Cultivate: Stories from the New American Farmer

Last spring filmmaker Chandra Simon of Cultivate Films visited Grow Dat while touring small farms throughout the Gulf region.

Simon produced a beautiful short film about our young urban farmers, featuring Crew Members Yasmin Davis, Tim Dubuclet, Martin Raymond and Co-Director Johanna Gilligan. Enjoy!

Farm Pix: Happy New Year from our team

Team Grow Dat

Happy 2013 from our team. Photo by Dylan Hollingsworth

Jeanne, Jabari, Johanna, Leo and Karnesha wish you all the best for much growth in 2013!

As we reflect on the accomplishments and struggles of 2012, we are grateful for an overwhelming sense of success. Our farm continues to thrive, as do the youth we serve. We’re grown so much as we now approach our THIRD year! Every year we take thoughtful, planned steps to hire more youth, grow more sustainable produce, and share more food with New Orleanians in need.

Thank you to everyone for your continued generosity in our year end giving campaign (it’s not too late!) - we are thrilled to be wildly surpassing our fundraising goals.

“A proper community is a commonwealth: a place, a resource, an economy. It answers the needs, practical as well as social and spiritual, of its members – among them the need to need one another.” -Wendell Berry

Happy New Year!

Youth Speak: Grow Your Own

This job was the best because of the bonds that I got to make with people – and because we grew stuff. I really do grow food at home now! I never thought about it – I used to think it was stupid – when I’d see my grandmother in the garden. But now it’s amazing when you just sit there and something grows and you eat it afterwards. It’s cool because you’re really independent – you don’t need anything, really.

-Youth Crew Member

Amber and Christian show the morning harvest from the Tee Field

Amber and Christian show the morning harvest from the Tee Field

This holiday season we ask for your help to pay the salaries of the fabulous young people growing on our farm. Please support our work today!

Farm Pix: Grow Dat Youth Interns

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Farm Pix: Grow Dat Youth Interns

Meet Amber, Deshawn, Melanie and Yasmin – our inaugural and extraordinary Fall Interns. Perhaps you’ve already made their acquaintance at a food justice speaking event around town, or on a tour of our farm. They come together from four different schools across New Orleans to grow food, continue to develop their leadership skills, engage in service, and advocate for change in our city.

Taken on the Bayou near Granny Oak right behind our fields in City Park, New Orleans. Photo by William Widmer.

Support Amber, Deshawn, Melanie and Yasmin today!

Growing the Green: Holiday Gifts that Support Our Work!

Give the gift of quality youth employment or fresh produce from our farm to those in need this holiday season! Our meaningful ‘Thanks for Giving’ cards are the perfect present for everyone on your list.

Donate by purchasing cards now!

You will be mailed beautiful cards corresponding to the amounts above to give as gifts this holiday season.

Jeanne Firth

Take a sneak peek at our ‘Thanks for Giving’ cards! Melanie, Jeanne, and Amber sell their meaningful holiday gift cards.

Click here to donate! 

Plant Sale and Party Success!

Thanks so much to everyone who came out to our first Plant Sale and Party on November 3rd. Your attendance made the day a great success! We hosted over 500 visitors who bought plants, took tours of the farm, played games and enjoyed delicious drinks provided by our sponsors Old New Orleans Rum and Rouses and ate food from La Cocinita and Frencheeze.

 

What happened: 
Our current interns–Melanie, Deshawn, Amber and Yasmin–did an excellent job at the event. Melanie and Deshawn led farm tours with such confidence and gusto many people asked if they were full time staff members. 

We sold over $1,000 worth of beautiful greens, broccoli, cauliflower, lettuce and herb seedlings. Amber and other Grow Dat staff members sold many, many plants that day…..

Yasmin staffed our Donation Station, where she and Grow Dat staff shared information with visitors about Grow Dat and let them know how they could get involved with our “Growing the Green” campaign. We earned an additional $1000 selling Grow the Green cards, drinks and t shirts!

 

More about “Growing the Green”
Couldn’t make it to the party but want to support our work? During the holiday season you can help us grow the green by giving the gift of employment or food! When you contribute we will provide you with a card recognizing your contribution that you can share with the person on whose behalf you have donated. Stay tuned for more information about alternative gift giving this holiday season! (Info will be up on our website soon!)

Photography by Will Widmer

Grow Dat Champions Needed!

Do you love Grow Dat? Are you able to motivate others to get excited about Grow Dat and our work? We need your help!

