Sunday, December 11, 2011

Were The Hobbits Right?

Nicholas Pepper
Scientific Revolutions
Final Paper
11-7-11
Were The Hobbits Right?”
Environmental degradation, overpopulation, refugees, narcotics, terrorism, world crime movements, and organized crime are worldwide problems that don't stop at a nation's borders.”
~Warren Christopher~

In the past 100 years we have seen changes in our technology and ways of life beyond the belief of most former cultural forecasters, but far less then some believed as well. When it comes down to it though I would say we only have about ten solid years of development left before we begin tracking backwards and falling into what can be called the great reskilling. Although we have come so far and technology seems to create newer technology every day the natural resources around us are disappearing, and the times are changing dramatically. Both will play a huge roll in the future of our civilization. It is safe to say most of the developments we see will be in an attempt to go as green as possible, and reverse harmful effects we have had on our planet and atmosphere.
As an environmental policy major we spend the majority of time studying current environmental issues, that unfortunately a lot of people seem to know nothing about. Maybe they are just blissfully ignorant t the issues, because they are having no direct effects on people in the U.S. Yet. The biggest crisis we will face will be the lack of oil available to us. You see oil runs on essential a bell curve distribution, referred to as the peak oil theory. Being a generally oil dependent world this is gonna create massive problems in our future as we run out. We will have to find new ways to heat our houses, to power our vehicles, to create oil based paint, even find something new to help produce our clothing. Thats right oil is used in a lot more than we think and is a very viable resource, but its supply is limited and we are nearing that limit available to us.
As we step into the future, due to this oil crisis you will see people all over the world doing what they can in order to generate power and electricity as greenly and sustainably as possible. Gas powered generators will be obsolete at this time and the dangers of nuclear reactors will have been realized. Factories will be closed down to their pollutants and high energy use. I also believe that electro magnetism will be one of the most utilized forms energy. We find all sorts of problems with todays food supply as well with how far it travels and the harmful growth hormones, chemicals and pesticides that most commercial farms utilize. What does all of this mean though, and how are we going to deal with these problems you ask? Well sit right back and we can begin.
Oil being the most threatening issue, and most likely to influence change is our starting point. As oil becomes gradually more and more scarce, and harder to attain every day, oil companies will start running cost benefit analyses on their oil extraction costs, and find that they either need to just stop the extractions and save the money, or raise their prices in order to supplement the raising costs to extract the oil. It isn't hard to guess that of courses the prices will go up before they stop production, as we have clearly already seen happen. The main issues that arises with this is we ship nearly everything we have available to using planes, boats and trucks, that all run on fuel derived from the crude oil we harvest. As the fuel prices rise the cost to ship these things will rise, and therefore the cost to buy them increases. This is the case for everything though, our booth brothers milk, our lettuce, our apples, our electronics, our clothing, all of it.(endoil.org) At this point with the ways the world economy is people aren’t gonna be able to afford the standard costs of living they were formerly accustomed to. The sad part is this is gonna come as a shock to a lot of people, and therefore create panic and therefore a crisis.
As this crisis sets in, most people will be at a loss of what to do and how to handle the issue at hand. Luckily there are already people taking step towards easing into this problem of no oil, by creating proposed solutions such as transition towns, and CSA's or community supported agriculture, and even farmers markets. Even more so though you will see what can be referred to as relocalization, which of course plays into the great reskilling. You see instead of shipping all of these goods people are gonna become more self sufficient and revert to outdated skills such as simple craft work and farming, as you see these things happen you will see them grow in number and eventually find localized shops and food production in every community. Transition towns are probably the best attempt at addressing these problems at hand. “These communities have started up projects in areas of food, transport, energy, education, housing, waste, arts etc. as small-scale local responses to the global challenges of climate change, economic hardship and shrinking supplies of cheap energy. Together, these small-scale responses make up something much bigger, and help show the way forward for governments, business and the rest of us.”(transition.org) This means that things will no longer have to be shipped, and therefore eliminating the cost of delivering all of the products that we can so easily create ourselves therefore cutting down the cost of these goods. This will then create a reverse in price margin, and will draw business away from the large chain companies such as Walmart and Sears, therefore relocalizing our economies and reverting our social system, back to an early twentieth century, late nineteenth century style of living.
CSA's will be the most popular form of farming in the future, because organic CSA's are far more sustainable and eco friendly then major commercial farms, and is an extremely viable why to work the great “reskilling” into the lives of community members involved in the CSA. There are two types of CSA's. CSA is an acronym for both of them. They stand for Crop Share Alliance, and Community Supported Agriculture. Both are great ways of getting organically grown meat and vegetables while supporting your local economy and farmers. In a world that has turned to industrialization and mass production, we need to find ways to limit our use of earths natural resources, for we are running out of them, and CSA's are a great way to take a positive step in the right direction.
You see this type of animal powered agriculture all the time and utilization of CSA's a lot now already, and this is because the technology in the farming industries has become dangerous for and harmful to the environment and our economy. Why go outside of your community and pay the extra money to get the milk or whatever it may be imported. Local economies also suffer greatly from this, because it is common sense that the more we import from other countries the more money that leaves our local economy. In todays day and age it seems as though farms are focusing on growing greater and lager crops, and therefore need chemical aid to keep such large crops healthy, and crops shouldn’t be grown with harmful chemicals and growth hormones that we later ingest. Lastly it is an important skill to know how to cultivate and work with the land around you when it comes down to it people really should learn the skills involved with cultivating land.
