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bread loaf writers conference

Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference

The same day as my second child Hazel’s birth (May 24th!), I received word in the mail that I was selected as a contributor in non-fiction to the 2015 Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference at Middlebury College in Vermont. This is a big deal for me as an “emerging” writer and also a challenge: it is expensive to attend this conference.

209.

Before Hazel came, my partner Kristin and I decided that I would take a full 8 weeks of unpaid parental leave from my job. We planned for it, but we knew it would be close financially. Now the opportunity to attend Bread Loaf has come along. I may not get this chance again since it is hard to get accepted into the conference. I consider myself very lucky but also know that I put in the work to make it this far.

The total amount to attend the 10-day conference (costs for travel, room, board, and tuition) is $3,500. It is steep, yes, but not unthinkable and I am halfway there with a couple of weeks to go. The conference runs from August 12 to August 22. We have time to do this!

What I would get at Bread Loaf is access to editors and literary agents – one-on-one – plus workshops, readings, and networking with established writers. If I’m going to advance as a writer myself, I need to take this opportunity. When I look at the bios of many of the writers I admire, Bread Loaf is almost always listed prominently.

Here is my plea: help me attend this conference! This is not rewards based crowd funding, but everyone that contributes will get something in the mail from me.

I have set the funding deadline for July 1st when payment and a manuscript is due. Anything helps, even just a dollar and a shout out on social media. Here is the link again: http://www.gofundme.com/tracetobreadloaf

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new writing subscription

New writing subscription

I am hoping to take advantage of a new model of patronage and encourage subscriptions to my writing.

For $12 per year – Based on a unique writing prompt that you send me each month, you receive a 100 word written piece emailed to you. You also get access to a private blog for supporters.

For $27 per year – You get 100 words written to you each month, in the mail, based on a prompt that you send me each month. You also get a copy of Quitter #9 (two months after starting your subscription) and access to a private blog for supporters.

For $60 per year – You get 200 words written to you each month, in the mail, based on a prompt that you send me each month. You also get a copy of Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying (two months after starting your subscription) and access to a private blog for supporters.

For $120 per year – This is the big one, the support level that means you believe in the potential of my writing and are willing to really get behind it. You receive every zine I release as soon as it is finished, 400 words written to you each month, in the mail, based on a prompt that you send me each month. You also get copies of Lasterday #1 through #4, Quitters Good Luck Not Dying through #9 (two months after starting your subscription) and access to a private blog for supporters PLUS access to audio recordings of each reading I do (at bookstores, info-shops, house shows, sitting in my family room talking to myself). If there is another project I take on, you get access to it. This is a subscription to my creative kinetic energy.

From my new Patreon page:

For the past ten years, I have written a zine named Quitter, a quarter page, self-published and mostly self-distributed work of creative non-fiction. Each issue is based on several “memoir vignettes” that expand around a theme. The current issue (Quitter #9) consists of two stories about breaking up. The first is about the divorce of my parents and the second about a severed land deed.

I am currently working on a memoir, Carrying Capacity. Carrying Capacity is a book of essays about ancestral lore, recovery from depression and substance abuse, and the disintegration of generational memory in the absence of physical evidence. What I intend to say with this book is that all of our personal histories are largely mythologies built more upon omission than anything else.

I was awarded a 2015 Ella Fountain Pratt Emerging Artists Award in Literature from the Durham Arts Council. This financial award will be used for a reading tour of North Carolina. In December of 2014 I received my Certificate in Documentary Arts in Non-fiction Writing from the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, a culmination of three years of work.

I write about personal mythology, the histories we create from our own background that are true to us but maybe not to others, and I want to share this with as many people as I can.

Praise for Trace’s writing:

“The new issue of Quitter [#9] is a quiet, deep-moving river of personal history, ideas, and true things told in a way that feels right and grounded. Trace’s best work yet shows him moving through time–boyhood to youth, pre-memory to adulthood. We find ourselves in horse pastures and wintery fields, anarchist farms and downtown coffeehouses. Outstandingly well-written, all of it. As his work continues to get better each issue, we stand solid in our belief that Trace Ramsey is a major talent destined to write things that last.”

“Trace Ramsey’s new zine series, Lasterday, is a graceful, deliberate, engaging piece of American storytelling. Over the course of these four minis, Trace writes about cabin life and depressive episodes, the lying inherent in stories and lost things that are not truly lost. Beautifully written and presented (each zine folds out into a poster), these tiny documents are something you’ll keep in your stacks forever. Recommended for fans of Joan Didion, Juliet Escoria, Harper Lee, and Thomas Wolfe.”

Quitter #7 is a hard and devastating piece of personal American history. Through abuse and poverty, blood and snow, we see Quitter author Trace Ramsey giving us something true and painful and beautifully-told. A Pioneers Press favorite, we look forward to future work from Ramsey, a great and powerful new voice in American writing. We can’t vouch enough for this. Buy this zine. It’s well worth your time. One of the best zines of the year, hands down.”

Quitter #8 is a quiet, elegant look at passing storms and coming sadness. In a lean and beautifully-written voice akin to Willa Cather (but all his own), Trace Ramsey shows us a tangled kind of life–deep-burrowed hurt, love and belief in (and need for) good creatures, a tinge of wildness in city blocks. A zine about depression and children and childhood and dreams, the eighth issue of Quitter (though brief) is one of the most substantial pieces of literary work in the Pioneers Press catalog.”

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Trace Ramsey

ella fountain pratt emerging artists award

Ella Fountain Pratt Emerging Artists Award

I found out last month that I was awarded an Ella Fountain Pratt Emerging Artists Award in Literature. The award consists of a cash grant for a specific project that is meant to boost and advance the artist’s career. I wrote my grant to fund a reading tour of North Carolina. I will read from previously published material as well as from a work-in-progress memoir called Carrying Capacity.

Trace RamseySo far I have five readings scheduled:

Wilmington, NC – Old Books on Front St.
February 28th, 4:00 pm

Durham, NC – The Regulator Bookshop
March 5th, 7:00 pm

Greensboro, NC – Scuppernong Books
March 6th, 7:00 pm

Carrboro, NC – Internationalist Books
with Emma Anitclimax
March 26th, 7:00 pm

Raleigh, NC – So and So Books
April 10th, 7:00 pm

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out now good luck not dying book and buttons

Out now! Good Luck Not Dying book and buttons

Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying started shipping on Tuesday. You can buy the book as well as buttons over at Pioneers Press.

Praise for Quitter:

“Truthful and devastating, Trace Ramsey’s Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying is a burning coal and a lighthouse, a haunted past and an open door. This brutal, elegant little book will shake your floorboards and rafters until the whole place comes crashing down.” –Do-It-Yourself Guide to Fighting the Big Motherfuckin’ Sad author Adam Gnade on Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying

“This is the sort of zine, the sort of writing that smacks you in the face. These stories will hollow you out. I’d compare Trace’s style a bit to Flannery O’Connor’s, in that neither one of them romanticizes anything, softens anything, and their takes on life are completely unsentimental.” -Rust Belt Jessie on Quitter #7

“It’s been awhile since I have read such a well-written zine. Reading Quitter #7 was a real breath of fresh air. I appreciate most zines, but I find myself reading them once then storing them away. Not this one, though. As soon as I finished it I wanted to start it again. So good. Do yourself a favor, pick up a copy of Quitter today.” -Dakota Floyd on Quitter #7

“This is a good-looking zine, a class act.” -Lily Pepper on Quitter #7

“The subject matter is intimate and stark. With precision word-smithing, Trace ventures into parts of the emotional landscape we normally avoid, and engages us by tapping the common well of humanity with an unflinching examination of his personal experience. Inspirational.” –Zine World on Quitter #4

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Assembly and stapling of Birds Birds Birds.

tennessee has her own zine

Tennessee has her own zine

Tennessee put together her own zine that will be available through Pioneers Press and also via mail order directly from Ten. Send me a message or leave a comment to get our address. We are all excited about the release of Birds Birds Birds!

Assembly and stapling of Birds Birds Birds.

Zinester.

Finished product. #birdsbirdsbirds

Tennessee was inspired after receiving another kid’s zine, Liam’s Big Diamond.

120. Catching up on the news.

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with their partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012 and baby Hazel in May 2015.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

This entry was posted in biographical, books, Pioneers Press, Quitter, tennessee. Bookmark the permalink.

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pioneers press re releases quitter good luck not dying

Pioneers Press re-releases Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying

Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying is experiencing a re-birth through the publisher and distributor Pioneers Press. Pioneers will also publish my first full length book next year, which I am very excited about.

Pioneers Press’ next published title is up for pre-sale! This book ships October 1st. Pioneers Press is proud to announce our next published title, Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying, a pocket-size book collection of Trace Ramsey’s excellent Quitter zine. What do you do when you realize the whole system is chock full of faulty wiring and institutionalized myths? Do you stay behind that desk (whether metaphorical or literal) and burrow into the security of “living in the first world” or do you throw yourself into the wilds? Sometimes it’s not so black and white, and sometimes “cutting ties” requires a privilege and skill-set we don’t have.

In this anthology of Quitter issues 1-6, we see Ramsey battling fear and freedom, history and an uncertain future. There are no hard and fast answers; nothing set in stone besides the guarantee of chaos and troubled waters ahead. Over the course of 64 pages, Trace struggles through life, winning and failing, looking for a better path but not always finding it.

A deeply honest narrative on struggling to break the binds that hold us down, Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying is a devastating, thrilling read; a beautifully written examination of the frustrations and pitfalls of life in

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pioneers press distro

Pioneers Press Distro

I’m really excited to say that Pioneers Press now distributes Quitter #7. They wrote a short review that makes me blush a bit every time I read it:

Quitter #7 is a hard and devastating piece of personal American history. Through abuse and poverty, blood and snow, we see Quitter author Trace Ramsey giving us something true and painful and beautifully-told. A Pioneers Press favorite, we look forward to future work from Ramsey, a great and powerful new voice in American writing. We can’t vouch enough for this. Buy this zine. It’s well worth your time. One of the best zines of the year, hands down.

Pioneers Press is also getting ready to re-release my book Good Luck Not Dying! Please support this amazing distro.

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bronto!

to the owls

To the owls

It is unbelievable how I can choose to ignore certain tasks, how I can become so forgetful of the things I used to take so much time to develop. I don’t offer any sort of excuse for not posting to Cricket Bread. I have just been busy with other things. Watching Tennessee become “more” – developing language, durability, expressions of gratitude and the beginnings of an understanding of context – is an amazing process that I document daily.

This kid is FUN:

bronto!

Ten and Momma

owl cape

Owly!

*******

A short review of Quitter #7 on Xerography Debt. You should buy a copy!

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ten and the pigs

Ten and the pigs

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

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the weight of the future

the weight of the future

Tennessee will be six months old next week. That fact is just unbelievably hard to believe, and I say that not in astonishment about time moving quickly or anything like that but rather in astonishment that we are all still alive six months later.

There have been times when I wanted to chuck Ten off the nearest cliff, leave her on the front stoop for the birds to eat or send her off to live with strangers in a strange place. But those thoughts are just momentary, caused by the unraveling of the knots of sanity in the dark hours of night or the squinting light of some dawn we weren’t looking forward to seeing.

Being a parent to an infant is by far the most challenging thing you will ever see me write about. Breaking up with circle acres? Lame and tame in comparison.

There are no short days anymore, no time to relax or even read a book. If I’m not working I’m with Ten or helping with Ten or doing the things that support Ten and support Kristin. If there is a spare minute I’m taking a few pictures or getting around to fermenting some green beans or fetching a ham out of the freezer or rubbing Kristin’s shoulders.

I can see the relationship between myself and Ten starting to take shape, imaging what we will be doing together when she is nine months old, a year old, five years old. I can see her personality foaming and melting and scattering from little fragments of her parents’ own strong wills, desires and work ethic.

Ten has no choice but to become whatever she wants to be, outside of all the cultural baggage and white privilege that she also had no choice about. We can explain to Ten the uselessness of Santa, gender norms and authority while instilling the usefulness of respect, community and DIY. But it will be a constant battle with other parents and society to explain to them that Tennessee is not theirs to mold and shape into a consumer of mediocrity like the rest of us.

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One Response to the weight of the future

    1. Marlow says:

      LOVE. Seriously. LOVE. Your authorial voice is so strong and I never tire of hearing it. You have a way with words with my friend!

where have you been

Where have you been?

Oh, the opportunities to write or load/develop photographs or garden or any of the things you come here to read about are few and far between. But as Tennessee gets older there are times when I can sit and think about this blog and how I have certainly neglected it.

Tennessee adds a new twist to everything on Cricket Bread, as the potential for new experiences in old places is elevated. Last Sunday we went back to rural Chatham County for the first time since we left last August. We went to visit our friend Bobby at Okfuskee Farm and Lynn at Full Circle. We “peaked” the trip at Saxapahaw General Store for brunch with Nicole from Transplanting Traditions Community Farm. Our friends Maryah and Collier from Homegrown City Farms came along for the ride.

Tenners is not quite into looking at and appreciating other life forms, but we figured it had been a little while since the grown ups had scratched a pig belly.

Lynn’s perennial garden was in full bloom!

This entry was posted in biographical, exploring, tennessee. Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Where have you been?

  1. So nice to read and view through your eyes again. Honored to be along your excursion.

  2. tanis says:

    Trace,
    You’ve always been my hero. Always will be. It’s interesting to see you holding your baby.
    Tanis

  3. Camille says:

    Nicely done. You belly scratchers and bubble blowers. Give my love to Kristin!

back from the dead quitter update

Back from the dead – Quitter update

I had planned on doing several things with Quitter this year – get #7 and #8 written, sell 100 books and get #1 through #6 formatted for iTunes. Not much of that has happened. For one thing, it is hard to get myself into the “Quitter voice”, what with aqll its unstructured sentences and heavy reliance on very distant memories. I have plenty of memories stockpiled and noted, but applying them to the voice is more difficult than you might think especially when you consider that we are only talking about a twelve page 1/4 page zine.

Without any further explanation, an excerpt from Quitter #7:

Rain

It is hard for me to describe the smell or sounds of rain. It is one of those scents that leads my brain in all sorts of leaps and skips and stops – cold mornings on the cusp of April, a light rain working to break up soil for new seeds; the quick shuffle of a city street, legs and car horns and black umbrellas singing as a mass under a stinging summer downpour; a tin roof under the pounce of a quick midnight thunderstorm, pinging and ringing and whistling, directionless, soothing. Hitting an asphalt shingle, rain has the swish and dribble of water circling a drain. On a metal garbage can lid, thick droplets are like a tire iron tapping a light post, singing up and down my ear canals, membranes vibrating like a plucked guitar string.

To me, the rain scent has it all: fallen leaves and dog hair, crushed acorns and root beer soda, unadorned armpits and fresh cut mint. There are only certain other smells with this sort of ambiguity to them – the air in a deflating bicycle tire, the blood of newly pulled tooth – and those smells contain their own piece of genetic code within us, the ability to unzip a thought at the cellular level and make our reactions seem innate. If it were not for the ability of these smells to grab us and throw us into memories, we might not stand apart from the others as conscious beings. Stuck with nothing but this exact present and the slowly unfurling future, no past at all to lean on or learn from, we would be burdened with these ten fingers and ten toes, wondering why they are able to do the things that they do.

To the ear, rain is just as complex. A rolling thunderstorm sometimes hurries me back to when I was five or six years old, barely tall enough for most everything, fingers tightening on a window sash, knuckles whitening trying to pull my eyes up to the glass. Fast outlines of trees vibrated against my retinas promptly followed by low rumbles shaking the panes, always mildly enough to leave them intact – both eyes and glass – but ambitious enough to produce a reaction among all the bones of the window. Thunder and lighting were always something I would wake up for and watch until completion, the drifting storm dissolving the time between dreams into a short series of intermissions and transmissions.

Among the other senses, I unfortunately do not frequently get involved in the memories of sight. I indulge them fully when I can, but vision can too easily betray a person. Heat waves floating from a sun baked highway are really nothing tangible, as real as wind but nothing to hold onto or brace against. But those tingling apparitions bring me back to summers working in fields of cabbage, the heat rising from between the open rows, reflecting the misery of the heat of an August mid-day. The fields are open as far as you can see, fence rows barely tucking in the edges of peripheral vision. The stretches of green, watery calories – bound for harvest, for trucks, for bags, for shelves, for plates, for bellies – sit in perfect rows, silent and still except for an occasional drop of hot summer rain running down into the outer wrapper leaves.

Tonight’s rain is one of those hot rains, the type that does nothing to lower the humidity or remove the stickiness from arms and foreheads. “A warm front”, the radio whispers as the wind picks up, a warm front moving into an already miserably warm climate. I currently live in a place where the first showers of a mid-summer front evaporate lazily from dark back roads, rising only occasionally as a vehicle parts the sick misty clouds. The next shower brings more of the same, saturating the air to the point of choking. If you have spent time in the South you know about this air. It is the kind of air that curls the covers of paperback books and makes envelopes stick together.

In this weather there is no choice but to sit six inches from a box fan, crank it to the fastest and highest settings, sit still and wait it out. There is no relief, no counter to this air thick with the grease and the swamp and the drench of another day in the Piedmont. Sweat – condensing on eyebrows, lip tops and knee pits – is not optional; it is a prerequisite for this course in human temperament. How you handle this details how you handle other personal tortures like hemorrhoids, ingrown nails and expired license plates. Our bodies are constant chain reactions of glop, responding to stimuli and adjusting internal temperature to fit the demands of any current surroundings. Cold? Get a blanket. Hot? Take off your pants.

The senses you own are your broken and rusty weapons in the war on distorted memories; how powerful or sharp or loaded with ammunition can they be if the past becomes so hazy that you forget how you wielded them or don’t even care? Everything you see or taste or smell is a trick on your future memory. It will never come back in its full context, its undiluted reason. Was I really there? Did I really say that? It sounds familiar, but…

We are at the mercy of our imperfect biological and chemical functions. We do not know, truly, where we stand in the past. It is somehow vacant and arbitrary and misaligned. It is a distortion no matter how much you think it is the truth. It is only the truth now, really, in this present when all the correct gases fill the lungs, all the correct fluids irrigate the eyes. This is it; the truth as it is in the now, the next, the now, the markings on the rain gauge.

We are not like dogs, relying on all of our senses for identification. We humans need clocks and compasses, measuring tapes and thermometers, bi-focal glasses and star charts. Our instincts and innate habits are no longer there for us to lean on in a pinch. They have been bred out of us by too much time in moving vehicles, too much time spent in inebriated states, too much time contemplating broken hearts.

The heart, it breaks. We feel it, but we know, scientifically, every emotion is simply an expression of the chemical mills of the brain and the guts. But we also know that any out of the ordinary input into those brains and guts can and will be processed into some staggering physical troubles. You get sick, you don’t eat, you don’t sleep, you dwell on the possibilities and wish you could rewind every moment in order to find out what it was that made the error get as far as your current reality. You stumble in from the rain, crumpling clothing here and there between the walls, soaked from the eyelids to the toenails, defeated from it.

Your heart, it breaks.

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time gets away

Time gets away

There are lists and then there are lists of lists and piles of those lists of lists. One item is crossed off while three others are added. As we enter week 39 of pregnancy, I am somewhat relieved that we have managed to get all the major projects removed from the list.

Thanks to a work party last Sunday, the backyard fence is up – just needs gates and a few finishing touches – but now we don’t need to worry about letting 80 out and her wandering around the neighborhood. We can let her out and go back to caring for baby when the time comes.

Other list entries are coming into focus and feeling critical but only on a personal level. I am supposed to have some new work in a show at the end of this month. The only problem is that I have not yet created that work. But the fliers are printed and my name is sitting right there. Time to figure it out…

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out with it

Out with it

2011 came with some pretty high expectations. We were going to build our straw-bale house, expand the garden, think about having a kid. With the implosion of goal number one and the realization that we were becoming outcasts on our own land, we quickly moved on to goal number three.

We knew we were pregnant while still living at circle acres but kept it to ourselves as the animosity boiled and the search for a new home commenced. We found a much-too-big house, but the size of the lot was too much to pass up. We are still getting used to the house, to the hot showers, to the kitchen with its awesome 1950s General Electric double oven. We seem to plan the garden area endlessly with the realization that we really do not have anything holding us back or pushing us forward. We can move at a pace that suits our days, our nights, our dinner bells.

The garlic bed went in late. We planted a much smaller bed this year as we are still trying to eat through last year’s pile. After giving a bunch away as seed and for eating, we are still loaded down with it.

We put in our first trees – a couple of fig trees started as cuttings a few years ago and a dwarf apple given to us by Kate and Keith from Bountiful Backyards.

Bountiful Backyards are starting an urban farm in East Durham. They have a Kickstarter campaign going at the moment to raise the cash necessary to make the farm a reality.

So that is where 2012 drops us off – new place, new friends, baby on the way. I hope you all stick around because this already branched blog is about to do some more branching. Keep an eye out for Quitter #7, new photo projects and my first real documentary films!

This entry was posted in biographical, farthing farm, food sources. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Out with it

  1. hoss says:

    keep on rockin’!

  2. shawnak says:

    Looks like fun! Wishing you all good things in 2012!

return of the mulchers

Return of the mulchers

After taking two very hot months off, the Crop Mob has returned to work. While we were resting, watching the drought march on and otherwise getting irritated with the heat, several new crop mob groups began around the country – Denver, Findlay Ohio, Olympia, Austin.

Now, freshened from rest and with plenty of built up demand to participate, the plan is to complete four mobs in two months with two of the mobs organized as “mini-mobs” with several nearby locations getting mobbed simultaneously.

In August we returned to Spence’s Farm to do some of the tasks that we do best – pull weeds, make large piles of compost disappear and lay down mulch.


This past Sunday we split up to hit three location in Durham. The Interfaith Food Shuttle’s urban farm plus the home gardens of several long time mob participants.

Kristin and I attended the mob at Steph and Steven’s house, turning a lot full of English ivy and wire-grass into several nicely cleaned up and mulched garden areas.



I am excited to see many, many first time crop mob participants. Ever expanding and pushing the model forward, I am still in awe at how it all continues to come together and function so well.

This entry was posted in activism, biographical, crop mobs, photo essays. Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Return of the mulchers

  1. Glad the mulching is back. As you know, I believe mulching is part of the ethos of Crop Mob :-)

    Here’s a link to the stuff on leftism I mentioned last night: http://less-art-more-meat.blogspot.com/2011/09/leftism-lenin-engels.html

outline

Outline

I have received quite a bit of feedback regarding the last post, both online and offline. It seems to have resonated with folks who understand that relationships do fail – often painfully and publicly – but their failure is not a sign of future outcomes on similar paths. It is a time and environment specific event, full of particular personalities and details. I can agree to some extent, but that is really damn ambiguous.   The benefit of experience dictates the scope and depth of present relationships and their future, yes, but we should have some idea of how we would like our relationships to work by the time we have the words available to provide the basic outline. From that point we just work on the logistics of filling in that outline. All the specifics already exist. It is just a matter of arrangement.

furniture has no say in life
it was made to be used by people
how many times have you felt like a bookcase
sitting in a living room gathering dust
full of thoughts already written?

Fugazi, “Furniture

I know that I am not meant to dwell, hoping that the memories are malleable to a point of bittersweet returns. There is no nostalgia for a lost sense of direction, no yearning for a hungry presence among deeply broken individuals. I am intuitive enough to understand a person’s trajectory towards the bottom, introspective enough to see ruins standing tall on the backs of my retinas. I have participated fully in this setback, probably put myself out there too far, now getting ready to do it again in new circumstances with new people within new geography.

I have learned that there is really no other way to go about it – embracing this life of layers we breathe like so much old skin – than just getting right the fuck on with things, albeit with a bit more resilience, learning how to fill out an outline like it is second grade all over again.

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3 Responses to Outline

  1. Lynn Hicks says:

    Trace,
    Just read both posts. Well written, I’m glad I read them. So many lessons about relationships, expectations. I wish you and Kristin well and hope to see you either out here or in Durham. We will miss you in Chatham, but I know you will make an exciting new life there, and new friends are lucky you are there.
    ((hugs))
    Lynn

  2. Pingback: Things Fall Apart « wowed out

about my disappearance

About my disappearance

By now, if you are local, you know that Kristin and I left Circle Acres. The reasons are deep and involve many differences in ideology, communication styles and lifestyle choices. My sobriety factors very heavily in this move as does my desire to be less accountable and responsible to an increasingly distant and foreign collective. A strong sense of misplaced entitlement pervades that place, which is something that I cannot support in any way. Living rent free while someone else carries the financial water is not anarchist, not friendly and not nice. The others may argue that this isn’t the case, but all I have to do is read through old emails and bank records to see how things went down,  get a glimpse of what should have been some serious red flags and see that I made many mistakes in making a path for this coddled land project.

At this point I have soured on the idea of collective living, understanding that anarchists tend to either thrive in that environment or find it too constrictive. As a very independent but collectively motivated individual, it is very hard for me to see the decision making process leave me behind. So we’ll move on, do our own thing and hope to remain decent with the larger spheres of community that we all populate. We may have wasted our time as part of Circle Acres, but regrets will never make us better people. The bitterness will fade as the freshness of it all moves along with the calendar, as new projects are presented and new people appear in our lives. As you encounter us in real life you may sense a bit of apprehension or distance; please be patient. No one can ever say that the two of us don’t work hard and get shit done.

Oh, and we are “city mice” once again…

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5 Responses to About my disappearance

  1. Ruffin says:

    Sorry to hear things ended like they did. Thanks for your work, and keep up the blogging.

  2. Aliza says:

    Have you ever read/heard of Drop City by T.C. Boyle? It’s one of my favorite books about collective living and all of the conflicts about freeloading, complex relationships, politics vs. fun, that you touched on in your post.

  3. Trace says:

    I haven’t heard of it, but I will look it up for sure.

    I did forget to mention that Kristin and I ceased having fun there a couple years ago while everyone else seemed to have nothing but fun. That surely took its toll on us, but in just the few days of being away from there our “personalities” are coming back.

  4. Patti says:

    Sounds like my ex-marriage. Watching the larger politics in the world, I’m wondering more if it’s just the nature of humans – the people willing to shoulder responsibility are taken advantage of by entitled types, both in personal relationships and in the business practices of corporations.

