We discussed the hunter-gatherers. We now touch on the agricultural revolution. When the difference between the two becomes great enough, we'll adopt the classical solution: walls.
I think that means we're going backward.
Urban Farming, a Bit Closer to the Sun
By MARIAN BURROS
THIS summer, Tony Tomelden hopes to be making bloody marys at the Pug in Washington, D.C., with tomatoes and chilies grown above the bar, thanks to the city’s incentives for green roofs.
Mr. Tomelden, the Pug’s principal owner, says he’s planting a garden to take advantage of tax subsidies the city offers in his neighborhood if he covers his roof with plants.
“If I can do something in my corner for the environment, that seemed a reasonable thing to do,” he said. “Plus I can save money on the tomatoes.”
There won’t be bloody marys at P.S. 6 on New York’s Upper East Side, but one-third of its roof will be planted with vegetables and herbs next spring for the cafeteria. The school is using about $950,000 in city funds that it has put aside, and parents and alumni are providing almost a half-million dollars more.
“For the children, it’s exciting when you grow something edible,” said the school’s principal, Lauren Fontana.
Aeries are cropping up on America’s skylines, filled with the promise of juicy tomatoes, tiny Alpine strawberries and the heady perfume of basil and lavender. High above the noise and grime of urban streets, gardeners are raising fruits and vegetables. Some are simply finding the joys of backyard gardens several stories up, others are doing it for the environment and some because they know local food sells well.
City dwellers have long cultivated pots of tomatoes on top of their buildings. But farming in the sky is a fairly recent development in the green roof movement, in which owners have been encouraged to replace blacktop with plants, often just carpets of succulents, to cut down on storm runoff, insulate buildings and moderate urban heat.
Delicious
Digg
Reddit
Newsvine
Furl
Google
Yahoo
Not on the roof but related
Last week I saw a documentary that included strong commentary/coverage on a community urban garden project in LA that was thriving until a developer (legally, if not ethically) took the land out from under them. Trailer at the link.
http://www.fiercelight.org/
Short news clip about the 30-day occupation of the urban garden by protesters/activists (not part of the documentary):
http://nl.truveo.com/joan-baez-daryl-hannah-butterfly-hill-seek-to-save/id/963283984
with so many living in food deserts in urban communities
gardens make a lot of sense. some of these churches need to bond together, and get lots from the city and do the gardens.
A round of worm castings for my friends
Now I'm convinced. If Milwaukee can handle this it can happen in... a lot of places.