As seen on 7 Local News, The Weekly Times and iCrowdNewswire
Note: This crowdfunding campaign is a follow on from the original campaign which can be found here:
www.startsomegood.com/backyardfarming
In the first campaign I raised a total of $3870, exceeding my funding target and my own expectations.
Unfortunately, I wasn't quite quick enough on the bike and only made it to Melbourne before the campaign ended. My goal is to ride from Brisbane to Hobart and I still have roughly two weeks until I finish my journey. Based on the interest I have generated during the ride so far, I feel that there may be an opportunity to raise some further funding through kind hearted people I meet along the way and so I decided to open up a new crowdfunding campaign (Part 2) to allow this to happen. If you have already donated in the previous campaign, thank you from the bottom of my heart and don't feel you need to donate again, as this is technically only a continuation of the previous campaign.
I want to make it clear, the campaign has already been a resounding success and this is not an attempt at milking more money, I simply want to make it possible for others I meet that feel strongly about the project to have a chance to become a part of it by contributing.
MY STORY
My name is James and I am very passionate about promoting the role of locally grown organic food. I think our food system that ships food all across the country (and the world) just doesn't make sense in a world that is obviously suffering under the strain of human impact. Having come from a background in civil engineering and urban planning, I have spent the last few years volunteering abroad on small scale organic and permaculture farms in a number of countries and have developed a strong sense of how food can be grown efficiently and without chemicals in relatively small spaces. I hope to use this knowledge to begin making small steps towards a less ridiculous food system.
A gigantic cassava harvested from Mohala Farms in Hawaii
THE REASON
A majority of people are becoming increasingly aware of our environmental impact and are willing to change their daily habits through actions such as reducing plastic bags, saving water and using public transport. A huge and often overlooked source of pollution is the choice of food that we buy each day. The transportation component for a typical basket full of groceries in Australia is on the order of 70,000 kilometers, or twice around the earth.
"Generally speaking, the greater the distance food has travelled, from paddock to plate, the greater the transport pollution, and the greater the impact on the health of people, the land and the global climate - a concept known as 'food miles."
If we were to pay a little more attention to how and where our food is grown, we could potentially have an impact that would make our other 'eco friendly' daily habits pale in comparison. Obviously the choice of food also plays a large part, with more processed foods and those from animal based sources contributing significantly more than those found in a simpler and more plant based diet. Another little known fact is that the nutrition contained in fresh produce is often only a fraction of its original content after days or weeks of refrigerated transport, meaning the consumer is not getting the full benefits of the healthy food they are eating.
Our current food system is not only unnecessarily damaging our planet, but is also reliant on a complicated and fragile web of fossil fueled transportation. To look at the volatile nature of the worlds economy, it seems dangerous to let access to food, one of the things vital for us to survive, be entirely dependent on whether we can get oil at a reasonable cost.
THE PLAN
- Find willing volunteers (the urban farmers)
- Anybody welcome, young people and school children especially encouraged, no experience required.
- Once gardens are built only minimal hours would be needed to maintain growing operation so workers could squeeze in time before/after work or on weekends to help out.
- Identify suitable region in Brisbane
- Area would preferably be a 'food desert' (A food desert is a geographic area where affordable and nutritious food is hard to obtain, particularly for those without access to an automobile.)
- Would need to be in a zone where there is likely to be sufficient backyard space.
- Find backyards (the urban farms)
- Door knock/pamphlet the region asking for yard space to ‘lease' in exchange for vegetables each week
- Conduct soil tests in yards to check for heavy metals and other contaminants
- Check for sun availability (6 to 8 hours per day is preferable)
- Settle on terms of use with owners, may involve basic legal agreement
- Build the backyard farms
- A working bee would be held to prepare each yard where participants would be involved in construction of raised beds, tilling, soil building, planting vegetable seedlings, mulching and irrigation system setup
- Depending on the soil encountered, some beds may need to be prepared and then left for a few months to absorb the amendments added before seedlings are transplanted.
- Maintain the backyard farms
- Sites would be visited a few times per week (this would vary throughout the season) by volunteers to check the plants and ensure the irrigation systems are working
- A live spreadsheet system would be used to record any observations and track progress
- Harvesting would be done once a week and the produce bought back to a central point where it would be sorted and packed for distribution
- Food baskets would be delivered to each property owner in exchange for use of the yard space
- The remaining produce would be freely distributed via food baskets to the local community in exchange for a small (optional) donation which would help go towards seeds and consumable garden supplies.
THE TRIP
During the fundraising campaign, I am riding a bike solo and unsupported from Brisbane to Hobart, including taking a ferry across the Bass Strait to Tasmania. In an effort to bring attention to the huge distance that most our food travels before it gets to our plates, I am doing the ride dressed as a giant carrot.
At the point of writing this, I have already ridden from Brisbane to Melbourne (2500km) in the last 6 weeks and am about to catch the ferry across to Tasmania, where I will ride from Devonport down to Hobart along the east coast over the course of about two weeks.
The trip so far has been a rollercoaster of adventure, characters, drama, exhaustion and fun. I have done my best to visit small farms along the way and have made a lot of friends and learnt loads more about biofarming. To read about the adventures of the cycling carrot, check out www.freewheelingfarmer.com where I have posted weekly updates or go to my instagram page https://www.instagram.com/living_deliciously/.
SIMILAR PROJECTS
I am not the first person to come up with this concept, many others around the world are transforming urban areas into lush mini farms and innovating the way forward. The biggest inspiration for starting this project was a group I volunteered with in Montreal called Cycle Alimenterre, this is the link to their website: https://cyclealimenterre.wordpress.com/mission/.
Below are a few more links to videos of inspirational urban and small scale farmers to give you an idea of what is being achieved out there.
Stacey Murphy of BK Farmyards in NYC - BK Farmyards
Curtis Stone (no, not the celebrity chef) of Green City Acres in Kelowna, BC - Curtis Stone Urban Farmer
Jean Martin Fortier, The Market Gardener - Jean Martin Fortier