Of course though realistically we will never eliminate long distance travel, it is far too appealing, and has been occurring for nearly all of history. Most of this travel in the future though will take place through electro magnetic bullet trains. These trains are able to run off of electricity, which can easily be renewed in a green manner. Whether that strategy be wind energy, solar energy or water turbine energy, the options of green power supply are immense. High-speed Maglev vehicles are lifted off their guideway and thus move more smoothly, quietly and require less maintenance than wheeled mass transit systems – regardless of speed. This non-reliance on friction also means that acceleration and deceleration can far surpass that of existing forms of transport. The power needed for levitation is not a particularly large percentage of the overall energy consumption; most of the power used is needed to overcome air resistance (drag), as with any other high-speed form of transport.
The highest recorded speed of a Maglev train is 581km/h (361mph), achieved in Japan by the CJR's MLX01 superconducting Maglev in 2003,[1] 6km/h (3.7mph) faster than the conventional TGV wheel-rail speed record.” (Wikipedia) That sounds pretty fast and efficient to me.
Heating our homes is another challenge we will face, and there are two viable solutions to addressing this problem of not being able to heat our homes with oil. The two solutions at hand consist of geothermal heating for homes and even larger buildings such as our own Perry Hall, we can also use wood burning stoves, which realistically is still in large use today. “Circulating fireplaces have heat circulation ducts built into the masonry fireplace. These pull air from the room, circulate it around a metal firebox and send it back, warmed, into the room. Some of these units have built-in fans to increase the flow of air and heat. Made of metal, circulating fireplaces warm quickly and cool rapidly once the fire is extinguished.”(Consumerenergycenter.org). Wood stoves are great, because wood is a completely renewable resource, if properly managed. Geothermal is interesting, Geothermal heating is the direct use of geothermal energy for heating applications. Humans have taken advantage of geothermal heat this way since the Paleolithic era. Approximately seventy countries made direct use of a total of 270 PJ of geothermal heating in 2004. As of 2007, 28 GW of geothermal heating capacity is installed around the world, satisfying 0.07% of global primary energy consumption.[1] Thermal efficiency is high since no energy conversion is needed”(Wikipedia)
Don't get me wrong though, this won't be the end of science or development it will just be a small set back, I believe one hundred percent that there will be scientists working daily in their labs and at their homes to develop alternative useable fuel sources. What will be that fuel source? Well in this time you will find that the largest crop that will be produced will be hemp. This will not be for use as a drug though. It is proven that hemp is one of the most useful crops in the world, the fibers can be woven into thread, the oils can be extracted and used for the clothing, in oil burning lamps and even as a fuel source. The fibers can also be used to create paper, and can also be used to smoke for pain and therapeutic reasons. It is one of the most useful crops in the world. Possibly there will be no fuel for our vehicles, or at least very minimal fuel used. Recently they have found ways to defy gravity using magnets and extremely cold temperatures. Perhaps this will be what controls are traveling ability, floating with small amounts of hemp oil fuel to propel the vehicles. This is fairly far off after the recession to simple life though unfortunately.
The communities that we live in will be small tight knit communities where everybody has to pull their weight in order for the community to function and survive. The cities we see today will be largely abandoned and what parts aren't will be slums the factories that were once lived in will be condemned, and share the occupation of varmint, homeless and their decrepit waste. The villages or communities you see people living in will be much like that of hobbit holes that J. R. R.Tolkien tells about in his story “The Hobbit”, and of course in the trilogy “The Lord of the Rings” very minimally invasive and harmful to our environments and surroundings. With lush large farms on the available land above our hobbit hole communities. The farms will be tilled, planted and harvested by human and animal power, once again because the oil will be so scarce that running farm equipment will be out of the question. On top of the hills are home are found in will not only be farms for food, but wind and solar farms as well. These wind and solar farms will be our means of producing electricity for the community. Just as all other communities will have as well. In coastal communities, you may find in a addition to just the solar and wind production, that they will be using tidal turbines as well, and communities on rivers may create dams with internal turbines to create energy. All other forms of energy production will be outdated and no longer utilized.
Wars will still be fought based on religious beliefs in the names of gods nobody has ever witnessed, even though stated in most religious readings, “thou shalt not kill.” Ironic don't you think? Weapons I think will be the only thing that develops with us through time unfortunately. This is the case, because big nations have to remain big, and keep up their “reputations” per say. In fifty years though bullets will be obsolete. And people will shoot lasers and plasma rays. Soldiers will no longer be involved in the fight, but instead be safe behind the screen of a computer where they can control land, air and water droids to fight their battles for them, much like the unmanned aircrafts we have today. This will only create more war though until eventually we learn to live together as a global community and not just belonging to our country of origin.
Renewable energy will become the focus of many people and governments of this time period, renewable energy is cleaner, more healthy for the environment and renewable, so we can't run out of it. The technology used to harvest this power will consist of renewable wind energy, solar energy, and turbine powered generators. Renewable wind energy will be harvested through the means of wind turbines, placed in high wind ares, such as coastlines or atop of our hobbit home hills. Solar energy will be the most utilized form of renewable energy, because it is the most efficient and energy not used as harvested can just be stored on a standard grid power energy source. Last but not least we will utilize turbine powered generators, such as dams on rivers with turbines in them spun by the force of the current, or tidal turbines that spin and generate electricity with tides.
In the end, you find that these ideas are really not too far out there on the spectrum of what could be considered, well outrageous, and sits a bit more on the side of a realist idea. It is true that the earth is heading for a major energy and oil crisis if we don't find an alternate fuel source soon. Oil will be the root cause of the problems we face in the future, and it along with the governments for not addressing the problem will be at fault for the transformation we undergo. It will begin with the raising of oil prices which will then translate to the prices of anything that is shipped, therefore elevating the cost of living. As the cost of living goes up everything will once again become localized. The communities we will live in will be similar to those of the hobbits that J.R.R. Tolkien invented in his books. Renewable energy will be a large focus with great utilization. As pointed out before the only form of technology that won't be affected by the set back will be that of weaponry. I mean I guess maybe it is a little bit “out there” but this truly is the direction I believe the earth is traveling in.