  5. Pingback: Things Fall Apart « wowed out

vote 553

Vote 553

I have several images up in a show at Rochester Contemporary Art Center in Rochester, NY. They have a prize for the top vote-getter in an online poll. Folks can vote once per day per email address for the piece of art of their choice. I have been asking folks to focus their voting on one of my images in particular – number 553.

Voting continues through July 1st. You only have to confirm your email vote once. After that you can vote daily, which would be awesome!

This image is one that I shot at an early Crop Mob at Okfuskee Farm in Silk Hope, NC.

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

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the bowling ball

The bowling ball

Things are sometimes difficult at Circle Acres. Just the fact that there are ten different people going in ten different directions at ten different times of the day is enough to make things a bit of a mess. Add two or three WWOOFers, dogs, cats, chickens, and various other components and you have yourself a pretty good stew.

I am the first to admit that I am sometimes very cranky to deal with especially if I get woken up. A few weeks ago, Brother was analyzing his bowling ball fetish at 11:30 at night. The backstory is that Gray found a blue bowling ball in the dumpster, brought it home and gave it a roll across the grass. Brother immediately took a fancy to it and began making a very strange sort of noise that no one had heard him make before. The strange thing is that he does not make the noise with any other type of ball or stick or animal. Only the bowling ball provokes this response.

So back to a few weeks ago. The sound of Brother’s yipping echoed through the trees, through the grass and through the tarp that covers the area behind my pillow. I calmly put on my head lamp and rubber boots, walked down the path and past the trampoline where Gray and Adah were giggling, found Brother’s glowing eyes and squeals of joy, took his bowling ball from him, threw it into a ditch full of water and quietly went back to bed.

Now the bowling ball lives in the ditch full of water, waiting for the summer drought. Brother also awaits the return of the romance.

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

This entry was posted in animalia, biographical, circle acres. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to The bowling ball

  1. Linda Welborn says:

    Brother is my grand dog and I’ll tell Gray that he needs a curfew :)

  2. Marlow says:

    This is hilarious! Much like Hazel and her exercise ball! ALSO, there’s no way that you’re grumpier than I am when woken up. It scares even me.

quitter 6 two stories available now

Quitter #6 – “Two Stories” available now

It has been a few years since I did something under the Quitter name, but those wild hairs just come out of nowhere sometimes and get me to put something together. The text for Quitter #6 has been sitting in a document on my computer for a long time just waiting for me to do all of thirty minutes of formatting and another thirty of printing. It is procrastination at its finest and simplest. The shorter the amount of time it takes for me to do something, the longer it will take to happen. Just ask Kristin about the piles of books, cameras and bullshit on my side of the bed.

So yeah, Quitter #6 is ready to go. As usual, the cost is $2 or whatever. An additional 80 cents covers the postage and PayPal fees. Here is a taste –

I distinctly remember second grade. It was somewhat of a turning point in my life, as much of a turning point as you can get when half your life is measured in years instead of decades.  That year I got my first and only pair of cowboy boots, a sharp toed brown and gold stitched outfit with heels and zero traction.  That year I also shoplifted a candy bar from a nearby gas station, smoked my first few puffs of a cigarette and, most importantly, got into my first real fist fight with someone who wasn’t my brother.




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favorite photos of 2010 part one

Favorite photos of 2010 – Part One

This last year was a big one for my life in photography.  From my first big show to being selected for a show in San Francisco to getting some gigs, things are changing a bit behind the lens.

This first shot (from early January) will be part of the “Sense of Place” exhibition at 18 Reasons in SF. If I had to describe why I chose to submit this one, I’m not sure that I could. There was a break in the construction of our scrap wood greenhouse, and it was starting to get late in the afternoon. Gray was taking a break.

Another one of Gray, this time using a skateboard deck for some fun time in the snow –

Warmer weather and a candid shot from Hannah and Link’s wedding –

Stevie processing a deer –

Slim pickings at the blueberry patch –

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One Response to Favorite photos of 2010 – Part One

  1. Wonderful! As an odd combination, I think my eye was most attracted to the balloon hat and blood-stained arm.

favorite photos of 2010 part two

Favorite Photos of 2010 – Part Two

At dusk, Noel throws an atlatl while Kristin watches.

“Pepper King” John roasts peppers while kids get into trouble –

Katy washed the apple press before making cider

A photo of a photo of a courthouse on fire

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One Response to Favorite Photos of 2010 – Part Two

  1. Kristron says:

    Ah hem…. as Kristin prepares to kill it!

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villagize

Villagize

I am not sure that “villagize” is an actual word, but I am going to use it anyway. I don’t know of another way to describe what has been happening out at Circle Acres over the last few months. New people are coming out with the intention of staying for awhile and establishing themselves.

This is all a bit of good and a bit of bad, with it mostly being pretty exciting.  The bad is that our infrastructure is lacking in some key areas, mainly water access and possibly heated living space. For the most part, the people coming out are pretty resilient and not too terribly bothered by much. Which is good, because an upcoming house project will need resilient folks…

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

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the edge of an era

The Edge of an Era

I am lucky in that I have had the opportunity to know what it means to work hard for something and get it.  Appreciating that “something” every day is another matter entirely.  I am not sure I understand how to do that yet, but there are no other options except to try it, try to figure out the problems holding back the appreciation, hopefully someday just be able to lay down in the grass and not have to DO anything.

Things change, ideas evolve out of or into one person’s control.  To stay static is to admit defeat in some ways, to admit that you or we are no longer capable of dealing with the dynamics of just about anything.

We live with the rules, consequences and laws of thermodynamics, of gravity, of genetic drift, of economic quality.  We come as prepared as we can, but it is often not enough.  Gravity is unbeatable but yeah, we adapt and upgrade and try to keep our faces from hitting the dirt with too much force.

Two years into my return to a rural lifestyle, and I feel that we are gaining some traction on some sort of identity. We are on the edge of an era in which we build the place that makes the most sense to us, to the people who live at Circle Acres full time, for the transients who might like to someday live there full time, for the folks just stopping by for a week or so.  What do we mean to each other? How can our differences be energizing instead of polarizing? What models of community labor make sense for sustainability? Someday we might figure it out. Until then we’ll keep polishing the edges and looking for a nice spot in the grass.

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46 hours

46 hours

Less than two days to go before my Kickstarter project comes to an end.  The prints are ordered and ready for pickup this Friday. Tonight I start on the program…

Goals were set, reached, reset and reached again. The whole process has been inspiring other folks to go the route of Kickstarting their projects.

While you are out there backing my project (hopefully), please consider backing a few others –

 

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counting down

Counting down

I am still moving through photographs for the show, trying to figure out sizing. It looks like there will be six at 24×30. I thought it might be eight, but finding two more has been a challenge. In the 16×24 and 16×20 sizes I feel that there are some strong themes developing. I’m just moving on from there.

On the food and drink fronts, on Friday night we harvested sassafras from our land for use in the root beer. On Saturday morning I helped out with a sorghum harvest just down the road at Okfuskee Farm. I am hoping that the sorghum molasses will be ready in time to add the sweetness to the root beer.

There are ten days to go with the Kickstarter page and then seven more days to the actual show. Please continue to spread the word and add your backing!

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

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kickstarter update

Kickstarter update

The New Blood for the Old Body Kickstarter campaign is amazingly successful, so much so that there is now a second goal.  I posted the following updates on the the Kickstarter page –

Update #1 – Response to this project has been strong right from the start, and I hope that momentum continues to build. If you are considering contributing please be aware that the $600 goal is just the minimum. Funding can go well beyond that – it means more prints on the wall at the show, more support of local farms and more invested interest from you all in seeing this project become a success. It also means the ability to take the show to other locations, which would be amazing!

Update #2 – call for 200% It only took five days to reach 100% funding on my project – I am extremely happy that that has happened. Feels like the support is just getting started and the word is spreading.

With that said, let’s keep it going. Another $600 is another full wall of photographs at the show, 24 more feet of my work on display. That would be immensely incredible as well as immensely humbling, the support of friends and strangers coming together to help me achieve something so rewarding.

As I post this, the project is just shy of the 200% funding goal with 21 days to go. If we make it to 200% by tomorrow I have some crazy ideas for what can come with 300% funding and beyond.

For full disclosure, I will post what this money will go towards. The quick summary is printing, mounting, hanging hardware, postage, promotional materials (postcards and flyers), food and beverages.

Please consider funding this project!

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

This entry was posted in biographical, photo essays, young farmers. Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Kickstarter update

  1. Rob Jones says:

    I say 500% or bust!! lets get the word out

kickstarter new blood for the old body art show

Kickstarter – New Blood for the Old Body art show

I have the opportunity to do a solo art show at the Hotel Hadley in Siler City, NC. I will use many photographs that you have seen here on Cricket Bread.  In order to pull off this show, I do need to come up with some funding to make it all work out.  So I am asking the community of readers of this blog as well as friends and friends of friends of the young agrarian movement to support this opportunity. Please contribute if you can and also spread the word.

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One Response to Kickstarter – New Blood for the Old Body art show

  1. Danielle says:

    I don’t have a lot, but I’m happy to help something worthwhile :)

    I also posted the link on my FB, so I’m hoping my friends follow suit.

    Best wishes!

what seed what root

What seed, what root

It is busy here. Transplanting is brisk; up-potting is tight. The turkey poults arrived in the mail yesterday and are chirping under the red light of the cardboard box brooder. Radishes are ready for market as are transplants and eggs. Our CSA starts on Tuesday.

With added plant and animal life at Circle Acres comes added stress.  Some of the things I worry about are late frosts, hail storms and loss of power to the brooder lights. None of these things come under my control.  My livelihood is not exactly on the line, but the livelihoods of my pack certainly are. So I worry about pests and plant diseases and stray dogs.  If we could fast forward to a time in the future where we are just living and working at Circle Acres, taking care of our community and ourselves, I wonder if I will dwell on these same worries as much.

Living that ascetic life is never far from my mind.  I live among a pack that yearns for that life and lifestyle.  Yearn might not even be strong enough.  Ever reach for something so much that you come into a sickness for it, that unattainable abstract that you wish you could have but get physically and mentally pummeled for moving towards it? If I could think of a word for that then I would like to use it.

For an easy life it sure is hard to get there.

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

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random signs of life 2009 in photographs part three

random signs of life 2009 in photographs part two

Random Signs of Life: 2009 in Photographs, Part Two

I applied for a photography fellowship over the Summer. I don’t know what to expect from it; it was a big deal at the time, but it takes forever to hear anything back.  Basically, my excitement has died down. I continue to see possible documentary projects all over the place, the only problem being finding time to do them with everything else that is going on – home construction, farm work, planning of all sorts. The unfortunate deal is that the tools for working in low light, fast action or other places where I can see things going are expensive, sometimes very expensive. This is hard to swallow for an amateur leaning towards removing the word “hobbyist” from my fake title.

Gray seeds out some flats

Scalding a chicken before plucking

Filming a music video with anarchists

Madeline framed with a fence under construction

Jack

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random signs of life 2009 in photographs part one

Random Signs of Life: 2009 in Photographs, Part One

Many of my photographs go into a folder called “Random Signs of Life”. Sometimes there isn’t any actual life within the frame, but there is life in the in between. As I have progressed in my photography, I have tried to abandon the want for my next photo to be better than the last. I don’t think this is anywhere near the best strategy for becoming a better photographer. I’m actually not sure what my current strategy is, but whatever it is it contains a very healthy amount of observation coupled with a wish that I had my camera with me during some of those observations.

I thought it would be fun to look through the photographs I took during the last year, the ones that weren’t posted here on Cricket Bread as part of an essay.  These photos don’t necessarily tell a story all together. That said, there is no particular order in time or in theme.

Noel focuses on starting a fire with primitive tools

Mike Slaton prepares for Diner Night

Jamie hula hoops at the Pittsboro Pepper Festival

Kristin relaxes in Denver

Dance party in Pittsboro, North Carolina

Kristin destroys a door frame

Danielle, Noel and Gray cook dinner in the Wolf Den

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One Response to Random Signs of Life: 2009 in Photographs, Part One

  1. Logan MB says:

    Really beautiful stuff man. Super nice. I like the more subtle ones of the fire starting better, than the one you have up now though – the subtle light-on-face, smoke-just-starting ones. Can’t wait to see part 2 (and 3?)

the eyes of food

The eyes of food

I grew up knowing that November meant there would be a deer hanging somewhere in the front yard, probably by the antlers or the neck and probably from the branch of a tree.  Or maybe hanging out of the bed of the pickup truck.  Or from a rafter in the dirt floor garage.

I knew that the stories of how that big buck came to be dead would be floating around the house until they could be recited, with all the groan inducing embellishments, by people in the house who were trying hard not to listen.  I could probably dig deep enough to remember one or two of those stories, but who gives a shit really?

My grandfather also told stories, the ones that I have forgotten, the ones about how the deer tricked him or showed him up or maybe never even existed.  He never seemed to be about the perceived glory of shooting something in the face; when a deer was in the freezer before December he seemed satisfied with the knowledge that, with the deer’s help, he and his family would have food for the Winter.  He didn’t regale in the winners and losers of what most sane people would see as a wholly lopsided conflict heavily subsidized by civilization and its tools – a heavily armed human against an unprepared, unwilling and unaware opponent.

My grandfather’s task was brutal regardless, but maybe less so as there were no mounted heads on the walls of his home like there were in our home. The need for those stuffed and preserved reminders is something that I couldn’t explain back then, but know now is an indication of small mindedness, a dedication to the outward projection of dominance when you know that you are inescapably weak inside.  You are a collector with no sense of how to interact with the dead or the living, both phases of life simply reminders of inadequacy, weak interpersonal skills and low self esteem. If you have a deer head or a stuffed fish on your wall, go look at it and ask yourself what reminder it serves that could not otherwise be captured by a photograph or poem. Is it there to show your friends and family what a hero you are?

When I was younger, I volunteered twice to travel with a New York DEC deer ager on their rounds.  For fourteen hours we visited deer processing places as well as any house that had a deer hanging in the front yard.  My job was to write while the ager examined teeth and called out the ages of each dead deer.

I think it was during this time that I became permanently desensitized to the sights and smells of dead non-human animals.  At each processor were dozens of barrels and drums and tarps full of various parts; piles of legs next to buckets of guts and tails; lines of deer carcasses waiting to be disassembled by hacksaws, band saws and reciprocating saws, mostly frozen in rigor mortis or by the depth of cold in the evening air.  Steam escaped from some of the recent arrivals, a sign that they were less than an hour dead.

*****

There can be nothing more brutal or common or necessary than taking a life in order to eat and sustain a body. Non-human animals do it without question, without any perceptible remorse or hesitation. What makes our actions so much different?

We pull carrots from the soil, ending their run from gravity, ending their gathering of sugar and all the processes that made them a living thing. They may not scream or run or struggle much, but a carrot is a living thing nonetheless and we must kill it in order to eat it.

Eating a carrot is nothing like eating an animal, which is why many choose not to eat the latter at all. I respect that choice; it was a choice that I had once made as well. As with eating it, killing a carrot is nothing like killing an animal. Animals articulate their disappointment in our choice to kill them in blood gurgles, screams and the twitches of ending nerve impulses. We destroy them in order that we can live; we destroy them for other reasons as well, reasons that have no bearing on survival. If you do not believe that then you deny that your meal had any previous life beyond its packaging. I apologize, but I can’t let you do that.

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

This entry was posted in animalia, biographical, food sources. Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to The eyes of food

  1. Camille says:

    Another outstanding piece, beautifully knitting a wide range of thoughts and feelings about how we choose to think about our food!

    I too, have seen life drain from the eyes of animals who were killed so that I might live. I have experienced the range of emotions involved in transforming carcass into meat – from sorrow, to revulsion, to scientific objectivity, to mind-numbing work, to pride. I know how it feels to butcher, grind, can and freeze meat which would feed me until next year’s harvest.

    I’ve since drifted away from a meat-based diet and consider myself lucky that my body functions well on beans, grains and vegetables. I like to think that my ecological footprint is smaller than it was when I ate meat. Inspired by “Diet for a Small Planet” I decided it would be more efficient to eat lower on the food chain. Rather than feed protein to animals, I skip the middleman and feed those calories to myself.

    On the other hand, I have work to do reining in the distance traveled by some of my food. Obvious targets would be the olive oil from Greece and the coconut milk from Thailand that I can’t seem to do without. And then there’s the Midwestern soybeans and California Vegenaise.

    Your writings reaffirm my decision to eat locally grown food and support my farmer friends as they expand into beans, wheat and rice. You are, as always, an inspiration!

  2. Kristen says:

    Thank you bro! I have never understood why we always seem to have to declare that we think we are so superior to the animals that feed us. It is why I groan during the fall as our local airport and grocery stores are filled with arrogant, camo-wearing Americans and Germans who paid absurd amounts of money to hunt (and I use that term loosely as they pay someone with extensive backcountry experiences to GUIDE them to the animals like big-horn sheep) and shoot an animal as trophy so that they can go back and brag to their friends as they break out the ruler stick and measure their manhood. It’s sick!

  3. Wow, insightful post. I often wonder if those carrots we pull from the ground actually do scream, but we just don’t hear it. I wrote a post a few weeks ago about hunting and how I feel about it as a vegetarian…If you have the time, here’s the http://foodfitnessfreshair.wordpress.com/2009/11/30/open-fire-opening-day/

  4. Bradford says:

    So many things about this post are great.

this is the point this is the manifest

This is the point, this is the manifest

Hardly recognize simple things anymore
I don’t want to be defeated

What else is there to do
But go outside and look around*

*Lyrics taken from Bed for the Scraping – Fugazi

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standing in the shadows of heroes

Standing in the shadows of heroes

One of the great things about the crop mob is the ability to go and do a few hours of work on an experienced farm.  It doesn’t happen all the time, and it isn’t something that is in the whole design of the mob, but when it happens it is humbling for everyone involved.

The experienced farmer is humbled by the presence of what constitutes a large sampling of the next generation of practitioners of sustainable agriculture, showing up on their farm, to work along side them and step through the same rows.

The mobbers are humbled by the ease with which they have access to lessons learned and practical advice, not only on that day but from that day forward until – if it is even possible – the relationship is exhausted.

But then maybe humbled isn’t the right word.  Awe?  Wonder?

Which leads to an opening of the debate on who is standing in who’s shadow…

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rolling away from the tree

Rolling away from the tree

I fell close to the tree, a chip off the old granite pile.  I fell close to the tree, but everything I want is downhill from it.

I’m not a fan of the metaphorical old orchard.  I have been rolling away from it for a long time now, even rolling through some more recent orchards at the expense of all the good times under the canopies.  At some point I will end up in an entirely different orchard under entirely different species of trees – maybe under hickories and I am an apple or maybe under pears and I am a paw paw.   Or maybe there are no trees at all, anywhere, and I am rolling around among thyme blossoms in full sight of the various stars of a southeastern summer.

All orchards have a lot of contrast, like grass growing between the yellow lines of a rural road.  Similarly, our agrarian places at night have no comparison to our agrarian places during the day.  At night, moist tree frogs attach themselves to any available surface, calling into the dark and into the ear membranes of potential mates, barely puncturing the drone of the various crickets scattered through the grasses.   It isn’t quiet, but it is still.  This is a contrast to the blur of a peaking sun, the quick clanking movements of hand tools among unloved rocks.  Sweat seeps off what looks and feels like a crying body; full and uninterrupted shade is a distant wish.

We move through it all, knowing that any craving for a cold-front is counterproductive to the goals of growing plants for consumption.  So we sweat and we grit teeth and we get headaches and we keep moving.  If we stop we realize how hot we are, how soaked our clothes have become, how miserable we must look.  Compare this to how we look in the blackness and dampness of rural summer; the clay stained knees and greasy hair hide among the sleeping cardinals in the privet clumps.

But what do we really care anyway?  If you are self conscious about being dirty and looking dirty, don’t work with the soil.  Just remember:  Dirt Don’t Hurt.

What would we do otherwise? We can’t go back to any previous life.  To what? To old cities or hometowns, old beer haunts and pool tables, grave markers and faded Christmas trees?  Nah, there is nothing romantic among the ruins and elders.

I have to think about my elders, how I can’t offer them the respect they think they deserve just because they are “elder”.  I used to have a bookcase full of political books with a “Respect Certain Elders” sticker on it.  In this young agrarian movement we are all elders, and we should fully appreciate when others begin to roll away from us and into their own orchards.

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3 Responses to Rolling away from the tree

  1. john gray says:

    That was really beautiful. Made me wanna grow things in dirt.

  2. Margaret says:

    Trace—I just recently stumbled upon your blog, and wanted to thank you for the beautiful words and pictures, in addition to a fount of useful information. As I believe that a movement of young, enterprising farmers can change the way we view farming and our food, I was wondering if you believe your ‘crop mob’, cooperative farming can be implemented in an urban space. I’m under the impression that farming, to your philosophies, involves a return to nature—do you think that we can effectively create ‘urban farms’, as opposed to ‘community gardens’?

  3. Trace says:

    Margaret –

    I think the idea of crop mob can certainly apply to urban spaces and I think more urban areas can benefit from adding agriculture to the mix. There are tons of models out there of integrating agriculture into the city.

it is the in between

It is the in between

I spend some days alone at our place, twelve acres of heat and humidity and chiggers and ticks and a rooster that won’t shut up.  The animals don’t talk so much as scream at a person – feed me, get away from me, look at me, don’t chase me, where have you been all day…

When I wake up I have to clear my throat to get words to come out, words like “hey piggles, you wake up too!”  or “get off the bed you lazy animals”.

I am ignored as the cat just twitches an ear, irritated but with a full belly and another eighteen hours of sleep to look forward to.

It feels like I just wander around on those alone days, tinkering around on slightly neglected projects, working from a list that has no written equivalent.  It isn’t until everyone returns that I realize I have accomplished anything, making me realize that I do have a function even if no one is around to prove it to themselves or to report it to others.  It is simply me moving through the life I have chosen.

It is those alone days that I know concretely that I have chosen well, that all five of us non-human animals have chosen well, that we are some of the luckiest people to ever sign a land title.

Watch out, we are just getting started.

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3 Responses to It is the in between

  1. gary phillips says:

    Very sweet essay, Trace. I resonate with it, every day.

  2. Mike says:

    That 18 hours of sleep sounds pretty good…

  3. Marlow says:

    Really love this bit of writing!!

Boss bites on my shoes

what happens when your friends become your food

What happens when your friends become your food

I spend quite a bit of time with our pigs.  Although they are doing work for circleAcres, they could be considered my project.  I move their fence and dumpster their food and make sure their house is in order.  This isn’t to say that the other folks don’t help out with all this, but I am the primary contact with the three piggles.

I pull the lice out of their ears.  That alone makes us pretty tight.

Boss bites on my shoes

Kristin has become attached to them, giving them their nightly belly scratching and making sure they have enough of everything that they need.  As I alluded to in a previous post, it is because of her view of the way these pigs live that she may be able to eat them when the time comes.  She has been vegan/vegetarian for thirteen years, about half her life, so it is a step that has not been considered lightly or without questions.

Slug says hey

I spent some time as a vegan/vegetarian, some five years or so, but as the saying goes, “if you aren’t now then you never were”.  Or maybe that is a straightedge thing.  My reasons for that life were political and human based, focusing largely on the interactions of people in the food system.  Animal rights and treatment were a close secondary consideration but not the major thrust for action.  Living that life greatly informed my decision to eat entirely local and make a conscious decision every time I make a food purchase.

Alf eats some cabbage

I have eaten meat for the last few years and, with very few exceptions, I know exactly where that meat comes from.  I have to allow some exemptions (such as the weekly free lunch at a church in Pittsboro), but I have to have a pretty good reason and it has to be from a local restaurant or store.

But in a few months, all my pork will have come from a few hundred yards away.

Boss in the pasture

This brings up the issue of how to deal with ending the life of an animal who has shared your space and your time and your close interactions.  I haven’t had to actually address the feelings before simply because this will be the first time I have raised an animal with the intent to eventually kill and eat it.

All three piggles

I can say that the best way to avoid any attachment is to treat the animal simply as a machine, a machine that needs to be checked on once in awhile in order to change the oil or put more fuel in the tank.  This is how many farmers treat everything on their farm – human labor, soil, resources.  Since I am trying to live a new example, I cannot get away with treating non-human farm residents as inferior or not worth any extra effort.  They are not machines; none of the components around me is a machine although sometimes I fail to see that.

All three piggles

I need to know firsthand that I have created a space in which the pigs feel safe, cared for and unstressed and are able to fully enjoy being pigs.  This means mud holes and tall grass, real dirt and kind words.  It means that when it comes down to it there can be some sort of peace between the killer and the killed, that the sadness and harshness of the process of taking lives can be tempered in some way and that life up until the end can be human interpreted as “happy”.

Without trying to justify any action, we, as the users of this food, have to take responsibility for the actions needed to place a meat meal on our plates.  We cannot do that unless we know where our food comes from.

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

This entry was posted in activism, biographical, circle acres, food sources. Bookmark the permalink.

14 Responses to What happens when your friends become your food

  1. Logan MB says:

    This is a great post, Trace. Thanks for taking the time to articulate the thoughts that I know many people share.

    Looking forward to seeing y’all soon!

  2. Brian says:

    I respect your efforts Trace. Looking forward to getting to read the commentary, if you choose to post one, after the meal; again if there is one….

  3. Dave says:

    I imagine it will be a very long moment when you raise up whatever item you are planning to kill him or her with. You’re obviously not the typical person who raises animals for slaughter or slaughters them for a living. They have come to see the animal as a commodity, or at worst, a piece of living garbage to be dealt with (I would think it the only way to do this regularly). Their actions are not filtered through a thoughtful perspective and they can kill without questioning. Or maybe not; I don’t really know.

  4. William says:

    Hi Trace,

    Enjoy your photography and commentary! And I appreciate the thought you have put into the dilemma of killing and consuming your piggie pals. That thought process alone sets you apart from the vast majority of animal farmers in the world. You are definitely to be commended for creating a lifestyle for your pigs that lets them express all their porcine sensibilities — their “pigness,” as Joel Salatin likes to say. The pictures of your co-laborers on your farm gives evidence of the healthy life you’ve provided for them.