We are seeking ‘Fundraising Captains’ – folks who are pumped about the work we do and want to reach out to their own networks to do some enthusiastic grassroots fundraising on our behalf. Our goal is to raise a collective total of $10,000 by December 31st for our second annual ‘Growing the Green’ campaign. With a small group of committed Captains dedicated to our mission, this is totally possible.

We ask Captains to reach to their networks to give the gift of employment for a young person, or underwrite food donations to New Orleans’ needy. Each donor will receive a printable card recognizing their contribution that they can share with the person on whose behalf they have donated.

Each Captain will create an online fundraising page using a basic template and reach out to their friends, family and colleagues. Captains will set their own fundraising goal and compete against other Captains to see who can raise the most green for Grow Dat.

Sound appealing? If you’re ready to sign up or have questions, send an email to jeanne@growdatyouthfarm or give us a callat 913.515.6892. The campaign kicks off Thursday, Nov. 15 so sign up now!

Together, let’s unite to grow dat green!

Grow Dat inspires world leaders at The Fetzer Institute’s conference in Italy

At the end of September, hundreds of world leaders gathered in Assisi, Italy for The Fetzer Institute’s 50th Anniversary convening. The Global Gathering aimed to address world problems through love and forgiveness in the spirit of Saint Francis of Assisi. The conference took its inspiration from real life examples, and our Grow Dat team here in New Orleans is humbled to learn that we were a featured transformative project!

The conference showed the astonishingly popular SEEDocs film about our project, sustainable community design, and our Eco-Campus. 

Check out the recent media coverage about Grow Dat and the other projects featured at the convening below.

The Washington Post

The Huffington Post

Youth Speak! Melanie reports back from her summer at Farm & Wilderness camp in Vermont

Melanie Long (right) and campers with freshly-harvested potatoes

My name is Melanie Long, I’m currently a Fall Intern at Grow Dat, and this is what I did this summer:

It started out with a blind leap into a state I couldn’t even place my finger on a map…Vermont. Plymouth, Vermont to be exact. I was to attend a work based summer camp for six weeks called Tamarack Farm, part of the Farm and Wilderness Camps. Beforehand, I was told that I would not have access to my cell phone or any other form of electricity for that matter so there would be no way for me to know what Liam and Hope were up to on the Bold and the Beautiful, my favorite soap opera. Anyway, I decided to not have any expectations about the farm when I arrived. This was a great idea, as I soon found out, because there were many many many new things that I was able to experience.

Grow Dat is an urban produce farm set in the heart of the city set right next to an overpass, but it is scenic none the less. Coming from this type of farm, it was totally new to live on a farm with both animals and produce, nestled in a valley surrounded by big green hills and a beautiful lake. The first big adventure I remember was nothing other than milking a cow. I love milk and personally knowing the cows that the farm’s milk supply came from was pretty eye opening! There were also chickens, ducks, calves (which act like puppies), goats and a ginormous (I cannot find any other words to describe her) pig. The pig was a sweetheart.

Up close and personal with the lovely dairy cow

The work projects were a pillar for the farm’s motto: Work is Love Made Visible. One of the major work projects which required about 40 percent of the campers was Barns and Gardens in which campers tended the farm’s garden and did various animal related tasks. Already having 5 months of farm knowledge under my belt, gardening was nothing new, and neither were some of the plants. Now this is very interesting because farms in the deep south, like Grow Dat, cannot plant many varieties all year round. Grow Dat stops growing cool weather plants like lettuce, radishes, carrots, and kales at the first sign of warm weather. Then Grow Dat plants hot weather plants like tomatoes, peppers, squash and okra. In short, we plant what we can while we can. Vermont’s climate, on the other hand, allows for all of these things to be grown at the same time during the summer. It’s not hot enough to wilt the leafy greens, nor is it cool enough to stop production of hot pepper plants. It’s amazing! I was introduced to different produce varieties like blue potatoes (see photo above if you don’t believe it), and was able to see how other things I eat grow, like snap peas and asparagus. (Honestly I didn’t start eating most vegetables until I got to Vermont. The cooks incorporated a vegetable from the farm into every meal we ate, and I enjoyed every morsel!)

Tamarack Farm Lodge

During the summer I hiked on the Appalachian Trail in the White Mountains, covering 26 miles in 4 days. I milked cows, cooked for about 90, used a composting toilet, went off a rope swing into the lake, picked blueberries, tried new foods, played ultimate frisbee, built a shower house, constructed a bed railing, made bridges and doors, screen printed shirts, and made a beach with the rest of the camp one bucket of sand at a time.