"Fireplaces and Wood Burning Stoves." Consumer Energy Center - Information for the Consumer about Saving Energy from the California Energy Commission. Web. 09 Dec. 2011. <http://www.consumerenergycenter.org/home/heating_cooling/fireplaces.html>.
Website
 The Greenhorns. Web. 05 Dec. 2011. <http://www.thegreenhorns.net/>.
Website
 "Maglev." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Web. 09 Dec. 2011. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maglev>.
Website
 "Use of Oil." Www.endoil.org. Future Circus. Web. 4 Dec. 2011. <http://www.endoil.org/site/c.ddJGKNNnFmG/b.4090055/k.9C17/Uses_of_Oil.htm>.
Website
 "What Is a Transition Initiative? | Transition Network." Welcome | Transition Network. Web. 09 Dec. 2011. <http://www.transitionnetwork.org/support/what-transition-initiative>.

Escape From Suburbia. Dir. Gregory Greene. Perf. Ed Schreyer, Matthew Simmons and Richard Heinberg. IMdB, 2007. DVD.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

CSA's Do it or get lost!

DO YOU WANT TO HELP YOUR LOCAL ECONOMY?

DO YOU WANT TO SUPPORT LOCAL FOOD AND AGRICULTURE?

DO YOU WANT YOUR FOOD TO BE GROWN ORGANICALLY?

DO YOU WANT TO KNOW THE FARM AND FARMER YOUR FOOD COMES FROM?

LETS START A MOVEMENT, AND CHANGE THE WORLD, BECAUSE TOGETHER WE CAN!



JOIN A CSA!


REGRETS LEFT AT THE DOOR.


