occupy the food supply

February 26th, 2012 by brooke

Tommorow February 27th is a national day of action called Occupy the Food Supply. The organizers of Occupy the Food Supply are a powerful alliance of sustainable agriculture advocates and food justice networks, including over 60 Occupy Wall Street groups as well as environmental and corporate accountability organizations who are joining together with a theme of creating local solutions and resisting Big Ag and its destructive practices of placing profits over people and the planet. Organizations and individuals are hosting events across the country that either focus on protest of the corporate food system or that highlight work thats already being done to forge a new model of equitable food production and distribution. Here is an interesting article by the executive director of Food First that discusses the intersection of the Occupy and Food Justice movements. Little City gardens is participating by putting our Monday workday on the map of events. Come out and visit us from 1-5.

2011 year end digest

February 9th, 2012 by brooke and caitlyn

We’ve spent our first full year on the farm! We got a late start last Spring due to the new zoning legislation not going into effect until March, therefore postponing our ability to sell our produce, but we were still able to do quite a bit of experimenting for the rest of the year. We ran a Summer CSA and weekly farmstand, maintained restaurant and caterer sales, hosted regular volunteer workdays, and gave a handful of group farm tours. We grew a ton of beautiful, delicious produce. There were ups and downs this year; high and low moods and energy levels, crop failures and successes, moments when we felt so blessed with support and moments when we could have used more. All of it has added to our ever-evolving bank of observations and thoughts about farming in the city.

From the beginning of this project, we have promised to make our experiences as transparent as possible. Not only do we aim to create a self-sufficient model of farming in the city, but we also aim to make public the barriers and successes that we encounter along the way. During the growing season, we were often too busy to collect our thoughts and share them. So after a few weeks of break, we have synthesized our experiences. Here are some of our thoughts about farming in San Francisco so far:

Have we been able to support ourselves through our work this year?
The answer to this question is no, yes and sort of. Taking into account our late start on sales, the amount of infrastructure setup, invasive weed wrangling and soil conditioning we had to focus on this year, we feel very proud that we were able to cover all of our operating costs (we’ll share a general breakdown once we finish wrapping up all of our 2011 accounting), set aside a healthy materials budget for next year, offer small gestures of thanks to a committed farm apprentice and pay ourselves each a little under $10,000. Of course we acknowledge that we cannot sustain this type of salary for too long. This is not considered a living wage in San Francisco and if we tried to pay ourselves by the hour, our wages would be embarrassing. We also acknowledge that this salary absolutely would not be adequate for anyone responsible for supporting a child or other family members, repaying loans, or medical bills. But for this year we were able to make it work with a little help from our other part-time jobs, and with some plain and simple living. It also helped that we took home much of our own food and that our work was so exciting and consuming that we didn’t have much free time to spend extra money.

We also couldn’t have done everything we did this year without the solid and regular help of our friend Heather. Heather is a skilled and seasoned farmer who has worked on a number of small farms over the years. She came out a couple days a week to help us with farm work and harvests. We can’t tell you how helpful it was to have Heather’s consistent friendship and farm help!

Will we be able to support ourselves in the coming farm year?
The answer to this question is we think so, we hope so, and we definitely won’t be rolling in it. This year, because we have a lot of the farm setup in place and some experimentation under our belts with how to work most efficiently on this small scale, we think we can grow and sell quite a bit more food. We aim to nearly double our CSA membership, to maintain our restaurant sales, and to begin selling at a weekly farmers market. This increased production may or may not prove to be overly ambitious for the second year growing on less than an acre. But with focus, hard work, and help from friends and neighbors we think we can do it. The trick will be to take precautions not to exhaust our bodies and the soil fertility in the process. We will certainly report back at the end of next year. At that point it should be easier for us to make a more accurate prediction of the economic viability of market-gardening in our city. Stay tuned!