    Could I add another thought here (as a vegan)? I think the very fact that you care about the dilemma you’ve created (killing that which you have “created” and grown to care for) is evidence that harvesting animals for food is an unnatural act. It’s easy to grow to feel the same way about a pig as we do about a dog or cat. They all enjoy belly rubs and ear-scratches and demonstrate pure pleasure that a tomato plant or tractor can not. You are certainly accurate to conclude that farm animals aren’t machines. It’s why we don’t kill and eat our pet dogs while they do in other cultures. There is obvious a lot of cultural confusion about what to do with animals we grow to care about. I think your sensitivity to the needs and ultimate end of your pigs is evidence that something in you/us wants NOT to kill them and eat them.

    That reality then begs the question, Why should we? There is nothing in animal flesh that we need for good health that is not available in plants (with the possible exception of vitamin B-12 which, if we didn’t sanitize and cook our field crops, we’d get plenty of from the naturally-occurring bacteria that produce B-12)—and much that we don’t need (saturated fat, cholesterol, etc.). Therefore, eating animal flesh ultimately boils down to appetite and economics: Meat (fat) has a taste humans grow to like, and raising animals free-range is perhaps economically motivating.

    So if taste and economics are the two main reasons for eating animals, we’ve only complicated our dilemma: We have now elevated our taste and pocketbook as higher values than the existence and pleasure of other sentient beings. In other words, we have to say to our porkers (chickens, cows), “I don’t need to kill you in order to be healthy, but I’m going to kill you because you taste good and you’re worth more to me dead than alive.” Ouch! No wonder we feel conflicted about the act.

    Please don’t take my thoughts as adversarial, Trace. As I’ve said, I commend you for the public and deliberate way you’re working through your relationship to the animals you’re raising. I hope other animal farmers will learn from your example and that your commentary will stimulate further helpful and healthy dialogue on what is, at best, a complicated issue.

    Ultimately, of course, I wish the human race could learn to co-exist with the non-human species in a non-confrontational way. Idealistic, perhaps, but as a Bible reader I see that peaceful coexistence was the pattern in the beginning (Genesis 2:19-20) and will be in the coming peaceable kingdom (Isaiah 11:6-9). Both man and animals were apparently created to be vegan (Genesis 1:29-30), though that pattern has been maligned through the ages. But I still think it represents the ideal to strive for. Dilemmas are not always avoidable, but the original plant-based pattern for living allows us to avoid the self-imposed angst we feel about loving, then consuming, our non-human friends.

    Thanks again for sharing your thoughts and providing a forum for feedback and discussion. Best wishes in all your endeavors and efforts to create a food “system” that is sustainable and satisfying to all its participants, human and non-human alike.

  5. Trace says:

    William –

    Thanks for the comments. One of the reasons I choose to eat meat, eggs and cheese again is that I was unable to meet my dietary needs with a local plant based diet. I tried not to eat fortified manufactured foods and my health suffered for it. During, but mostly after, my illness I became a “post-vegetarian food activist”, one of many that seem to populate my generation of anarchists.

    I don’t feel that it is unnatural to live among non-human animals and eventually eat them. We enter a very symbiotic relationship of work and give and take that connects us among distinct seasons and other points of time.

    I disagree on the statement about meat that it has “much that we don’t need (saturated fat, cholesterol, etc.)”. The human body uses fat and cholesterol for a reason, and I think the only reason humans have been able to colonize the bulk of the planet is because of access to non-plant sources of energy (be they insects, meat, milk or eggs). Urbanization has allowed for the ease of transitioning to a vegan diet, but I would wager that a collapse of civilization would erase that ease within months. Not that I think that will happen but it must be acknowledged.

  6. Ali says:

    I am in awe.

    I completely respect your ability to do this & have to say as a meat eater my whole life (although no pork for over a decade), I don’t think I would have the strength to eat one I have grown to love & who has learned to trust me. Good luck & I hope you realize how special you all are living this life. Inspiring… yet again. :)

  7. Salla says:

    I just found your blog, and I appreciate it very much! In those beautiful pictures of your pigs you very well capture the dilemma of a sensitive carnivore. But isn’t it so that since we humans are so timid when facing our own mortality, we don’t want to be confronted by the fact that life, in order to go on, requires death? The more we are into prolonging our own lives by unnatural means, the less we want to know of death, not as it is in movies or computer games, but for real. I was 29 before I saw a dead person for the first time, and yet I don’t know if I could ever bring myself to kill an animal bigger than a mosquito. But I see it as the only way we have: to face and embrace death, life and rebirth, and accept our own weakness and mortality. Then we can perhaps try to go on with living on this planet Earth, a bit more in sync with it than we are now.

  8. Morgan says:

    I have thought and rethought whether to switch to a vegetarian or vegan diet and I’ve decided for the time being that my family would be well-served by reducing our meat intake to a few times a week (local and responsibly raised), but not eliminating it all together. As with a lot of of lifestyle changes, it is easier to achieve an 80 percent change than a 100 percent change (i.e. raw food diet or car-free lifestyle). Plus, I’ve read that soy — which many vegans rely on for protein — presents its own health and environmental problems.

    By the way, I just wrote about NC farmers who have made the switch from CAFO to pastured pork, so people of all stripes and backgrounds are trying to make a difference:

    http://www.news-record.com/blog/52580/entry/67616

  9. David says:

    Human selfishness never ceases to amaze me.

  10. Kathy says:

    I could never raise any animal with the intent of raising it for food….I’d rather eat tree bark.

  11. Pingback: Switch To A Vegetarian Lifestyle. | 7Wins.eu

  12. janet babin says:

    Thanks to Trace for posting. And to William for articulating so beautifully.
    i wonder now about Kristin….and whether she’s still a vegan.

  13. Trace says:

    Janet:

    No, she is not. She has been eating the pork since last December. We currently have three pigs that are nearing the end of their stay with us. I think the sadness is just as strong or stronger this year as it was last year, but this is how we have chosen to live. In order to do that we have to kill.

    Trace

  14. Perpetua says:

    I just read this post–realize its a little out of date–however–I completely see your thought process on this. And I completely admire it. That said—I could never create that situation for myself. Oh my goodness!!! I already know I would be living with those three pigs in the house by the time Winter came. You are very brave–not so much for the killing part—but for setting up that situation–or is it an expirement?– in your life and to keep on with it. I keep saying I want a small farm down the line, so, maybe I’ll be stronger when that time comes. For now, I’ll just say WOW. And I would be interested to hear the End of the Story. Oh and also—your point about Veganism not being able to last the break down of society is so correct in my humble view. A deciding factor in my personal ethics–when terms of “natural” and “unnatural” come up, are along those lines. Not that I am expecting apocolpyse any time soon, but I do factor in that kind of questioning.

down in denver

Down in Denver

Kristin and I recently returned from a trip to Denver.  I had never been there, so I wasn’t sure what I was looking for in the actual existence of Denver.  I was somewhat disoriented by the city itself;  I couldn’t get my bearings at all in the mass of food deserts and corner liquor stores.

We were there to attend the commitment ceremony of our friend Duncan and his partner Rachel.  The ceremony was fun and short and a good time to catch up with old friends and listen to new friends.  The reception was a potluck with long tables full of all sorts of yummies.  There was even banana pudding, which is my favorite locavore exemption.

In the corner was a whole roasted pig, all wrinkled skin and a nice tan head still attached.  It skeeved Kristin a little.  Her thoughts and imagination turned to the three little pigs we have at the farm and how they would look spread out on a table, some chef’s hands all in their insides pulling out hunks of smoked muscle and fat.  But she says she may eat them when it comes time just because she knows that they have had amazing lives full of good food, tons of space and belly rubs twice a day (more on weekends!).

The reception after-party wasn’t really my thing, which was kind of a bummer.  Since I don’t drink or smoke anymore  I find it increasingly hard to relate to the folks who I consider “my people” – the artists and anarchists and renegade agrarians who wash over me wherever I go – once the sun goes down on a Saturday night.  I can’t keep up or interact.  Maybe I’m getting old or maybe I simply over did things way back when and now I am paying the price for my lack of foresight .  As I keep repeating to myself and others – regardless, here we are…

* The name of this post comes from a song by …Revel in the Morning. They once did a show in the basement of the Local Revolt house in Wilmington. I lived there for quite a while, well from start to finish actually, and our friend Duncan lived there for six months or so. Nathaniel, pictured in many of the slides in the above slide show, lived there for a year. There is a video of a song from the Revel show featuring the actual basement of Local Revolt. It was shot by the band on August 14, 2003 –


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and the rocks and weeds eat each other

And the rocks and weeds eat each other

I picked rocks from a bunch of Western New York fields when I was a kid.  My step-father would drop me and my brother off at some hedgerow and tell us to walk the perimeter of the field and pick up as much as we could.

We’d have to throw the rocks into the tree line or into a tractor bucket, breathing the dust as it split with the crevices of the basalt and granite and diorite brought to the surface with the most recent bottom plowing.

The rocks arrived long before we were thought off, catching a ride on the gray belly of a two mile thick glacier.  In the deposits that followed came everything from the boulders – now sitting in front yards painted with house numbers or enveloped by lichens – to the baby minerals of feldspar and hornblend and all those magnificent magnetic bits of iron.

Picking up rocks is as fun now as it was when I was eight years old, which is to say that it is no fun at all.  It reminds me of work for no pay.  It reminds me of long summer days away from friends.  It reminds me of responsibility that I had no need or want of.  It reminds me of time ill-spent laboring for someone I could care less about.

But that all changes with the crop mob…

Sometimes I know that rocks need to be picked and weeds need to be pulled.  These tasks are best accomplished with more than one person, in a mass of asses and elbows, jabbering on and on about everything other than rocks and weeds and tasks that really have no end.

Weeds decay into their components of minerals and carbon and nitrogen within days.  A person could watch the whole process if they had the patience and justification.

Rocks decay much more slowly and, without the aid of the outside crush of a human or machine doing some work, they will not likely decay within a person’s lifetime.  You can watch if you want, but you might want to bring something to eat while you wait.

So picked and piled rocks will remain picked and piled rocks wherever we place them at least until some other monkey comes along and moves them again.  Maybe they will be hidden under weeds as the years pass only to be rediscovered by a passing lawnmower or an unprotected toe.

Only when I was a teenager did I realize that there existed mechanical rock pickers that pulled behind tractors and did the work we did in seconds rather than hours.  This made me realize that dropping off kids at the edge of a field was just a convenient way to get rid of those kids for the day.  Tasks without end make good kid-sitters.

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One Response to And the rocks and weeds eat each other

  1. Camille says:

    Ahhh, the many ways parents have of getting respite from their spawn. At least you lived in the country where the rocks you picked actually needed picked. I grew up in the city, so idealized the country life. I had no purpose and longed for real outdoor chores. I had three imaginary horses who needed fed and groomed every day. The grass is always greener on the other side.

    My family lived on a little island in the Bronx, so my father used to say, “Why don’t you take a long walk off a short pier” when he wanted us out of his hair. Bob’s parents used to suggest he and his three brothers go play in traffic.

    Looking back, we had it pretty good. No real responsibilities, nothing to do and all day to do it, running with the neighborhood kids, trying not to get pecked at by the swans in the cove at the end of the street.

a new generation of farmers emerges circle acres primer

“A New Generation of Farmers Emerges” – Circle Acres primer

From USA Today (July 14th edition):

It’s like being ‘a ninja’

The farmers often live very frugally, Philpott says. “You typically produce lots of food, and that cuts down on your food costs.”

Jennifer Belknap, 36, and her husband, Jim McGinn, 43, are old-timers. Their Rochester, Wash., farm, Rising River, dates to 1994. Belknap estimates they net $30,000 a year. They live off the land and keep other expenses to a minimum.

It’s like “being a ninja,” says Fleming, in Nevis, N.Y. You have to be fluid, flexible, an activist and an entrepreneur, she says. “We’re working against the odds. The educational system, the economic system, the subsidies, the tax structure for land owners,” none of them are focused on helping tiny organic farmers, she says.

Trace Ramsey, 35, one of five farmers at Circle Acres in Silk Hope, N.C., works a full-time job and devotes weekends and nights to the farm. “Having a steady paycheck really helps with upfront costs like buying feed or cover crop seed,” he says.

Ramsey worked as a technology manager for a small company for five years after graduating from the State University of New York-Genesee, where he majored in biology.

He met up with a group of like-minded friends and they decided to start a farm together. They spent six years saving and planning and looking for land to buy around the country. They finally settled on North Carolina because it had access to consumers wanting organic produce and there already was a strong organic farming community there. Their 2-year-old farm sells to CSAs, some restaurants and the local Whole Foods.

Ramsey stages what young farmers are calling “crop mobs.” A local farm puts out the word that it’s holding a crop mob to untangle drip irrigation lines or pick sweet potatoes. A crowd descends, works for the afternoon, gets fed a big dinner and then has a party and dances until dawn.

“You can do a week’s worth of work in five hours if you have 50 people,” he says. “It creates such a huge connection between everybody. Living in a rural area, you don’t often have much chance to see folks every day like our urban contemporaries.”

There are five of us at Circle Acres – four owners and an apprentice.  We bought our land two years ago, and we started our project in earnest this February.  We continue to improve new areas for planting.  We are currently growing produce on 1/4 of an acre.  Goats and pigs and chicken occupy another 1/4 acre.

We grow food for ourselves and the surrounding communities.  We do not ship to faraway places.

We live pretty simple lifestyles away from television, mass marketed products and wholesale appeal.  We feed ourselves with the food we grow as well as food we salvage from the trash.  We live apart from the mainstream and have no interest in it.  Email does not reach us at night or on the weekends, but we are available by phone if we can catch a signal.  However, we are not back-to-the-landers or hippies or gun nuts or dropouts.  We are idealistically anarchist, radical, punk  Do-It-Yourselfers interested in promoting systems and ways of life free from hierarchy and experts.

We consider ourselves an educational place rather than a farm, which is why we have omitted the word “farm” from our name.  We are educating ourselves on the diversity of tactics of sustaining ourselves and our neighbors.

We are guerrilla agrarians in the information age.

Oh, and I have never danced until dawn.  They totally made that up…

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One Response to “A New Generation of Farmers Emerges” – Circle Acres primer

  1. Rick says:

    Great post. I love the idea of a “crop mob”!

knee high by the fourth of july

Knee High By the Fourth of July

New views of corn…

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So let the rain become a raging flood
To wash away buildings and boundaries
Swallow whole the world we have known
And as the waters rise
Let the black flag fly

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2 Responses to Knee High By the Fourth of July

  1. David Anthem says:

    Great From the Depths reference. They are good friends of mine. Nice to see it on this blog.

  2. Trace says:

    The pictures were from a video shoot for the “Let the Black Flag Fly” song. I’ll post it whenever it comes out…

explaining to kids why you just jumped out of a dumpster

Explaining to kids why you just jumped out of a dumpster

Yesterday was like any other day.  After throwing a few boxes of goodies out of a grocery store dumpster, it was time to get myself out.  I came jumping out the side door, keys jangling from the clip on my belt loop, hands stinking of fouled up watermelon, tomato seeds in the seams of my boots.  When I hit the pavement I quickly found out I was being watched.

Looking up at me with big eyes and puzzled expressions, were two children straddling their bicycles, one training wheel on each bike touching the pavement.  Most likely there were streamers coming from the handlebars but I don’t remember that part.  No one else was around.

“Why you in the gahbawg?”

“I’m getting food for my pigs.”

“You pigs eat gahbawg?  That’s gross.”

“Naw, they like to eat this stuff.  It isn’t really garbage; I’m just trying to help them out.”

“How big you pig?”

“About this big…” I approximated the length and width of the pigs with my arms.

Oh…and they eat gahbawg.

I had quick thoughts of what it might look like if the parents of these kids came around the corner to see some guy with mud on his pants standing next to a dumpster talking about how big his pigs were.  And the truck was still running.

Nice to meet you kids, but it’s time for me to go.  Hope you learned something?

One Response to Explaining to kids why you just jumped out of a dumpster

  1. Chelsea says:

    hahaha! and great picture too.

farm or die a revised manifesto

Farm or Die – A Revised Manifesto

A few months ago I wrote an essay that became known as “A Young Farmer Manifesto” for this blog and also for Civil Eats.  That piece spoke to many people and generated a lot of emails and comments and such from farmers, city slickers, eaters and everyone in between.  It also brought me an opportunity to write for an upcoming compilation of essays about the young farmer experience.

So I edited and added and doubled the length of the original.  It was eventually rejected for the compilation because there was not a personal story involved.  I am working to fix that by writing another bit on my own journey to this point, but the original essay will most likely have a new life as the preface to my photography book project.

So, here it is for your review, the new and improved New Blood For the Old Body, a “Farm or Die” screed for those of you stuck in Accounts Payable or the IT Department or some other place where you know you don’t belong.  Join us in the creation of a new agrarian experience…

************************

Many of us never meant to become farmers. We had our ambitions to enter the world as accountants or lawyers or teachers or some other clean, respectable professional. We never really thought about the origins of our food or questioned the intentions of those who screen out the realities of farming; we always knew that the supermarket shelves would fill themselves, food came in boxes or cans ready to serve and farmers were simply one dimensional photographs in the mix of a hot new marketing campaign. Sustainable and industrial agriculture held meaningless differences, no more distinction than competing national brands of light duty trucks or diet soda.

But then something happened. In the previously steady route of our lives, a shift occurred. The soil moved under us somehow, got stuck in the creases of our pants, in the ridges of our shoes, in the lines of our palms. Suddenly white picket fences, situation comedies and mutual fund returns didn’t seem so interesting anymore. The big ball game and the driving range became distractions from the reality of a new love affair. We got hooked on the possibilities of growing our own food and also providing that food to others.

The epiphany was likely different for many of us. Maybe a friend took us to a farmers market. Maybe someone had a plate of local hamburgers or collards at a picnic. Maybe the news of some global food disaster made us question the monocultures piled high on our plates. Maybe a real life farmer entered our life.

For a few of us, those with farming in our past – a childhood spent in the fields of the big farms or the family plots, throwing rocks into the hedgerows for little or no pay or watching over milking machines in the stench of industrial sized barns – there was no love, no kind of encouragement, no appreciation for our part in the dynamics of food production. We were simply limbs and calluses then, small gears in a giant cranking clock. We left the farm to pursue something else only to be pulled back hard when it became apparent that we could abandon everything that farming once meant to us. We could make it ours.

Still others came to farming from DIY and anti-authoritarian backgrounds, building urban community gardens or putting up food in anarchist collectives. Gardening always had a community aspect to it, but we wanted something more. We knew that we could do the work, that we had the right vision and skills. We just needed the access and the resources to get started.

Regardless of how we arrived at this point, here we are; we will call ourselves farmers from now on. We are transplants from cities, dropouts from university systems and ex-corporate shufflers. We are mothers and sons and grandparents, masters in communications, colorful documentarians, shy propagandists. Most of all, we are teachers and students inhabiting the same bodies and breathing the same air.

Our young and new farmer movement is made up of many itinerant folks, traveling to places we want to see, gaining knowledge we never thought we would need and forming the basis for our own theories on agriculture. Our commonality with the landed and the stable is the soil and its layers. More specifically, our bond is in the ways we approach that soil and our desire to grow food in a way that builds on a sense of the farmer never dying. The immortality is not functional but symbolic – if you imagine that you will need to use a piece of soil forever, you will never intentionally do it harm.

This intentionality is not a new idea, but neither is it very well known in the information age. It is buried in our collective past, not necessarily waiting to be discovered, but intact and beckoning nonetheless. To get to the guts of it, we are throwing away the agricultural methods of our parents and grandparents, even subverting our great-grandparent’s proud thoughts of survival amidst the coming surpluses. Things may appear as cobbled together bits of dust and weight and worn out shovels, but its functionality in an agrarian way of life is apparent with very little inspection.

We stand in the books and plots and ideas of the past, pulling out the rusty pages and diseased cells in order to build something practical from the obsolete and misinterpreted, rewiring the seed catalogs, rewilding the crosswalks, reconnecting the pastures to the kitchens.

So here we are, doing more than is required of us, daily pushing the boundaries of our bedtimes, our muscle structure, our hunger pains, our balance of minimalist living conditions with the reality of satisfying relationships. We don’t need justification for living this life, but that rejection of validation won’t feed or shelter our families or protect our chickens from roaming dogs. We have concrete needs – access to land, to capital, to markets – but we cannot ignore the bounty before us as we seek to satisfy these needs.

We have to live farming as it happens, at our level, at the pace that we can move. The weeds don’t and won’t pull themselves; the new beds won’t magically appear out of spilt potting mix or the crumbs of a quick dinner of sandwiches among the paths. Anyone who tells you that growing food is simple is a lunatic. Anyone who tells you that having animals lessens the physical workload is a liar. But we stick the possibilities of a simpler, easier way of life in the context of the larger ecology, the massive inebriation that defines the world and my generation. If we are to sober up, we need to get moving.

We are bridging eras, going about tasks the hard way but with newer tools and even newer outlets, burrowing into ancient methods and supplementing with our own big-brained flourishes. A generation of reclamation, telling our story to groups of people that may have never been inspired to so much as think about how a piece of grass might pop from a crack in the sidewalk. The whisper is that we are here to exploit those cracks, get our dirty fingernails scratched with asphalt and debris while attempting to save the disorientated souls of the material apocalypse. We young farmers have the double task of growing food for the community as well as being able to communicate about the process and our decisions in spaces that are new and possibly uncomfortable.

The pictures we take of ourselves hang in art shows and stand out in glossy magazines; our recipes are printed on cardstock and handed out at tradeshows; our words bring excitement to readers wishing that they too could participate in the riot that is small scale sustainable agriculture. This riot exists outside the handshakes and millionaires of the agra-political grease machines, knowing, with the certainty of the tides, that the transactions we despise will occur no matter how long we scream, no matter how far we march, no matter how many letters we write. It is not defeatist or abandonment of the successful tactics of the past, just recognition that we can do much better with the actual actions of farming in sustainable ways, demonstrating to the consumers and wholesalers and value-adders that we are successful despite their dismissals. We cannot change the culture without changing the culture; yelling and otherwise carrying-on never has set a sweet fruit or fed a piglet, and I will bet it never will.

We love this life – we have to – but sometimes we can feel that we don’t own it, that it owns us and grips us in a way that will never shake us loose. In those moments of weight we can only shrug, pull on the rubber boots and move deliberately until the fireflies speckle the whippoorwills’ breaths. Throughout all the highs and lows we can look at ourselves over and over again knowing that, if we stick to our ideals, we can do noble and appropriate work no matter what happens.

We are the new blood in the old body.

2 Responses to Farm or Die – A Revised Manifesto

  1. Terry says:

    Hey Trace, I’m Danielle’s cobber-friend & we met at your cropmob. I think it’s time that I fess up & let you know how much sustenance I’ve been getting out of your writing. During the few weeks after the cob workshop, I read your entire blog, start to finish. It was like food, more important than food, I just couldn’t get enough of it. I’ve been dreaming the homestead dream for 20+ years now, and am finally just getting to it, with my own 10 acres not too far from yours. The cob workshop was a turning point for me. I’d been wanting to do the homestead thing for so long, but now I know that I need to. There is no turning back.
    Also, the original of this article rang so deeply true when I read it. I was, at that point, in the throws of struggling at being thrust back into my “regular” life, when I knew that my energy/life force/whatever would be so much better spent barefoot in mud. Your writing has touched me, and sustained me, and I want to thank you for that.
    Another post that hit ground zero was the brief comment along side that haunting b&w photo, ending with “but we just may be alone”. Isn’t it just lovely to know, now with contact from Spain, that we are not alone at all. . .
    Blessings, Terry

  2. Dee says:

    Trace, Terry and others who stumble on this amazing blog,

    Please know that you are definitely not alone, especially here in Chatham County. You are the future, part of a growing movement of people fully dedicated to growing and/or promoting sustainable, whole, healthy food in their own backyards or close to them. When I moved to Chatham 30 years ago, just about everyone grew their own food, some commercially, most just enough to feed their households. But you couldn’t find a ripe tomato in the supermarket if your life depended on it, even at the height of the growing season.

    Now there are some 250 sustainable farms in the Greater Triangle area, most of them with 3 acres or less in production, many with 1-2 acres. There are more than two dozen CSAs,and about 30 Farmers Markets. We have the largest organized farm tour i the nation and the most recent one had arecord-breaking attendance. Most of the small farmers I know have no trouble selling their food. In fact the demand exceeds the supply. The recession has only made this even moreso, despitewhat the media say, as consumers continue to seek out authentic food that they can prepare at home.

    The biggest challenge is getting started. Land prices are high. But there are folks willing to lease or trade some of their land in exchange for a modest share of the crop, such as a share in a CSA.After all, they will get a big break on their property taxes and the satisfaction of seeing someone productively lose their land for sustenance.

    I’m writing about all of this on my blog,and hopefully for a book about our emerging local food scene,and I look forward to an opportunity to chat with you some day. Trace, you’re a wonderful writer and thinker and I wish you the very best in fulfilling your dream and sharing it with others.

    Best,
    Dee Reid
    Pittsboro
    http://sustainablegrub.wordpress.com

crop mob guerrilla agrarians in the information age

Crop Mob – Guerrilla agrarians in the information age

I have been involved in the Crop Mob since the first time the group convened to do work last October. I missed the initial meeting of people who created the idea and named it, so I take no credit for its inception only its implementation.  I push the idea whenever and wherever I can, attending every call of the Mob in the process.


I have been a strong proponent of the young agrarian movement, writing essays, giving interviews, taking photographs. The Crop Mob is the physical realization of all those words and images, the sinew, muscle and breath behind the imagination.

With the Crop Mob there exists the possibility of something beyond what we usually perceive of as farming.

The idea is bigger than barn-raisings, more technical than workshops, more thoughtful than textbooks. It is guerrilla agrarianism in the information age. Maybe that isn’t an apt description, but when I watch shovels hitting dirt on a foreign farm with a crew assembled using email, social networking and word of mouth, it surely feels like it.

The Crop Mob is unstoppable, yet flawed on some levels.  Reciprocity from the farmers we have helped is greatly lacking.  We are all busy, yes, but if we are to keep donating our labor, the labor pool must continue to snowball and include previous beneficiaries of that labor.  On that end we can improve our pitch, farms can understand better what they are getting and everyone involved can get what they need out of the day.

We are not unskilled; we bring decades of combined experience in dozens of areas – bed building, fencing, transplanting, harvesting, permaculture, food/farm activism, media outreach – so we are capable of making substantial impacts in a handful of hours.

