Urban gardens can improve economic, environmental and personal health
December 2, 2008
University Park, Pa. — Do you ever look at the labels on your groceries to see where they come from? Notice how many items come from overseas? Wonder how much time, money and energy it takes to get them onto the shelf in your local grocery store?
If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, you’re not alone. In this age of highly publicized food contaminations, energy anxieties, and global warming, concerns about where and how our groceries are produced and distributed are emerging worldwide. “The Urban Side of Green” is a series of online videos produced by Penn State Outreach that discuss the benefits of greening up city landscapes. Part one, featuring an interview with Penn State’s Dorothy Blair, can be found at http://www.youtube.com/user/pennstateoutreach.
Blair, an assistant professor of nutrition, is a longtime advocate of eating locally — a lifestyle sometimes described as “localvore.” Blair has been studying and teaching about global food production system for 30 years. While serving in the Peace Corps early in her career, she said she saw firsthand how the global food production system perpetuated poverty, funneling money away from the people producing food, and into the coffers of distant conglomerates. Later, through her academic research, she was able to pinpoint “fatal flaws” that would render that system ecologically unsustainable.
In contrast, “if you’re producing food in a urban area, it’s very diversified — many producers on tiny plots,” Blair pointed out. “It’s very energy-efficient, and you have people eating food that is good for them—extremely fresh—with the kind of nutrients they might find difficult to obtain because of their low budget. And you have people locally making money.”
"People do not realize what an amazing amount of food comes out of urban areas,” explained Blair. As a pioneer in the Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) movement in Central Pennsylvania in the late 80s, Blair personally experienced how productive a small plot can be. “On three acres of cultivated land, we were able to feed 30 families,” she said.
Blair sees three main benefits to city farms and gardens:
To learn more about Blair’s research, visit http://www.personal.psu.edu/ey6/.
To view the interview with Blair featured in Part 1 of “The Urban Side of Green,” visit http://www.youtube.com/user/pennstateoutreach.
Penn State Outreach the largest unified outreach organization in American higher education. Penn State Outreach serves more than 5 million people each year, delivering more than 2,000 programs to people in all 67 Pennsylvania counties, all 50 states and 80 countries worldwide.
Contact
Cole Hons
Email:cmh103@psu.edu
http://live.psu.edu/outreach
814-865-7600