Remember the five simple rules to be happy:
1. Free your heart from hatred. 
2. Free your mind from worries. 
3. Live simply. 
4. Give more. 
5. Expect less.”
~Jeff Bridges~
Organic CSA's are far more sustainable and eco friendly then major commercial farms, and is an extremely viable why to work the great “reskilling” into the lives of community members involved in the CSA. There are two types of CSA's, and CSA is an acronym for both of them. They stand for Crop Share Alliance, and Community Supported Agriculture. Both are great ways of getting organically grown meat and vegetables while supporting your local economy and farmers. In a world that has turned to industrialization and mass production, we need to find ways to limit our use of earths natural resources, for we are running out of them, and CSA's are a great way to take a positive step in the right direction.
A crop share alliance is a means of farming where a farmer receives payment for his crops local community members, before it as actually ready for harvest. This farmer uses that money to then plant his crops, and once harvesting begins, the people who have invested in the farmers CSA will then begin to receive fresh organically grown produce for a set time in return for their early payment. As with anything there are both downfalls and advantages to having a crop share alliance. We will start with the advantages. This gives people who don’t have enough land to have their own garden have access to to fresh locally grown produce, meat, and dairy. It supports local business,and your ow local economy, just as buying anything local does.You can feel comfortable about what you are consuming, because you know where your food is coming from and can see that it is grown organically, with out any harmful pesticides or herbicides or fungicides.Also many people hold full time jobs, and this limits there ability to tend to a garden, and so they can still have organic locally grown food available to them through these great organizations. Although there are all of these great benefits, just as anything there comes downfalls. Although the benefits outweigh the downfalls it is important to know both sides. The most significant downfall would most likely be that people don't learn the subsistence farming skills themselves, and still remain dependent upon an outside source for the supply of their produce and meats and such. Also, we unfortunately have to keep in mind that these are still generally large farms, and because of that it is important to keep in mind the amount of machinery needed to produce large crops. Finally it truly really does just create a lot of work for a single farmer and maybe a few farm hands.
Of course the other type of CSA as afore mentioned, is community supported agriculture, sometime referred to as community gardens. Community gardens are where people pay for a small area of land on a large plot, and do their own farming and can grow whatever they wish. This is beneficial in many ways. This includes, people who don’t have their own land to grow on now have a place to grow whatever they wish, this of course is a similar benefit to that stated about crop share alliances, accept there are no limits, beside of course laws and climate to the different things you can grow, and you get to choose. The most important benefit is hands down is that the people learn the skills for themselves. Social interaction, is also another key benefit from community gardens, because people can trade plants, vegetables, herbs and what not. They can learn from each other and even make new friendships. The most comforting benefit is probably just that you know first hand what was used in the growing process, and because of that you know you have truly organic produce and plants. It once again also is a way to boost your local economy because its not imported. Due to the fact that it doesn't travel and you harvest it when ready, your plants and food are as fresh as possible. Of course though there are downfalls, there are not many, but they do exist. The first is you have to have time to tend to the garden, so a person who works a lot may not be able to pay the garden enough attention and have a poor or unhealthy crop for that reason. The other downfall is the limit of space, because the plots are not usually very large.
CSA's have the ability to produce a multiplicity of goods from meat to dairy products to fruits and vegetables. Beef, chicken and any other meats they may produce, such as pork, all organically and grass fed, if they choose to do so, can be made available as well if the farmer so chooses to tend livestock. Dairy products from milk cows, such as fresh non hormonal milk and cheese, are another great venture to dabble in, and also not just raise animals for slaughter. You could do the same with eggs from chickens. They also have the ability if they own livestock to produce their own fertilizer from the manure of their livestock, therefore making them in just one more way a little bit sustainable.
Last but not least of course are crops, such as: corn, cucumbers, lettuce, tomatoes, potatoes, green beans, etc.
Why is this important though, your asking yourself. I offer the afore listed reasons as to why CSA's are beneficial, and many more. One of the most prevalent problems with commercially farm grown fruits and vegetables is as the price of oil goes up so does the cost of all of these things we can produce right in our community. These prices go up, not because it is harder to attain but instead because it costs more to ship. So Why go outside of your community and pay the extra money to get the milk or whatever it may be imported. Local economies also suffer greatly from this, because it is common sense that the more we import from other countries the more money that leaves our local economy. In todays day and age it seems as though farms are focusing on growing greater and lager crops, and therefore need chemical aid to keep such large crops healthy, and crops shouldn’t be grown with harmful chemicals and growth hormones that we later ingest. Lastly it is an important skill to know how to cultivate and work with the land around you when it comes down to it people really should learn the skills involved with cultivating land.
