbanized, fast paced lives we have lost touch with nature and our ability to connect with the very thing that is essential for our survival and ability to feed our growing population.  In a great documentary called DIRT, there was a scene describing an urban school that wanted to convert concrete playgrounds to vegetable gardens, but a journalist reporting on the story was worried that there would be nowhere for the children to play.  I will never forget that twisted feeling I got as I realized just how disillusioned and frightened of the unpredictability of nature we have become.  We often fail to understand how important a resource soil is, and desire to escape rather than embrace and appreciate the presence of soil in our daily lives.

I happen to live in a pretty rare suburban landscape.  I have a natural greenbelt next to the river that runs through my neighborhood.  As a kid, I remember being outside and playing in soil all the time.  But it’s easy to imagine how living in urban landscapes allows many people to disconnect with nature, including more importantly I think, understanding where our food comes from.  The emergence in popularity of farmers markets and community gardens are an indication that more people are making healthy and sustainable food a priority.

Now we must go one step further and make the connection to the bigger picture and understand that soils on a global scale are in danger.  In some places, we are currently disposing of fertile soil to develop big suburban communities, complete with Wal-Marts, fast food chains and vast expanses of paved area that encourage us to forget how and why we got here in the first place.  Soil erosion is a big problem in places where deforestation to make room for agricultural landscapes has destabilized and exposed soil to the elements so that it simply washes away.  Monoculture farms that use large amounts of synthetic fertilizers to maintain high yearly yields contribute to the degradation of nutrients and biotic life in soils.  Without maintaining bacterial and fungal communities that help plant roots to obtain essential nutrients, the food that we eat is not as nutritious.

It took billions of years to establish the delicate blanket of soil covering our planet that has provided us with the ability to develop complex agrarian civilizations.  Yet, in a matter of a few generations we are well on our way to destroying one resource that we really can’t live without.  It is encouraging to see that an awareness and desire for nutritious, organic food is growing in many urban areas.  Permaculture, which designs agricultural systems to maximize efficient nutrient cycling and to maintain healthy ecosystems, is a philosophy for land management that is growing in popularity, particularly among young people looking to try farming or just urban gardening.  However, it isn’t easy.  Gardening takes lots of patience and practice and I’ve failed at it more times than I have succeeded.  Even if you don’t have the room or desire to grow some of your own food, it is possible for everyone to contribute by attending farmers markets and supporting small-scale, local farms, that through grass-roots actions, are going to revolutionize the way we appreciate and value our food, soils and our place on Earth.

Now that spring is here, farmers markets will be starting up soon.  Here’s a link to find farmers markets throughout BC.

http://www.bcfarmersmarket.org

A great website with tons of info and links to other great farming blogs as well:

http://youngagrarians.org

http://www.permaculture.org/nm/index.php/site/index/

You can watch DIRT the movie free online here

http://www.truththeory.org/dirt-the-movie/

A good quick overview on the Green Revolution:

http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/pubs/pubs/ib/ib11.pdf

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If You Can’t Enjoy Quinoa, You’re Dead To Me.

by Melanie Hadida

Rant first; recipe later.

I guess I’ll start by addressing the recent controversy associated with quinoa farming and the ways rich white people’s demand for copious amounts of quinoa has driven up local costs of quinoa for South Americans:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/jan/16/vegans-stomach-unpalatable-truth-quinoa

The article was making the rounds on Facebook, and I’m pretty sure if your Facebook news feed is as socially and globally conscious as mine is, you’ve already seen this article. As a proud McGill University International Development Studies alum, I am certainly aware of the plight of third world farmers and their disadvantages in the global market, unfair economic policies and the overall exploitation millions of people experience to harvest and produce the foods us greedy fatties love to stuff in our faces. I’m an extremely strong advocate of Fair Trade practices (although the movement itself has its own downfalls). Indeed, quinoa can be farmed in North America so why not support that as well!

But my problem is with trendiness. Caring about quinoa farmers has become just as trendy as quinoa itself. I have a serious issue with thousands of hipsters tweeting and Facebooking “Sorry vegans! Looks like your love of quinoa is evil for poor Bolivians!” from their laptops and smartphones that were also—surprise surprise—BUILT ON THE EXPLOITATION AND OUTRIGHT TORTURE OF OTHER PEOPLE!

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What Matters Most

by Jesse Nelson

I recently received an early Christmas present, a book titled Something Fierce by Carmen Aguirre. The book is set in South America in the 1980’s and is about a Chilean-Canadian teenager who spends a decade traveling across and living within countries such as Bolivia, Argentina and Chile with her sister and exiled revolutionary mother and step-father.

