I am very fortunate to live in a place that has one of the best farmer's markets in the country. It's a bit of a community ritual, going down to the park on Wednesdays and Saturdays, checking out the edible wares, doing some people watching, and maybe getting your veggie corn dog on (mmmmm...).
We were listening to the Freakanomics podcast the other day (FANTASTIC if you haven't ever listened to it, by the way), and the topic was eating locally, and whether it was really as good for us, the planet, and the economy to eat this way. Spoiler alert, but their conclusion (after talking to various experts, reviewing academic studies, etc.), is that NO, this is not the answer to our food problems. While they make several good scientific and numerical claims and points in their piece, I can't help but disagree. You see, one thing you can't measure is people's well being, their sense of connection, of wholeness. Going out and touching. Seeing. Feeling. Knowing exactly how food gets to your table is important. It touches us deep down on a primal level, way down in our root chakra where our sense of survival and interconnected-ness lies. Even if you don't buy your food at your own farmer's market, going and experiencing that connection is good for the heart. As our world speeds up and becomes smaller, our desire to slow down increases. Buying food at the farmer's market might be inefficient for our pocketbooks, but not for the soul.
Even more inefficient for the pocketbook? Growing your own.* After spending $30 on plants, soil, cages, etc., for a few plants, it makes you wonder how many veggies you could buy with that money (especially if you bought them in season, when they'd be ripe anyway). But it's beside the point. Going out everyday, watching them go from little transplant to ripened thing that you can actually eat, is magical. And you can't put a price on that.
Do you have anything planted?
.shanti.
*Of course, if you plant from seeds and are all established, it would be quite cost effective. I'm talking about your everyday, throw a few tomato and pepper plants out there peeps, like myself.
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ReplyDeleteI completely agree. That's why they call gardening a hobby, right? It's not about what you get out of your garden, but the many hours you enjoy putting in it.
ReplyDeleteI actually gave away my entire first harvest! But actually, it felt better to share it with a friend than to throw into dinner and forget about it. But I might keep the next batch for us. :)
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