In our class we watched the film escape from suburbia, there was a part in the film where the interviewed the owners of a local California CSA, and its members. The most prevalent and impressive part of this CSA, where the kindness and relationships it created in what really seemed like not so great a part of California. Towards the end of the film the CSA was destroyed, and many of its members protested and gathered to show there discontent with its destruction, these people really do become just as much a part of the CSA as it is a part of them. The most distinct part of the film “Green Horns” for me was when they were talking to one of the farming families, and he discussed how no actual farmer that works in the fields, really want to produce massive commercialized crops, because it really such a great amount of work for one single human being. It just makes more sense to have smaller more localized farms available where the work load is divided amongst multiple farms in an area. According to the book “The Future of Life”, the world has a a capacity limit generally measured in food available to population, in the book they used grain. The annual grain harvest yields about 2 billion tons annually. That is enough to feed approximately, 10 billion east Indians, but only about 2.5 billion Americas. As other countries grow to the level of consumption we have as we see trending across the world, we can adjust the lack of supplies, by coming more self sufficient and sustainable, including doing things like supporting local agriculture.
As brought up in the book “Living With Your Land,” in the section called First Steps For the Individual,farming is not only a way to become more self sustainable, but can also be used as a way to protect your land. For instance, “he can plant wheat, rye, or rye grass to hold the top soil: can protect sloping tracts by planting or retaining vegetation.” Also, as mentioned in our text book, “industrialized food production requires huge inputs of energy,” we can reduce the input of energy making smaller more prevalent farms that require less energy to run and uses far less machinery, or is a form of “traditional subsistence agriculture”, or “traditional intensive agriculture,” which both rely on the use of draft-animals instead of fossil fuel burning farm machines. As talked about in the book Frontiers in Agricultural Research: Food, Health, Environment, and Communities, over the past three decades there have been a lot of changes to the food and agriculture industries, and the demands placed on the agriculture based industries need to find find new innovative solutions, and I believe a CSA is just that.
Steps are being taken everyday across the world for farmers to switch to more organic and more sustainable means of farming. We find not only in our own country these efforts but efforts expanding into other countries, such as the efforts going on in Thrissur now. According to an article from City Journal their lands have been devastated by the use of harmful farm aiding chemicals. We also find many efforts here in the U.S. as well. There are already multiple bans on certain harmful pesticides and fungicides and other chemicals farmers have used with more going into place. There is also a new billy in place to make some changes to the recent 2008 Farm Bill, that was put in place to grant financial aid to farmers in need. We also much more of a prevalence of people seeking to use CSA's, and farmers, and young new developing farmers turning to CSA's to provide for their livelihood.
There are many cool things that farmers can do with their CSA's or really any farm when it comes down to it. Although it makes work much more difficult, animal power is a great way to reduce your emissions and uses of fossil fuels by eliminating the use of large bulky far equipment that is harmful the environment. You can also extend educational benefits greatly by offering summer or 4h camps for the next generation to learn the valuable skills of working the land. A crop share alliance could also run the possibility of delivering their goods, and running their delivery trucks off of corn ethanol fuel. Farms are generally very open areas in order for lots of sunlight and water to get for them, and that leaves lots of room for self sustainable renewable energy systems, such as solar panels and wind mills.
In the end new CSA's are popping up all over the country and for the right reasons, such as Gator CSA run by Anna Prizzia who says “We started Gator CSA in an effort to provide the community with better access to local produce,” according to the Gainesville Sun. Whats even better to hear though is that this isn't only possible here in America, Thrissur is taking many steps to making their entire state only organic farming due to the harm of certain chemical agents, according to a City Journal article. Steps are being taken even within our government to help these farmers remain in business, and a new bill has just been presented in Congress, that will address some problems in the 2008 farm bill, according to (Enewspf.com). As you can organic sustainable farming through CSA's have substantial benefits, including lighter work loads, stronger local economy, organically grown food with out harmful use of chemicals, like many U.S. Farmers and even farmers in Thrissur are working on moving away from. I can't sit here and say That CSA's are the solution to all of our problems, but what I sure can tell you is they are a step in the right direction. 

