Category Archives: Uncategorized

#Farming Friday 28: Invisible Farmers

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Women are responsible for 50 to 80% of the work on the rice paddies of Asia but they are virtually invisible. Surveys seek opinions from male farmers as head of households, research, extension and credit programs are mostly designed with men in mind. With more men moving to the cities to work, the role of women farmers grows even more critical. Efforts are on to ensure that policies are not undermined by the lack of attention to gender.

Map of crops for human consumption, animal feed and biofuels

Fascinating read on how much of the world’s cropland is actually used to grow food!

Willem Van Cotthem's avatarDESERTIFICATION

Photo credit WVC 1996-01: One of the typical Chinese greenhouses with a thick clay wall (left), heated by the sun in summer, radiating heat in winter (here in January). A TC-Dialogue Foundation (Belgium) project in Wushengyi, Inner Mongolia, P.R. China.

How much of the world’s cropland is actually used to grow food?

Updated by Brad Plumer

This fascinating map from National Geographic shows the proportion of the world’s crops that are grown for direct human consumption (in green) versus all the crops that are grown for animal feed or biofuels (in purple):

Crops grown for food (green) versus for animal feed and fuel (purple)

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Just 55 percent of the world’s crop calories are actually eaten directly by people. Another 36 percent is used for animal feed. And the remaining 9 percent goes toward biofuels and other industrial uses.

Read the full article (marked with highlights): Vox

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2014 in review, thank you for stopping by to read and comment!

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2014 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

A San Francisco cable car holds 60 people. This blog was viewed about 2,000 times in 2014. If it were a cable car, it would take about 33 trips to carry that many people.

Click here to see the complete report.

#Farming Friday 27: Where Do Christmas Trees Come From?

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As you might imagine, growing trees is a tough job but losing a beloved father did not deter this mother and daughter team from carrying on the work they love and their commitment not to disappoint customers at Christmas time! A lovely story!

(Image Courtesy: freedigitalphotos.net)

#Farming Friday 26: Technology is Transforming the Farm

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There is a new buzzword in the investing world and it is “ag-tech”; funds are pouring in to bring the latest technology into the farm sector and transform food production. From farming apps to robots that trim lettuce and software that calculates the grass required for grazing cattle.

To the farmer it means the ability to do more and be more accurate with inputs now that sensors on on farm machinery, GPS data from satellites and a host of other applications. Like any other technological development, there are questions about how best to incorporate the new technology but it seems certain to play a huge role in the way food is grown in the future.

Recipe for a National Food Policy

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 Recently, The Washington Post featured a piece calling for a national food policy. It started off with the statement that food impacts every sector of the economy and the lives of every person in the country and therefore it is essential that it be regulated by a national policy. The first idea we can agree with, regarding the second though, many may have reservations. The writers then go on to assert that the food system has caused “incalculable” harm to the health of people and the environment, and such harm would warrant waging a war in response, if it were the act of a foreign power. Yes, there us much that needs a strong effort: from the obesity crisis to hunger in our communities; fair working conditions for farm workers to the challenge of growing food while facing climate disruption but we could surely agree on ways to find solutions in a productive way without call to hostilities.
And exactly how would the national food policy tackle the situation (first step, of course, would be to nominate a Food Czar!)? The recommended objectives are:

  • to assure access to healthful food for all: no disagreement there although how the access would be ensured remains to be determined
  • support public health and environmental objectives: ditto
  • climate resilience: how? not discussed. Would the application of biotechnology be considered an option, for example?
  • care for livestock: agreed
  • “our food supply is free of toxic bacteria, chemicals and drugs” ,which looks very much like “organic or nothing”
  • “Food marketing sets children up for healthy lifestyles by instilling in them a habit of eating real food”: some confusion here, children acquire eating habits in the context of home and family. As a parent, I cannot imagine letting a corporation teach my children what to eat, that is my responsibility and most parents would agree.
  • Production and marketing are transparent and the food industry pays a fair wage: while laudable, this refers to the food processing stage, what about farmers and farm workers?
  • To increase carbon sequestration on farmland and reduce the food system’s carbon footprint: what changes or innovations this might require in agriculture are not discussed.

The first thing that stands out is the consumer centric nature of the demands.  It makes demands about how workers should be paid, livestock should be cared for and how agriculture should respond to climate change. What, one wonders, would those who grow food actually think about this? How would they define a food policy?

And there we come to a core question: what is a “food policy” anyway? The piece states that “an agriculture policy is not the same as a food policy” but then neither is a food consumption policy a true food policy. If we want to chart out the path ahead for the food system, we need to take into account both the growers and the consumers of food, and reconcile these interests instead of pitting them against each other. A long argument is made on how and why the government needs to put a policy in place but it mainly comes down to dismantling the “agricultural-industrial” complex. That is a good objective but that alone cannot fix the food system.

