[Lapg] Permaculture Scott Pittman's Training/Front lines of change: returning soldiers become farmers
Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
lakinroe at silcom.com
Fri Feb 18 06:48:09 PST 2011
Front lines of change: returning soldiers become farmers
http://www.guilfordian.com/world-nation/front-lines-of-change-returning-soldiers-become-farmers-1.2003635
By Omar Hamad
Published: Thursday, February 17, 2011
Updated: Thursday, February 17, 2011 17:02
Though thousands of miles away from each other, the deserts of
Afghanistan and the deserts of Northern New Mexico are strikingly
similar. Containing dry, mountainous landscapes, irrigation ditches,
and agricultural economies, it seemed the perfect place for
schoolchildren to teach organic farming techniques to National
Guardsmen.
The members of Oklahoma's 2nd 45th Agricultural Development Team (a
division of the Guard), were trained by students from Pojoaque, New
Mexico's Camino de Paz Montessori school in the art of beekeeping and
goat-milking, Tikkun Magazine reports.
The members of the unit were training under the auspices of New
Mexico's Permaculture Institute, preparing for deployment to
Afghanistan in the Fall of 2010. Their mission: to revitalize that
country's much-diminished agricultural infrastructure.
This is only one of many recent examples of the links between the
U.S. military and efforts to revitalize agricultural inside and
outside of the U.S.
While some troops prepare to assist agriculture overseas, more and
more U.S. combat troops are returning home to an increasingly fragile
job market. However, the agricultural sector, in which half of all
farmers are expected to retire in the next ten years according to The
New York Times, is attempting to fill an increasing demand for young
blood with returning veterans.
"There is a tremendous need for young farmers, and a big wave of
young people inspired to go into the service who are coming home"
said Michael O'Gorman, founder of the nonprofit Farmer-Veteran
coalition, to The New York Times.
At Archi's Acres in Valley Center, California training in organic
avocado farming techniques overlaps with classes in Business for
interested veterans.
Teaching sustainable practices including hydroponics, the former
Marine and founder of Archi's Acres, Colin Archipley, began
informally training veterans after buying his Valley Center farm in
2007. Working together with his wife, they benefited from the farm's
proximity to the Camp Pendleton Marine Base, just north of San Diego.
Since then they have began administering classes through the Veterans
Sustainable Agricultural Training VSAT program at MiraCosta College.
The program runs at $4,500 to Camp Pendleton provides assistance to
veterans from the base seeking training there.
"What the farm offers veterans is decompression from the trauma of
war," said Archipley to San Diego's East County Magazine.
According to The New York Times, while only 17 percent of America's
population is classified as rural, 45 percent of returning Army
veterans are classified as such. This means that many returning
soldiers enrolling in VSAT and similar programs come in with previous
farming experience, while also being exposed to new agricultural
methods.
The hydroponic techniques used at Archi's Acres means that crops are
grown in soil-less mediums rather than in soil itself. In addition to
being more energy-efficient, Hydroponic methods eliminate 90 percent
of contaminates by using alternatives to soil.
"We're able to water several thousand plants off just five gallons of
water," said Archipley of the technique's efficiency to East County
magazine. "This greenhouse alone uses about as much water as two
avocado trees, but it produces several times as much income"
While the program operations have not been entirely smooth, the
majority of veterans working at the farm have been positive about
their experiences.
"Archi's Acres has given me a lot of peace of mind. Working with
other vets is very peaceful," said former Navy Lieutenant Olaf Hansen
to East County Magazine. "I don't have to watch every word - and I
don't have to dress up, plus I'm learning a lot about organic
gardening"
Many returning veterans expressed optimism about the ability of
programs such as those at Archi's Acres to ease the return into
civilian life.
"One thing I've noticed about agriculture is that you become a
creator rather than a destroyer," said former Marine Mike Hanes to
The New York Times. Hanes has suffered from PTSD and was left
homeless for a year after returning from a tour in Iraq before coming
to Archi's Acres.
The efforts of organic farm training have not only helped integrate
returning veterans into civilian life, but also aided in connecting
military personnel with their surrounding communities.
"We went to the website of this unit (Oklahoma 2nd 45th) and looked
at their goals and found that we have some things in common:
teamwork, responsibility, discipline, and helping each other make a
difference" said Pat Pantano, executive director of the Camino De Paz
school of the student-soldier relationship promoted by the
permaculture program.
With sustainable agricultural practices increasingly important in a
world of limited resources, soldiers and veterans to pave the way for
progressive farming.
"For a comparable age, you won't find people who have had as much
responsibility," said John Maki, transition assistance specialist at
Archi's Acres to The New York Times.
"They've been tasked with making life-and-death decisions, already."
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