Benefits specific to urban farming:

  1. Community Engagement – One of the most positive outcomes of our farm so far has been our engagement with neighbors through our CSA. Because the farm is nestled within a densely populated residential neighborhood, it served as a hub during our weekly CSA pickup days, allowing neighbors a closer relationship to the plants and the act of farming. In addition to CSA pickup days, many neighbors stop by throughout the week to say hello, show their friends, take their parents for a walk, play with their kids, smell and see plants growing, or to offer us support. For some the farm really does double as a park! We feel like these face-to face interactions are the key to revisioning a society that values both food and farmers and that integrates this life-supporting activity back into the commons. See some testimonials from our neighbors.
  2. Experiential Learning – Because of its central location, our farm also offers very accessible volunteer opportunities for city residents interested in learning the basics of market-gardening. Volunteers come every week from all over the city, from the East Bay, and from around the country to lend a hand. They come by bus, by bike, by car, or by foot.
  3. Close Proximity to Market – We’ve experienced a unique and mutually beneficial relationship with the main restaurant we sell to. Our relationship with one especially supportive, consistent and flexible chef has been instrumental for us in working towards business viability. Because the farm is so close to our markets, we are able to sell tender items like salad mix and greens, delivering them immediately after harvesting with little travel time between the field and the refrigerator (or dinner plate). We are able to host farm tours for chefs and restaurant staff so that diners get the most accurate and firsthand knowledge about what they are eating and where it has come from.

Barriers specific to urban farming:

  1. Land Value – The value of land has proven to be very prohibitive for urban farming — both finding it and keeping it. In a city like San Francisco, it isn’t every day that you find a vacant lot that is close to an acre in size, and when you do, chances are it’s worth a lot of money. Not only is it financially unrealistic for an aspiring market-gardener to purchase a vacant lot in SF, but it is currently unrealistic to even rent a lot at market-rate for gardening in the city. If land is assesed at real-estate development rates as most lots are, the associated property taxes are also high. Generally the land-owner would need to pass on the cost of the property tax and mortgage to the renter which becomes an annual rent that could be anywhere from 5-15 times the cost of renting the same amount of rural land. So without some generosity from the respective landlord, or some new creative tax incentives from the city, affording rent as a market-gardening business is a very challenging proposition. We feel this challenge first hand as we run our business on the very shaky grounds of a now month-to-month lease. The owner of our property is actively trying to develop the lot so that he can recoup the significant financial investment that he made when he purchased it. If we were to cover his monthly expenses, our rent would be around $3,000/month. This is an untenable price for less than an acre of land for any farm business.

    Also, under the tenuous framework of a month-to-month lease, we have found it difficult to make the infrastructural investments that would make our farm run most efficiently. Visitors ask us all the time why we don’t set up a more extensive rainwater catchment system, dig a well, plant fruit trees and berries, raise chickens, or build another tool shed. The answer to all of these questions is: we would absolutely love to! These will be on the top of our to-do list once we have more land security and can justify the cost and energy required.

    We feel that it would be an amazing step if, as a city, we identified vacant lots that are well suited to market-gardening, and then structured a way to value them for their topsoil and assess them based on their potential fertility instead of their financial potential in the real estate market. We believe that in order to see urban market-gardening really flourish, we must first cultivate the political will to reduce taxes for some parcels of land that have agricultural potential.

  2. Balancing Sociability and Efficiency – Being surrounded by the vitality of a city and the social wealth of a neighborhood means a lot of daily conversation. We love this and we wouldn’t have it any other way, but we do note that it can slow down our work and make some days more efficient than others. We strive to strike a healthy balance between focused work and fulfilling interactions.
  3. Urban Water Costs – The price of municipal water is high. Chances are that an urban farm, like ours, won’t have a well or a pond to irrigate the crops and will have to tap into the municipal water supply. Because our lot doesn’t have it’s own water meter, we currently run our irrigation from a generous neighbors hose spigot, and we reimburse them monthly. In San Francisco, the bulk of one’s water bill goes towards treating the water after it washes down the drain and into the sewers. Of course all of the water we use permeates directly into the ground and never touches the sewage system, rendering our water use unlike a typical household’s but still responsible for the same fees. (We’re currently in the process of applying for SF’s Landscape Irrigation Rebate Program.) Most annual vegetables are pretty thirsty plants and because we irrigate close to 1/2 an acre of them currently — and even more this next season — we push our neighbor’s water use into the higher-usage tiers which corresponds with higher water prices per unit. So this year we have footed some very large water bills, to the tune of approximately $300/month in the height of the summer.