I did all of these things this summer and even more that I can’t fit into this blog post!

Melanie hikes 26 miles on the Appalachian Trail in the White Mountains

Melanie Long graduated from Grow Dat’s core program in June 2012 and now works as an Intern on our farm. She is a Senior at De La Salle High School in New Orleans.

Fall Volunteer Days on the Farm

Want to get your hands dirty and directly support sustainable local food systems in your city? We’d love to have you join us for any of the following volunteer days on our farm in City Park this fall.

The weather is cooling off (finger’s crossed!) so now is a great time to volunteer. We have lots of work to do to prepare for our FALL PLANT SHOW & PARTY (save the date – Nov. 3) and for the next crop of Grow Dat youth crew members who will begin their farming jobs with us in January 2013.

Saturdays in October, November and December 2012
October 13th, 20th and 27th
November 10th
December 1st and 15th

9am – 12 noon

Please notify Jabari Brown if you intend to join us for any of these dates: jabari1@growdatyouthfarm.org, cell: 601.260.0509. Wear long pants, boots or sturdy shoes, and be sure to bring a hat and a water bottle.

Thanks for your support! Hope to see you on the farm this fall.

Hurricane Isaac Update

We are happy to report that we weathered the recent storm with no lasting damage to our fields or campus! Thanks to our friends and funders for an outpouring of concern and support.

Our fields are already dry, but we do have several damaged trees that will need to be removed. The bayou near our campus rose 20 feet – and was accommodated perfectly by the large bioswale designed specifically for such overflow around the front of our site. Check out the photos taken this afternoon below.

Please join us for a Volunteer Day this Saturday, September 8, from 8am-12 noon to help us get our farm back in order!
We’ll clean up tree debris and clear the fields of any obstructions to planting or mowing. 2nd year interns begin their advanced training with us on the same day – we want to welcome them back to a beautiful, functioning space that’s ready for their hard work in the fields and beyond. With your help we can get back on our feet and ready for our youth programming this fall.

Volunteer Day
Saturday, September 8, 2012
8am-12noon
Report to 150 Zachary Taylor Drive, City Park (between Pan Am Stadium and the dog park)
*Wear long pants and boots (or very sturdy close-toed shoes)

Youth summer employment opportunity on our farm – applications due this Thursday!

Attention Applicants:

Applications and a letter of recommendation are due this Thursday, May 10!

Want to join Grow Dat for our intensive 4-week summer program? Please put the finishing touches on your application, gather your letter of recommendation and submit both these documents to your school’s Grow Dat Liaison. (Not sure who your Liaison is? Contact jeanne@growdatyouthfarm.org)

Applicants will be notified Thursday night if they have been selected for an interview. Interviews will take place Friday, May 11.

Students are being recruited from our five 2012 PARTNER SCHOOLS:

  • New Orleans Charter Science and Mathematics High School (SciHigh)
  • De La Salle High School
  • Warren Easton High School
  • The Net Charter School
  • Joseph Clark Charter High School

Want to apply but have more questions?
If you’re a young person in New Orleans who is interested in applying to join our 2012 Grow Dat Team, click here for detailed information on how to apply.

We look forward to reading all the applications and meeting our next crew of inspiring young leaders soon!

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Amber and Christian harvest from The Tee Field in City Park. Apply now to join our team for the summer!

 

Recipes from our Farm: Turnip Cole Slaw

Think you’re not a fan of turnips? Think again!

Grow Dat Wellness Specialist (and resident chef) Deb Willetts has concocted a truly fabulous Turnip Cole Slaw using the scarlet turnips which are now bountiful in our fields. Have you enjoyed our samples recently at the Sankofa Farmer’s Market? There’s a strong chance that this is the recipe you sampled! (Or, it might have been our Radish Leaf Pesto or Arugula Pesto – stay tuned to this blog for future delectable recipes.)

Turnip Cole Slaw

5 small turnips (about 4 cups shredded)
1 large carrot
2 green onions (optional)
2 tablespoons honey
1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar
1/4 cup mayonnaise
1/4 teaspoon salt

Shred turnips and carrot using cheese grater. Put in large bowl. In another bowl, combine mayonnaise, vinegar, honey, and salt and stir til well combined. Pour turnips and carrots and mix well. Garnish with chopped green onions if desired. Chill in fridge and serve cold.

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Assistant Crew Leader Martin Raymond prepares samples of our own pestos and Turnip Cole Slaw at Sankofa Farmer's Market