Food Forests, Pizza Ovens, and Rooftop Strawberries
By Brian Loloia
2009 marks the year I start to seriously think about food. If 2008 was the
Year of Mud, let 2009 be the first Year of Food. I'll start off with saying
that I adore food. Not only do I love the flavors and sensations associated
with a good meal, but the act of eating, and how food is grown, and food
culture are all of major interest to me.
Although I will be devoting at least a couple of months to finishing up
work on my cob house, I want to take some preliminary steps towards growing
and producing some of my own food this 2009. Currently, I eat with the
lovely folks of Bobolink, Skyhouse's all-vegan food co-op. I thoroughly
enjoy eating with Bobolink, but I want to start to venture towards growing
my own food and crafting a more intensive local foods diet (including
dairy, which I do miss being part of Bobolink).
Thus I will embark on a (potentially lifetime) quest to start growing my
own food. (There is some talk of starting a new subcommunity / food co-op,
but let's keep that aside for now). Additionally, I'm also thinking more
about how and where I will be cooking this food. There are several key
components in this grand mission, some of which are in the very beginning
stages.
The start of a Food Forest
After reading Toby Hemenway's Gaia's Garden, I feel a more confident grasp
on the practicalities of permaculture, and I can more clearly envision
planting a mini food forest to the north of my house, featuring up to half
a dozen fruit trees, berry and nut shrubs, and perennial vegetables. This
year, I expect to get all of my desired fruit trees in the ground, and
perhaps a few shrubs, and beyond that I will sheet mulch the heck out of
the warren and seed the beds with a variety of cover crops. The perennial
vegetables will have to wait until at least next year.
To the south of my house, I have some space for a few annual vegetable
beds, which I'll probably fill with tomatoes, peppers, and a few other grab
bag items. I hope to fill up much of the space with extra seedlings that
folks give away.
Edible rooftop and an herb spiral
When my living roof is finished being built, I will seed it not only with
native grasses, but hopefully a decent little patch of strawberries above
the doorway. I love the idea of the strawberries eventually spreading out
across the roof, and climbing a ladder to pick a handful whenever I want a
little snack.
Once I gather enough bricks, I'll begin laying out an herb spiral (which is
effectively a spiraling, space-saving, and microclimate-promoting garden
bed), planting it with some of my favorite food seasonings. (I like the
idea of taking advantage of as many space-saving techniques as possible,
since it's a definitely a finite amount of land I have to work with.) At
the very least, basil, dill, oregano, thyme, parsley, and rosemary will all
be featured. I'm leaning heavily towards pizza-appropriate herbs, because
one of the bigger projects I plan to take on this year will be building an
outdoor cob oven...
Pizza in the outdoors
One of my favorite foods is brick oven pizza. (Growing up in northern New
Jersey is good for at least that sort of thing. Consider me a bit spoiled,
even.) I've told other folks that I plan to be making pizza regularly by
mid-summer, and I hope to stick to my word. That's where the outdoor cob
oven comes in. What could be better than an outdoor oven for making piping
hot pizzas and bread, and baking other goodies, not to mention slow-cooking
stews and soups, and drying herbs? This oven might fit into an outdoor
kitchen arrangement, which I've yet to put serious thought towards.
The bigger picture
It's my belief that, overall, America is lacking a healthy and thriving
food culture. We eat foods from all over the world, and there are questions
about whether or not something is "good for us". Without going into too
much depth on this issue, I will say that it's a long term goal (again,
perhaps lifetime goal) to help craft a local foods diet and culture, based
largely on grains, legumes, and vegetables that all grow in this bioregion,
preferably grown by the sweat of our own brow. As a now-frighteningly
globalized, industrialized, and consumerized society, Americans are largely
clueless about how to produce their own food, or what we are even capable
of growing on our land.
;
Who in this country is growing the entirety of their food? People eat
processed breakfast cereal, order sushi for lunch, and tear open some
plastic packages and heat up dinner in a microwave. I applaud any effort
made to subvert this trend, but more important to me is going back to
earlier roots: growing and gathering all of our own food, and cooking and
preserving it year-round. Whatever we can't grow should be traded for with
neighbors in our local communities.
I think that permaculture plays a major role in my wish for a local food
culture. Permaculture presents appealing methods and techniques for growing
food in a more balanced, efficient, sustainable, and, for lack of a better
word, more "natural" way, requiring less labor and outside energy inputs
than other food production practices. Thus I will try my hand at putting
ideas into action and hopefully work towards my ultimate wish of completely
localized food production through permacultural strategies. (Let's not
forget about wild food foraging either, of course.)
Every less grain of wheat, black bean, or tomato that comes from land
outside of Dancing Rabbit is a movement towards establishing a stronger
local food culture. This first Year of Food and what I have outlined above
is but a small step towards that delicious horizon.
The Start of a Food Forest? Here's a big U-shaped keyhole suntrap garden bed.
editor@dancingrabbit.org
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