    Fortunately, we are on our way to a solution. This year the SFPUC unveiled a grant program that allocates funding for new water meter installations for eligible urban gardens (a service which usually costs a minimum of $8,000). We were relieved to have received the grant, and this will allow us to open our own account and request a Landscape Irrigation Rate, hopefully significantly reducing our water bills. We hope to have that installed by early spring, just in time for the beginning of the dry season. By the way where is all the rain this winter?!

  4. The Price of Food The system that sets the value of food in this country is a huge beast for any sustainable farmer to be up against and we wrestle with this issue consistently. We appreciate that San Francisco has a large number of people who are broadening their awareness of the way food choices are tied to social, environmental and economic justice. We receive a great amount of encouragement, interest and moral support for our work. However, we do still find ourselves in need of more physical support in the form of committed customers. We hope that as we continue to make ourselves more accessible (via the farmers market and an expanded CSA), we can effectively communicate these needs.

Our experimentation with marketing outlets: We experimented with a few different marketing routes this year, including direct sales to restaurants, a CSA program, a weekly on-site farm stand, and sales to caterers. We discovered benefits and challenges to each of them.

  • Restaurant sales – These were straightforward and relatively efficient. The main chef we work with was creative and flexible, meaning he was often willing to alter his menu based on whatever was abundant in our fields on any given week. We discovered this year that working with at least one very flexible and collaborative chef is a real support to a young farm business. Restaurant orders were often our largest orders, which allowed us to move a good amount of produce all at once. We appreciated the efficiency of this system, and, financially speaking, this was a fairly successful outlet for us.
  • CSA – This was one of the more socially fulfilling components of our business and a solid financial basis for the season. The model was very important to us, as it allowed us to share our experience on the farm with an intimate group of committed subscribers, many of whom were immediate neighbors. We are really excited about having a strong CSA as the heart of our business plan again for this year.
  • Farm Stand – Each week, during our CSA pickup window, we put together a small farm stand. This seemed like a great way for us to sell surplus produce as well as extra items that we didn’t grow in large enough quantities to put into the CSA boxes. We also liked the idea of neighbors being able to stop in and buy a few items for the week without having to sign on as committed CSA subscribers. Unfortunately this didn’t work out exactly as we had hoped. Farm stand sales turned out to be very low in relation to the amount of time we spent harvesting for the table each week, in part because the farm’s tucked away location isn’t ideal for drop-in customers. We were often left with large quantities of produce to donate or take home which was a challenge to deal with at the end of a very long day. We are hoping that by participating this year in an already active farmers market we will have a steady enough customer base to make our harvests worthwhile.
  • Caterers – We found this to be our best outlet for specialty items like rare herbs, baby root vegetables and edible flowers (items that, because of their specialty, are able to fetch a higher price). We found the efficiency of working with caterers to be highly variable. For example a large order from a caterer that required minimal email exchange was very efficient, whereas a small order that required a lot of communication and special pickup time was less so. We would love to increase the amount of caterers we work with and special events that we provide for while also determining an efficient framework for these sales — a minimum order value and a few consistent pickup times.

    Most successful crops this year: Red and golden beets, cabbage, lacinato kale, broccolini, basil (under a hoop-house), tokyo turnips, french breakfast radishes, artichokes, strawberries, spaghetti squash, kabocha squash, salad mix!

    Least successful crops this year: Both napa cabbage, and tatsoi were attacked viciously by slugs. We had trouble with root maggot in our summer radishes and turnips, and onion root maggot in our summer scallions. Cucumbers were planted too late in the season and we didn’t get around to trellising. Under these conditions, the Lemon variety performed better than some of the Pickling varieties. Delicata squash and Butternut squash plants didn’t begin to flower and set fruit until September which didn’t leave them enough time to grow and ripen before winter.

