Why We Do This

Ben O  Kjelshus the Spirit of Food Not Lawns in KC

Ben O Kjelshus the Spirit of Food Not Lawns in KC

 Ben sent Toby and I this email exchange from one of the students in the current class…

I am enrolled in your “Food Not Lawns” class on Wednesday evenings and absolutely loved the first session. I am wondering if my husband might be able to pay the $16.00 and join us for the remaining 3 sessions?  He would not be able to attend the workshop on Saturday, as he is taking a class in laying flagstone, but would be free for our remaining 3 Wednesday evenings. 

Thank you so much, this class is amazing,

 I came to the class to learn more about gardening and after the first session came away with a sense of urgency to not waste money and time cultivating a lawn that is basically useless. I came away with a sense of urgency to conserve and better use the land around my home and to strive to grow better food to feed my family. I can’t tell you what a wakeup call it was for me. I thought it would be learning how to better enjoy my hobby of gardening but I feel it’s much more important that a hobby now, it’s a responsibility, a pleasure and an honor to be a better steward of what’s been given to me. 

Leanna “

 

The weather has cooperated so the workshop is on. See you there.

 Steve

Transforming Suberbia… into Superbia!

butterfly-zenniaAre we stuck with unsustainable, suburban neighborhoods?  What will be the future of all those Mc Mansions? How can we feel like we are a part of something meaningful when we look out on the sterile, bird less environmental disaster of most Kansas Cities Suburbs? We wonder about the rising cost of that commute to the ‘veal fattening pen’ that is the corporate workers cubical. Free your spirit let it soar. Un fetter your wings and rise to that bright future you know in your heart we must bring to be.  Transform your suburban neighborhood.  Its time to unplug the TV, get out of your chair and talk to your neighbors.

Here are 31 steps from the authors of Superbia, Dave Wann and Dan Chiras. Some are easy and some are challenging. Start with one step when completed go to the next step. Share ideas with family, friends and neighbors.

Easy Steps

1.     Sponsor community dinners.

2.     Establish a community newsletter, bulletin board, and community roster.

3.     Establish a neighborhood watch program.

4.     Start neighborhood investment clubs, community sports activities and restoration projects.

5.     Form weekly discussion groups.

6.     Establish neighborhood baby-sitting coop.

7.     Form an organic food co-op.

8.     Create car or van pools for commuting to and from work.

9.     Create a neighborhood work-share program.

10.                        Create a mission statement.

11.                        Create an asset inventory.

Bolder Steps

12.                        Tear down fences: opening back yards to create communal play space and a space for neighbors to mingle and a community garden.

13.                        Plant a community garden and orchard.

14.                        Establish a neighborhood composting and recycling facility.

15.                        Plant shade trees and windbreaks to create a more favorable microclimate.

16.                        Replace asphalt and concrete with porous pavers and greenery.

17.                        Establish a more edible landscape—incrementally remove grass in front lawns and replace with vegetables and fruit trees.

18.                        Start a community-supported agriculture program in which neighbors “subscribe” to local organic farm’s produce.

19.                        Create a car-share program–purchasing a van or truck for rent to community members.

20.                        Begin community-wide retrofitting of homes and yards for energy    and water efficiency.

21.                        Solarize your homes.

Boldest Steps

22.                        Create a community energy system.

23.                        Establish alternative water and wastewater systems.

24.                        Establish a more environmentally friendly transportation strategy.

25.                        Create a common house.

26.                        Create a community-shared office.

27.                        Establish weekly entertainment for the community.

28.                        Narrow or eliminate streets, converting more space to    park and         edible landscape, walkways and picnic areas.

29.                        Retrofit garages and rooms in your homes into apartments or add granny flats to house students or others in need of housing.

30.                        Establish a mixed-use neighborhood by opening a coffee shop, convenience store, and garden market.

31.                        Promote a more diverse neighborhood.

And of course number 32 is

Grow Food Not Lawns!

http://www.terrain.org/articles/13/superbia.htm

 Steve

Food Not Lawn’s Hands-On Workshop

 

site of sweet potato patch

site of sweet potato patch

 Food Not Lawn’s Hands-On Workshop June 20th 10:00AM – 2:00PM

Location: 2401 NW 53rd Terr KCMO

North of the River near Riverside

Food Not Lawns Communiversity class participants have asked for some hands-on projects.  Here is just such an opportunity.

 Join us as we build a minimal tillage sweet potato patch in the lawn at Erick Easton’s forest garden. Located at 2401 NW 53rd Terr on Line Creek near Riverside.   

Paste this link for a Google map: http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&q=2401+NW+53rd+Terrace,+Kansas+City,+Platte,+Missouri+64151&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=31.784549,53.789062&ie=UTF8&cd=1&geocode=FfYDVgId6GRc-g&split=0&ll=39.191412,-94.609628&spn=0.001896,0.003283&t=h&z=18  

Interstate 29 North, Waukomis exit one block north to NW 53rd Terr. West to end of street on the left behind MODOT.

 Let’s see about carpooling from KCMO, Brookside, Midtown, Overland Park, KCK, Independence, Lees Summit, St Joe, Lawrence, Columbia and throughout the Universe if we can.

 Send me an email if you are coming and willing to bring someone or if you want to find a ride.

steve@squashblossomkc.org

 We will be just down the road from Lynn & Neil Burdick’s Creek House Norganic Community Garden which is on the Urban Farm and Garden Tour this year. We will stop by and visit our Food Not Lawns Experiment Station and see living mulches and cover cropping in action when were done.

Bring work gloves, insect repellant if you use it, food and drink to share.