Where to from here?  The next step may be to franchise the idea or mutate it or trim it down or use it differently.  In the meantime we will continue to do what we have been doing – showing up and getting shit done.

10 Responses to Crop Mob – Guerrilla agrarians in the information age

  1. Trace and mob,
    LOVE your existence so so much. It is a brilliant thing on the face of the earth, beyond the Piedmont.

    I appreciate hearing concerns and needs for its continued success; I’d also like to hear the factors you can name that have been vital in creating is as is. Seems this area is rich beyond measure in young activists with a tremendous range of skills who have this cooperative vision and spirit. We are very blessed.

    I’m curious about your thought to franchise . . . I’m guessing I’m missing your meaning as to me to franchise is to sell rights to an idea? . . . (as in RRFM, no one is profiting on that concept, just spreading them like wildfire)? What are the insights you could offer to locales where perhaps that resource exists but is not so visible or cohesive? I.E. how can we create crop mobs in places where the environment is very different from the triangle? What are the key factors to replicating?? (group willing to get shit done obviously, but you id some others as you talk about reception from farmers?)

    of course it would look different in each locale . . . and there are MANY places in the country where a Crop Mob just like this one would thrive immediately, like the RRFM has done from one end of the country to the other. Certainly, start with assets, right? Get as many Crop Mobs in as many places where they can successfully be started quickly. If I could bank roll sending crop mobbers to various parts of the country to help start-ups everywhere . . . hehe, love that image . . . but tis really just the idea that needs to be spread, yes? Trace particularly, thanks for putting it out there so brilliantly, compellingly, beautifully, again and again, as well as for diggin in the trenches, again and again! as ever, you are my favorite blogger.
    tes

  2. Trace says:

    Tes,

    My idea about franchising is to completely remove the idea of ownership. To spread the cop mob we have to let go of intellectual rights while still setting up the parameters in which the mob should function once exported. Just like Food Not Bombs serves rescued vegetarian meals no matter which one you attend, any where in the country, a Crop Mob would not show up to pick sugar beets for export or fumigate apple orchards or clean out an industrial chicken house. There have to be clean parameters to work within, and I personally don’t think the idea would very hard to replicate no matter where it happens. The ideology is simple; at the core is work and around that work is sustainability, humane treatment of animals, the betterment of the soil and the community. Might be a good workshop idea for conferences or tabling, anything to get the idea into folks’ heads.

    Trace

  3. Ramsey Van Veen says:

    Trace,
    What is up man, you dont know me but I have heard your name spoken a couple times. I just moved down from Iowa to attend the sus. ag. program at CCCC. I believe I live really close to you also, rufus brewer rd? I may be wrong. Any how, I just wanted to drop a wat up! I am VERY interested in starting to attend these crop mobs, how do I get in this uber cool crop mob ya got goin’ on here in the Pied?

    Veen

  4. Trace says:

    Hey Ramsey,

    You do live close by. We refer to that road affectionately as “Rufus Beaver”. Don’t know why, just thought it was a better name. Even named one of our chickens Rufus Beaver. Take a left on Jessie Bridges then a right on AW Buckner. That’s us.

    Anyway, if you go to cropmob.org you can sign up for the listserv and get the notices. Mobs are once a month…

    Stop by when you get a chance. Nights and weekend afternoons are best.

    Trace

  5. chelsea says:

    these are beautiful pictures, trace! though i’m kind of happy i left before the cameras came out (camerafright)

  6. stephen says:

    Trace- I found your blog about a month back, and I’m glad I did. You write some insightful and challenging stuff. I’ve been thinking about the concept of a crop mob since I read about it here. I love the phrase “guerrilla agrarians.” I think that most communities striving to support small, local farms would benefit greatly from a crop mob. I’ve been thinking of starting one here in Fort Collins, CO. I’ve looked through the cropmob.org website a number of times, but I think it’s more the type of thing that needs to be done, first hand, rather than to read about. Have any insights on starting it up?

  7. Hey Trace. I was planning to write a little ditty on the Crop Mob for my book, but would love to use your words instead, with just a few of my own to introduce the concept. Let me know if this is OK with you. I’d credit you and list your blog. Will get back to you with final details, but please email me directly if you’re up for this. Book’s not out until spring 2011, so we can only hope Crob Mob will still be around. Be around, Crop Mob! — Diane Daniel

  8. Trace says:

    Stephen:

    Since I’m not familiar with the Fort Collins agricultural scene, I’ll have to make some guesses on where to start.

    The apprentices and interns in this area tend to come out of the Sustainable Agriculture program of the community college in Pittsboro (NC). Many attend classes and work on area farms part time. Given that, I would start at the universities in Fort Collins. Seems like there is an organic curriculum? – http://organic.colostate.edu/ Also the specialty crops curriculum – http://www.specialtycrops.colostate.edu/

    Flyers advertising an organizational meeting could go out to the instructors to announce to their classes. Also post in local shops, grocery stores, farmers markets, CSA boxes, etc.

    You should approach any farmers you know in the area as well as the ones you don’t know. Once you have about 15 to 20 committed folks, you should be able to quickly do most projects within 5 to 7 hours.

    To keep it all together, set up a basic email list and a basic wordpress blog to keep the community updated.

    After that, pick the first farm, setup your time frame, decide on what should be accomplished, make a sign up sheet, delegate and make sure the projects are successful and completed to the host farm’s liking. Repeat in a month or so on a new farm being sure to get the previous farm residents to participate in the next one.

    Please keep us updated on the progress and let me know if I can offer any more help.

  9. stephen says:

    Trace- thanks for the info. I’m involved in both the specialty crops and organic program at CSU. I’m working on the universities 8 acre organic farm this year. We have a 75 member CSA as well as many many variety trials and other research projects. I love it, but it can feel a bit insulated from the rest of the local food scene. Thanks for your advice and encouragement. I’ll keep you updated on how things move along. peace.

  10. Seth says:

    Stephen/Trace,
    I lived in Ft Collins for a few years working for the state forest service and now live in the Charlotte NC area … I have no experience with Crop Mobs (just read about them here), but it is an intriguing idea. I’d guess that the students in the sustainable development program @ CSU (if they still have it) would be game for a Crop Mob trial. Several of our friends at the time had their own impromptu farms in the Wellington area, and while they are long since gone, they would have been up for the experiment. Any connections at the co-op in Old Town?

    Anyway, good luck.
    Seth –

work weekend and crop mob at circle acres

Work weekend and Crop Mob at Circle Acres

Who: Crop Mob
What: a million things, eating good food, building community
Where: Circle Acres farm
160 A W Buckner Rd (1964 Jessie Bridges Rd) – Silk Hope, NC
Why: why not
When: 10am-3:30pm Sunday May 24th

We (Danielle, Gray, Kristin, Noel and Trace) at Circle Acres farm are planning a work weekend for May 22nd-24th.  We are also calling out for a Crop Mob on Sunday the 24th from 10-3.

We have plenty of camping space available for both Friday and Saturday nights.  Parking at the farm is interesting, so please fill vehicles to the max…

Here are some of the things we might get into –

– sheet mulching “lumps” for the pumpkin patch
– removal of privet and bio-char demonstration
– building sheet mulch beds
– prepping land for a living fence
– untangling and testing used drip tape
– plugging mushroom logs
– pulling new electrical wire in the house
– ripping out plumbing
– digging a gray water trench
– building a solar shower
– playing around with cob mixtures

For food, please bring snacks, drinks and whatever you think you might want to have on hand for the weekend.  We will cook for the Saturday dinner and Sunday Crop Mob lunch; we’ll do our best to provide for other meals, but any help is appreciated.

Please RSVP as soon as you can and let us know what days you will be at the farm.  Also let us know if you have any special needs, dietary or otherwise.

One last note – please leave your dogs at home.

This entry was posted in activism, biographical, circle acres, crop mobs. Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Work weekend and Crop Mob at Circle Acres

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rethinking the possibilities

Rethinking the possibilities

When I see black plastic mulch and wide open fields, I have to wonder about the possibilities involved in removing both of those from the farming landscape.  Short rows, shady fruit trees, living mulch.  We are on to something, but we just might be alone…

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One Response to Rethinking the possibilities

  1. Tanis says:

    Black plastic mulch? Sounds like Brer Fox has been at it again.

like they do in the country

Like they do in the country…

After we had stopped working on the guinea pen for the day, someone got a wild hair and decided to dance on the new platform –

Kristron – ‘We need to get out more.’

Me – ‘We are out more.  We’re all the way out back.’

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One Response to Like they do in the country…

  1. Kristin says:

    One brain… this was totally in my cue! Let’s get our bikes up and running as soon I get back.

the short chain

The short chain

I like the way farming looks.  Not the cleared acres with unending rows; that bores me and makes my mouth a little sour.  I’m talking about the short rows and the squatting bodies, the hand seeding and pebble flicking.  It is intimate in a way that maybe only someone who is in it all the time can understand.

 

 

This entry was posted in biographical. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to The short chain

  1. Marlow says:

    I like the way your pictures look. And your stories….and your beard.

  2. mike says:

    eh ehm…I think April say it best!

new quitter book review and news

New Quitter book review and news

The Quitter book received a new review in the latest issue of Zine World (#27).

Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying: Compendium of the first five issues of Quitter zine, in a nice hand-sewn hardback, with dust jacket and stickers. Trace’s essays wander appealingly and wittily around, as he searches for something real in our cosmetic world. Issue #2 is the standout: Trace flies over the Midwest, musing over cultural impermanence. I liked this greatly, but however nice the book and stickers are, $19 is more than I would have paid for it.

Making books is not what I’m looking to do with my Spring and Summer.  It is more of a Winter project, a project that I failed with horribly this year.  I am behind on books – way behind.  If you ordered a book recently, you will get it within the next few weeks.

So I am again looking into getting the book printed in softcover, either through a self-publishing avenue or by a publisher wanting to run with it.  All options are open, but I simply can’t keep up with a hand made book…

If anyone out there knows of a publisher, is a publisher or just wants to help out, let me know.

I will continue to offer the paperback version as well as individual issues, but I am taking the hardcover version off the shelf.

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to New Quitter book review and news

  1. Kristin says:

    Try being a quitter of perfectionism and start recognizing your awesomeness, babes.

  2. Tanis says:

    I have a couple of extras if you need them but I will need to have them replaced!!!!!!!!! Can I help you do anything with the books?

new blood in the old body

New blood for the old body

Many of us never meant to become farmers.  We had our ambitions to enter the world as accountants or lawyers or teachers or some other clean, respectable professional.  We never really thought about the origins of our food; we always knew that the supermarket shelves would fill themselves, food came in boxes or cans ready to serve and farmers were simply one dimensional photographs in the mix of a hot new marketing campaign.

Farming was at best some idyllic retirement scheme, never a seriously considered career possibility.

But then something happened.  In the previously steady route of our lives, a shift occurred.  The soil moved under us somehow, got stuck in the creases of our pants, in the ridges of our shoes, in the lines of our palms.  Suddenly white picket fences, situation comedies and mutual fund returns didn’t seem so interesting anymore.  The big ball game and the driving range became distractions from the reality of a new love affair.  We got hooked on the possibilities of growing our own food and also providing that food to others.

The epiphany was likely different for many of us.  Maybe a friend took us to a farmers market.  Maybe someone had a plate of local hamburgers or collards at a picnic.  Maybe the news of some global food disaster made us question the monocultures piled high on our plates.  Maybe a real life farmer entered our life.

For a few of us, those with farming in our past – a childhood spent in the fields of the big farms or the family plots, throwing rocks into the hedgerows for little or no pay or watching over milking machines in the stench of industrial sized barns – there was no love, no kind of encouragement, no appreciation for our part in the dynamics of food production.  We were simply limbs and calluses then, small gears in a giant cranking clock.  We left the farm to pursue something else only to be pulled back hard when it became apparent that we could abandon everything that farming once meant to us.  We could make it ours.

Still others came to farming from DIY and anti-authoritarian backgrounds, building urban community gardens or putting up food in anarchist collectives.  Gardening always had a community aspect to it, but we wanted something more.  We knew that we could do the work, that we had the right vision and skills.  We just needed the access and the resources to get started.

Regardless of how we arrived at this point, here we are; we will call ourselves farmers from now on.

Our new loves – with their sharp hooves and unfamiliar odors, bright green leaves and bee covered flowers – give all the confidence to continue and pursue every goal we can imagine.  Our new hates – hail, crop failures and rain on market days – fully test our tolerance and keep those same goals in the territory of attainability.  Throughout all the highs and lows we can look at ourselves over and over again knowing that, if we stick to our ideals, we can do noble and appropriate work no matter what happens.

Local and sustainable farmers are our peers and our heroes, the most supportive, loving and steadfast community we could ever hope for.

We young and new farmers have the opportunity to change the features of the agricultural systems we have come to inherit.  Through the way we speak, act and work we can change the old infrastructure, market by market and county by county.  We have the time and ability to influence extension agents, educational systems and other institutions to make them function the way we need them to function in order to attain a sane and purposeful community based food system.

We are the new blood in the old body.

13 Responses to New blood for the old body

    1. Brad Mills says:

      This is the best post I have read yet. I love following the blog and knowing how many people are quietly changing their lives for health, security and community.

    1. Margaret says:

      Trace –

      You can speak for me anytime!

      Thanks for giving such eloquent voice to the soul of our movement.

    1. Nicole says:

      Thank you for articulating what we can’t all find the words to say. And for doing what so many of us, so far, have only dreamed of doing.

    1. Ali says:

      This is simply beautiful.

      & a big THANK YOU to the new bloods.

    1. Samantha says:

      Trace, your posts add significant value to our efforts as a mob. Thank you for documenting. It’s wonderful to read!

    1. Camille says:

      You’ve outdone yourself with this post!

    1. Emma says:

      What a beautiful and inspiring discription of youth, farming, and so many things. I work on a couple farms in Northeast CT, and it’s great to find information on what other young farmer folk are up to. I’ll be following your escapades! Check out my blog if you feel like it http://yawantapeanut.blogspot.com/
      thanks
      Emma

    1. Great work. The in-town farmers markets in Greensboro and Winston-Salem speak to the heart of the region and combine all the traditions. My first stop whenever I visit.

    1. Michael G. Cistulli says:

      Beautifully said!!!

    1. Hi Trace – A friend of ours just forwarded some information about HR 875, the Food Safety Modernization Act of 2009.

      You’ve probably seen the YouTube video that’s going around or the Sunlight doc.

      What do you know about this bill? Is it as bad as some people allege? It does seem sort of nefarious, and of course it’s being vigorously sponsored by Monsanto et al.

      Thanks

    1. Pingback: Agrarian Road Trip: Part Two « HOT Urban Gardening Coalition

    1. Pingback: Agrarian Road Trip: Part Two. « Waste-Not Wagon

    1. Geri H. Brown says:

      I’m a library information assistant and I came upon your site while researching a customer’s question. I’ve enjoyed the posts I’ve read. In my experience, however, the small farm/buy local movement cuts across all generations. Here in Vancouver, WA (across the Columbia River from Portland, OR), grower-vendors at the farmers’ market range in age from 20-somethings to 85. Some older growers are carrying on a family tradition while others retired from city careers.

      That’s the great thing about the movement – it’s bringing generations together again.

      Geri

on a snow day or any day please eat what you kill

On a snow day or any day, please eat what you kill

Where I grew up, it was hard to go nine days in Winter without some sort of snow fall event.  Here in North Carolina, nine years is about the average wait for an significant snow.  In New York, days off from school because of the weather were very rare, but those days were always met with enthusiasm.  A snow day meant sledding on the Thruway bridge or banging around on snowmobiles or just walking around in the woods.  Days off from work because of snow were even rarer, and those days were usually met with early beer and earlier bed.

With the beauty of the snow in NC comes the problem of clearing it from the roads and the ridiculous frenzy and panic of the local population.  Just the threat of snow is enough to close all schools and most businesses.  Bread and milk flies off the store shelves, people forget how to drive and banks close their doors.  It took me three days to make a deposit at the local bank branch; even the day of the deposit had a delayed opening.

Snow plows are in very short supply around here, and it can take a day just to clear a major highway.  We live on a side road off another side road off yet another side road and then down a dirt road, which basically means that we never see the snow plow anywhere near our home.

It is nothing like New York where the plows come fast and often, their sounds destroying the quiet of night.  I wrote about the plows in Quitter #5.  Here is a taste –

Oh, How Long December…
During a snow storm, the plows mostly come at night.  In the sturdy, hoary months of childhood in Western New York, I would lay awake listening as the distant scraping of the plow brushed its steel blades over the roughly poured asphalt.  In the dry winter air, the low hum could be heard for miles, the flashing orange roof lights of the plow radiating off the lumbering snowflakes, themselves moving unpredictably towards any available surface, wrestling the wind’s vacillating directions.

First the plow would pass to the south of our house, down the thin Barville Road, then up North Byron Road and finally across our unmarked, no-shoulder road.  As the sound grew closer I would pull my face up to the window, watching the coming lights reflect off every available inch of ground, the thick cover of flurries yielding very little until the massive vehicle was right in front of my eyes.  A wave of snow and rock passed over the giant chisel, driven by a mass of grinding metal and boiling oil, echoing brutal noises off the aluminum siding of the house.  The sound and lights would fade as the driver made way through the expansive grid of rurality, on and on towards the gawking of other children unable to sleep.

***************

In Chatham County we are blessed with the ability to grow food all year round.  With this blessing comes the curse of trying to fool the natural cycles either through the creative use of energy (wood stove in the greenhouse) or by the less intensive means of row covers and low tunnels.

Yesterday’s snow meant that the folks at Piedmont Biofarm had to battle the flakes in order to keep their crops alive.  I found farmer Doug Jones busy in the storm sweeping off his row covers with a push broom.

Even he had to admit that it was a losing battle.  A day later, he and a few of his interns finished the work, clearing the snow and ice by hand.

***************

Yesterday ended up being a half day of work for myself and Kristin.  The first snow at the farm was an event for me even though snow and cold and ice is basically in my blood.  I haven’t studied an icicle in years.  The icicle is an indication of poor roofing and a lack of insulation, but let’s leave all that for the adults to think about…

One thing you don’t usually see is a Magnolia grandiflora full of snow.  The evergreen leaves stand out during the brown of our short Winter, but they really stand out against the cold white of an even shorter and rarer snow fall.

And what would the short work day be without a little snow fight action?

We threw snowballs at each other and at 80 (our doggie).  But she was busy with work most of the afternoon, and could barely be bothered to play along.

Her “work” mostly consists of chasing mice in the back field and running around like a crazy person.

This work keeps her occupied and healthy, alert and slim.  It is almost a script – the mice run; she follows their scent, bouncing from grass clump to tree stump, digging up rocks and fallen branches all day long.  The mice run some more.  Repeat.

80 doesn’t really come off as a killer.  Now I’m starting to think that I should be cheering her on.  After all, with a depleted mouse population, we may be able to lower the tick infestation in the Spring.  Mouse blood is the gateway drug for young ticks.  Damn delinquents…

After she caught the mouse (the first one I ever saw her catch), I basically took it away from her.  Later on in the evening I thought that it probably would be best if she had been allowed to eat her catch.  We live in the middle of nowhere, so these field mice are not eating poison.  Kind of a waste of protein.

From now on at Circle Acres, the number one rule for all of us is “You eat what you kill.”

This entry was posted in biographical, circle acres, photo essays, scavenging. Bookmark the permalink.

7 Responses to On a snow day or any day, please eat what you kill

  1. winterbear says:

    ‘Sgreat!!! Amazing photos!

    80 is so awesome!

  2. Camille says:

    Back in the day when I had pets, I kept company with a gray cat who hunted all day long. He always ate most of what he killed, leaving tiny, glistening piles of dark offal for me in the carport.

    Smokey never brought his catch up to the house after the first time, when he was only several months old. I scolded him and then picked both him and the dead mouse up, took them out and put them down, crooning “good kitty” to him as he ate his kill.

    I spent part of my childhood in the Bronx and remember making snow forts and igloos during the winter. We’d wear ourselves out and come in to my Mom’s hot chocolate After dinner, my dad would make us snow cream for dessert.

    It’s good for me to take a moment and recall the joys of winter, now that I’m older, colder and spent eight years in the tropics. I don’t like winter much at all anymore, but at least I can still remember what it felt like to enjoy playing in and eating the snow.

  3. Kristin says:

    i’ll wash that dog’s mouth out with turkey toothpaste!

  4. Trace says:

    Not sure the turkey toothpaste will make things in her mouth any better…

  5. Ali says:

    80 is adorable! & your pictures are always the best.

    Hope the plants survived.

  6. Marlow says:

    Max would like to know if 80 is hiring.

  7. Parrish says:

    Trace!

    Great pictures! We’ve been looking into a dead rat quiche, but as it turns out, it has gluten in it and you know the April is intolerant to that (the gluten, not the rat).

    I added your blog to my short list of ‘Great Blogs’. April hooked me up with a blog to keep all of my poems in one, accessible place.

    Hope you are great! We hope to be in your area sooner than later, semi-permanently.

soil farmers

Soil farmers

So, the reality of starting a farm is starting to creep up.  Noel and I are tossing around ideas, and it seems that the current stage can best be labeled as “experimental design”.  We have lots of ideas on what we don’t want to do, such as growing boring yellow squash and cucumbers in a market where everyone has boring yellow squash and cucumbers.

For several reasons, we can afford to mess around (within reason) with nutritionally superior, fun to grow and aesthetically amazing food all while building the soil.  As Noel says, we’re soil farmers first and foremost.  And we have an amazing array of soils on our little twelve acres.

Our land is basically split down the middle into two basic soil types.  To really geek out for a minute, the west half is a Cid Lignum complex or CmB.  The east half is Nanford Badin complex or NaB.

The Cid series consists of moderately deep, moderately well drained or somewhat poorly drained soils on Piedmont uplands. These soils formed in residuum weathered from argillite and other fine-grained metavolcanic rocks.

Soils of the Lignum series are deep and moderately well and somewhat poorly drained. They formed in the residuum weathered from Carolina slate or other fine grained metavolcanic rocks.

Soils of the Nanford series are deep and well drained. They are on uplands and formed in material weathered from argillite and other fine grained metavolcanic rocks of the Carolina Slate Belt.

The Badin series consists of moderately deep, well drained, moderately permeable soils that formed in residuum weathered from fine-grained metavolcanicrocks of the Carolina Slate Belt.

So basically CmB and NaB are combinations of these two soil series.  What does that all mean?  From what I interpret it means that NaB is the preferable soil type.  But the thing is that each soil type can be modified significantly (at the top level) by adding organic matter.  The subsoil will remain as the identified complex.  Keep in mind that I am not a soil scientist, so I could be completely wrong.

Beyond those two types, a half dozen areas of the property have top soils with different characteristics.  In the northwest corner of the below picture, dense orange and gray clays are dominant.  Gray clay is generally nutritionally inferior to the darker orange clay.  Both drain poorly though and dry into hard clots if tilled when wet and left bare.

In the northeast, the soil has more organic matter and crumbles unlike the clay.  This is most likely a former garden site that has had organic matter added over time.  That are will be the start point for production.  The rest will go into cover crops and mulching.

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One Response to Soil farmers

  1. Marlow says:

    Oooh!! Exciting! You have to admit thought, there’s nothing quite as tasty as yellow squash sliced thin, tossed in cornmeal, and fried up.

a very quitter new year

A very Quitter new year

Since the June 2008 release of my book Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying, I failed to reach my goal of one-hundred books sold by the end of the year.  I sold a little over sixty, which isn’t bad for a six month effort.  I know it doesn’t sound like much, but sixty hand-made hardcover books represents about two-hundred-plus hours of work.  Design, prototyping, printing, cutting, gluing, etc. paid me about $4.00 an hour to do.  Add in the cost for materials, and I almost broke even for the year.  Almost.

So, for 2009 a few things are changing.  For one, the price of the hardcover is going up to $18.  I am not looking to get rich with this effort (it is working so far, right?) but the process should at least cover the associated costs.  In addition, I will also start printing a softcover version for around $8, give or take, that I can start shipping really soon.  The softcover will also be full color and individually numbered just like the hardcover.  Both versions should be available through The Abundance Foundation pretty soon.  In the meantime, check out the Quitter page to order.  If you live in Chatham County North Carolina, I’ll take payment in Plenties at the old hardcover price of $15 (1 and 1/2 Plenties), paperback at $5 (1/2 Plenty)!

If that were not enough, the ideas for Quitter #6 are rattling around in my head, on scraps of paper thrown all over the heres and theres of my life or sitting alone somewhere, talking to themselves and waiting for me to go pick them up.  I’ll get on that shortly…

And finally, I hope to commit issues one through five to audio in the very near future.  Look out!

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One Response to A very Quitter new year

  1. lynn says:

    happy birthday trace!

industrial carrots and uncle television

Industrial carrots and Uncle Television

Last week Kristin and I traveled back to my hometown near Buffalo, NY for Christmas.  My brother, his wife Kristen and nine month old Charlie (my first nephew) also made the trip from Fort St. John, British Columbia.

Traveling back is usually a culture shock.  I don’t use television, microwaves, automatic dishwashers or disposable plates, but those are just the basics of my family’s lifestyle.  Christmas morning, Uncle Television screamed as we opened gifts and tried to talk to each other.  It didn’t really faze anyone else, but Kristin and I realized that no one was even watching the stupid thing.  That morning was the first of many where I asked that it be turned off.

We watched my brothers play video games for days.  Guitar Hero and some other games for the Nintendo Wii shared time with random shows about how peanut butter is made and Shirley Temple movies.

I gave in and played some bowling on the Wii.  It was pretty fun – all the fun of bowling and you can quit any time you want.

Discussion of taxes crept into every daily conversation.  A new “obesity tax” on soda drinks proposed by the governor of New York has members of my family up in arms.  My response – “don’t buy soda” – was met with weird looks.  The best anyone living around there can do is complain, stay uninvolved in any decision making process, watch television, eat crappy food, and complain some more.  It drives me insane to see so much apathy attached to so much moaning and groaning about the state of things.  And no proposed solution makes any sense to them.

“Food is too expensive”. Have you tried growing more of your own?  “Vehicle registrations are going up in price.” How about ditching one of your vehicles?  “The gas taxes are crazy.” How about driving to town once a day instead of four?  It is always the same whenever I visit; nothing is ever good enough or cheap enough or easy enough.  My response can only be that we live in a world of our own making.

