[Ccpg] Grow Food Party Crew Ventura /Eye on the environment: Volunteer crew relishes creation of edible gardens
Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
lakinroe at silcom.com
Sun Nov 2 06:31:20 PST 2008
Eye on the environment: Volunteer crew relishes creation of edible gardens
http://www.venturacountystar.com/news/2008/nov/01/volunteer-crew-relishes-creation-of-edible/
By David Goldstein
Guest writer
Saturday, November 1, 2008
How do you get dozens of teens and adults to voluntarily landscape
other people's backyards? Throw a party.
How do you get these energetic volunteers to not only provide labor,
but also supply equipment, music, food and in some cases money? Give
them something to believe.
The volunteers are motivated by a philosophy called "permaculture"
and organized around a "movable feast" called the Grow Food Party
Crew, which focuses on creating edible gardens. The group is the
brainchild of Devin Slavin, a Ventura-based advocate of permaculture,
combining "permanent" and "agriculture" in a way that promotes
environmental principles.
Slavin traces his philosophical and gardening roots to the 1970s,
when Australians Bill Mollison and David Holmgren came up with a set
of principles and techniques designed to produce food, reduce energy
use, conserve water and create beautiful landscapes. Mollison and
Holmgren called their philosophy "permaculture" and dedicated
themselves to sharing their beliefs and methods.
Since Slavin started Ventura County's first Grow Food Party Crew,
branches of the gardening group have grown in Ojai and Santa Cruz.
The Ojai group is headed by Dulanie Ellis, who also chairs the Food
and Agriculture Committee of the Ojai Valley Green Coalition.
Two months ago, a joint event hosted by the Ventura and Ojai Grow
Food Party Crews attracted 80 people to the Ojai Community Center.
The group watched the YouTube debut of a documentary about their work
and heard a lecture from Rose Hayden-Smith about World War II victory
gardens.
Recently, the Grow Food Party Crew of Ventura hosted a workshop
called "Essentials of Permaculture Garden Design." More than two
dozen people paid $25 to $50 to attend a lecture at Ventura's Bell
Arts Factory, then applied their permaculture principles to a
backyard the next day. Rachel Morris, a local environmental activist
known mostly for her work with VC COOL, a local nonprofit
organization fighting climate change, was the recipient of the new
garden.
The crew first shaped the ground of Morris' backyard, designing and
building contours to capture runoff water and channel it into the
garden. It then planted more than 200 fruits and vegetables, focusing
on "companion planting," or placing plants into mutually beneficial
groups where the shade and growth of one benefits another. The plant
choices also considered the principle of "time stacking." For
example, broccoli takes 100 days to flower, so next to it the crew
planted radish and lettuce, which will grow and be harvested in time
to give the broccoli room for growth.
Often, people benefiting from the new landscapes provide donations
larger than the cost, but in cases where they cannot afford to pay,
the group has organized a benefit concert, dessert tasting or other
fundraiser at the host's house. According to Slavin, average costs
for a new 600-square-foot landscape are $75 for plants, $25 for
compost and $150 for irrigation.
The Grow Food Party Crew is willing to work anywhere - at a home,
school, business or community organization. Slavin expects requests
for the parties to quickly grow, saying, "Our society is growing to
appreciate the abundance of nature."
Listen to permaculture advocates long enough, and you might hear a
dark undercurrent they are reluctant to acknowledge, a sort of
doomsday/survivalist streak within their philosophy. Behind their
joyous talk about harvesting nature's abundance, their vision of
neighborhoods' providing their own food also considers, in Slavin's
words, "community resilience in a time when the economy isn't doing
well."
The next Grow Food Party Crew event will be a big, citywide weekend
party in Ventura featuring several groups, each creating multiple
gardens. Organizers hope to create 100 new gardens in one weekend.
The event, called "Growing Gardens of Gratitude," will take place on
the weekend before Thanksgiving, Nov. 21-23. If you'd like to keep
your eye on the environment by learning permaculture while
volunteering, contact event organizers at growfoodpartycrew at gmail.com.
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