Steve

 

Food Not Lawns in Lawrence

Yard Farming in Lawrence Kansas

Yard Farming in Lawrence Kansas

What’s Going on with the Food Not Lawns Movement!  A family in Lawrence, Kansas is leading the way.
As awareness grows of the need to become more self reliant in a time of declining energy resources, Jeremy and Amber Lehrman’s solution is to grow food in place of their lawn.  During last week’s Lawrence community gardens tour this photo was taken of the Lehrman’s yard in a south west Lawrence subdivision.

Jeremy and Amber Lehrman's yard

Jeremy and Amber Lehrman's yard

With concern for rising food and fuel prices, and being tired of struggling with a weedy lawn, they dug up the grass and tilled the lawn.  In its place from curb to adjacent curb they put in raised beds, mounds, and a vine trellis.  Potatoes and strawberries are planted in the easement strip between the street and the sidewalk. In the main area of the yard they have planted raspberries, black berries, vegetables, culinary and medicinal herbs, and various fruit trees.  The Lehrmans plan to use most of the produce, sell some and can the rest. 
So far the neighbors all support their efforts.  There is no local law restricting food gardens to back yards, and the “weed” ordinance has a height exception for “proper gardens”.  If this isn’t a proper garden, then nothing would qualify!

Steve Moring

Subterranean Clover as a living mulch

Subterranean Clover  at the Food Not Lawns KC Experiment Station

Subterranean Clover at the Food Not Lawns KC Experiment Station

 

 I gave Lynn some subterranean clover seed to plant at Creek House last year.  She planted it in the area we weren’t going to plant that year. It reseeded itself and grew to a thick matt of lush green growth. I am planting tomatoes, peppers, and the Three Sisters with a substitution. I will use sweet potatoes instead of squash in this living mulch. Sweet potatoes form a dense matt of vines and leaves and are  allelopathic, a living mulch.  I use my heavy hoe to cut a 18” circle in the clover. I can usually pull out a plug of clover that can be used as mulch from the holes..  The Sub clover has already bloomed and drilled it’s flowers into the soil forming a little nodules of seeds. This is going to be very interesting… more later.

Steve

Creek House Norganic Community Garden

groven to good food, good company and good music

groven to good food, good company and good music

 

 

 

Most gardeners and growers don’t know that they aren’t allowed to use the word Organic to describe their growing practice.  The market farmer who sells at the local farmers market can only call their tomatoes ‘Organic’ if they have been certified by a independent inspection service to be in compliance with the National Organic Program (NOP) standards. The  US Government under the USDA has written rules and regulations to protect consumers and created ‘Standard Organic Labeling for Consumers’.

According to the USDA “The National Organic Program and the Organic Foods Production Act are intended to assure consumers that the organic foods they purchase are produced, processed, and certified to be consistent with national organic standards. ”  

See: http://attra.ncat.org/guide/n_z/nop.html

Those who seek out organic food need to be assured they aren’t being cheated by unscrupulous  hucksters. But that leaves the rest of us who honor the community of life in our gardens without a word to describe succinctly how we grow our food.  At the May 16th Food Not Lawns Potluck the discussion lead to the fact that Linn can’t call our garden ‘Creek House Organic Community Garden’   because of the regulation.   The beauty of these ‘tribal’ gatherings shown through when Toby suggested the word Norganic, naturally organic as a new descriptor.  Consensus, connection  group mind meld , the community energy becomes greater than the sum of the  members energies, yea it works.

So now it’s Creek House Norganic Communitry Garden. Come on by during the Urban Farm Tour June 28th and feel the beauty.

FOOD NOT LAWNS KC POTLUCK and GATHERING

Line Creek

Line Creek

 

JOIN US!! FOOD NOT LAWNS KC

POTLUCK and GATHERING

Saturday, May 16, 5PM at

Linn Burdick’s scenic and historic place

Creek House Organic Community Garden

6310 NW Waukomis, KCMO 64151

 

Please bring a dish to share, and reusable plate, cup and utensils for yourself and chairs.

Program: Stan Slaughter, noted Eco-Troubadour, will share his wonderful music with us as we sit around a bonfire by scenic Line Creek.

 Discussion on Carbon sequestration and 

Terra Preta – Black Earth known as BioChar

 

 

Directions:

Cut and paste in your browser

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=6310+NW+Waukomis+Dr,+Kansas+City,+MO+64151&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=31.784549,53.349609&ie=UTF8&ll=39.206586,-94.609795&spn=0.007582,0.013025&t=h&z=16&iwloc=A

 

Contacts:

Ben 816-767-8873

Steve 816-352-9213

Affirmation for life

 

The Importance of touch to a caring community

The Importance of touch to a caring community

 We humans have many longings. To be part of a vibrant, caring, energetic and engaged community is one of the most powerful. Think about the hugs, ritualized handshakes, back patting and wrestling we engage in when we are together as a community. Look at the children. We learn the power of human touch from the loving embrace of our mothers from birth forward. That’s why when the Food Not Lawns volunteers come together to do our transformative work we hug and smile, hy-five and pat each other on the back. It’s our connection ritual. It’s about trust that leads to the feelings we experienced staring up at the joy filled face of our mothers

 

 

We come together and the level of communication and connection allows us to create a shared vision of the world we want. We create a new cultural story that honors the Community of Life we are a part of and transforms out world. We’re not going to be part of the problem anymore. Not part of the 23 million acres of lawns in America. Lawns that gobble scarce resources using over 250 billion gal of water a year. Lawns that consume more resources that the agricultural system that feed’s us. The amount of carbon released by mowing for one hour is like driving an older car 350 miles. We know how important cutting back CO2 emissions is. It’s a matter of life or death. 

 Our shared vision ultimately comes down to this; we make the choice for life.

Steve

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