By: Nicholas Pepper

Bibliography:

Frontiers in Agricultural Research: Food, Health, Environment, and Communities. Washington, D.C.: National Academies, 2003. Print.
Miller, G. Tyler, and Scott Spoolman. Living in the Environment. [Pacific Grove, Calif.?]: Brooks/Cole Cengage Learning, 2012. Print.
Escape From Suburbia. Dir. Gregory Greene. Perf. Ed Schreyer, Matthew Simmons and Richard Heinberg. IMdB, 2007. DVD.
De Los Santos, Elise. "Fresh and Sustainable." Gainesville Sun. 5 Nov. 2011. Web. 5 Nov. 2011. <http://www.gainesville.com/article/20111105/ARTICLES/111109743/-1/news?Title=Fresh-and-sustainable>.
Vosburgh, John R. Living with Your Land; a Guide to Conservation for the City's Fringe,. [Bloomfield Hills, Mich.]: Cranbrook Institute of Science, 1968. Print
Wilson, Edward O. The Future of Life. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2002. Print.
"Community-supported Agriculture." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Web. 04 Nov. 2011. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_Supported_Agriculture>.
"'Organic Farming Crucial to People's Safety'" CityJournal.in. Web. 04 Nov. 2011. <http://www.cityjournal.in/Newspaper/20111105/Metro/Metro_3.html>.
"Legislation Introduced In Congress To Support Local And Organic Food." Enewspf.com. 2006. Web. 03 Nov. 2011. <http://www.enewspf.com/latest-news/science-a-environmental/28536-legislation-introduced-in-congress-to-support-local-and-organic-food.html>.
The Greenhorns. Web. 05 Dec. 2011. <http://www.thegreenhorns.net/>.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

CSA yes sir!