The story describes the author’s life, Carmen, as part of the underground anti-Pinochet resistance movement, eloquently detailing the economic, political and social environment in South America at the time, including the prevailing and systemic divide between classes and ethnic groups (wealthy Spanish and the impoverished aboriginals – or “indians” as referred to in the book).

It is a fascinating story about growing up as a revolutionary in politically and economically turbulent times, although the descriptions of the people and their lives, both their unrelenting selflessness and commitment to serving the greater good, as well as their bravery in the face of such extreme violence, is what sets this book apart. Absolute poverty is an underlying theme that is brought to the forefront through the author’s narratives and observations. At one point, when Carmen’s train stops at a station, she watches a family loading their luggage on the back of a ‘mule’, literally a human mule, whose jobs it is to carry the bags, luggage and other heavy items of wealthy Bolivians. She describes the mule bending over, grunting as the weight of the luggage is piled high onto their backs, knowing that the mule will likely have to walk several kilometers to the owner’s home or lodging (to no surprise, their average length of life was 35 years).

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What is a ‘socially conscious’ product nowadays?

by Kate Patterson

It’s not very hard to look around any public place these days and point out several people wearing TOMS shoes.  I am no stranger to the brand either, having owned several pairs for the last three or so years. But I recently reflected on just how big the TOMS phenomenon has become when it also dawned on me how annoyed I am that every day I get spam emails from them after purchasing a pair of their shoes online about three years ago.  I eventually came to the realization that the TOMS brand might not be the miracle company that so many people are claiming it to be.

By now, most people have heard about TOMS and will have a general understanding of their business model.  For every pair of shoes purchased in Canada, the US and other developed countries where they are sold, a pair of shoes is given to someone in a developing country that doesn’t have shoes.  Blake Mycoskie founded the company in 2006 after he traveled to Argentina and allegedly saw severe economic disparities that he wanted to do something about.  Seems like a pretty good idea right?  I thought so too, at first.  Not only do they make one feel good about the fifty or so dollars being spent on a pair, they are very comfortable, and recently have also become very fashionable.

The problem is that sometimes we in the developed world have a ‘whites in shining armor’ kind of attitude towards the developing world.  It makes us feel better to make such a purchase, while at the same time allowing us to continue on with our consumption of consumer products.  What is sometimes forgotten is that developing countries do have thriving local manufacturing and market economies that may actually be undermined by a flood of foreign aid.  And in fact, TOMS creates the illusion that there are no shoes to be purchased in some of these countries when there often are shoes available through some very productive local markets.  By intruding upon people in an attempt to save them from poverty, the incentive to produce is destroyed and local merchants are put out of business.  When they go out of business, they can’t afford to buy shoes or other goods for their families, thus perpetuating the vicious cycle of poverty.

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Problem Reaction Solution – Kony 2012

by Dominique Silvan

I’m not usually a viral aficionado, but this particular 30-minute video was plastered all over Facebook and I couldn’t resist.  I was wondering what the content of this fast-spreading buzz piece could be, and why so many of my friends were beginning controversial discussions about it.

[Author’s Note: I knew I would probably want to write a little bit about my insights after watching Kony 2012, but I had no idea I would be SO motivated.  Please bear with the length of this article: I feel that without proper explanation, there would be leaps of logic and omissions of integral facts.]

Right away my heart was torn, witnessing the horrific reality of the situation that has transpired in central Africa, and indeed everywhere else it happens.  I was moved to tears, grieving for the pain and fear these abducted children soldiers and sex slaves experience.  Like everyone, I wondered how this had been allowed to happen and continue.  Surely at this point in our history, despots who wage multi-decade wars of terror on civilian populations would be an international priority for removal.

About halfway through, I became aware of my emotions and how strongly this film was encouraging me to “fight against war” and resent this criminal, Joseph Kony.  I took note of the format in which the film was presented to me, and the people and organizations involved.  I noticed that the viewer were shown the problem – a very pressing and legitimate concern for all humans who know with every cell of their body that we are peaceful and loving beings by nature.  I perceived my reaction with as much mindfulness as possible, noting a strong desire to express outrage, sorrow, and anger, and demand justice.  Promptly, the filmmaker offered up a solution: force the issue into critical international attention so we can all demand that world policy makers commit to military action in Africa.

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Are Humans Here to Give? Charles Eisenstein’s ‘Sacred Economics’

by Sarah Allan

Charles Eisenstein argues that human beings are here on Earth to give. He believes that the universe, and human life, run by the principles of the gift, reciprocity and community; and he endeavours to show us how the world economy could change to reflect these principles. Eisenstein, an authour and Yale graduate with a degree in the interesting combination of math and philosophy, gave a talk a while back entitled Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition, which incorporated ideas from his new book,  ”The Ascent of Humanity“. His ideas where then incorporated into this film, available for free online (a gift!) directed by Ian MacKenzie:

Here’s what I understand Eisenstein’s theory of ‘Sacred Economics’ to look like….

