| Fields of Plenty Review |
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This is an interesting book detailing some of the greatest pioneers in sustainable farming. The premise is that farmers only have time to visit other farmers in the winter, when the fields permit them to leave. One such farmer, Michael Ablemen is one of the founders of the Center for Urban Agriculture at Fairview Gardens in central California. He decides to leave his small farm in Salt Spring Island, British Columbia, and travel around to sustainable farms all over the northern USA and British Columbia, Canada. He and his oldest son are looking for answers to some basic questions: "How do we make sure that pure food is available to all, not just those who can afford it? How can we grow food without depending on vast amounts of energy and foreign oil? …How do we protect and enhance Biodiversity and the natural environment within and around our farms?"
To find the answers, they visit farms when their crops are
still in the ground in order to get a proper idea of what exactly is grown, how it is raised, and
what those crops taste like.
At each of the farms, which grow anything from melons to cheese and everything in between, Ablemen takes pictures and receives goods to take on to the next farm. From Anthony and Carol Boutard's 144 acre farm outside of Portland, OR; a true collection of heirloom crops, to Eliot Colman's winter greens farm on the coast of Maine, Michal Ablemen visits and discusses some of the most inspiring farms in North America. He visits a cheese farmer whose pride is the fungus she grows in her cheese cave—she treats each wheel as if it were a beloved pet. Toward the end of the journey he visits Polyface, a farm run by agricultural author Joel Salatin. There, they discuss the problems that small meat farmers encounter when trying to get around legislation designed with only large-scale production factories in mind.
Last update: July 13, 2008
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