    Goals for 2012:This past year was focused on farm setup — putting together our CSA model, and building relationships with restaurants, neighbors and City officials. This year we will focus on widening our access to customers which means both growing our CSA and being present at the Mission Community Farmers Market. We will also focus on continuing to find more efficient practices and habits. This means both exploring the best tools and inventions for facilitating our garden tasks, as well as creating even better organizational structures for managing our recordkeeping. In addition we hope to continue to facilitate or open conversations on themes of agriculture (where it fits in our society and what power it has to shape our culture), food justice (equal accessibility for everyone), and the grassroots economy (how to vision resilient co-interdependent communities). If you have any ideas about how we can best raise and engage in these conversations that are so important to us, please let us know! We will also continue to nudge the city to introduce policies that will further support the growth of urban agriculture.

    We are also excited about so many things on the farm! We’re going to be trying out new vegetable varieties and saving seed, setting up worm bins, planting a few fruit trees and perennial plants (our land tenure may be unpredictable, but we will see these tree plantings as a gesture of hope), hosting a small group of interns, getting a refrigerator, building more storage space, setting up a hoop house, attempting to increase our yields without drastically increasing our labor (tricky!), growing more flowers, and making more friends.

neighbor testimonials

January 6th, 2012 by caitlyn

When putting together a packet on the blight-reducing benefits of urban farms a couple months ago, we asked some neighbors to say a few words about their relationship to the farm and their feelings about the lot now, as compared to before. We were touched by the responses. Below are a few excerpts, and you can read more here.

Social activities and the farmstand they have operated have provided a meeting place for neighbors I have gotten to know, for the first time. I feel much more involved and positive about my neighborhood. It is no longer just a bunch of houses and driveways- it has that vital ingredient -life…

…You turned kind of nothing into something GREAT…

..I am very pleased that an urban farm exists in my neighborhood. It is a blessing to have an area where food is grown locally…

email lists

January 2nd, 2012 by caitlyn

Please note that we’ve added an email sign-up page on our sidebar to the right. Over the next few weeks we will be doing some cleaning and reorganizing of our email lists, so if you’d like to receive information and updates about our upcoming CSA, volunteer workdays, or farmers market specials, please take a second to sign up! (If you think you’re already on our email list because you’ve received updates in the past, please do still sign up here. We’re starting from scratch!)

loss of farmland

December 18th, 2011 by brooke

As some of you know my sister Ali is a producer of a live radio news show on KALW 91.7. The show is called Your Call and airs M-F from 10-11am. Every show is fascinating and compelling but specifically wanted to link to a show that aired last week because it addresses the issue of the fate of farmland and how land-use and zoning policy on a federal, state and local level affect the preservation or irretrievable loss of land. Apparently we lose 1 acre of farmland in this country every minute to development. It seems of utmost importance that we halt this trend soon because the rebuilding of resilient regional food systems is completely dependent on our shrinking arable land-base.
Tune in to the show.

photo overlooking Mount Davidson from Twin Peaks circa 1925, from the SF Public Library Archives

winter reflection

December 14th, 2011 by caitlyn

The 2011 season is winding down, and as the light gets lower and the mornings get frostier, we’re busily preparing the farm for some rest this winter. Our perennials are pruned back, our herb beds are mulched, the last of the winter brassicas are in the ground and we have 18 new beds broadforked and dug, ready for spring planting. Still to do on the farm: sowing cover crop (we are waiting ever-so-patiently for some real rain), dividing artichokes, re-sheet mulching weedy pathways, finishing the pea trellising, planning for an expanded irrigation setup, and organizing the tool shed. And off the farm: crop planning, email list consolidating, website work, and catching up on our accounting. Brooke and I will both take a little time off this winter so we can rest our bodies (these back aches are getting serious!), get out of the city, work on other projects, and prepare ourselves for what we hope will be our most productive and fruitful Spring yet.