I had some complaining to do myself.  Besides the television being on all the time and eating on Styrofoam, I had issues with the same old racism and homophobia that plagues my family.  Not much to do with that except argue and inject some acidic comments into the mix.

As if all that were not enough, a ten acre field of carrots rotted in a field across from the house because the industrial sized farm (where I worked as a teenager, by the way) had met their quota at the cannery.  As an aside, my father insisted that the owners of the farm didn’t receive much of anything from the federal subsidy system.  A quick search of the federal database says that each of the four brothers received $52,000 in subsidies last year.  So the farm received a total of $208,000 last year.  That seems significant to me.

Tons of carrots will stay in the ground not because there isn’t a market or people aren’t hungry, but because an arbitrary threshold has been crossed at one processor.  All the labor, fuel, time and thought that went in to tilling, planting, weeding are wasted.  Not to mention all the energy that went into growing and shipping the seed…

We managed to rescue a few carrots from the field for our salads, but most were so large as to be impractical for anything but the processing facility.

For food, we made a pumpkin lasagna based on a recipe from a recent local lunch.

On the way from the airport we stopped at Lexington Co-op to get the needed supplies, looking out for local ingredients.  Local milk, acorn squash and butter made it into the dish that we would end up eating for four meals.

The alternatives were not appealing:

This entry was posted in biographical, food sources. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Industrial carrots and Uncle Television

  1. Ali says:

    That is the biggest carrot I have ever seen!!!

    & I feel your pain about the TV. My parents leave it on & stress over what to watch, flipping for what seems like hours for the perfect show, just to get distracted & not even watch it. I ended up turning it to the music station just for some atmosphere (& end the talk & commercials) & they wondered what was wrong?

    Its nice to be back home… nice quiet home.

  2. Camille says:

    It’s always a shock to come into contact with T.V., Styrofoam and crops rotting in the field but sadly, often the price we must pay to hang out with family. What a coincidence that your brother’s wife is Kristen! I’m so glad you knew where to look for that lasagna recipe and happy to have you back inside our little bubble.

punk n pie part two

Punk ‘N Pie part two

After the pie auction, folks could be seen in every corner of the room eating and sharing their pies.  A few people dug their fingers into our sweet potato dish.

I’m not sure which pie bakers ended up with dates, but I don’t think that was really anyone’s intent.

With pies filling bellies, it was time for the entertainment to begin.  A puppet re-enactment of the victory over the police, presented in three hysterical segments…

Then on to some anarcho-country folk punk from Dan Mac.

My favorite song from Dan was about liberals, their hypocrisy and how they are part of the problem and not the solution.  My distrust of the right is often eclipsed by my distaste for the inaction, posturing and verbal drooling of the left.

i’m sick of you
and your goddamned hypocrisy
if peace is patriotic
i’m starting a fight

they’re not my soldiers
and they’re not my astronauts
we can all be leaders
and we don’t need fuckin’ cops

clear cut the forests with hybrid machinery
Brutus and Judas have nothing on us
don’t say the “R” word, just write to your congressman
we’re here and profiteers, traitors of trust

The recent Obama selection of big-ag, cloned meat cheerleader, GMO loving, ethanol guzzling, bio-pharmaceutical conman, and all around jerkstore cowboy Tom Vilsack as Secretary of Agriculture illustrates the last verse perfectly.  When you trust a politician, sooner or later you lose.  Now we’re losing sooner – maybe there won’t be rainbows, peace on Earth and gold raining from the sky on January 20th after all.  Thankfully, we can still rely on each other instead of the so-called representatives.  Can we just call them “self-described representatives”?

Anyway, the last band to play was From the Depths.

Their set was energetic, but it was the crowd that made the show.  Animated and dynamic, many of the folks were pulling out some of the old dances, but I saw some new things during the show as well.

Intensity was not lacking…

During the From the Depths set, someone said that they voted for Obama because he promised to make punk lyrics understandable and audible.  They are going to hold him to that promise…

From that seed
A mighty root
And it grew

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2 Responses to Punk ‘N Pie part two

  1. mike says:

    Thanks Trace…a healthy serving of truth, as always!

    stopvilsack.org

  2. permie boi says:

    Hey great post and great photos. I wonder if you knew their is actually a band named punkin pie? I think their out of portland. Anyway I love your site and welcome you to stop by a e-zine I facilitate at http://www.punkrockpermaculture.wordpress.com
    We’re currently looking for more contributors so please pass the word along. Writers are currently compensated by hugs but that is subject to change.

    ~permie boi

stone house crop mob

Stone House Crop Mob

I wonder how much the Crop Mob is about agriculture and how much is simply about enjoying the company of like minded people?  We came from all over to dig beds and spread mulch for someone most of us had never met, yet we did it with skill, enthusiasm and the efficiency of seasoned laborers.  This is only the second time the Crop Mob was used; for a third of this group of 24 this was their first experience with the group.

An outsider would question our motives as would some cynical old-timers or jaded sustainable agriculture veterans.  I wouldn’t even bother with those folks.  My main thought is not on convincing the skeptics that our agenda is one of filling a need, but rather my main thought is Where do we go from here?

Three months out of Wilmington and it is finally settling in that I am in a very different place.  Things move quickly here and things get done by folks who say they will do them.  I can feel some of my own cynicism fading away as I leave behind some of the vapidity of Wilmington, its slow moving, energy-sucking ambivalence flaking away like dead skin.

I am starting to warm up to the people that spin around in my daily interactions.  I’m trying to build the sorts of friendships that emulate family.  The Crop Mob is helping me with some of my apprehensions about new people and my own motives for entering a new world as an automatically standoffish person.

I have had a hard time, wondering how I would fit in when my experiences with building community in Wilmington often met with horrible failure.  I came into a ready made yet evolving community, ready to take my place yet unsure of what that place would look like.

It seems that my role here could be one of role model or experienced advice giver, but mostly, in the first few months, my role has been that of a lost explorer.  Things that I know how to do – cook, forage, dumpster dive – have been lost temporarily as I try to figure out the basics of living.

Cooking without anything resembling a kitchen has been frustrating; washing dishes without a good source of water makes cooking more of a chore than it needs to be.  What that has to do with the Crop Mob is beyond me, but it does affect my interactions.  It has also made my first impressions harder to shake.  Adah (pictured above) has tooled on me about my peanut butter and white bread lunches, but for me that meal has been easy, quick and comfortable in this time of transition.

Now that some of those issues are worked out, I feel like I can join this community in a functional capacity, sharing what I know and accepting learning opportunities as they present themselves.

And yet I am still not a talker.

To bring it back to the Crop Mob, the rhythm of the work is often set with old camp songs.  The one I have heard at both mobs is about sweet potatoes and biscuits –

Sweet potato biscuit that’s what I said
sweet potato biscuit dancing through my head
went to the cook’s table askin’ for some bread
found me a biscuit but the cooks was all dead

Sweet potato, sweet potato biscuit on the run
gotta find me a biscuit, gotta get me some of them
Sweet potato, sweet potato biscuit on the run
gotta find me a biscuit, gotta get me some

Standin’ on the lookout since the day before last
saw a line of biscuits stretchin’ into the past
Jesus on the hillside you know what he said
he said take this biscuit this sweet potato bread

Standing on the banks of the river wide
hop on a biscuit and catch yourself a ride
ride to the devils house all the way
share a biscuit with the devil on the judgment day

Sweet potato, sweet potato, sweet potato, biscuit
sweet potato, sweet potato, sweet potato, biscuit

sweet potato, sweet potato, sweet potato, biscuit
(whispered) sweet potato, sweet potato, sweet potato, (shouted) BISCUIT!!

This entry was posted in activism, biographical, crop mobs. Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to Stone House Crop Mob

  1. mike says:

    ‘A VERY special place…’

    Sad I missed this one.

  2. shawna says:

    Gorgeous pictures & concept! Looks like a great day/life.

  3. T. Gray says:

    Believe it or not, you did plant seeds while in Wilmington. My sister shops at Tidal Creek occasionally, sent me the article about your move in the Wilmington paper, and I have lurked on your blog ever since. I’m an old fart dad/potter/community garden manager in Seagrove, about an hour+ west of you. We’re in the beginning stages of organizing, if you wanna call it that, a crop mob. See? Nothing is for naught. One more thing—community also means acknowledging/accepting/honoring those that disagree with us, don’t like us, or just don’t give a fig one way or the other. They too are part of the fabric that makes up a particular community in a particular place. I think I got that from Wendell Berry.

  4. Trace says:

    I know that I planted plenty of seeds in Wilmington. The problem is, not many of them were “potted up”.

the farm starts now

The farm starts…now

There are only two months to go before the other half of Team Buckner moves to the farm.  The reality is that the house is barely ready for Kristin and I, even though we are only inhabiting 250 square feet of it for the foreseeable future.  The house is about 1600 square feet total.

Our little “apartment” holds the wood stove (our only source of heat), our new fridge, toaster oven, bed, two tables, a dog, a cat, and the day to day possessions of the two of us.  The place is pretty snug, but we are getting used to navigating it.

We now have running water, but no hot water heater.  We also have power, but only one working outlet.  Small steps seem to take forever, but in the larger picture the pace is not really all that bad.

The rest of the house is in a state of rotten.  The floors collapsed or were in the process of collapsing.  All of the timbers that hold up the house frame have been eaten away by water and termites.  They literally crumble into dust when touched.

The original construction of the destroyed parts of the house was done with any available materials.  The pilings that hold up the place are merely stacks of field rocks and random bricks.  One section of the house is held up with two scrap pieces of firewood.

house frame

In order for Noel and Danielle to take residence in the upstairs portion of the house, the bottom level has to be rebuilt in order to hold the weight of two people and their stuff.  At the moment it would be sketchy to even think about living above the disaster.

rotten frame

I’m not sure how the stairs are even held up.  They float above the dirt floor like a ghostly transporter to the upper floor.

the people under the stairs

The large chimney was built on top of a pile of rocks with no other support.  It is no wonder that the chimney itself is turning into its own pile of rocks.

dust

still life with shovel

The floors came out pretty easily with the help of a sledge hammer and reciprocating saw.  Mike and Noel tore it up in a short period of time.

floors removed

We found evidence of other residents.  A pile of deer ribs, half a corn cob and a turtle shell told the tale of a scavenger living among us.

bone collector

Another entrance to the house has been consumed by water damage.  A ruptured pipe under the house and a leaking roof provide plenty of standing water and rot.

holy floor

Outside the house Danielle, Noel and I also found time to scour the woods for downed cedar trees.  These will be used for fence posts to hold in the goats and keep out the deer.

cedar posts

Planting time is coming soon, and the decision to take on a farming apprentice in February (more on that later!) is making the house and land preparations all the more urgent.  I have been hauling horse manure and cardboard like a crazy person, getting the building blocks for the farm beds together.  Let’s start the countdown…

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

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2 Responses to The farm starts…now

  1. mike says:

    Laissez Les Bon Temps Roulez!!!

  2. ilex says:

    Holy cow, what a pile of work you have before you.

like weeds well grow

Like Weeds We’ll Grow

I do not look up to the people that mainstream culture considers heroes and role models.  Sports figures, TV personalities, cops, and politicians do nothing to inspire me or make me believe that they live any type of life that I would want to emulate.  My heroes are my friends, the people who are making things happen in their daily lives that have the capacity to change how the world works and change it for the better.

It is profoundly more satisfying to sit on a porch talking with your heroes rather than watching them act like another person on television or race a car around a track or beat up people practicing what is left of their rights.

My heroes dig in the dirt, work in offices, have short hair and long hair, piercings and tattoos, crisp shirts and ties.

My heroes have trembling voices, strong voices or sometimes no voices at all.  They are all ages, from various backgrounds.  I learn from them and they learn from me, sharing practical information on fixing bicycle tires or picking wild edible plants, creating the type of community where no one wants for anything if they are willing to participate and work for each other and themselves.

My heroes are everywhere, and I meet more of them everyday.  They grow like weeds, through the cracks and crevices of society, immune to the herbicides dumped upon them.

Be Your Own Hero!

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One Response to Like Weeds We’ll Grow

  1. lynn says:

    yay! i couldn’t take my eyes off of the eye candy on the wall!

Quitter #4

new quitter 4 review

New Quitter #4 review

From Zine World #26

quitter #4: Every once in awhile you read a zine written in beautiful prose. It’s great, you don’t have to commit to read beautiful and complex descriptions for a whole book; instead you get a brain massage for just a few moments while waiting for the bus. My favorite story was on the author’s experience living out in nature for three months studying birds: “Early on in the study I passed the time chewing on birch twigs and inventing commentaries, developing arguments against the domestication of humans, and settling philosophical disputes between pebbles and sticks, using a slow flowing creek as the adjudicator.” Other stories discuss an unnamed health condition and a treatise on fish sticks; “plastic wrapped… fully reduced from sentient parts of an underwater ecosystem into full color anthropomorphic cartoon representations of happy fish enjoying a full plate of their own ‘fingers.’” Trace [$1.50 everywhere, or trade 20XS :15] –ailecia

Quitter #4

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local lunch friday

Local Lunch Friday

I am settling in to my new work home, trying to remember people’s names and failing to quite get where it is that everyone fits into this project.  There is a farm component at The Plant as well an accounting office, a sustainable energy/local food focused foundation, and, of course, a million gallon a year biodiesel production facility.

Inside that facility there are also plenty of other components such as R&D, an analytics lab and a design/build team that works on making new facilities and fuel reactors.  Oh, and add to that a new piece that will do glycerin refining.  Wait, and the reactor that makes bug spray our of rue.  And the hydroponic greenhouse.  And the giant vermicomposter.

With all these components comes plenty of people and personalities, running past each other as they work or play or occasionally do both at the same time.  At most points in my day, the length of time I could have a conversation if I wanted to is minimal (and those who know me know that I am not a talker).

In this hectic environment, the folks around here came up with a nice speed-bump called Local Lunch Friday.  The idea is for teams of people – involved with The Plant on some level – to cook lunch for everyone else.  Once a week, everyone comes together to share a space and a meal made from as much local content as possible.

This past Friday was my first Local Lunch.  It was also ECO’s turn to make food, so I got to cook for thirty people in my first week on the job and without knowing many of those same people.

We made pepper slaw with peppers from Green Dreams Farm in Pittsboro, Baba ghanoush, flatbread and crackers.

There was also apple crisp out of Caroline Red June apples from one of our farmers in the mountains.

My contribution was a chunky squash and tomato soup seasoned only with honey.

A crowder pea pie made with spaghetti squash and potatoes served as the main dish.

Farmers, fuel makers, interns, friends and guests; all turned out for a great lunch where the food disappeared in minutes.  It was a good exposure to the people populating The Plant.  Hopefully I can get over myself and start to talk to folks more, get over my stand-offish outer appearance and spread more of the “hey, come talk to me” spores into the wind around me.

This entry was posted in biographical, ECO. Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Local Lunch Friday

  1. lyle says:

    Sorry I missed it. Think of us as a giant tangle of hair, or perhaps an extension cord that has never been properly wound. Bring your conditioner, your comb, and your patience, and it will all start making sense soon enough.

  2. If you want, I’m pretty sure that I may be able to make you a t-shirt that says, “Hey come talk to me.” And just so you know, your appearance is not as stand-offish as you think. I feel that you appear more smart and deep in thought than snooty. You’ll be showing them the Brule’s Rules in no time!

  3. Ali says:

    have fun at lunch today. Just invite April as your guest, she can get anyone talking to you…as demonstrated in her t-shirt idea. If you feel too out of the loop, just drive on down for pizza day! & I have to agree, you do give off the relaxed smart vibe. They will warm up to you in no time at all.

back in the news locavore takes his passion to the next level

Back in the News: ‘Locavore’ takes his passion to the next level

You thought that since I moved away from Wilmington that all would be forgotten?  In the news again

Tidal Creek Co-op produce manager Trace Ramsey bills himself as an anarchist, but his desire to pull up stakes and help build a self-sustaining farm with four friends is part of an organized plan.

Ramsey left his Tidal Creek position last week to the dismay of customers who, for the past five years, relied on him to keep the cooperative stocked with fresh local fruit and vegetables. Now, on 12 acres in Chatham County, he’ll raise animals and grow organic vegetables, working the land without mechanical tools.

Continued

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4 Responses to Back in the News: ‘Locavore’ takes his passion to the next level

  1. Ali says:

    …never forgotten! You’re a legend. Just get used to it! :)

  2. I’m pretty sure you have officially beaten me in our “local media” competition. Geez! This article is awesome and much deserved! Next up, Oprah!

  3. Pete Soderman says:

    Trace:

    Steve brought the paper with the story to the meeting Thursday night & he, Mike and I would like to wish you all the best! Much luck with what you are doing with your life & may you succeed beyond your wildest dreams.

    Pete Soderman

  4. Hi there,

    Sorry to be a bit off topic here, but reason I am writing to you from deepest France is because at Farm Blogs from Around the World (a completely and entirely non-commercial site) I am trying to gather in one place the very best of global blogging about farms, farming, rural life and anything concerning the production of food and fibre.

    You were recommended to me by Kathryn at Countryfarm Lifestyles and I’ve done a post about her recommendation which you can find at http://farmblogs.blogspot.com/2008/09/countryfarm-lifestyles-recommends.html

    You can find the blog roll, sorted by country (and a General Interest section).

    My posts are made up of the blog recommendations from farm bloggers and I also post regular stories about world farming.

    All blogs have been recommended to me by other bloggers or identified by me during my occassional browsing.

    I have a pretty broad definition of farming – if you’re producing food or fibre, on whatever scale, you’re a farmer, to my mind at least.

    So blogs range from ranches to part-time smallholders, and resources for them.

    Once recommended, I add them to the blogroll and then contact the bloggers (just as I am contacting you), asking them to send me a few words about their farm/small-holding and their blog and, critically, to recommend their favourite farm/farming blogs (just as Kathryn recommended you).

    And so it goes and grows.

    I added you to my blog roll but I am trying to provide a little more info besides each link – namely location; acreage; stock and crops raised).

    I would very much appreciate it if you could please consider:

    a) writing to me with a brief description of your blog and holding (at a minimum location; acreage; stock and crops in order to help people find like minded souls) along with permission for a once off only use of a couple of photos from your blog, so that I can make a posting about you;

    b) writing to me with your favourite farming/rural blogs recommendations;

    c) add a link on your blog, if that’s possible, to http://www.farmblogs.blogspot.com; and if you can find a moment even make a posting about http://www.farmblogs.blogspot.com and how this blog is growing organically accross the world from other farming bloggers.

    d) please feel free to send me the odd photo, both now and on an on-going basis (people who do this write to me about once a month, with a brief para of text and up to 5 photos – again it helps drive traffic to them). The blog tries to pick up different seasonal activities in different parts of the world at different times, so any photos would be much appreciated – they also help drive traffic to your site.

    I know this is a drag but a lot of people are finding that my blog is driving a lot of traffic to them, so I hope you can find a moment to drop me a line. Very much hoping to hear from you,

    With kind regards,

    Ian

    http://www.farmblogs.blogspot.com

eastern carolina organics

Eastern Carolina Organics

On Monday I start work at Eastern Carolina Organics.  Yes, I’m really finally moving to the farm.  Yes, I’m really going to start driving again after all these years.  Yes, I hope my current internal-combustion mule has what it takes to commute a couple dozen miles a day.  No radio, no AC or heat, bad wiring and the previous owner’s silver bullet lock pins – what could go wrong?

Anyway, as produce manager for Tidal Creek I purchased small amounts from Eastern Carolina Organics over the years through various means of transport.  When I was in Pittsboro (home of ECO) I would try to haul home a carload of veggies or try to convince a friend or two to do the same.

The ECO model is pretty straightforward, but not simple – farmers get together with a manager who focuses on the marketing and sales.  This leaves the farmer to do what they do best – grow food – instead of trying to sell their goods all over the place.  The manager focuses on what they do best, which is getting the produce into the hands of chefs and retailers.  This model simplifies the process on both ends of the sale.  The farmer gets a distributor and the buyer gets a place that offers produce from a couple dozen of those farmers.

I was at the CFSA Sustainable Agriculture Conference in 2004 when the creation of ECO was announced.  ECO was born out of a modest grant from the Tobacco Trust Fund awarded in late 2003.  ECO became its own farmer-owned LLC in 2005 and hasn’t looked back.

I’m excited to become a larger part of the local food system, excited to get to know more North Carolina farmers personally and continue being part of something I believe in.  I’m also excited to be working at The Plant, an eco-industrial park of sorts with a farm, a biodiesel plant, a hydroponic greenhouse, a vermicomposting greenhouse and a billion energetic and dedicated people all over the place.  Count me in…

This entry was posted in biographical, ECO, work. Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Eastern Carolina Organics

  1. mike says:

    awesome job Trace! They’ll never know what hit ‘em…

  2. April says:

    I’m excited for this! I hope today is going well!

  3. Carson Jewell says:

    Hello, my name is Carson and I heard of you through my cousin Matt Jewell. I have a restaurant idea that I think you would like and I need a little guidance. Please contact me at the above email address at your convenience. Thanks a bunch!

quitter book review by gianni simone

Quitter book review by Gianni Simone

Gianni Simone, a mail artist residing in Japan, writes zine reviews for Xerography Debt as well as their own blog Gloomy Sundays.  Gianni recently reviewed my Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying book.

He (Trace) has been putting out his zine Quitter since 2005. After publishing five issues, he has decided to collect the whole lot into a 40-page hand-made book and he was kind enough to send me copy #35 (I know because each copy is numbered). The object itself is a little jewel, with a great color cover and color and b/w illustrations throughout. And then there’s the writing, of course. Put it simply, I believe that the best writing is the kind that 1) manages to be engaging regardless of the subject; 2) makes me think; and most of all 3) makes me feel like I want to take highlighter and pen and cover the pages with comments and orange marks. Quitter managed to do all these things.

Trace writes what he calls creative non fiction, and through the years has developed the ability to put common words together in original combinations. He manages to be sophisticated in a natural, unassuming way. At the same time, he anchors his rants with stories taken from his memories. Sometimes he will write something like ‘I was born with an extra pair of ribs’ and the reader (or at least a dumb reader, such as myself) will search for hidden meanings until he realizes that is the plain truth. Apart from the autobiographical notes, the common theme that returns in all the five issues is Trace’s decision to ‘quit’ the kind of world that humankind has turned into a huge pile of garbage. Quitting a job he hates and translates into ‘someone else’s hopes and mortgage and car payments;’ quitting unconscious consumption; temporarily quitting the civilized world in order to live for three months in ‘solitary confinement’ in a forest and study the breeding habits of a small songbird… What he will not quit is fighting to ‘preserve the history of (…) an idea that would often be considered irrelevant by the dominant culture,’ and writing ‘for an audience that is resilient in its opposition of being taken for granted.’ What can you ask more from a zine?

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One Response to Quitter book review by Gianni Simone

  1. Pingback: Books and Magazines Blog » Archive » Quitter book review by Gianni Simone

last day at work

Last day at work

Today was my last full day at work in Wilmington.  I have a meeting to attend next Thursday, and then I am on to more and different things.

I worked at Tidal Creek for most of five years.  Well, I took a few months off in 2004 for a short lived veggie-oil fueled car trip, but other than that have been on the clock at the co-op.  Here is the notice that went into the latest co-op newsletter:

In December of 2003 I found myself working a register at Tidal Creek Cooperative Food Market.  I was happily unemployed up to that point, earning my rent and food money by finding things in the trash and selling them on eBay.  I also ran an organic produce buying club and converted a few old diesel cars to run on used vegetable oil, forming the idea that would become Cape Fear Biofuels.  It was an interesting life even after the point where I decided to hold onto a time card again.

A year or so later I was produce manager.

As manager I have had some profound experiences that have shaped my life and my philosophy of community and food.  I have met and talked to a great many of you.  Those conversations shaped the way the produce department evolved over the years and determined the priorities for bringing in products.  You wanted organic; you wanted local; you wanted trust in the food and the systems and people that provide it.  Hopefully I have given you what you wanted.

It is now time for me to move on and take on new challenges.  I leave for my land in Chatham County to start a farm and get back into the dirt.

Nicole, my long time right hand in the produce department, is also leaving at the same time as I am.

I leave the department in the hands of a new staff and manager who will lead you into a new era.  Please welcome Stephen Chu (manager), Buddy and Stephen K. Embrace them as you have me and all the other produce folks over the years – Mike S, Sasha, Matt, Peter, Nathaniel, Stacey, Daniel, Brad, Shannon, and Nicole B.

Just to add on a bit to this, Mike, my previous right hand in the produce department, has moved to Chatham to get into the sustainable agriculture program.  So there will be a bit of the old with the new…

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3 Responses to Last day at work

  1. mike says:

    this is good…so close!

  2. Ugh. So sad. Awesome for you! So sad for me.

  3. Nicole says:

    I almost shed a tear. “Don’t liberate me…I’ll take care of that”. Couldn’t have said it better myself.

new look

New look

Since Cricket Bread has been steadily moving towards a life narrative and away from a local-food documentary, I decided it was time to change the look of things.  I will still do a lot of commentary on food issues, but it seems that there will be much more discussion about home construction, work, Quitter, etc..  I hope to do more photo stories as well, similar to the posts about farm tours.

Posts may take a bit longer in coming as I get settled into my new Internet-less home at the end of this month.  I intend to be heavily involved in the sustainable scene in Chatham County no matter what, so there should be plenty to share with all of you.  In the meantime, let me know what you think of the new layout.

By the way, the image header is supposed to rotate when you refresh the page…

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2 Responses to New look

don buckner education

Don Buckner education

Every time we go out to the land, we learn about a “blue million” new things.  This last weekend we learned about the elaborate trail system through the woods, where the natural springs are, where the home site is where our 77 year old neighbor, Don Buckner, was born.

We learned that that same neighbor was featured in a Chatham County Herald article in 1980 where he talked about doing some of the same things we are about to get ourselves into.  The article was all about organic agriculture, resource conservation and energy effeciency.  Windmills, solar hot water, woodlot management… Sound familiar?

3 Responses to Don Buckner education

  1. mike says:

    Wow! This is inspiring. Donnie sounds pretty amazing! Talk about a resource…

  2. Kristin says:

    Hey – I was born in 1980!

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2nd annual be your own hero fest

2nd Annual Be Your Own Hero Fest

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: Hero Fest!