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Ecocide as an International Crime: Protecting Ecosystems by Law

by Tracy Giesz-Ramsay

What if, just as humans have a right to life, the earth – as a living, breathing entity – had a right to life as well? And what if just like genocide there was international law in place against the large-scale massacre of ecosystems? That is what UK lawyer and environmental activist Polly Higgins has been trying to bring to the table, dedicating her career to fighting for the addition of ‘ecocide’ to the four established Crimes Against Peace, punishable in the International Criminal Court (ICC) and recognized by the United Nations and the international community.

Although originally coined in the 1970s, the term ecocide was largely under the radar when, in Copenhagen, Higgins had been giving a talk on her proposal to the UN about a Universal Declaration of Earth Rights. She was questioned about creating a new language to deal with the massive, systematic destruction that humanity has committed against certain ecosystems. Right then and there, she said it was like a ‘light-bulb moment’ when she contemplated how this was “like genocide, except that it was to ecosystems” and should be considered an international crime with legislation in place prohibiting it.

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The Dirt on Sustainable, Organic Farming in America

By Rebecca Mitchell

I recently had the privilege of reconnecting with an old friend, Eric Budzynski.  Eric and I attended the University of British Columbia at the same time, and met through mutual friends.  Upon discovering of Eric’s involvement with a sustainable, organic seed and vegetable farm in central Oregon, I thought it would be interesting to conduct an interview with him, to learn more about the industry, and his perspective on recent controversial issues surrounding farming in America.  With Eric’s education, experience and passion for seeds, he presents an extremely knowledgeable response on topics ranging from:  sustainable farming, the term organic, USDA, and general concerns regarding agriculture in America, as well as hopes and predictions for the future.

RM: I recall crossing paths with you quite frequently at Sprouts Co-op in the Student Union Building of UBC, a few years back.  It seems that you have been involved with the sustainable food & farming industry for some time now.  Could you elaborate on your background, in terms of education and experiences leading up to your present job on the farm? Did this have any affect on your move to the states?

EB: I started out in Political Science at UBC, but quickly got fed up with the culture of international politics and decided to talk to a program advisor in the faculty of Land and Food Systems, looking for something that I perceived as real and meaningful. Around the same time, after eating a year of dorm food, I began to think critically about my food, how it was produced and where it was coming from, and became interested in growing my own food.

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Why Fair Trade? It’s Not Just Hip, it’s Delicious. (Recipe Included!)

by Melanie Hadida

Does food taste better with a clear conscience? I think so. It’s no secret that Fair Trade products have become popular and trendy recently. For the right reasons? I’m not exactly sure. But what I am sure of is that if more people actively support Fair Trade, we’ll all be better off.

For years I worked at a Cegep (junior college) in Montreal where I was responsible for educating students about global and environmental issues. I would regularly sit at a booth in the cafeteria, giving out free samples of Fair Trade chocolate, in exchange for a brief preachy lecture on why to choose to buy ethically. The aim was to help students understand the genuine connections between the products they consume every day, and those who are involved in producing them. I wanted to help students become aware of the (often oppressive) practices that bring the products they use from the producer to the consumer.

Real people—real families, mothers, fathers and even children—are intimately and painstakingly involved in the production process of almost every single item we eat, drink, and use on a daily basis.

“Duh.”

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On Cultural Comparisons and International Nutrition

by Andrew Heneghan

Traveling always opens my eyes to other ways of life, and often provides important comparisons to cultural norms we take for granted. For example, the Spaniards relaxed pace of life in which nothing is more important than siesta/socializing with friends and family. Or in Morocco, where people readily share rides with strangers in an attempt to decrease the cost of transportation. Or in Germany, where cities are so well organized the wait for a bus or a train never exceeds 5 minutes.

Returning to North America and the United States in particular, I am reminded how this nation’s identity as a ‘world leader’ has been rebuked by years of poor leadership, corruption, greed, and overall poor health. It is amazing the food that this resource rich country consumes. I would argue that many people suffer at comparable levels as malnourished people; as the food they consume is devoid of nutrients and minerals, laden with toxic chemicals, and highly processed and genetically modified. Chronic illness such as diabetes, obesity, hypertension, etc. are extremely common. It is scary to me, and my stance on organic has grown ever more established (as well as plant-based diet).


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