We’ve been doing a lot of reflecting on the past season — during which we successfully ran our first 30-member CSA, hosted a weekly farmstand and maintained weekly restaurant sales — and with this year’s accomplishments in mind, we already have long lists of improvements to make for next year as well as new, exciting ideas to implement. Next Spring, in addition to an expanded CSA, we have plans to sell at the Mission Farmer’s Market (more details on both of these soon). We’re excited about starting a new season with this year’s observations under our belts and a winter’s worth of creative energy built up.

Aside from farm tasks and crop-related planning though, we also think it is a good time to check in with you, our supporters who have been following us through this experiment from the beginning, and address some of the data we’ve collected this year as well as more general reflections about farming in the city. Stay tuned for these thoughts and numbers, they’re coming soon — once we can get ourselves to put down the shovels.

gift certificate

December 8th, 2011 by brooke

Don’t wait in line at big box stores to buy your holiday presents this year! It’s not only dangerous (did anyone see those headlines about Black Friday?), but it often supports corporate power and labor exploitation around the world. We present you with a healthy, locally-produced, grassroots economy fostering alternative: a gift certificate to Little City Gardens!

You name the amount, present this beautiful card (hand lettered by Caitlyn) to your loved one, co-worker or friend, and they can redeem it beginning Spring 2012 at our on-site farm stand, our table at the Mission Community Market (stay tuned for more info!), or apply it to a CSA subscription. In the spring we resume sales of a variety of beautiful organic produce and delicious greens mixes, and we will continue to offer artwork inspired by urban farming.

This gift certificate is not only a ticket to some old fashioned, home-grown healthy food but also a gesture toward the healthy stewardship of land and community, and toward the building of responsible, collaborative, grassroots economies. Who wouldn’t want to get that for the holidays?!

To those of you who are Bay Area locals: as always we greatly appreciate your support. We couldn’t do what we do without amazing, consistent customers. To those readers around the country and around the world: consider finding a way to put some of your holiday spending money towards your local small scale farmers.

If you’d like to purchase, please send us an email with your name, the name of the recipient, the address where you’d like the gift certificate sent, and the amount you’d like to put on the card. We can take payment through the mail or in person.

Happy Holidays everybody!

Occupy Wall Street, San Francisco, Oakland and Beyond!

November 1st, 2011 by brooke

*The first poster was sent to me by a friend and i thought it was beautiful. It is a piece by Miriam Klein-Stahl

Caitlyn and I will be stopping work early tomorrow and heading over to Downtown Oakland (14th and Broadway) for the General Strike which was called for by Occupy Oakland. We are skipping our regular Wednesday cardboard and manure hauling in order to be on the streets in solidarity with the Occupy Movement and its stance against police brutality and for civil, human, and constitutional rights and economic justice. The unfolding of this movement is such an exciting thing to watch and a magnetizing thing to participate in. The energy, enthusiasm and broad participation feels like a deep breath of fresh air. I realize I have been waiting for this for a long time. This moment is our chance to join in a loud call of political discontent. It is also our opportunity to participate in a gesture of aspiration towards a society and a political system that actually meets the needs of its people.

It is not acceptable that our cities employ their police departments to violently attack and injure their own citizens engaging in completely peaceful protest. And it is not acceptable to continue to fuel this economic system, built on colonialism, inequality, and corporate power, which perpetuates so many forms of oppression and destruction of the environment. We want to recreate an economy based in local production, ecological sensitivity and mutual support, in which no one is unemployed, underpaid or under-appreciated. So it makes sense to us to show up tomorrow in Oakland and to continue to be present for this movement. The garden could use a day off anyways.

DO JOIN US TOMMOROW!!