Be Your Own Hero Festival Now Accepting Submissions

The 2nd Annual Be Your Own Hero (BYOH) Festival will be taking place in Wilmington, North Carolina September 27th and 28th, 2008. Submissions for workshops, info sessions, skill shares, and musicians are currently being accepted until August 15th, 2008. Volunteers are also needed to help out on the day(s) of the event and/or to join the BYOH Fest Planning Squad.

Please send workshop submissions to herofest@gmail.com with your name, email, phone, organization/collective (if applicable), proposed workshop title & short description, materials needed, and time needed. All other ideas, volunteer availability, and inquiries may also be sent to herofest@gmail.com. We welcome all subjects and we encourage all people to apply, especially those who do not fit neatly into the status quo!

In 2007, Wilmington NC was home to the first Be Your Own Hero Festival, an all day radical Do It Yourself (DIY) Festival held at the Soapbox Laundro Lounge. The Festival included a Really Really Free Market, potluck, workshops, info sessions and live music. 2007′s workshops included: DIY parenting (a radical concept), Basic Bicycle Repair, Truth in Recruiting / Promoting Peace, Social Activism & the Info-Radical, Radical Menstruation, Food Politics, Trans 101: Becoming an ally to transgender people, Unconventional Action: Organizing against the DNC/RNC, and DIY DJ Workshop. Bands included: The Brothels, The Nothing Noise, Gator Country, Prize Winners Collective, NED, and Ghost Mice.

For more information on the Be Your Own Hero Festival and Collective, visit www.beyrownhero.com or contact herofest @ gmail.com.

_______________________

Be Your Own Hero Fest Workshop Submission Form

Email to herofest @ gmail.com by July 31, 2008

NAME:

EMAIL:

PHONE:

ORGANIZATION / COLLECTIVE:

PROPOSED WORKSHOP TITLE:

DESCRIPTION:

MATERIALS NEEDED:

TIME NEEDED: choose from 45 minutes, or 1 hour and 45 minutes

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AAC block

the big move

The big move

On August 31st we leave Wilmington for the land in Silk Hope. The replacement produce manager has been hired on at Tidal Creek. Kristin is working out her work plans. Inspections for septic and electric are going on this week, and we hope to have final house plans in our hands by this Friday.

The plan is to live in part of the old house while we build the new house. We’ll work on parts of the old house in order that it is more livable for Danielle and Noel when they arrive in the winter. For now we are ripping out the water logged wall boards, fixing the leaky roof and generally making the house not so much of a mold and mildew factory. The hope is to make the place livable for friends and family in the future, so repairs need to be of pretty consistent quality.

I spent some of this weekend clearing some of the vines that had grown into all of the windows and parts of the roof. The porch roof is starting to separate from the house because the vines grew up between the house and the singles.

The roof on the back of the house has some bad leak issues. Some old fixes have no become real problems.

And siding is coming apart where water now runs into the house…

…exposing insulation and interior wood…

…providing great habitat for termites.

And the worst part is the unintentional skylight in the side porch’s roof. It really adds aesthetic value to the place. And the aesthetic smell of wet fiberglass insulation makes it a real keeper.

The inside of the house is another battle. From a neighbor’s description of the place, it is basically layer upon layer of fixes, cover-ups and DIY patches. Once I started tearing out some old paperboard, I could see what he was talking about. The existing roof is built over at least one other roof. I haven’t gotten far enough into to everything to see what else is involved. It is quite funny so far. How all the pieces of wood fit together is also great comedy. I felt like I was in a tree fort that a bunch of neighborhood kids put together out of scrap board and bent nails.

But all is not old. We received our first delivery of AAC block which will become the first floor of the new house.

AAC block

While all this fixing up of the old house, building the new house and starting the new job is going on, we’re also supposed to be starting a farm. More on that soon…

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3 Responses to The big move

  1. stew says:

    Looks like you have some adventures on the horizon. Good on you. Let me know if you want some extra hands at any point in the house restoration.

  2. April says:

    You are so brave!!

  3. mike says:

    THis is…….exciting?

Carolina Gold box

eat carolina food challenge day six

Eat Carolina Food Challenge day six

This post is part of the week long Eat Carolina Food Challenge where participants are asked to submit a blog post every day of the challenge. Posts from all the other participants are aggregated on the Carolina Farm Stewardship website.

I try and eat a pretty good breakfast during the work week, but the meal is often scattered over the course of a few hours. It isn’t until Sunday that I get to have a good sit down breakfast at a most unreasonable hour of the day (breakfast at noon?). Tomorrow I am looking forward to a big pile of pancakes, a pile of bacon, a pile of scrambled eggs with sweet peppers and goat cheese, a pile of blueberries, a pile of melon, a pile of toast and jam and butter, a pile or rice and honey — just huge piles of breakfasty stuff inches from my coffee rinsed eyes.

I didn’t always have a good relationship with breakfast. During most of my working life (read: most of my life) I have skipped breakfast entirely, preferring to start the day with a billion ounces of various caffeine shots. When I was an apple inspector for the USDA my breakfast was a Jolt cola and a half dozen cigarettes. When I packed trucks in a shoe factory, my breakfast was the yammering on of the forklift driver and a gallon of coffee. When I…well, you get the point.

It wasn’t until a few years ago that I really started to get into breakfast as the basis for the day. I would start making rice in the morning and pairing it with various preserves or pour a big bowl of crunchy granola and top it with berries. Or fry up some eggs and potatoes and have at it.

On occasion breakfast became some sort of calming mechanism. Afterwards I’d listen to local morning radio or read a farming magazine or pet the cats. Then on to work in a relaxed state of mind.

Breakfast changed my life so much that I kind of like to eat it for dinner sometimes as well. “Breakfast for Dinner” is a pretty well used phrase around here, and I don’t see that changing anytime soon. So yeah, I’m looking forward to breakfast tomorrow…

Carolina Gold box

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fig tree

eat carolina food challenge day three

Eat Carolina Food Challenge day three

This post is part of the week long Eat Carolina Food Challenge where participants are asked to submit a blog post every day of the challenge. Posts from all the other participants are aggregated on the Carolina Farm Stewardship website.

Socks for Supper, a children’s book written in 1978 by Jack Kent, was my first introduction into an alternate economy. I was four years old when it came out, and it was shortly after that that I received a copy of the book. Although I don’t have the original, I still keep a copy and try to read it to the kids I hang out with. It is a great story and can lead to some great discussions.

The book tells the tale of a poor old couple with nothing to eat but a bunch of turnips. They are glad for the turnips, but they are relatively boring when eaten day after day. They look upon their neighbors’ cow and think of the milk and cheese that they would love to have. Since they don’t have any money, they decide to offer a trade of red socks for some dairy products. The neighbors accept and soon the old woman is taking apart the old man’s red sweater in order to make more socks to trade for more milk and cheese. Soon the old man is sweaterless, and the old woman has only enough string for one sock. The neighbor woman is happy to get the one sock; it is just what she needs.

The neighbor has been secretly using the socks to knit a sweater for her husband. The sweater ends up being too big for the man, so, noticing that the old neighbor is now shirtless, she offers it to him. It fits perfectly of course and everyone has a good laugh…

Where I work, an older couple sells me vegetables off and on during the year. When they come to the store I sometimes send them home with a few potatoes that have gone green or some other produce that still has a use. Over the course of the season they plant the potatoes and harvest enough for the two of them for the year. They will occasionally bring me something. Today they brought me a fig tree, a youngster rooted from an established tree. Within a few years the tree will be producing fruit.

We have provided each other with the means to get food (provided the tree doesn’t die or the potatoes rot out) and established the basis for a gift economy between us. There are no expectations from each other – I often have nothing to send them home with and they don’t bring me trees every week. We have created something new between us that has the ability to resist cooptation.

If we aren’t careful, local eating has the possibility of becoming just another mindless consumer trend. The focus becomes the label instead of what is behind it – real food; family run farms; the basis for a new type of economy, a blend of the free market and the barter market; Community Supported Agriculture; sustainable agriculture schools. We, as the eaters and champions of local food, need to keep community, farming and alternative food systems at the forefront and keep the term locavore above the consumptive abyss.

We need more versions of socks for supper and the patience to defend those simple transactions.

fig tree

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watermelon delivery

eat carolina food challenge day two

Eat Carolina Food Challenge day two

This post is part of the week long Eat Carolina Food Challenge where participants are asked to submit a blog post every day of the challenge. Posts from all the other participants are aggregated on the Carolina Farm Stewardship website.

At about a pint a day, I have eaten enough blueberries this year to earn my keep in the produce department. And that is just from the commercial berry producers. I haven’t even had time to go picking on the abandoned blueberry farm or the various wild patches scattered around the city.

This time of year is perfect for folks who like to stay cool by burying themselves in fruit, and by bury I mean eat a whole lot of it. If all you ate was fruit, you would have a hard time going hungry right now. Blueberries are going strong and are at peak sweetness. Galia melons are cracking with sugar, giving off their sweet bubblegum smell, practically daring you to eat the whole thing. Blackberries bring the tart while watermelons bring the grass covered in “discarded” seeds, thrown out of people’s mouths by physics and festival contests. Then there are honeydews, charentais, sugar babies, crenshaws, casabas, moon and stars. And of course the fruits that most people don’t think of as fruit – tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers to name a few.

This is also the perfect time of year to interact with farmers. The markets are in full swing, the deliveries are flowing, the sun is out and the heat of the afternoon provides an excuse to lay off the work for awhile and chat. After the wagon is unloaded of course…

watermelon delivery

Pictured – Julian Wooten (left) from Southwest Berry Farm and Trace Ramsey from Tidal Creek Cooperative Food Market. Photo by Jessica Ashcraft.

3 Responses to Eat Carolina Food Challenge day two

  1. Amanda says:

    I would love to go to the abandoned blueberry farm you mentioned–any chance you could share its location?

    a.

  2. Trace says:

    Ah, one of the most common questions I hear. I’m afraid I can’t tell you exactly, but if you email me I can point you in the general direction…

  3. ike turnier says:

    Dang …… I missed it.

Cricket Bread garbage plate

eat carolina food challenge day one

Eat Carolina Food Challenge day one

This post is part of the week long Eat Carolina Food Challenge where participants are asked to submit a blog post every day of the challenge. Posts from all the other participants are aggregated on the Carolina Farm Stewardship website.

I am not a food separatist; I often find myself staring at piles of food wondering how they all could fit together in one dish. I am fond of soups and casseroles, and I would really like to get more into creating variations of bibimbap. One pile of food in a bowl is perfect for me.

Last August I wrote about a spaghetti squash garbage plate meal that I prepared from a bunch of summer vegetables. For my first dinner with the Eat Carolina Challenge, I figured I would revisit the premise and get all the ingredients into a pile and into a bowl (and into my mouth). The idea is pretty basic – just throw a bunch of stuff together that you think would taste good together. Throwing together things that don’t taste good together is bad news. Don’t do that.

For tonight’s dinner, I started with a pound of ground beef from Nooherooka Natural. To that I added some new potatoes, lavender bell pepper and garlic from Black River Organic Farm. To that mixture I added a handful of grape tomatoes from the same farm as well as a couple of spoonfuls of Pepper Dog Medium salsa.

Lastly I threw in a box of “expired” organic mac and cheese (I am known around here as a food scavenger) made with Maple View milk and butter. I topped it all off with some chipotle goat cheese from Nature’s Way, and I had a concoction that looked a bit like dog food but tasted a whole lot better.

Cricket Bread garbage plate

This will also be my lunch at work tomorrow, making the challenge just a little bit easier…

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im in your radio

I’m in your radio

Posted at June 23, 2008 7:18 pm under biographical, interviews

I will be on WHQR Public Radio 91.3 Tuesday June 24th at around 12:20. Jemila Ericson will be interviewing me about local eating and our foodshed. The website has a link to listen live, and I think it will be archived as well. Jemila says it will be about a ten minute interview.

quitter book ready to go

Quitter book ready to go!

I am happy to finally announce that – after seven months of writing and rewriting, working with Josh on the illustrations, Nathaniel on the cover, and going back and forth on using a formal publisher Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying by Trace Ramsey (that’s me) is now available for purchase. The book is 78 pages with over a dozen color illustrations. It is hand stitched, hardcover, numbered and made by hand by the author.

Considering the time, materials and general effort it takes to make one of these books, I decided on a price of $14 (updated in January 2009 to $20).

That might sound expensive for such a small book, but in a quick search of Amazon I could not find a 78 page hardcover for less than $20. Plus it is made by hand. That has to count for something.

I will pretty much make the books as I receive orders. PayPal seems to work well for most folks, but if you live near me or see me all the time and want to pay cash just let me know. Each book will get some goodies with it including buttons and/or stickers, maybe a book mark.

Thanks for keeping up with this project! I hope you support it if you can…

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bookbinding quitter book prototype

Bookbinding – Quitter book prototype

The first two attempts at making a hardcover book were miserable and complete failures. For the first attempt, I used some really simple looking instructions from DadCanDo.com. The instructions were so simple that when I followed the steps and completed the book I ended up with a sticky, bent, unattractive pile of cardboard and paper. Even after having dried for a day and half, the cloth that I used for the cover had dark stains from the glue that I used. Unattractive and shoddy looking –

The corners didn’t stick together the way they should and were coming apart a day later –

And the front pages were wrinkled and generally gross –

The second attempt didn’t yield any better results. After sleeping on it, getting some more supplies and watching some YouTube videos on bookbinding, I finally made a decent hardcover book.

I printed the book in four sections of eight pages. In the lingo of bookbinding these are called the signatures. It took me awhile to figure out that the software I am using (Adobe InDesign CS3) does not make this process easy unless you are a commercial printer. In order for me to print a book on my home printer I have to use a series of programs each requiring some of the same steps. Just figuring out those steps took several hours of searching the Internet, posting on forums and sending emails.

For this hardcover I used construction paper instead of the first few attempts using cloth. Much better results –

I have a few more minor problems to fix, but this stands as the prototype for making the Quitter hardcover book.

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3 Responses to Bookbinding – Quitter book prototype

  1. April says:

    Woah! Great Job trace! I was going to suggest just ripping a cover off of someone else’s book…

  2. mike says:

    Looks great! Exciting!

  3. Ali says:

    The orange copy with the construction paper looks great!

    …yet another thing you do that makes me dream of how to spend my time off!

quitter diy or die

Quitter – DIY or Die

Due to budget issues, the Quitter book project kind of stalled out in the last few months. I cannot afford to publish the book as originally planned. I will instead take an entirely different route. This new route will require more time on my end. The end product will be much nicer and will not cost me anywhere near as much to produce. Hopefully.

In a weird daydream, I decided it would be nice if I knew how to bind books. That led to a quick search of the Internets and loads of free advice and detailed how-tos on not only book binding, but hardcover DIY book production out of scrap materials. Perfect… I have ready access to all types of trash cardboard as well as bags of fabric, paper, glue and tools. If the materials are cheap enough (or free) and it doesn’t take too long to assemble, I can offer the book for a lower cost.

The only problem is that the book will not have a handy bar code and probably won’t have an ISBN number, so you won’t see it on Amazon any time soon. The good thing is that more and more small book stores will sell these types of non-barcoded books and more and more DIY distributors will also carry them. many actually prefer it if the book doesn’t scan.

All that said, I still have not finished the re-write of Quitter #5. It is close, but something is still missing. End of this month? We’ll see…

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One Response to Quitter – DIY or Die

  1. April says:

    I know a place that can print barcodes!

short and sweet

Short and sweet

I just finished a long day at work, and I was really ready to get out and get home. The customers just kept coming and coming with no real let up. As I was putting out the last blueberry case for the night I caught a short conversation that made the whole long day worth it –

Five Year Old Kid (grabbing a pint of blueberries): “Are they ‘ganic?”

Mom: “No, but they’re local.”

Five Year Old Kid: “Yay! Local!”

Maybe there is hope…

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2 Responses to Short and sweet

  1. mike says:

    gives me hope…

  2. ilex says:

    Yes, there is hope. Really!

Buckner before the farm tour

Buckner before the farm tour

This past weekend Noel, Danielle, Mike and I went to the 13th Annual CFSA Farm Tour. We drove up Saturday night to the land in Silk Hope, ate dinner at Chatham Marketplace and sat in the camper trying to figure out which farms to visit.

The choices came down to our individual interests and proximity of those farm choices to each other. The proximity issue was important since the 35 farms on the tour were spread out over several counties. Our hope was to visit four farms in three counties.

Since we have seen vegetable production in full scale operation as part of our jobs and lives, we decided we wanted to visit farms that incorporated animals, passive solar greenhouses and alternatives to the things we see everyday. We went over the maps and each made our choices. With little debate we picked four farms that were pretty close to each other and fairly diverse. After the choices were made there was nothing to do but make fun of each other.

Saturday night was the full moon, but it was obscured right after I took this picture and didn’t return. The rain came soon after. We could faintly hear the Shakori Hills Festival going on nearby as the thunderstorm came through.

We fell asleep in the Wolf Den to the pounding of rain.

Sunday morning was a chance to explore the new growth around the farm. The spring oats that we spread out a bit ago were a few inches high. It looks like it is going to take. The yellow clover was harder to figure out, and we aren’t sure what will happen with it.

The mint patch near the house was already a few feet high.

Wildflowers were coming up everywhere. I haven’t identified anything yet since I forgot to take pictures of the leaves, which is where my key likes to start.

Noel thinks this is a Quince tree.

The picture below is Cedar Apple Rust (Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae), and its presence makes the poor health of the surrounding apple trees make more sense. The fungus needs both cedar and apple trees to complete its life cycle. This cedar tree is about ten or so feet from an apple tree. The only source I could find on the edibility of the fungus simply said, “I have no information on the edibility of Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae.” Thanks.

I find new things every time I visit the farm, and of course I had to set up a nice still life with the note I scrawled in the lean to when we bought the place –

I will have reviews of the four farms from the farm tour coming up over the next few weeks…

One Response to Buckner before the farm tour

  1. mary says:

    Hi Trace – Thanks for making a Chatham Marketplace stop before you took the tour! :) Are you permanent residents of our lovely Chatham County, yet?
    Mary

another quitter update

Another Quitter update

Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying is still moving slowly ahead. Josh has a few more illustrations left, and I have begun the process of choosing where they will end up in the text. I didn’t think it would be that hard, but I am finding the process a bit taxing. The biggest problem is figuring out if I should go full page on the illustrations or weave them into the text. And then where would they make the most sense and how does it change the flow of the words.

Quitter #4 recently received a review from Zine World

Quitter #4: Everything about this is impressive. The writing is stellar, and the packaging very polished. Trace (Quitter) gives us four vignettes on varied topics, woven into a common, flowing theme. The subject matter is intimate and stark. With precision word-smithing, Trace ventures into parts of the emotional landscape we normally avoid, and engages us by tapping the common well of humanity with an unflinching examination of his personal experience. Inspirational. Trace, cricketbread.com [$1.50 worldwide 20XS :25] –Jack

I went back and looked at Quitter #5 to see if the month long lapse since I looked at it made any difference. The ending stood out as needing some work, and I would like some opinions…

Snow Plows

During a snow storm, the plows mostly come at night. In the sturdy, hoary months of childhood in Western New York, I would lay awake listening as the distant scraping of the plow brushed its steel blades over the roughly poured asphalt. In the dry air, the low hum could be heard for miles, the flashing orange roof lights of the plow radiating off the lumbering snowflakes, themselves moving unpredictably towards any available surface, wrestling the winds vacillating directions.

First the plow would pass to the south of our house, down the thin Barville Road, then up North Byron Road and finally across our unmarked, no shoulder road. As the sound grew closer I would pull my face up to the window, watching the coming lights reflect off every available inch of ground, the thick cover of flurries yielding very little until the massive vehicle was right in front of my eyes.A wave of snow and rock passed over the giant chisel, a chorus of grinding metal and boiled oil, a short echo off the aluminum siding. The sound and lights faded quickly as the driver made way through the expansive grid of rurality, on and on towards the gawking of other children unable to sleep.

In grade school and high school, hearing the plow at night could bring early news of a snow day. More often than not, if the plow was required then it was a particularly heavy storm. School buses were known for driving through just about anything, so there was no need for them to follow the plow in a shallow snow.

As a kid, there is really nothing like waking up to a new, deep snow. The kitchen on a potential snow day takes on a transcendent quality, a vision of potential for all that are present. Coffee brewed and eggs sizzling, cereal pouring and spoons clanking, the radio playing at a louder volume than usual. The room’s state of mind like a puppy expectantly wagging its tail in the silence of an empty house, anxious for the humans to come back. Then finally, the radio voice would begin reading the listing of closings. “Byron-Bergen, Caledonia-Mumford, Le Roy, Pavilion, Pembroke…”

As a young adult, hearing the snow plow took on a different meaning. It meant that the roads were indeed clear for everyone to go to work. Work was canceled only in extreme circumstances, and I never saw that happen before moving to the virtually snow-free South. I followed the clean routes of the snow plow to work on many occasions, a half hour drive through the salted gray and brown of a cold winter. I wondered then – as I do more often now – is this the rest of my life; is this really necessary? Is it worth dying on an icy road just to get to a horrible job? What is it that we truly value?

If there could ever be a time when acorns or walnuts have more worth than gold or silver, when a handful of fresh basil inspires more than any movie screen, when the crunch of a just-picked green pepper incites more pleasure than any amusement park ride, this must be the time. If this is it, I ask only to open up our pretentious imaginations, bring the blood and sweat into the arms and faces of those controlling all the debt, all the shiny credit card machines and all the grocery store shelves of this paved-over dump, make the “movers and shakers” into forgotten paperweights. Afterwards, among the rotting cans of baby formula and pork-and-beans, the stale crackers and moldy bread, we’ll be freed from the grinding ambitionless void of labor and rent, steel toed promises and unforgiving authority.

We demand a simpler life, a new and unspoiled horizon, the nutrition of friendship and family. We are not requesting for this, begging in the face of blankness and cheap suits. No requests; this is clearly a demand, an insistence backed up with all the strained voices and dirt caked sinew that we have left. They will give us what we want or we will take it. We will burn the snowplows and tear up the roads, ready to simply enjoy a heavy snow for its own sake.

We are made for more than this…

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4 Responses to Another Quitter update

  1. stew says:

    Hey Trace! Very vivid imagery. It brought me back to my Western Michigan childhood.

    My best feedback will be mostly regarding mechanics.

    Here are a few things I found:

    wrestling the winds vacillating directions.

    change winds to wind’s

    a chorus of grinding metal and boiled oil

    I don’t know why you’d be hearing boiling oil. This seemed weird to me.

    Work was canceled only in extreme circumstances, and I never saw that happen before moving to the virtually snow-free South.

    I read the above as though before you moved to the South you’d never heard of work being canceled only in extreme circumstances, which is the exact opposite of your meaning. Maybe just delete before moving to the virtually snow-free South

    If this is it, I ask only to open up our pretentious imaginations, bring the blood and sweat into the arms and faces of those controlling all the debt, all the shiny credit card machines and all the grocery store shelves of this paved-over dump, make the “movers and shakers” into forgotten paperweights

    “pretentious imaginations” is an odd turn of phrase. I’m assuming you’re going for a meaning something like “ambitious”, but the primary meaning of pretentious might be too strong in your readers’ minds to let that secondary meaning through. And then they’ll think you’re saying our imaginations are snobby. :-)

    Also in the above italicized sentence, you set up a series of verbs (to open up, bring). But then you stray and use “all the shiny…” with no verb. Lastly you need an and before “make the “movers and shakers”

    It’s really just a long, awkward sentence, though. Maybe you can break it up a bit.

    steel toed
    Hyphenate

    We are not requesting for this,

    Delete “for”

    They will give us what we want or we will take it.

    I’d change to “, or else we will take it.” (at least put the comma in there.

    OK, I have to run to dinner. Take care!

    Jenny

  2. stew says:

    Whoa. That was long.

  3. Trace says:

    Jenny:

    I took out some of the lines before you commented. However, “pretentious imaginations” is what I had in mind. We are not getting anywhere with our snotty dreams of big houses and fast cars; lets bring it back to the dirt.

    The rest is the “Quitter voice”. I don’t usually use “and” after the last comma in a list. Long awkward sentences are part of the experience. I try to setup a lot and deliver a little. The reader is my writer in their own mind. Here is your image, here are your words…When you go to sleep thinking of the two, what stays with you at the breakfast table?

spring oat sprout

spring at the farm

Spring at the farm

Yesterday I went to pickup Kristin from her two week tour with Bellafea, and I stopped by the land to check on how the cover crops were coming along. The clover is sprouting up pretty nice, but doesn’t yet have true leaves.

The spring oats are way behind the clover. I managed to find a few just sprouting and a few sprouted and rooting.

spring oat sprout

Plenty of plants and trees are in bloom at the farm including a huge swath of daffodils.

The apple trees were flowering and bringing in loads of pollinators including some wasps and swallowtails.

And speaking of pollinators, I stood and watched honey bees flying to a hive that I thought was dead just a few weeks ago, little bullets heading towards me from the fields. I managed to find a close place where they were foraging.

From bee school, I know that these girls are at least 22 days old and half their lives are over. The one in the bottom picture is probably older than that as her wings are a bit tattered. They will literally work themselves to death and will most likely die in flight to or from the hive.

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One Response to Spring at the farm

  1. mike says:

    This is exciting!

cover crop mission

Cover crop mission

This past weekend Kristin, Noel and I went up to the land for a bit, visiting our beloved Wolfden. Sunday we had breakfast at the General Store Cafe in Pittsboro then dropped Kristin off in Carrboro. She is going on tour with Bellafea for two weeks.

Noel and I then headed to the land to put down some cover crops. This will be the first step we have taken to get the farm started.

I bought two hundred pounds of organic spring oats from Seven Springs Farm and fifty pounds of yellow sweet clover from Welter Seed & Honey.

The rate for each was fifteen pounds of clover per acre and forty eight pounds of oats per acre. To figure out our acreage, I looked for a cheap measuring device.

I picked up a walking measuring tape for cheap off The eBay. The three of us each guessed how big the front strip of land was. Noel said four, Kristin said three and I said two and half. When Noel and I got done walking it out and doing the calculations, we ended up with one and a half acres. We were all way off, and I found out that an acre is a lot of dirt.

From the marker by the bag to the road at the top of the picture is one and a third acre.