No industry can flourish if there is no demand for their products and that demand comes from the consumers. If there is a demand for mashed potatoes in a box, then that is what we will find on the shelves. Of course we should be boiling and mashing our own potatoes, but for that, deep rooted lifestyle changes are required, changes which cannot simply be mandated by policy, and changes which, if we are honest, we are rather reluctant to make. Getting back from work only to have to ferry the kids to classes and practice games or even to have to go to a second job to make ends meet leaves little time for cooking. We need a discussion and changes in why we are living this way and how we can make changes. You can mandate whatever food policy you like but the basic question is how do I find the time to cook? And I say this from the experience of someone who does cook everyday. It is hard, and it is exhausting, it is nothing like the cooking shows on TV, that is for sure. So blaming the food industry for all our problems is  not sufficient for change.

This gap in perceptions was highlighted at another event convened by the New York Times to discuss the future of food which initially had no farmer or rancher involved in the discussions! Once this was rectified, a participating farmer was able to urge the panelists, to involve farmers in the discussion on food, a sad disconnect! But it was encouraging to learn that there was at least an awareness of the need to work together. The food movement  seems to have fallen into an us vs the food companies pattern, but in reality any successful food movement would need to include everyone: those who grow, process and sell, and consume food. Yes, food impacts everyone and everything and it is precisely for that reason that there are no easy answers here, the solutions are complex and everyone has to make an effort.

Finally, a national food policy will find it increasingly constrained by outside factors. Climate disruption is impacting agriculture everywhere and lack of food is expected to spark social unrest and large scale migration of people from affected areas. The struggle for resources could lead to actual wars, not just ones that can be debated in newspaper columns. An effective food policy will build a path forward which is able to respond to climate change and achieve goals of conservation and food production for the planet’s inhabitants at the same time. So it might be tempting to reach for avocados for that healthy lunch salad but it is also important to remember that it embodies a cost in terms of depleting water resources in another country that has to be accounted for as we set policy goals.

(Image Courtesy: freedigitalphotos.net)

November 21 is National Cranberry Day

Fun facts about the berry of the moment!

Unknown's avatarFoodimentary - National Food Holidays

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November 21 is the 1st annual National Cranberry Day*

Here are today’s five thing to know about Cranberry:

  1. Another name for cranberries is “bounceberries” because they bounce when ripe.
  2. Some Native Americans called the cranberry ibimi which means “bitter berry”
  3. Native Americans and Pilgrims used cranberries as a red dye.
  4. Wild cranberries were probably part of the first Thanksgiving in 1621.
  5. Today, cranberry sauce is an essential part of American and Canadian Thanksgiving celebrations.

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Today’s Pinterest Board : Julie Child’s Holiday Recipes

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Today’s Food History

  • 1941 ‘King Biscuit Time’ radio show was first broadcast from Helena, Arkansas. It is the longest running daily radio program in history, broadcasting live blues music, interviews, etc. It is named for its sponsor, King Biscuit Flour.  The ‘King Biscuit Flour Hour’ rock and roll radio program took its name from ‘King Biscuit Time.’
  • 1970‘I Think I Love You’ by the…

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5 Years of Blogging!

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It is a milestone I might almost have missed if Word press did not send a congratulatory message, blogging has become such an integral part of my life now that it is hard to remember a time without it. I started out very much in “mommy blogger” mode, anxious about food safety, keen to know more about the food that I was setting out on my children’s plates at every meal.

Somewhere along the journey my roots kicked in: something about  the way we studied food issues back home in India, where a country faced with famine decided to adopt a brand new technology which transformed the agriculture sector forever, but where hunger and malnutrition were still part of everyday life for so many. There were newer concerns to think about as well: the promise of biotechnology and the distrust it provoked. And most of all, the question of growing food in a world where the growing conditions were being reshaped by a changing climate.

I learned a lot and had fun writing my pieces on food news that was making the headlines. The hardest part about blogging is not knowing if anyone is even reading because not everyone stops to comment (so, a special appreciation for those who have done that!), but the stats assured me the readership if not extravagant was certainly non-negative and that kept me going.  When the map shows me that people from the other side of the world have been viewing what I wrote, it is a good feeling, I have to say!

And on to more seeking and writing: “If it doesn’t challenge you, it won’t change you.”

(Image Courtesy: freedigitalphotos.net)

 

 

Toshiba’s high-tech grow rooms are churning out lettuce that never needs washing

Toshiba is growing lettuce plants in a room where it used to make floppy disks? Fujitsu is doing the same in a semicondutor plant and Sharp is growing strawberries? The fascinating story of how tech and gizmo companies are turning to growing food…indoors!

Update: Plant Health News (06 Nov 14)