The Fascinating World of “Classical” Organic Seed Breeding
In the 1980s Frank Morton began as a farmer of mixed salad greens with a budding interest in saving seeds when he discovered one red lettuce among many flats of seedlings of green leaf lettuce. This...
View ArticleSeed Libraries: Keeping Seeds in the Hands of the People
Rebecca Newburn is a permaculturalist and math and science educator who, in 2010, began the Richmond Grows Seed Lending Library in Richmond, California, one of the first in the country. Seed libraries...
View ArticleA Peach Farmer’s Quest for Significance and Survival: An Interview with Mas...
Mas Masumoto is an organic farmer and author of 14 books including Epitaph for a Peach, the story of how an old heirloom peach had fallen out of favor in the marketplace and forced Mas to make some...
View ArticleThe Fair Food Program: Fighting For Farmworkers’ Rights
“The Harvesters” image – courtesy of artist Erin Currier (@erincurrierfineart www.erincurrierfineart.com) – depicts three Coalition of Immokalee Workers leaders: Gerardo Reyes Chavez, Nely Rodriguez,...
View ArticleThe Farmlink Project: Reducing Hunger by Reducing Food Waste
When the Covid pandemic hit and disrupted so many of our social and economic systems, a crisis within the crisis exploded: the number of people who were facing hunger grew catastrophically. News...
View ArticleUrban Farming, Community Care and Self-Love
ab banks, an urban farmer whose work is grounded in agroecology, wellness and Black food autonomy, is the Garden Lead for People’s Programs at the Oxford Tract at UC Berkley, which grows food and...
View ArticleAlaskan Native Looks to Tradition to Deal with Contemporary Problems
Alaskan Native Looks to Tradition to Deal with Contemporary Problems Deenaalee Hodgdon (who uses the pronouns they/them) is a Native Alaskan and the Executive Director of On The Land, an Indigenous...
View ArticleThe Sacred Plant Biocultural Recovery Initiative: An Interview with Gary Paul...
Gary Paul Nabhan is a renowned ethnobotanist and author focused on the confluence of cultural and biological diversity. His innovative writings and projects have raised awareness of the economic and...
View ArticleBiochar: An Ancient Method of Healing Modern Soils
Amazonia is the largest river basin in the world, covering an area greater than Europe. More than 3 million species live in the Amazon rainforest, making it one of the most diverse ecosystems and...
View ArticleA Young Artist-Activist Works for Equity in the Food System
Minkah Taharkah is an artist, poet, farmer, and organizer. While a student at UC Berkeley, she co-founded Black Earth Farms based on her desire to eat healthy and affordable food and to provide the...
View ArticleThe Dark Secret of Student Hunger: An Interview of Tim Galarneau of the...
For students from low income or marginalized communities entering college (often the first in their family to do so) can be a source of pride and expanded opportunity, but for those who don’t have the...
View ArticleTackling Student Hunger: An Interview with Francis Ge of the Basic Needs...
Alarming numbers of college students, even at some of the most prestigious universities across the country, struggle financially, affecting their access to housing and food. Those personal crises make...
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