We decided to put down every seed that we brought on every piece of bare land we could find. Hopefully in a couple weeks there will be some good growth on the ground, and we can start to choke the weeds out. A good start and a productive day…

3 Responses to Cover crop mission

  1. Megan says:

    Hi there. I stumbled on your blog purely at random (I love it when that happens), and was intrigued by your post from Feb. 15 about your rescuing perfectly good food from the dumpster. I’ve heard of others doing this but always wondered if it was safe? I mean, yeah, it’s good food–but how do you know it’s not contiminated somehow?

    I also wondered how easy it is to rescue food in this way without getting caught by a disgruntled manager or a policeman?

    I don’t even live in a big city. I’m just curious. But it’s something I’d be interested in trying if I thought it was worth it. :p

  2. Trace says:

    Megan:

    I have never gotten sick from any food I have found in the trash. Your nose and eyes are your best defense since you can see if something is not worth eating and you can also certainly give it a big old sniff test.

    The best time to dumpster food is at night since there aren’t likely to be any managers around. And the folks taking out the trash could care less if you are going through the dumpster. Police and guards are a different situation. They can give you a ticket for trespassing, but you have to mouth off pretty good to get one of those. The two easiest excuses are that you are getting boxes for packing/moving or you are doing an art project. You’ll have to make up the art project depending on what you have in your hands at the time. I have only been hassled once in the past seven or eight years. I have only been caught physically in the dumpster twice, once when I was reading magazines at Barnes & Noble and once when Kristin and I were dumpstering candy behind a drug store.

    You don’t need to live in a big city to find food in the trash. It is everywhere.

  3. Paul says:

    Hello, I just over seeded my a field/lawn next to my garden with red clover and spring oats out here in Oregon. I was wonder how you clover/oat planting turned out? Do you have any pictures of the fields?

    I love your site and plan to make the pickled beet recipe. It sure looks yummy.

    Paul

Kristin and Trace

in the news local couple lives their ideals

In the News – “Local couple lives their ideals…”

We’re back in the news…

“Kristin Henry, 28, and Trace Ramsey, 34, seamlessly weave their ideals into the cloth of their lives.”

Full story

Kristin and Trace

Photo by Kate Lord – Wilmington Star News

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7 Responses to In the News – “Local couple lives their ideals…”

  1. stew says:

    Looks good, Trace. How does it feel to be a star?

  2. Trace says:

    Not so much a star as a guide…

  3. jeena says:

    Hi there my name is Jeena and I have started a food recipe forum that I thought you would like to join here Click here for food recipe forum

    I would love to see you on there to chat about food and cooking you can talk about anything you like and start your very own topics. :-)
    or see my main food recipe website Jeenas food recipe site

    Hope to see you soon

    Thanks

    Jeena x

  4. Laurie says:

    Great article, Trace! Even though we’re looking forward to your eventual move to the Piedmont, I’m glad to read about your food activism in eastern N.C. The more publicity in that area the better! (from a southeastern N.C. native)

  5. shawna says:

    aww…when you guys moving? :(

  6. Trace says:

    We’re planning on moving this summer. We’ll see how it goes though!

  7. tigerhorse says:

    Yes…superb article! Refreshing to see in the ‘mainstream’ press! To say Wilmington will miss you both is a supreme understatement…

working off a csa share

Working off a CSA share

Money is kind of tight these days. I just spent a couple hundred dollars on cover crop seed for the farm in Silk Hope, and another hundred or so on farm tools. Add to that the need to save up a bunch of money to pay the impact fees for the new house on the land, the impending need for a car, putting out a book and buying a bunch of other miscellaneous crap (including beekeeping equipment and plants for the garden). So when it came time to rejoin Robb’s CSA, I hesitated.

Knowing that I couldn’t come up with the full share price – but still wanting to participate – I asked Robb about the possibility of working off part of the share price. She considered it, and last Monday I ended up spending a few hours at her farm.

I pulled weeds, helped roll out row covers and cut up seed potatoes. I also took a bunch of pictures of a hawk that was watching me work. I don’t know if it was hoping I would stir up a mouse or what. It wasn’t interested in the fire ants biting my hand that’s for sure.

My tool of choice was the wire weeder, a light and quick weed killer that slices off the main plant from the roots. It also allows for precise cultivation between plants.

As I said, I put in at most two hours out the farm. From my research tonight, it looks like the going rate for CSA labor is between $4 and $6 per hour. I’ll shoot for the average and ask for $5 an hour. A few hours a week should get some of the share paid off. Even without compensation, the ability to get out of the city, hang out with hawks, hear turkeys and chickens and horses make their noises all around, and put your hands in the dirt…that has to be worth something.

Well, the first delivery came yesterday –

That’s what it is worth.  Yeah!

One Response to Working off a CSA share

  1. I work off my CSA as Site Coordinator for the weekly distributions from June through December (I WISH our CSA started up as early as yours, but our cold-winter climate doesn’t allow it). I spend five hours every Thursday hauling bins off the farmers truck, organizing the empties, and coordinating the volunteer work crew (members are required to put on five hours total over the course of the season in addition to the subscription fee). Bonuses are meeting the other members, hanging out with the farmer, and of course, all that gorgeous fresh produce.

media day

Media day

“if your heart is free, then the ground on which you stand is liberated territory… defend it!”

Today was a big day for Cricket Bread in the media. There was a story about eating locally in Winter featured on the front page of the Today section of the Wilmington Star News. Although they didn’t use the cool picture (everyone in the store that saw it thought it was cool) of me standing in the produce department, they did get some good information out there about local food sources.

“‘I think the false perception about eating locally is that it can be really hard to get into it,’ Ramsey says.”

I love it when you are referred to by your last name…so very news-like.

“Ramsey substitutes root vegetables in soups and stews that call for potatoes only, and he uses all kinds of winter vegetables in salads. When he’s on a sweet-potato roll, Ramsey puts them in soup one night, makes fries the next, adds them to stir-fry for another dinner, and turns them into one of his favorite side dishes – sweet potatoes mashed with chopped pecans and a bit of honey.”

The other story came out in Encore, the arts and entertainment weekly, otherwise known as “Your Alternative Voice in Wilmington, NC.” Emily Rea did an awesome job putting my ideas and ideals down on paper, making both accessible to the readership.

“If this kind of thinking could only spread like wildfire, if each of us adopted a ‘Trace mentality,’ a better future could be upon us sooner than we think. For now, Trace’s view of the future, while still hopeful at its core, is tough love in its truest form: realism. “

To give some background on the above quote, Emily asked me if I had hope for the future of the world. My basic answer was “no”. I feel that, from my perspective, that answer is a wake up word to folks who think that politicians or environmental groups or NGOs are going to solve anything, ever. In many ways, we as activists can’t worry about the world. We need to bring the focus back to our communities and the idea that we can make life better for people and plants and animals that we see, touch and speak to every day. This is not a discount on the lives of people in far off places; their problems are very, very real. But unless we are traveling to and working directly in their communities (with them, not around them – hope you understand my distinction), the best we can do is hope that the donations we send do some real good and aren’t wasted.

I can visit the farmers who supply my food. I can talk with my heroes. I can start and finish projects here and now that directly benefit the people I look in the eye every morning on the way to work. Those projects inspire other people to get involved in their community and make it stronger, more self-reliant. This is the main idea – through various incarnations – that I have been trying to spread for almost a decade.

From the online edition of Encore –

Trace Ramsey’s suggestions for taking simple and specific first steps toward going green, going local and building community:

“Start with just one all-local meal a week—one meal is extremely easy. We have so much available locally. Even in January we have all kinds of meat, greens, potatoes, root crops—all kinds of stuff is available.”

“Some of the hardest stuff [about trying a 100-mile diet project] is identifying where your lines are going to be. You can’t be so restricted that you aren’t able to function in your community. If I go to eat at someone’s house, I’m not going to go, ‘Well, where did that come from?’ If you’re getting together to eat, it’s more about the community aspect [anyway].”

“Definitely try to get involved in some sort of community action plan, like a group that you identify with. There’s so much community involvement to be had.”

“Increase your reuse of stuff instead of buying new stuff all the time. Try to buy stuff in bulk so you’re using less packaging.”

“Drive less… That would help me out.”

“Start interacting with your neighbors more; find out what they’re about. See if you can get together and share some garden space. Growing your own food reduces your impact.”

“Get rid of your TV; that’s always good.”

“Local food in season is going to be cheaper than what’s at the grocery out of season. You’re cutting out that transportation, all that refridgeration, all that abusive labor abroad. You’re having a definite impact on a farmer’s life. You’re also eating a healthier product because it hasn’t been in storage. The benefits are economic, nutritional AND community-focused.”

Thanks Emily!

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3 Responses to Media day

  1. Tigerhorse says:

    Very insightful…Very cool!
    Thanks Trace!

  2. BS96 says:

    Wow, you’re like an ILM celeb!

    You have a “mentality” named after you.

    I must admit, I often ask myself, “WWTD?”.

  3. Tigerhorse says:

    Inspiring thoughts/words…Truly a good article!

    Glad there where no “There’s no risk.” moments..

quitter book update

Quitter book update

The Quitter book is moving along, mostly as planned.

I have been spending a lot of time learning how to use Adobe InDesign CS3. I have been figuring out how to do the Quitter book layout on my own, but I’m finding that I might need to call in some outside help on this. I understand how it all works; it just isn’t working the way it is supposed to. I’m used to the old PageMaker platform that I have used since 1997. CS3 is really different in good and bad ways.

The good news is that Nathaniel sent me the final watercolor book cover. I am working with it in Photoshop in order to get all the publishers requirements met. The cover is amazing, but I won’t give away the details. It is exactly what I was looking for even though I provided no guidance. The first idea is usually the best idea…

The inside illustrations are a few weeks away from being finished and scanned. This pretty much means that the completed layout is about five weeks from completion. This assumes that I actually finish writing everything that needs to be written in that time frame. I read the guts of Quitter #5 aloud to Kristin a few nights ago. Traditionally this means one last edit before printing. Traditionally…

I’m getting close, and I can’t wait to actually hold the book in my hands.

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circle acres in winter

Circle Acres in winter

I had a chance to go and visit the farm again, albeit just to stay over night in the camper. We went to see the Zegota reunion show at a new collective space in Greensboro, NC called The Hive. The show was streamed live online and also saved for viewing later.

It was amazing to see a billion people that I knew, some that I haven’t seen in years. I don’t know if it was the bands or the new space that brought people out, but there were plenty of folks to go around. We got back to the farm at 2:30 in the morning, just in time to put on every item of clothing we had in order to get warm. It wasn’t too terribly cold, but 38 degrees in a big steel and aluminum box can seem colder than it is.

The last time we visited there were still leaves on most of the trees. Now they are mostly gone, the trees standing bear even as the temperatures creep back into the seventies. Winter in the South can be very strange.

The neighbor plowed in their plot of field corn, carefully navigating the newly staked property line. The red clay was stiff and hard to crumble this morning; every time I visit I have to grab of fistful of dirt and mash it around in my hands.

We are trying to decide where to build our house. I am partial to this spot as it gets some good Winter sun.

The view of the roof of old well from inside the camper…

And the oak that towers over it…

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year in review 2007

Year in review – 2007

2007 in words and pictures…

In January I started four shelves full of flower seeds for a May reception.

I usually use my light racks for veggies, but this year was different. I don’t have much experience with flowers, some of them died or bloomed prematurely, but the end result was great.

In February we sold off The Peanut, a 1980 Mercedes 300TD that I had converted to run on used vegetable oil. We sold it on Ebay to someone in Europe. It was a weird transaction what with customs, certifications of various natures and dealing with the company that would eventually put the car on a ship and send it back to the motherland. The mileage when I handed off the keys was 305,000.

In March I ditched my beard-o look. Here I am, pre-cut.

In April we purchased our long sought after piece of land.

Our idea of building a self-sufficient life becomes concrete on this twelve acre spot in rural Chatham County. Once we make the big move, I envision scaling the local diet down to twenty five miles, with most food coming right from the farm.

The picture above is where the goats, chickens and guinea hens will live. The picture below is the property line as it enters the woods.

On May 26th, Kristin and I held our commitment ceremony.

We led a bicycle procession to the reception. It was kind of like a Critical Mass ride except that we dressed up all fancy-like.

In June I started the Cricket Bread project and set out to discover my foodshed. That month I also sold my 1981 Volkswagen Dasher, another car that I had converted to run on used vegetable oil. It was the first car I had converted. The odometer stopped working years ago and was stuck on 224,000 miles.

In July I bought an old camper to put on the land in Chatham. Code named “The Wolf Den”, we have spent many a peaceful night in its confined comfort. The camper gets horrendous gas mileage, so it will sit on the land and not be a road cruiser like in its past life. It gets to be a simple home…

To pay for the camper, I sold my last vehicle in August. A 1985 Chevy Silverado diesel with 196,000 miles on it. I hated to see it go, but sometimes you just have to make the hard decisions.

We are now a one car family (Kristin bought a 2003 VW Jetta diesel), and I am a 100% bicycle commuter. I was bicycling pretty much everywhere anyway since the Dasher had a messed up axle and the Chevy’s batteries were dead, but with them gone there is no excuse not to ride everywhere. Plus no more insurance payments, fuel costs, upkeep, etc.

September was Be Your Own Hero Fest here in Wilmington. Kristin was a lead organizer.

Hero Fest consisted of a Really Really Free Market, activist workshops and live music.

In November I attended the Sustainable Agriculture Conference in Durham, NC. I had considered running for a board position with Carolina Farm Stewardship Association, but changed my mind after realizing all the stuff that I had going on already.

Also in November, our landlord let us know that we had to move out by the end of the month. Just what you want to hear at the end of the year. We also met with a home builder in Chatham County and signed off on a contract to build our new (small) home.

In December we moved to a house across the street. Kristin and I celebrated five years together. I decided to write a book. I have asked some friends to do cover artwork and also do some illustrations.

Things are coming along…

 

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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

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2 Responses to Year in review – 2007

  1. Rob Harris says:

    What ever happened to the Dasher??? I’m originally from Wilmington, NC!!!

  2. Trace says:

    I think it ended up in Texas or something. The guy I sold it to sold it to someone else…

past garden projects number three fowler

Past Garden Projects Number Three: Fowler

Sometimes you just have to push the boulder uphill and like it. The Fowler Street garden had several strikes against it even before Noel and I got started on it. First, there was no water source. Second, I was going to be leaving town for a summer long road trip just as everything was getting started. Third, we thought that maybe the asphalt shingles and roofing tar that we dug up had contaminated the soil. (A soil test for heavy metals showed that the soil was fine.) Starting the tilling led to the discovery of a forth strike – an infestation of kudzu that took several days to rip out and contain.

The land had been a roofing and plumbing company way back when. This became obvious as the pile of debris – tires, piping, shingles, nails – started to build up.

Noel did the tilling for the whole space. We measured it as just under a quarter acre, and the whole process of tilling took several days.

Next came another few days of actually forming the raised beds. We built three-foot wide beds, forty-five feet long.

We ended up with seven rows, but only really used five. For the garden, I grew about a hundred tomato plants and sunflowers as well as several dozen summer squash plants. Basil plants were scattered among the rows. The goal was to make this a market garden and sell the produce at the recently opened downtown farmers market.

After everything was planted, we realized that water was going to be a major problem. Every other night at my house, Noel and I would fill a couple of 55 gallon drums with water and drive them over to the garden. From there we would fill watering cans and try to saturate each plant by hand. The whole process took several hours.

From hand watering, we moved to drip tape attached to upright barrels. We would still haul water to the site, but instead of using watering cans we would use a hand pump to transfer the water to the barrels and turn on a spigot. The water pressure was not enough to get water all the way down the row, so it was largely ineffective.

I’m not sure how much produce came out of the garden since I was absent for most of its productive time. The lack of steady water supplies led us to the conclusion that this project wasn’t going to work. So, after one season we moved on. I ripped out all the plants in late August when I was back in town, cleaned up the site as best I could, hauled off the barrels, pots, twine, stakes, drip tape, buckets and whatever else we had there and called it a day.

The land is flat again, and to my knowledge it hasn’t been used as a garden space since. We did learn some new skills and figured out how to do our best when the situation was never going to be optimal or even very manageable in the long term. We also came up with the name Circle Acres here and considered Fowler to be its first incarnation.

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quitter the book

Quitter – The Book

The subtitle of this blog is “Thoughts on a local diet and other things in Wilmington, NC…” I have the local diet thing down, but in the past week or so I have become engaged in some “other things”. This other thing is something I am very excited about even though its completion and implementation is fairly far away. I have decided to put my other project, Quitter, into book form.

It seemed like a logical way to conclude the first five issues of the Quitter story, five fairly different pieces of writing. I have no idea if the demand is out there for this obscure personal zine, but I am confident that I can break out of the zine world and into a larger audience. These are stories about me and my experiences; will they resonate beyond those that know me? I think I can say yes at this point, three years on…

I meet people, randomly, who have read the series but have no connection to me personally. I have learned that people pass on their copies to friends and family, and this gives me the inspiration to put Quitter out there with some sparkle to it (read: glossy cover and ISBN number).

Cricket Bread reaches around the world instantly. It has grown more than I ever thought and it is just getting started. The emails I get from readers are inspiring. Folks are getting something out of my experiences, and they are enjoying coming along with me as I discover my foodshed. If I was just talking to myself, I wouldn’t need all *this*. But folks also like somethings to be tangible, which is the draw of printed material. This is why Quitter is not available electronically. That is not the format it needs.

Quitter has never made any money. Any zine writer will tell you that hundreds of dollars go in and a fraction of that comes back. It is an art, not a paycheck. I expect to price the book with a minimal return just so that it can be affordable. Hopefully, as the publication date gets closer, you all won’t mind me making a couple pitches for the book.

Until then, back to local eating…

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3 Responses to Quitter – The Book

  1. April says:

    I think a compilation is surely needed and I can’t wait!

  2. Mike says:

    Yes! This is exciting news! Will the book include Quitters beyond #5?………………………..!

  3. Trace says:

    One through five. Five will only be in the book and will be longer than the rest.

past garden projects number two local revolt

Past Garden Projects Number Two: Local Revolt

Originally named “End of the Line”, Local Revolt (the linked interview and its out-of-context editing and framing used to make me really angry, now it is just funny and reads like bad satire) was a short lived anarchist house. After three years, its vision of becoming a collective never really materialized although we often called ourselves a collective. Plenty of folks came and went…bands played, art shows were held, films were screened, books were loaned, protests were planned, shit was talked. I was the only person to stay there from start to finish, living in each of the three bedrooms at some point along the way. I may have been the only person that actually loved that house, but even I knew when it was time for it to come to an end.

We had a Free Store that was abused by anyone who wanted to come and dump their junk on us. We had an open door policy that allowed a homeless prophet to move in for a month and eat all our food and watch free cable all day in the basement. We had a lax housemate policy that brought in some sketchy folks who had to be kicked out after very short stays.

We had loud housemates, housemates who wanted to run us into the ground with their window AC units, housemates that would never come out of their room. In total there were fourteen people who revolved through the bedrooms. In addition there were dozens of travelers. I am still in contact with a few of those traveler folks, and most were great to hang out with. Whether they had hitchhiked or hopped a train into town for something to do or were biking the East Coast or walking from the West Coast and back, everyone had a story that stuck with me.

Anyway, this is supposed to be a post about a garden…

I started a garden even before I officially moved into the house. I slept on couch cushions on the floor in my room, but didn’t care as long as I got some beans and tomatoes and squash and flowers in the ground as soon as possible. The area of the garden was pretty shady, so I had to get creative with its placement.

One of the first things to go in were the compost bins. The next was a driveway garden.

The bins are in the back right of the picture. The driveway garden usually had the greens, lettuce and a smattering of sunflowers. I grew edible nasturtiums and cosmos as well.

After the first year the gardens got a little bigger. I was able to clear some vines and small trees from a fence area in order to get more light and focus on the backyard garden. Cherry tomatoes, beans, greens and summer squash all did pretty well there. Basil and rosemary also did well, but other herbs didn’t really take.

The garden was often a happy mess of a place. The garden gate was the aluminum decoration from an old screen door. Office filing shelves served as compost sifters. Metal shelving supports from the Office Depot dumpster made up the bean trellis. Notice the assorted chairs rescued from the garbage as well as the gaggle of duck decoys on the porch railing. The porch itself was a disaster. One of the old housemates briefly tied his dog to one of the columns. The dog ripped the column out, breaking part of the flashing that attached to the house thereby setting up the roof to leak for the next two years.

We moved out during the summer when tomatoes and squash were coming off. I was pretty depressed about leaving, so I left a lot of the stuff unharvested. The garden was tilled under soon after I left and is probably a nice, green, chemically altered lawn at this point…

I’ll break the suspense on this thread of past gardens; none of the three in this series are still around.

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2 Responses to Past Garden Projects Number Two: Local Revolt

  1. BS96 says:

    Is it just me, or does the linked Lo’Rev’ article end abruptly?

    It is a technical error, or just bad writing?

  2. Trace says:

    Horrible writing and just an all around bad interview. The worst…

co op month contest

Co-op month contest

I have been moving to a new home over the last few days and am pretty run down with all the carrying and dragging and boxing and unboxing. I hate moving; there are few highlights. My high points of the day – Noel and Danielle brought me some expired goat cheese and goat butter. Tonight was dinner with Sarah and Anthony.

Given that I am surrounded by boxes and unfamiliar with which light switch works which light, I am in the mood to be a bit self congratulatory. Please bear with me.

A few months ago I was nominated for the Cooperate for Community Contest. From the Tidal Creek website:

National Cooperative Grocers Association (NCGA) and Frontier Natural Products Co-op sponsored the first-ever ‘Cooperate for Community!’ contest to educate the public about the benefits of sustainable food and the cooperative model.

Open to anyone aged 18 or older, this contest encouraged co-op members, shoppers and community members to identify and honor the people and organizations that work toward more sustainable food in their community while exemplifying an outstanding spirit of cooperation along the way.”

I won the local competition, but was disqualified from the national stuff because I am a co-op employee. I guess “open to anyone aged 18 or older” doesn’t really mean anyone. Dumb. But I won locally and was able to donate some money to Carolina Farm Stewardship Association and receive a Tidal Creek gift card. Here is what my nominator wrote. (I read it for the first time when it was printed in the co-op newsletter. My nominator is pretty damn cool her ownself…)

“Local Winner – Trace Ramsey

Trace’s everyday life demonstrates his commitment to a just and sustainable world. He is currently the Produce Manager and a board member of our local co-op, Tidal Creek. Trace motivates Tidal Creek to adopt policies and programs that support and follow principles of sustainability.

Since Trace became Produce Manager, he went through the tedious process of organic certification for his department. It is the first and only certified produce department in Wilmington.

Through choosing to try to eat within a 100 mile foodshed and blogging about it at cricketbread.com, Trace has inspired the store. He is helping the co-op identify and connect with local producers and compile this information by creating a local foods guide for Southeastern North Carolina. This guide will be a huge resource to consumers, restaurants and small farmers in our area.

As a part of Trace’s healthy living, he bikes to work everyday, five miles each way. He is an advocate for alternative transportation and has instituted a bike incentive program for employees and customers. Outside of Tidal Creek, Trace has initiated a community garden, organized a community bulk veggie purchasing program helping make organic produce affordable and accessible to low to middle income families, rescued food from dumpsters, helped launch the Cape Fear Biofuels Co-op, and participated in many other projects.

Trace is worthy of the Cooperate for Community award because of his dedication to sustainability and community building through his work and advocacy for organic and local foods. He is truly a leader in our community by facilitating our co-op’s mission of providing fresh food and educating and empowering the public.”

There is my self promotion for the day…

3 Responses to Co-op month contest

  1. BS96 says:

    Awesome! Congrats.

  2. jessica says:

    I just read that in the Coop Current this morning. Congratulations! Well deserved.
    And I second the moving-sucks motion.

  3. Ali says:

    That stinks that you were disqualified. Your the winner in my books.

    Thanks for all you do. You are an inspiration.

past garden projects number one castle street

Past Garden Projects Number One: Castle Street

Nostalgia can be one of my weak points, especially when looking at pictures and such from years ago, garden pictures in particular. I have taken on a few garden projects in Wilmington over the last decade, some for myself, some for other people, on rented, donated and abandoned land. Each project was unique in its perspective and scope, from community based plots to market gardens. This series of posts will be a short retrospective on the three projects that I have been able to find pictures of.

Six years ago, myself and handful of others – probably half the entire anarchist community in Wilmington at the time – set out to transform a grassy parking lot on the corner of 4th and Castle into a small garden. In my personal time line this was pre-Kristin, pre-Noel and Danielle, back when most of my time was spent in community activism or traveling to protests and direct actions or working an office job.

Prior to this garden idea, some other folks had tried to get a farm stand going on the property to resell local produce. That didn’t get far. Another person had just ended their organic food buying club, distributing the bi-weekly shares out of the building on the property.

We had ideas for the building too, all of which never happened. We wanted to have a community radio station, an infoshop, a coffee shop, and on and on. Every idea had some road block, everything from zoning to the FCC to generating enough money to actually buy the books we wanted to distribute in the infoshop. So we focused on the small plot of soil presented to us.

This garden was a chance to get some literal roots established among the concrete and asphalt and toxic soil. The land was basically donated to us along with the ability to use the building on the property to store tools, seeds and pots. The project was simple – turn the grass into garden beds and distribute the food that grew to all the participants.

Big ideas came and went, the ground was tilled, manure and compost spread, buckets collected, compost bins constructed, beds outlined. The work didn’t take long as long as people showed up. And they did, at first, but folks gradually moved away from the garden after the first year.

The first year was prep work and cover crops, kind of boring, tedious work if your vision was in instantly harvesting squash and beans. I guess my vision was a bit longer, so I stayed with it. It became more and more a solo effort during the winter.

The second year we planted a bunch of annual vegetables and some fruit trees. I had met Kristin by this point, and the garden became one of our first projects together. Other folks came and went, contributing a few hours here and there which we would write down in a log book.

Year three was the final year of the garden. The owners of the place had rented the building out to some people who did car detailing. The renters wanted the garden for parking the cars as they cleaned them. The renters were also pilfering the garden during the days we didn’t stop by, cutting the flowers and picking the peppers and tomatoes. This was discouraging in itself, but returning the garden to a parking lot after three years of work was very aggravating. I don’t know how long the garden would have lasted. I do know that it would have gotten better and better as I learned more and more about what was going on in that particular dirt.