 CSA
  • 2 Types:
    • Crop Share Alliance:
      • The farmer does all the work, but gets paid ahead of time by customers who receive shares of the crops in return
        • Benefits:
          • People who don’t have enough land to have their own Garden have access to to fresh locally grown produce, meat, and dairy.
          • It supports local business.
          • You know where your food is coming from and can see that it is grown organically, with out any harmful pesticides or herbicides or fungicides.
          • It helps the local economy as well.
          • Also people who may work a lot and don't have time to tend to a garden.
        • Downfalls:
          • people don't learn the subsistence skills themselves.
          • The amount of machinery needed to produce large crops.
          • A lot of work for a single farmer and maybe a few farm hands.
        • Things they can produce:
          • Beef, chicken and any other meets they may produce, such as pork, all organically and grass fed.
          • Dairy products from milk cows, such as fresh non hormonal milk and cheese.
          • Eggs from chickens
          • Their own fertilizer from the manure of their livestock.
          • And of course crops, such as: corn, cucumbers, lettuce, tomatoes, potatoes, green beans, etc.
    • Community Supported Agriculture:
      • Also sometimes called community gardens are where people pay for a small area of land on a large plot, and do their own farming and can grow what they wish.
        • Benefits:
          • People who don’t have their own land to grow on now have a place.
          • People learn the skills for themselves.
          • The people can get what they want.
          • Social interaction
          • Education from others.
          • You know first hand what was used in the growing process.
          • Its fresh and not imported.
        • Down falls:
          • you have to have time to tend to the garden.
          • Limit of space.
        • Things they can produce:
          • Whichever flowers, vegetables, fruits, medicinal plants you choose to grow in your section.
          • The owner of the land may also have animals that they gather sellable goods from and offer for sale to community members.
  • Why CSA's are important:
    • As the price of oil goes up so does the cost of all of these things we can produce right in our community.
    • The more we import from other countries the more money that leaves our local economy.
    • Crops shouldn’t be grown with harmful chemicals and growth hormones.
    • People should learn the skills involved with cultivating land.
  • Other cool things you can do with CSA's:
    • Animal Power
    • Educational summer camps
    • Delivery
    • self sustainable renewable energy systems.


Appeal to my audiences using, a blog and bumper stickers.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

CSA Crop Share America

My research topic is CSA's
 The farm I worked on this summer.


 A CSA is a crop share alliance or community supported agriculture.  In my research paper i will look at the types pf areas these farms tend to pop up in, and also what they sell at or supply from the farm.  i will look at how they have caught on a great amount recently and why that may be.  I would also like to peak into whether or not this really is the future of farming, and how long it will last.  All in all I myself am interested in starting a CSA of my own, and can not wait to look further into the subject and learn more about it.

I would like my audience to consist of ordinary people in the U.S. and other farmers.  I would like to reach them through means of a blog, Crop Share America, and perhaps a you tube video.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Welcome to my mind!

Me and my girlfriend Cynthia

My name is Nick Pepper, I am from Winchendon Massachusetts, and I love the outdoors.  coming from a small woodsy town like mine, you find a lot to do outside.  I personally prefer skiing, fishing, hunting, and mountain biking. I love country music, but I am open to other types as well. I spend a lot of time with my friends and love going to my lake house in Vermont during the summer and cruising around Lake Willoughby There is not much else I love in this world more then the stars.  I hope to someday be successful and live a quiet simple life with a family. I also aspire to someday own my own brewing company.  For right now though I will just keep working at The Red Apple Farm.


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 Craig Morgan "Redneck Yacht Club" courtesy of Youtube.com