Monday, August 22, 2011

Lynchburg Grows


I started volunteering at Lynchburg Grows last fall, shortly after I moved back to Lynchburg.  My parents mentioned it to me, I checked out the website, and thought, Wow!  an urban farm in town, with 9 huge greenhouses!  How did I grow up going to the City Stadium, and never notice those structures behind?  Turns out very few people knew.

View from the rear of Lynchburg Grows
I went over and said I wanted to volunteer.  For some time I've wanted to work in a greenhouse, so this worked out perfectly.  It couldn't have been easier -- they told me to just show up any day, and they'd have something for me to do, whether it's weeding, planting, cutting, trimming, or any of the other innumerable chores a farm imposes.





Crops

When I started in the fall, the main crops were lettuce mixes (spring mix, arugula), swiss chard, beets, radishes, spinach, and roses.  Over the summer they grew carrots, green peppers, basil, cucumbers, and others.  The contrast in the interior between low winter greens and upright summertime peppers was marked:

Wintertime lowriding spinach


Wintertime beets line the raised bed


Summertime peppers bust out tall

The seasonal difference in heat is also severe; in winter they are a mild 50, but in summer those glass ovens scorch at 120 degrees and higher.




Residents

Plants aren't the only things living on the farm.  Princess is the resident goat.  She spends her days hanging out in her pen with her close friend Lucky the Duck.  Sometimes she's hunkered down in her wooden hut; other times she's perched on a log or her huge cable spool, just enjoying standing around.

Princess reclines on her spool

Not too far from her pen live the chickens.  They enjoy a nesting hut with individual nest boxes, as well as a decent-sized yard and a tree.  They get fed corn meal and lots of vegetable and plant scraps.

Chickens socializing




Greenhouse #9

Several months in, I asked the guys for a longer-term project.  They told me, "Take Greenhouse #9 and upgrade it so we can host events.  Do what you can, however you want."  Whoa, what a cool opportunity!

Greenhouse #9, summer 2012
What are the plans for #9, you ask?  Well, get rid of unsightly messes like this, for starters:

Greenhouse #9, in suboptimal condition

The idea is to create a welcoming space for events such as wedding rehearsals, meetings, and receptions.  A couple of weddings or receptions have already been held here, but to really make it a great spot for the community, it needs a lot of work.  Steam pipes are being cut out, beds cleaned up, weeds pulled, and before anything else, about 80 panes of glass need to be replaced.  The budget is tight, so we've raised about half what we need for the glass.

Some ideas for the space include herbs, a water feature, benches, green end walls, carts with planters, and a better floor.




Aquaponics

This year's principal capital improvement project has been the aquaponics system, in Greenhouse #7.  Micha laid a beautiful stone walkway through the entire greenhouse.  Throughout the spring and summer the beds were cleared and frames erected over the beds.  By August they had started running water through the first two aquaponics systems.




The plan is to stock the bottom bed with fish (probably catfish or tilapia), then grow various crops in the upper troughs.  Some students from the Lynchburg College environmental program are helping design and set up the system.




Composting

These days I'm not going over as much as I was last fall, but I'm helping in other ways.  For example, they maintain a worm composting bin in the main greenhouse.  I thought it deserved a poster or sign explaining how it works, since quite a few school groups and other visitors come through, so I found a poster online:

Worm Composting Educational Poster


In addition, the City of Lynchburg drops off a good portion of the leaves it collects in the fall at the Grows, for a source of compost.  As you might imagine, all those plants generate tons of scraps, which are either fed to the residents, or stuffed into the large compost bin.


The Grows offers a CSA program, as well as onsite sales of its produce.  They hope to offer rose bushes, starter plants, and more crops as they evolve.

Working in the greenhouse is grounding and satisfying.  I get dirty, even got poison ivy from clearing out some of the leftover overgrowth from one greenhouse, and I love it.  Cutting my own chard and sauteeing it up minutes later; eating arugula straight from the plant; helping develop a local agricultural and community destination; these are all great reasons to work at Lynchburg Grows.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Political Philosophy

Recently a new acquaintance in the local Tea Party asked me my opinions on the following topics:

"economy, federal reserve, military, abortion, proper role of state/federal power, 2nd Amendment, 4th Amendment"

So then, some tidbits of my opinions:

Economics: I haven't studied economics much.  I understand there are various schools of economics that advise varying governmental strategies on managing national finances.  I believe in capitalism, but I support strong regulations on business to protect public health and safety.  I'm undecided on a consumption-based tax, as opposed to an income tax, but it's worth looking into.  From what I read the wealthy are gathering up a greater and greater share of the national wealth, which I find very disturbing.  I support higher taxe rates on wealthier individuals.  I don't know enough to support or reject "free trade agreements".  I support proposals that would encourage buying American-made goods.  It seems highly unlikely that the U.S. can make headway against its deficit and debt without substantially higher revenues, most likely in the form of taxes.  I disagree with those who are rabidly anti-tax -- it constrains their policy choices unreasonably.

Federal Reserve:  Don't know enough to have a reasonable opinion.  I know this is one of Ron Paul's pet issues.  I also know Carter Glass, a Senator from Lynchburg, helped create the Fed.

Military: The military is too large, and too expensive, and used to fight useless wars.  The military should be used only for defense of United States land.  No one on the planet could invade us, so really we probably don't even need much of a military.

Abortion:  Pro-choice. It doesn't concern me what another woman does with her fetus.  I couldn't stop her from doing whatever she wanted anyway.  I believe there are serious problems with considering a fetus the same as a born human being. I believe a woman does have the right to determine her own life and that of her fetus, but I don't support encouraging abortion, and I think it is a very serious decision not to be taken lightly.

Federal Vs. State Authority/Power: This is a tricky area, and somewhat abstract.  In both cases, we are talking about governments being able to coerce people.  I don't believe in "states' rights" -- in my opinion, only individuals have rights; states, nations, and other organizations have authority from people, but no "rights".  I joke that the U.S. is too large to govern effectively, and that it should be broken into regional or state-based nations, but I am halfway serious.  I believe the most local solution is often the best, but of course we must temper that with a recognition that local decisions should never violate someone's rights, and the federal government has a role in defending our rights.  I believe the federal government has a particular role to play in public health (e.g. EPA), because pollution knows no boundaries.

2nd Amendment: The latest Supreme Court interpretation of this is that it protects an individual's right to bear arms.  It also reaffirmed that restrictions on that right are constitutional.  My take on guns and public safety is highly colored by my time in Spain (and other parts of Europe), where handguns are essentially nonexistent.  I felt extremely safe everywhere I went, no matter what time of day or what part of the city, knowing virtually no one had a gun.  Most Spaniards (and Europeans) find the American fixation with guns baffling; Spain was under a dictator until 1975 and yet they don't fear their government now; note that Europe has been home to the major totalitarian regimes, World Wars, etc.  I don't agree with the idea that more guns makes a safer society, and there is mixed data on that.  Personally I would be satisfied with fewer guns in society, with stringent regulations and licensing requirements.

4th Amendment: This seems pretty straightforward.  Most of what I consider violations of this are a result of the War on Drugs, and now the War on Terror.

I may expand on these in further posts.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Update to Lynchburg NORML

Several months ago I found out we can't use the name "NORML" until there is an official chapter, so at that point I renamed the group Lynchburg Citizens for Reasonable Marijuana Laws.  It met a few times, at Drowsey Poet in Candler's Mountain shopping center.

It currently has a Facebook page.  I'm putting less effort into this group at the moment, and more effort towards Virginia NORML and my Cannabis 101 presentation.  I'm hoping this, other presentations, and other public events will help give the local group some momentum.