Also of note: This Saturday November 5th is an organized day of action: National Bank Transfer Day. One very effective way to chip away at the concentration of power and money is to move our money out of large banks and reinvest in small banks and credit unions which invest in small business. Little City Gardens already banks with a local bank focused on community empowerment, Mission Federal Credit Union. So we won’t be participating in the great Bank Transfer, but if you bank with Bank of America, Chase, Wells Fargo or others of that ilk and you’ve been meaning to move your money anyways consider doing it this Saturday November 5th in order to send a strong collective message. http://moveyourmoneyproject.org/.

green beans special!

October 20th, 2011 by caitlyn

Have you been wanting to get some canning or pickling in before the season’s over? Are you eager to preserve some of the summer’s bounty to be enjoyed during the wet, grey months ahead?

Now’s your chance! We planted a late season crop of green beans (and purple beans) this summer, and now that our CSA & farm stand are done for the year, we are finding ourselves with an abundance of beautiful, tender, juicy beans that are waiting to be harvested. So, we’d like to make them available to you. We’ll be taking orders every week; see below for details.

And perhaps even more excitingly, in order to keep prices down as much as we can, we’re also offering you the chance to come to the farm and harvest your own. This could be a great Fall activity to do with your favorite kid, or it could be your long-awaited chance to spend a little focused, quiet time outdoors at what we think is one of the most beautiful spots in the city. The details:

For pick up: Fridays 5-6pm in the Mission (email for details) — $2.50/lb
…..OR……
Harvest-your-own: Mondays/Wednesdays (12-4pm) — $1.50/lb

Pickled green beans are delicious and so easy to make, whether you preserve them or just keep them as refrigerator pickles (see here, here and here for different recipe ideas). Send us an email at littlecitygardens@gmail.com if you’d like to place a Friday order (please get your orders in by Wednesday evening and we’ll send you a confirmation email with pickup details) or if you’d like to set up a time to come to the farm to harvest-your-own. Offer good October 24th – mid November or so (or until bean production slows down).

free strawberry plants

October 9th, 2011 by caitlyn

We just divided up many of our strawberry plants and we have a couple dozen to give away to anyone interested! The variety is Seascape and they have been delicious and incredibly productive for us this year. I didn’t know how delicious strawberries could be until I ate them straight from the beds and freshly sun-warmed. This was my favorite midday snack all summer long! Send us an email at littlecitygardens@gmail.com if you’re in SF and you’re interested in picking them up.

cheers to a great first CSA season!

October 2nd, 2011 by brooke

Last Monday we put together our last CSA boxes of the summer session. The last box included some exciting things like dry-farmed kabocha squash, bouquets of cosmos, and a gift of herbal first-aid salve, made by Ali Budner, with olive oil, beeswax and medicinal plants from the garden.

Here is an example of the flyers, recipes and notes that we included in our boxes throughout the season. You will notice that when it comes to culinary advice we are quite simple and straightforward. For almost every vegetable we recommend to slice thin and sautee with olive oil and salt. I do find it true that if the vegetables are fresh from good earth they don’t need much more preparation than that!

Now we will spend the fall focusing on our restaurant sales, renegotiating our lease, building compost and soil fertility, and planting/planning for next year’s CSA. If all goes well with the lease, we will begin the 2012 CSA in the beginning of February. If you are interested in applying for a CSA box, write us an email and we will put you on our email list. For those of you who are already addicted to our salad mix and other produce: don’t worry! We will be taking salad and greens orders most Fridays for pick up in the Mission. Look out for the emails if you are on our list.

It feels far off but its already time to start planting kale, collard greens, favas and cabbage for February harvesting. Its about time for garlic planting, seeding onions in the greenhouse, and even though its a little bit late in the season we hope to squeeze in a fall potato planting. We’ve got to sheet mulch the squash mound for next year and open up a new patch in the weedy back of the lot for cover cropping and an experiment with winter wheat.

So there is plenty of work to do in the garden. Its going to feel really good to have some time as we work to reflect on the both the successes and shortcomings of this season’s CSA. We are already starting to integrate some of the lessons that we’ve learned into our work.

We had our first drizzle of the season last week! It barely seeped into the top inch of soil but it was a warm up for the rainy times coming.