Today there are few signs that the garden was ever there. I can’t even really look at the place when I pass by, but I have always hoped that some of the veggies went feral, messing up the parking lot…

A lot did come from this project. I ended up running a organic produce buying club for a few years and also started up a traveling infoshop that I took to shows and community events for about four years. I also learned a lot about building soil and starting from scratch, things that will help as the projects get bigger.

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2 Responses to Past Garden Projects Number One: Castle Street

  1. Mike says:

    I wish I was around then. Hate to see what happened to such a great place….guess ‘nothin’ gold can stay.’

  2. BS96 says:

    Damn, I am lazy.

circle acres part one the purchase

Circle Acres Part One: The Purchase

In April of this year we bought 12 acres in Chatham County, NC about 150 miles from Wilmington. The purchase was the culmination of over four years of saving, research and scheming. During those four years we tossed around all sorts of locations – West Virginia, Blacksburg, Athens Georgia – before finally deciding that we wanted to live in the Piedmont area of North Carolina. Not only was it close to where we all live now, but also the opportunities and people were exactly what we were looking for.

Once we started looking in Chatham County, we found out several realities of searching for homes and land in developing rural areas. Many of the traditional stick built homes on more than 10 acres were well out of our price range. At $250,000 you’ll get some decent acreage and a well built house, but, unless you will also be moving into a well paying job or have a ton of savings, the monthly payments would be pretty gross. We set our budget low and looked again.

At the other end of the spectrum were decent prices for decent amounts of land but with a singlewide trailer or other manufactured home on the land. These homes are things that mortgage lenders rarely touch anymore, so the purchase must be outright cash or some fancy financing. Pretty much everything we found in our price range was a manufactured home or a place with very little acreage.

Then we found our place. Twelve acres, a crumbling house and the perfect feel.

With an initial attempt last July to buy the place with a traditional loan, we found out that the Big Mortgage Company with the fancy ads on the radio wouldn’t loan on a house with no central heat or a house in “fair” condition. The house had a wood stove and a gas stove, and those apparently aren’t central enough. And the home had to be in “average” condition, an arbitrary word based on the observations of an appraiser. So we let it go, sad faces all around.

The next attempt came in November after I did some research on construction loans. A few things had changed – the price of the house was the same, but a foreclosure was imminent. Then came the bad news from a general contractor friend. Even though the house was stick built it was in too bad of shape for a bank to loan money on it without some massive money up front. The extent of the repairs was such that a construction loan was out of our reach simply because we didn’t have the large percentage down payment. What we had wasn’t even close. So we let it go again; sadder, angrier faces all around.

After that, the listing disappeared from the real estate websites and we thought it was gone for good. It reappeared in February at a reduced foreclosure price. Unwilling to get burned again, we waited. By the time the end of March came around, the price had dropped significantly. We contacted our realtor, and I started looking for some different financing.

We were able to find a local lender that would loan on the appraised value of the land only, leaving out any value of the home or any other structures. Even with a required down payment of 30%, we were pretty sure we could pull it off. With a few phone calls, we came up with what we needed. At the end of April everything came together, all the papers were signed and keys were handed over.

It took us almost one year from the day we originally looked at the house to the day we signed off on the loan documents. It was a constant up and down but in the end all worth it. Now, we plan, we explore the land and we figure out what we just did. Welcome to Circle Acres…

8 Responses to Circle Acres Part One: The Purchase

  1. Jessica says:

    Congratulations – that’s a real accomplishment and a huge adventure! 12 acres seems like a small country when you consider the tiny plots we all live on here in Wilmington.

  2. Amy says:

    Congrats! I’m sure you’ll find many wonderful things to do with your new land.

  3. BS96 says:

    Sure beats my 568 sq. ft.!

  4. Congratulations! I look forward to hearing about your new home as you get to know more and more about it.
    Leda

  5. Mike says:

    Thanks for all the updates and insights! It’s always a pleasure. Watch out for those wolves…..ooooooooowwwwwwwwwwwww!

  6. Stew says:

    As a piedmont resident myself, I hope we get a chance to meet! I don’t have any land at all, living urbanly as I do, so you’ve got at least one hand to count on for help with occasional projects. :-)

  7. A Different Amy says:

    Congrats on the land, and welcome to the neighborhood! It was great talking with you in Durham last weekend, and if you need a hand with anything, you know where to find me!…

    Amy from NCCIA

  8. Trace says:

    Thanks for all the comments. I have been away at a sustainable agriculture conference (referenced by A Different Amy) and unable to comment back. A new post soon…

wilmington star news article

Wilmington Star News article

Local eating in Wilmington is front page news! Thanks to Sam for a great article. If you want to see the picture of me in my kitchen you’ll have to buy the print version.

Movement to eat locally grown food gains momentum in Wilmington

By Sam Scott
Staff Writer
sam.scott@starnewsonline.com

Her kingdom for a carrot – so long as it’s locally grown.

For the past four months, Jessica Probst and her husband, Sal Marsico, have been on a culinary quest – to live on local foods as much as possible.

More…

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interviews

Interviews

In the past I was very hesitant about giving interviews to certain media. I did a few television interviews, one about organic food and another about the spinach recall last year, and both turned into horribly spun pieces of garbage. I will never do another television interview, mainly because I believe the local TV news media to be nothing but sensationalist idiots. Their lack of knowledge and interest is a detriment to real reporting of newsworthy stories, as their stories are presented with the depth of a dried up puddle. I was approached to do a TV interview about freeganism last year and asked the people involved to drop the story as their angle would only hurt the people who rely on the waste stream. Thankfully the story went nowhere, as no one would speak with them.

I feel that written stories are much better as they are usually pretty well researched. I did an interview this spring about mushrooms that turned out very well. I also did an interview about Community Supported Agriculture that has yet to be printed. The reporter was very interested, and I feel that the story will be well presented and researched. That interview led to another story idea about local foods that I am excited to be a part of, as one of the primary objectives of this project is to get the word out about local foods and community building. All of this is serving as a catalyst for local foods presentations, foraging workshops and simply getting folks interested in a community that offers so many food choices and the opportunity to support growing production.

There is hope that younger people are getting interested in local and organic food. This is evidenced by a high school senior’s project on organic food systems to which I gave the following interview:

1. How far back does organic farming/food go?

Organic agriculture is tens of thousands of years old. The widespread practice of using petroleum derived fertilizers and synthetic chemical pesticides is only seventy or so years old. The heavy use of these products came about almost exclusively from the need to retool the war time products of World War Two (mainly ammonium nitrate for bombs) into something else. That is when ammonium nitrate (nitrogen based fertilizer) became an input for increasing yields in agriculture.

2. Do you know organic farming’s origins? If so, what is it?

As I said, organic agriculture came about when hunter/gatherers began forming more permanent communities thousands of years ago. But the modern organic movement as we know it had its start in the early 1940s with Rodale and more roots in the counter-culture and back-to-the-land communes of the 1960s. In 1979 the organic movement was codified in California with its first official definition and legal guidelines for calling something organic. The Federal Organic Foods Production Act of 1990 established a federal standard and in the early 2000s the USDA published what is known as the “Final Rule” which strictly defines what is organic.

3. How long have you been apart of the Tidal Creek crew?

I have worked for Tidal Creek for four years.

4. What exactly is your job and what type of tasks do you prefer to do?

I am the Produce Manager for the store. I am involved in all aspects of purchasing, pricing and displaying produce as well as supervising the other produce employees. I am an involved manager so I take part in stocking, cleaning and other tasks that the other produce people do.

5. Why are organic foods more expensive than store brand food at a grocery store?

There are several reasons. The supply of organic products is often not enough for the growing demand. Also, organic agriculture receives no government subsidy assistance like conventional agriculture. Organic production also tends to have more hands-on labor, which can add to the costs of the produce.

Currently organic produce pricing is very competitive with conventional produce. The pricing of our in-season produce is often cheaper than at the larger grocery stores.

American consumers have become far too used to cheap food and the problems with that paradigm manifest themselves in how we look at farming and how separated we are from our food. Constant consumption of highly processed cheap food also manifest in health problems. There are also the issues of long distance transportation, diminished vitamin and mineral content of hybridized produce and just a complete lack of understanding of how farmers are affected by our buying decisions. Food should be something that we buy the very best that we can afford. We spend our money on non-essential things like cable television, candy bars, fast food value meals and electronic gadgets and then wonder why we are so unhealthy.

6. What are some benefits of buying organic food?

Organic agriculture nurtures and builds the soil and ecosystems contained within the farm. Buying organic supports that process. Buying organic also provides farms with incentives to transition to organic, and it also pays the farmer what they deserve to be paid for their work.

7. What is the process of importing organic foods to your store?

I buy from two national distributors, one in New Jersey and the other in Florida. I also buy from many, many local and regional farmers who I deal with directly.

8. Would you rather import foods locally or from else where? Why?

I absolutely prefer to buy local. I personally only eat locally produced food, so I always have it in mind to support local first. I also like to get to know farmers personally, get to know them by visiting their farms and seeing how they do their work. Also, the local food that I buy is the freshest it can be, as it is often picked the same day that I put in on display. As soon as produce is picked, its nutritional content begins to diminish significantly.

The closeness of the farm translates into higher vitamin and mineral content as the produce has not had a chance to break down in transit and also because it is picked at peak ripeness. Most produce in grocery stores is picked when unripe and allowed to ripen during the one to two week transport process.

9. Is the money that a consumer uses to buy organic food really worth it in the longrun? Why or why not?

Yes. Buying organic reinforces the decision of the farmer to grow organically. Buying local is even better, as more of the money used to purchase the food goes directly to the farmer and stays in the community.

10. What do you think the biggest misconception people make about organic food and its process?

People think that organic is some extra special way of dealing with the production of food, and they don’t realize that growing organically is something that farmers have been doing for thousands of years. People don’t realize that conventional agriculture uses things like un-composted animal waste and sewage sludge, irradiation and genetically modified organisms. These things are not used in organics – animal waste must be composted for 120 days, and sewage sludge, irradiation and GMOs are not permitted.

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elba onion festival

Elba Onion Festival

Elba, NY, population 670 in town, maybe another 600 in the village. A small town by anyone’s measure and the place where I spent my first few school years and every summer until I was 21.

I lived in the village part of Elba, what seemed to me a massive area of farmland and sparsely spaced houses. But just like everywhere else, the old Miller Road of my youth has been subjected to the pervasiveness of new home building that occurs on farmland everywhere. Farmers grow old, tire of the long days, and, with no one willing to step up and continue to farm the land, sell the property off in one acre plots, the perfect size for modular homes and above ground pools. So it goes that factory built homes invade the unique landscape of hand built structures meant to stay in the family for generations, not just until the divorce.

My summers in Elba were mostly filled with work. Working on the Starowitz farm until I was 17, then taking a grocery store job at Bell’s while I finished my senior year at LeRoy High School. When I turned 18, it was factory time for me. Every day after school I would walk to Bok Industries where my Mom also worked. Every night after school I put rivets in three ring binders, pressed bales of recycled vinyl and cleaned toilets. I had already told myself that this was my life, and I had to get used to it. Then I went to college and ruined this whole scene.

The usual signal that my summer was coming to an end was the Elba Onion Festival, a pre-Fall celebration of the one product that the small town of Elba was supposedly well-known for – the onion. There were other celebrations in neighboring towns for other crops, processes, industries and whatever, but I really stuck to this one festival every year.

Usually held in the beginning weeks of August, the festival came to indicate a time to reflect on the previous several months of work and the return to school. It was pretty common for me to request time off from my jobs during this particular weekend. It was a time to catch up with people I hadn’t seen over the previous year, or even maybe for a couple of years. It was time to play a low stakes game of DARTO (yeah, just like BINGO), gorge myself on mini-donuts and Polish sausage, bet quarters on white rats that ran around a spinning wheel (dropping into various colored holes) or hang out near the beer tent late at night waiting for someone “on the inside” to toss unopened cans of Busch beer over the fence.

The festival had at its heart a fundraiser for the town’s volunteer firefighters and rescue squad. Every year their was a raffle for a brand new car, a Cadillac in the old days, but now a Ford Mustang, real Western New York type vehicles.

Small bags of onions were given to all the folks who came and bought tickets for the raffle. I always grew up under the assumption that the onions were from Elba farms and farmers, but it turned out that the onions (at least back in the eighties and early nineties) were from California and were most likely “old crop”. I shudder to think of where the onions come from now, these one pound bags of goodness, symbolic of the local community, most likely trucked in from the heavy onion producers of Central and South America. I can only hope that this isn’t the case and the onions they give away now are the real deal, locally farmed, harvested and bagged.

The food disconnect back then was more apparent than ever, just the fact that you can hold a celebration of your town’s biggest product and think nothing of importing that product in order to give it away with every raffle ticket. I’m sure the irony was not lost on some of the organizers of the event, but as they say “the show must go on.”

But good things are happening in Elba. One of the state’s largest organic farms in located in Elba. Porter Farms currently runs a CSA for three hundred or so families and delivers to Whole Foods and Lexington Food Co-op in Buffalo. The farm is right around the corner from where I grew up, but it has only been growing organically since the late nineties, after I had moved away.

There is also a large farmer’s market in Batavia, NY that operates twice a week. Last time I visited the market there were several organic farms represented, something I would have never seen when I lived there. The momentum for local and organic is getting into every small town out there. When they see the success, more farmers are willing to give organic a try and more small town consumers are pushing them along. The local food movement can only have a positive effect on the folks still farming and also encourage a new generation to get back to the farm and maybe grow some onions.

2 Responses to Elba Onion Festival

  1. jeena says:

    Hi there you have a great blog,lovely recipes. Feel free to visit my blog too :)

  2. Sean says:

    Makes me miss home. I can’t say much for the onions,but I do miss walking through the woods and picking leeks out of the ground. Good to hear the farmers are being proactive about their situation back home.

meat holiday

Meat holiday

When I was vegan, I twice took what folks might call a “meat holiday”. Both occasions involved my grandparents and a meal prepared by them. My grandparents were always deniers and misunderstanders of my vegan diet, and would only prepare foods for me the way they always had. When visiting one summer I was presented with some venison sausage, which I ate without a complaint. One holiday visit they made a meat lasagna, which I also ate without complaint.

The basis of the meat holiday or, in my current diet parlance, the exotic food holiday, is to recognize that the idealism surrounding certain food choices can be transcended by the enjoyment of food in a social context. Instead of arguing with my grandparents about factory farming (I saved that stuff for my parents), I would simply act as if everything was normal, eat a small portion of venison, and continue to enjoy an evening visit.

And so it goes with the local foods paradigm. My world revolves heavily around food – its selection, preparation and consumption. The preparation and consumption are very often done with good friends several times a week. While everyone is aware of my self imposed dietary restrictions, there are just certain events where it wouldn’t seem right to bring my own food while everyone else eats something different. A friends recent birthday dinner was a good example, as I ate a bit of guacamole, bagged carrots (though they were technically expired and free), a cupcake and coffee. In the context of the situation it didn’t seem right to be in the strict local foods mode. To understand the importance of a gathering of friends is to get to the center of the project – community.

Another recent example was an out of town picnic for farmers, produce buyers and interconnected folk. The vast majority of the food was not local, probably not even close, but I ate what everyone else ate. Again, it was the community atmosphere. The subject of local eating didn’t come up once, and I was pretty glad for it. I’m not into defending this diet as the end-all, “save the planet now” thing to do just like I was never one for vegan proselytizing. I am taking on this project to show the possibilities, not to dwell on the restrictions.

Just like everything else in my life, Cricket Bread will evolve into what it has to be, what it was meant to be. The 100 mile boundaries will most likely come and go, the foodshed changing as I move about the state learning more about the farmers around me and their practices.

I’m still learning, still exploring, still looking at a plate of meat lasagna when all I want is a nice salad. I’ll figure out the best ways to implement the structure of a local food system in the correct contexts, the most appropriate ways to teach others the benefits of swimming shallowly in the food pool.

But I’ll get to that after my friend blows out the birthday candle, and I finish my cup of coffee.

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3 Responses to Meat holiday

  1. Amy says:

    It’s all a balancing act. While it’s important to keep food miles and the ethics behind what you eat in mind, it’s also important to make community a priority and to make eating local something that is accessible to everyone. If you rule are too strict or if you constantly nag others about their food choices then you make the whole concept of local eating less appealing.

    I personally try hard to buy all my food at the farmers’ market or at stores that carry local foods, but I live with two other people who enjoy cooking. I’m certainly not going to turn down a good, friendly meal just because a California cucumber got mixed into the salad.

  2. Jessica says:

    I hear you – I myself am a person that craves structure, so it’s easy to let myself get caught up and put restrictions on myself that don’t exactly make sense. That being said, I have always valued relationships and community over the local diet. Sharing food is such an important part of our culture, and there are just too many opportunities for me to connect with others that don’t include local food. Plus I just don’t have the gene that allows me to turn down guacamole when it’s offered to me…

  3. Trace says:

    Yes, it is a balancing act. That said, I am trying to be as strict as I can because I feel that by doing so I can show folks that this whole idea is a real possibility not only on a large scale but in their lives as well.

    As a side note, I think that the folks involved in local foods are the same ones that eat meals in more communal atmospheres fairly regularly.

cabbage stars

Cabbage stars

I was trimming red cabbage today at work. It brought back a billion memories of a process that I was part of for five summers in the eighties and early nineties, a process I never really had a need to document but is now coming out as if I were going to work in the cabbage fields tomorrow morning. The thing that really started the memories coming back was the cabbage star, little pieces of stalk and leaves that are often left over after trimming.

When I was 12 years old, I went to work planting “skips” behind an eight seater cabbage planter. The job was temporary, until I could learn how to actually sit on the planter and move with the speed it required.

My job was to take a handful of cabbage transplants, walk behind the planter and put a plant in any gap in the four rows that the planter placed on its trip down the field. The work was long and tiring, walking what could amount to dozens of miles during any given day. These weren’t small fields; five acres deep might be a good estimate for some, ten acres on others. When planting dozens of rows per day, the up and back walk was quite considerable. Most days the farm didn’t even use a skip planter, mainly because a person, especially a 12 year old, could get pretty worn out after ten or so hours of walking and bending over every few yards.

I didn’t last long on the skips. Less than a week after starting my job with the farm I was riding the planter, one of eight people slapping transplants into the arms of a spinning wheel. It was hard to get the hang of the momentum, and my arms didn’t quite reach into the transplant box to get refills. For much of the first few days I had to be helped by the person sitting next to me. They would slap in two for every one plant that I was able to get in. Eventually I got the hang of it, and by the end of the planting season I could run one of the wheels by myself.

Getting the plants in the ground is a huge step, and the process consumes all of the front end labor hours. Maintenance required only a regular eight hour day, practically a vacation after the sixteen hour days of planting. The maintenance of the large cabbage fields was often by hoe and by hand. When we got to the farm each morning we were allowed to sharpen our hoes on the grinder, shooting sparks onto the concrete barn floor as the humidity of the day started to put sweat on our eyebrows. Sweat didn’t matter. This job, like moving irrigation pipe or sweeping barn floors or stacking pallets, was busy work, work in anticipation of the harvest to come, the other bookend of long days in the fields.

Harvest was done by hand. Each of us had an 8 inch knife, long enough to reach under the largest leaves and snap the stalk. There wasn’t much cutting involved unless a person was lucky enough to have a really sharp knife. Knives went dull quick, so it was more a matter of learning how to apply correct pressure so that the weight of the cabbage head would snap the stalk where the knife blade was placed.

A constant rhythm was required and encouraged by a tractor mounted radio playing the rock hits of the era on 96.5 WCMF. I can’t hear a Skid Row song without thinking of picking cabbage. Eighteen and Life seemed to be the anthem of my third summer on the farm.

During the harvest, the field manager only wanted to see “asses and elbows”, a reference to the only things really visible to someone observing a row of pickers. As the cabbage was picked, we would load it into 4x4x4 wooden boxes, six of those on a trailer, twenty or so trailers a day. From the fields it went into storage to await incoming orders and then trimming and bagging.

The new kid never gets to do any of the good jobs such as stand on the trim line or drive the tractor or run the forklift. My first summer in the trimming barn I was on clean up duty, making sure that the conveyor line built into the floor kept moving the trimmed leaves up into a waiting dump truck. My second summer I bagged the trimmed cabbage as it came down another conveyor belt. Fifty pound bags, stacked five to a row and four high. The cabbage came about as fast as the blisters and blood as the mesh of the bags dug into the skin of my knuckles and the areas between my fingers. There was no time to heal or nurse or worry about any of that. There was also no time to contemplate how a 13 year old who weighed less than 100 pounds was supposed to throw fifty pound bags neatly on a pallet, one bag every two minutes. I have no idea how I did it, but I lasted the summer and came back looking for more.

By the next summer I was able to work the trim line. I would take a head of cabbage out of a 4x4x4 box placed on a hydraulic lift. As the box emptied I could use a lever to tip the box closer to me until I had removed all of the hundreds of cabbage from the box. A quick slice at the stem end to remove most of the outer leaves and the trimming was basically complete. Trimmed cabbage went on the belt down to the baggers and the cabbage leaves went to the conveyor belt in the floor by my feet. A protective bib helped deflect the blade of the trimming knife from cutting the person doing the trimming, but I still have scars on my chest and stomach from some misplaced chops.

During lunch and dinner breaks while the trimming was going on, each of the worker kids would gather up handfuls of the cabbage stars and proceed to play in the vast warehouses and weed fields surrounding the warehouses. We’d climb in and out of empty bins, underneath corn harvesters, inside parts trucks or underneath office desks. The whole game was to hit each other with the flying stars (which could fly quite far if thrown correctly) and keep track of how many times each person was hit. No teams, no alliances, just twenty minutes of brutal non stop running and throwing. Once lunch was over, the remaining cabbage stars were dropped pretty much where you stood, left for a game the next day or week when someone would come across the pile and use it as needed. Bloody noses and skinned knees were common sights on the trim floor after a brutal round of cabbage stars. Walking back to our stations, we could see the damage we did to each other. Often, simple smiles and shrugs would carry a “no harm done” attitude into the next round.

Thinking on it, it’s hard to believe we were all just kids and in charge of all that food. That is a lot of responsibility. We had no idea where that cabbage was going, and to be honest we didn’t care.  Cabbage was something to trim and put in bags and throw on a pallet.  To think too hard about how people ate the stuff would get in the way, get in the way of doing a job and trying to have some fun in the process.

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eight things

Eight things

In response to Jennie at Straight From the Farm, here are eight somewhat random things about me, a few of which are similar to hers…

#1 – My very first job was picking strawberries; I was 11 years old. Payment was per pint, and I remember picking way too many pints when I first started. After a nice talk with an adult who owned the berry patch (who spoke with a raised voice), I no longer worked as hard or as fast. Still, I bought a BMX bike with my earnings from those few weeks in the strawberry fields.

#2 – My first car was a 1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme. It cost me $1200. My brother crashed it while I was away at college. I bought a 1979 Cutlass the next summer for $200. I should have waited a few years; I could have saved some money.

#3 – Occasionally I write a zine called Quitter that I print and distribute myself. Each issue is a document of personal stories set against my perceptions of a dying world. Each issue is $1. If you would like a copy of any or all of the issues, please let me know. An excerpt from Quitter #3:

“At night, on a rainy night, streetlights reflect off the machines and roadways, providing the only beauty we can concede to those objects. An overhead light beaming into a pool of oil-soiled water provides enough mystery, enough beckoning from some magical world below, that a concession of majesty is not much to ask. However, deep in those reflections are all the kings and all the slaves, all the coal-burning trains and all the diesel smoke nightmares. In those reflections we see the destruction we work so hard to avoid yet find so easy to create.”

#4 – I have been involved in some form of agriculture since I was 7 years old. Cabbage picker, USDA apple inspector, guerrilla gardener, and now produce manager. I still feel that I have barely scratched around in the knowledge of living systems and am constantly humbled by how much plants and non-human animals can teach us.

#5 – I have never actually eaten cricket bread, but I have threatened to do so many times. However, Noel has been collecting crickets from the fields. I may soon make that bread and end all threats.

#6 – I am a bicycle commuter, pedaling 10 miles round trip, 5 days a week. I do own a truck that I run on biodiesel, but I never drive to work or drive anywhere for that matter. The truck sits idle for months on end. Automobiles are useful tools and have their place. That said, I don’t eat pasta with a hammer or turn the compost with a microphone or drive for the fun of it or to simply get where I am going that much faster. It just never works out that way.

My status as a bicycle commuter will change when I move to the country, so I will have to reevaluate what the automotive tool is good for.

#7 – In the winter of 1995, I tracked river otters – fitted with radio transmitter implants surgically inserted into their abdomens by Cornell veterinarians – through the swamps of Western New York. The otters were being reintroduced into their native habitat after successful wetland rehabilitation projects made the environment hospitable again. This was during my junior year in college. My ornithology professor Dr. Beason asked the class if anyone wanted some radio telemetry experience. A few folks raised their hands, but I was the only one who showed up when the day came for training.

Each time I went into the field, I drove a buckled old Department of Environmental Conservation truck that stalled all the time. While driving I tried to hold a large radio receiver out the window and listen for the tick-tick-tick of the transmitter. After two weeks of monitoring, the tick-tick-tick disappeared, the theory being that the otters were too far into the swamp to be effectively tracked with the current equipment. My tracking stint ended soon after, but there is still an active river otter reintroduction program.

#8 – My father is an electrician, and during the years immediately before my birth he ran a television repair service. I was named after the electrical trace that appears on an oscilloscope when examining voltage, resistance and such on electrical systems, parts and appliances. Ah, irony…

2 Responses to Eight things

  1. jennbecluv says:

    Cool name. Cool stories. Love that you’re a fellow commuter cyclist. I knew you were my kind of guy! Now, about this cricket bread… is Noel collecting live or dead crickets? How many do you need? Is there really a recipe for it? If anyone will make it, you will. :)

    And oh yea, thanks for honoring my meme request. :)

  2. Trace says:

    The crickets are collected live. From what Noel told me, the crickets are then fed fruits to purge them. They are killed, then the legs, wings, head and ovipositor are removed. They can then be fried, boiled, sauteed, etc. Once fried they can be crushed up and baked in bread. I do have a recipe, which will come out when I actually make the bread.

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