Category: News Alert

Back Yard Farmers

Anders Gurda hops off his bike at various backyards in Minneapolis, grabs his garden tools and starts weeding.

When he’s done checking for garden pests, adjusting the irrigation system and harvesting the vegetables (which he puts in the home’s refrigerator or cooler), he cycles to his next plot and starts over.

He’s an urban backyard farmer, one of a growing breed throughout the country thanks to programs like Minnesota’s Backyard Harvest.

”It’s like having a CSA (community-supported agriculture program) in your own backyard, and you’re supporting a farmer without a farm,” Gurda said.

The goal of Backyard Harvest, said coordinator Krista Leraas, is to encourage the growing of local foods. The group, under the nonprofit umbrella organization Permaculture Research Institute, is in its second year. Although it is rare in operating as a nonprofit, dozens of programs with similar missions have sprung up around the country and worldwide.

In Portland, Ore., a group called Your Backyard Farmer began in 2006 when Donna Smith and Robyn Streeter were growing weary of driving through the city’s outskirts looking for affordable land to farm. The thought struck them: ”Why aren’t we bringing food to the people?”

They drove back to the city and printed out flyers advertising their farming services in urban neighborhoods. By the time they got home, they had 11 messages inquiring about Your Backyard Farmer. That’s the most advertising they’ve ever had to do.

Fast-forward four years: Your Backyard Farmer is thriving with 58 backyard farms – and a waiting list for 2011.

At least 27 other programs around the country and 15 abroad have consulted with Smith and Streeter.

People love the program for its convenience, the food’s freshness and the ability to customize, Smith said.

”People could choose what they wanted – every single farm is different,” Smith said. ”Typical yards include tomatoes, peppers, eggplants, and people thought it was pretty cool to have those in your own yard. Then everybody started going, I’ll try arugula or radicchio. We have 42 vegetables, and they can choose them all or just a few. If you don’t like it we’ll pull it out of the ground.”

In many backyard-farming programs, homeowners can choose from a wide variety of vegetables and fruits, and can choose full service (a farmer plants, maintains and harvests the garden) or a consulting service (the farmer teaches the homeowner how to maintain the garden so the homeowner can take over the next year). Farmers may also give advice on how to use, cook and store the produce.

Prices depend on the growing season and the square footage. In Minneapolis, prices average around $1,250 for the season, or about $11-$13 per square foot, and in Portland, prices start at $1,675 per season. Services are often available only in certain neighborhoods to reduce the farmers’ commutes.

The programs often focus on sustainability and organic foods. The ultimate goal, said Leraas, is to create urban homesteads where people raise chickens, reuse rainwater and keep honeybees, for example, in addition to gardening.

A Heat Wave Will Engulf Pennsylvania

A heat wave will engulf Pennsylvania for the rest of the week.

National Weather Service forecasters say a large ridge of high pressure parked over the central Appalachians will provide the state with mostly clear and hot weather for the next couple of days.

Heat advisories are in effect for the southeastern third of the state. Heat indexes – the feel-like temperature of the air based on temperature and humidity – are forecast to range from 100-104 degrees.

An air quality alert is in effect for Allegheny, Butler, Beaver, Armstrong, Washington, Westomoreland and Fayette counties. The state Department of Environmental Protection says ozone levels will rise and air quality will stagnate.
There are some things residents can do to minimize their risk of succumbing to excessive heat and humidity.

  • Stay out of the direct rays of the sun and seek shelter in the coolest place available. An air-conditioned building is preferable. Most shopping malls and theaters have air conditioning.
  • Dress in lightweight and light colored clothing and avoid strenuous activities.
  •  Drink plenty of water or other nonalcoholic drinks and avoid alcoholic beverages.
  • Eat less or eat lightly. Food consumption increases metabolic heat production and increases water loss in the body.
  • Do not take salt tablets unless a physician specifies it. Those on salt restrictive diets should consult their physician before increasing salt intake.
  • Look after family, friends and neighbors. Those are most susceptible to heat reactions include elderly senior citizens,. infants and small children, chronic invalids, those on certain medications – especially tranquilizers and anticholinergics – and people with weight and alcohol problems.

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Amsterdam, N.Y 84 Year Old Man Killed by Lawn Mower.

Associated Press – June 24, 2010 7:15 AM ET

AMSTERDAM, N.Y. (AP) – Police say an 81-year-old Mohawk Valley man was killed when the mower he was riding overturned, tumbled down a 35-foot ravine and landed on top of him.

Police in Amsterdam say William Kryzs (Kriss) apparently came too close to the edge of his lawn and the mower overturned.

Kryzs was found by his son, who called 911.

Amsterdam is about 30 miles west of Albany.

Tryone, PA – Resident Honored for Farmland Preservation Work

Karen Morrow of Tyrone Pennsylvania was honored with the Farmland Preservation Local Heroes award by the American Farmland Trust.

Karen Morrow is the first receipiant of this award, and has been awarded for her efforts to protect farms and natural resources in the blair county area.

Marrow and her husband, John, own two farms in the sinking valley area.