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January 16th, 2007

You are currently browsing the articles from EcoSherpa | Sustainable Living written on January 16th, 2007.

Spinning a Good Farm

Spin Farming

Thanks very much to J - one of our faithful blog readers and comment maestros - for letting us know about this one!

I’ve been thinking a lot about the whole ‘urban eco agriculture’ (or whatever you want to call it) notion quite a bit as of late (links to follow) and am always interested to learn about projects and businesses that relate to this idea.

‘SPIN’, an acronym for ‘Small Plot Intensive’, is a fascinating model for small-scale organic farming developed by two Canadians, Wally Satzewich and Gail Vandersteen.

Here is an exerpt from their bio page:

Wally Satzewich and Gail Vandersteen initially started farming on an acre-sized plot outside of Saskatoon 20 years ago. Thinking that expanding acreage was critical to their success, they bought some farmland adjacent to the South Saskatchewan river 40 miles north of Saskatoon where they eventually grew vegetables on about 20 acres of irrigated land. “This was a site to die for,” Ms. Vandersteen said. “It was incredibly beautiful, but the pestilence was incredible too! We couldn’t believe what the bugs and deer could do. Not to mention the wind.”

“We still lived in the city where we had a couple of small plots to grow crops like radishes and salad mix, which were our most profitable crops. We could grow three crops a year on the same site, pick and process on-site and put the produce into our cooler so it would be fresh for the market.”

After six years farming their rural site, the couple realized there was more money to be made growing multiple crops intensively in the city, so they sold the farm and became urban growers. “People don’t believe you can grow three crops a year in Saskatoon,” observes Vandersteen. “They think it’s too much work, but the truth is, this is much less work than mechanized, large-scale farming. We used to have a tractor to hill potatoes and cultivate, but we find it’s more efficient to do things by hand. Other than a rototiller, all we need is a push-type seeder and a few hand tools.”

Three crops a year in Saskatoon?! Keep in mind, it’s in zone ~2 - also known as tundra (joke).
We are in zone ~5 here in southern Ontario so needless to say that makes me sit up and take notice.

Here is another interesting blurb:

“For aspiring farmers, SPIN eliminates the 2 big barriers to entry – sizeable acreage and substantial startup capital. At the same time, its intensive relay growing techniques and precise revenue targeting formulas push yields to unprecedented levels and result in highly profitable income.”

In 2003, its first year of operation, Somerton Tanks Farm, located in northeast Philadelphia, the fifth largest city in the U.S, produced $26,100 in gross sales from a half-acre of growing space during a 9 month growing season. In 2005 gross sales increased to $52,200. So in just three years of operation Somerton Tanks Farm achieved a level of productivity and financial success that many agricultural professionals claimed was impossible. And it is providing a way for independent farmers to once again have a viable role in the food production system that has tipped too much in favor of large scale mass production agriculture.

More than $50,000 in sales for a half-acre plot? I’m certainly no farming expert but that strikes as pretty astonishing, and also speaks volumes as far has home food production capabilities go!

I definitely want to learn more!

By the way, here are links to a couple of their prototype/test farms if you are interested: Somerton Tanks Farm & Wally’s Urban Market

And of course, be sure to check out the main SPIN Farming site as well.

Other Semi-Related Sherpa Posts:
Sauron Has an Eye For Good Stories
Suburban Food Production - Growing Your Own Is Not As Hard As You Think!
Edible Estates - Bye Bye Lawn, Hello Dinner!

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Written by Bentley on January 16th, 2007 with 7 comments.
Read more articles on Gardening and Interesting & Notable.

EBay For Greenies?

ecocentra

Just saw a post about this over at ThinkTank7 (who seems to get all their stories from other blogs - pretty sure HippyShopper is the actual source) and it sounded interesting so I went in for a closer look.

Of course, the first question to come to mind…

Who’s their daddy and what does he do?

(sorry, I was temporarily possessed by ‘Awnuld’)

All joking aside…

We are an online marketing place for buying and selling eco friendly and ethical products. We believe that environmentally friendly and ethical shopping is an ideal way for ordinary people to make a positive difference to the world in which we live.

Not to mention the fact that…

Unlike ebay, you can list your products for up to 3 months
Unlike ebay, we focus on products that help reduce our impact on the planet
Unlike ebay, listing your products on ecocentra is FREE. Commission payable only if your product actually sells. .
Special offer: FREE commission for all products listed before January 31st (normally 2% of selling price).

Hmmmm…sounds pretty cool! It looks as though they don’t really have too many listings yet, but hopefully with a little more press exposure we’ll see things pick up a little.

[UPDATE] Sheesh - it might help if I gave you a link to the site! Here ya go: Ecocentra

Related Sherpa Articles:
Reduce, Reuse, Freecycle?

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Written by Bentley on January 16th, 2007 with 2 comments.
Read more articles on Interesting & Notable.

Important Green Energy Anouncements Expected

Some Canadian environmental news to share

Just caught this on the CTV website:

OTTAWA — The federal government is expected to produce a flurry of environment-related announcements in the next week or two, but they won’t necessarily come from the new environment minister.

Sources say Natural Resources Minister Gary Lunn — rather than John Baird — is set to announce several green-energy programs, including incentives to make houses more energy-efficient.

Planners at the Prime Minister’s Office have tentatively set dates for three announcements: one related to heating on Wednesday, another on the theme of “renewables” for Friday and another on energy efficiency next week, said a non-government source familiar with the plan, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

However, Prime Minister Stephen Harper might choose make some of the announcements himself, as the Conservative government attempts a green makeover following the departure of former environment minister Rona Ambrose from the key portfolio.

For full article go here: Flurry of green energy announcements expected

Should be interesting to see what Harper and his crew have planned, but I won’t hold my breath for anything monumental.

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Written by Bentley on January 16th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on News.