Feeding
Our Future
by Michael Ableman
Thinking Outside the Lunchbox, Center
for Ecoliteracy
Lunchtime at Goleta Valley Junior High
starts at 12:07. Within 28 minutes, 700
students have to be "fed" before returning
to classes. The scene is pandemonium.
Students are either standing in lines,
clustered in small bands, or racing around
as if lost. The lunch tables are folded
and stacked with their accompanying chairs;
students eat outside while standing up
(a food fight a couple years ago resulted
in the administration's removing any
opportunity for students to sit down
and eat together).
The cool stainless tubular slides that
once carried plastic trays of hot food
dished out by hair-netted women in starched
white uniforms remain. But no milk machines
squirt columns of regular or chocolate
milk; no bottom-heated tables keep mashed
potatoes or lasagna warm; no fishcakes
wait in stacks; no coleslaw sits at the
ready; no clam chowder simmers, ready
to be ladled into waiting bowls.
The heating table's large pans are now
filled with prepackaged barbecued beef
sandwiches and cheeseburgers prepared
at anonymous kitchens, miles away, with
ingredients from U.S. government commodities
programs. On the wall a faded sign reads, "Fruits
and vegetables are always in season.
Whether they're fresh, frozen, canned,
or dried, they all count." The cardboard "No
pizza today" sign brings audible sighs
of disappointment.
A salad bar graces one corner of the
room, laden with shredded iceberg lettuce,
grated cheese, pickles, peppers, yogurt,
granola, peanuts, and apple and orange
pieces. Another station is stacked with
Italian subs, ham sandwiches, and celery
pieces with containers of peanut butter.
With a pair of plastic tongs, the lady
in charge of the salad bar makes a futile
attempt to conceal the brown lettuce
leaves. She asks if I'm an inspector,
then apologizes for the condition of
the lettuce. She tells me that it's the
last day before the break and that they're
trying to "get rid of" the old product.
The longest lines of students lead to
two wire mesh-covered windows outside
the building, where attendants dispense
nachos - orange gooey imitation cheese
squirted from a machine onto chips. Every
purchased item is placed in a thick cardboard
tray. I watch as students pay for their
food, then immediately toss the trays,
foil wrappers, napkins, and cans into
rapidly filling trash barrels.
Just a few blocks away, in the fertile
fields of Fairview Gardens, a small community
farm, long rows of asparagus poke their
heads out of sandy soil, crimson strawberries
dot a nearby field, and multicolored
lettuces stand up straight and tall.
Peach, plum, apricot, and nectarine trees
have just shed their pink and white flower
petals, revealing branches loaded with
small fruit. In neighboring fields, the
last of the mandarin oranges hang like
orange beacons, and the first avocados
cluster from huge grandfather trees in
the "cathedral" orchard that dominates
the land.
The farm is often referred to as "the
little farm that could" for its unprecedented
diversity of products and as a model
of urban agriculture and public education.
It has operated since 1895, holding out
against the tide of development, withstanding
a range of threats to its existence,
and now permanently preserved under an
agricultural conservation easement.
In the large field along Fairview Avenue,
the main thoroughfare used by most students
going to and from the school, carrots,
beets, spinach, onions, broccoli, artichokes,
and snap and English peas provide food
for the burgeoning suburban population
that now inhabits this once agricultural
valley. In the surrounding neighborhood,
fields containing some of the richest
and deepest topsoil on the West Coast
now yield housing developments, shopping
centers, and clogged roadways.
It takes about 10 minutes to walk from
Goleta Valley Junior High to Fairview
Gardens farm, about four minutes by bicycle,
and about one minute by car. This stunning
twelve-and-a-half-acre outdoor classroom
is open to the public. Thousands of people
come each year to enjoy a different kind
of educational experience, starting with
soil and moving through a range of food
crops and animals.
Hundreds of students from the school
have toured the farm. The farm helped
the school to start a garden and has
done assembly presentations about food
and farming. But while those experiences
are well received, the ideas and inspiration
they engender stop at the cafeteria door.
As founder and executive director of
the Center for Urban Agriculture at Fairview
Gardens, I've tried to interest the school
in replacing some of the highly processed,
distantly grown items that its cafeteria
serves. I've offered the alternative
of fresh, organic food grown by the school's
neighbor down the street, but have never
been able to generate interest.
Recently, the school district spent
$150,000 on a computer system to manage
the inflow of anonymous food from distant
sources. But it doesn't require a computer
to figure out that young people need
whole food - food that tastes better
because it's grown in living soil and
harvested locally, food that makes clear
the relationship between human health
and the health of the Earth. It doesn't
require a computer to tell us that by
feeding young people the best, not just
the cheapest, we are in effect feeding
and nourishing our own future.
Why shouldn't students be eating the
sweet French carrots, the Clementine
mandarins, the year-round salad greens,
the radishes and beets and avocados that
grow so near the school? How difficult
would it be to replace nachos with real
corn on the cob? How much more time and
expense would be required to serve farm-fresh
eggs, or ripe strawberries, or bean or
vegetable soups and stew produced with
real local ingredients? How difficult
would it be to spend less on hardware
and more on providing professional development
so that cafeteria staff can help students
make connections between the food they
eat and the farms where it's grown?
Imagine if students could plant, harvest,
and cultivate the very foods that later
appear in their lunch at the cafeteria.
Shouldn't all 700 students at Goleta
Valley Junior High be required, as part
of their education, to develop a relationship
with the farm in order to understand
the connections between soil life and
their own life - between taste and health?
For more than twenty years I have hosted
local students on the farm, walking and
grazing from the fields with them, allowing
them to settle into a different rhythm
for an hour or two. I always take a few
moments to get to know them, to ask a
few simple questions before we begin;
How many of you live on farms, how many
have ever visited one, what did you eat
for breakfast? Over the years I have
seen a dramatic shift in young people's
responses and in their relationship to
food and the land.
It used to be that a handful in every
group lived on farms; most had at least
visited one. Their breakfast might have
included an egg or a piece of fruit or
bread, or even some whole grain. Now
it is rare to find a kid who lives on
a farm, or has even visited one. Many
have not had breakfast, and those who
have often tell me that it consisted
of a granola bar, a corn dog, or even
a can of Coke.
It is not just kids' answers that tell
me that something has changed. When young
people come to the farm, I look at each
of them, study them the way I do the
farm's soil and plants and trees, try
to get a feel for how they are doing.
These days, many are overweight; they
seem to lack focus and have difficulty
being still. Our task with our young
visitors is different now, our goals
very basic. We want to provide them with
something real to eat - a fresh carrot
or strawberry - and an hour or two outside
of the walls of the classroom, a chance
to slow down and an opportunity to touch
the Earth for just one moment and to
be calmed and settled by it. Change,
I have to remind myself, comes slowly
and incrementally.
Michael Ableman is a farmer, educator,
and founder of the Center for Urban
Agriculture at Fairview Gardens, based
on one of the oldest organic farms
in California. He is the author of "On
Good Land" (Chronicle Books, 1998).
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