Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Food Banks Ask Gardeners to Grow Extra for Hungry
LANGDON, N.H. -- Sharon Crossman hadn't tasted fresh fruits or vegetables in a week. Since her husband had two heart attacks and stopped working, she has relied on disability checks and the free food provided by a food pantry.
But lately, the only fresh produce available at the Fall Mountain Foodshelf where she volunteers has been shriveled potatoes and sprouting onions.
Pantry director Mary Lou Huffling expects that to change soon, as she has begun asking local gardeners and farmers to grow extra rows of produce to donate.
"Almost everyone around here has a garden," said Huffling, who also runs a program that delivers meals to the hungry in this rural part of southwestern New Hampshire. "If they would grow a row for the food program and the Friendly Meals program, it would help so much."
At least 50 families have responded to Huffling's request and she thinks about 100 will end up participating. In July, she expects to feed fresh vegetables to 100 to 130 families each week.
"People have been very excited about it," Huffling said.
She has learned that her idea and even the name she chose for it, Grow a Row, are not new.
Sharp increases in food and fuel prices and the shaky economy are creating alarming shortages at food banks and pantries around the country at the same time that demand is surging.
Programs like Plant a Row for the Hungry, a national campaign that encourages gardeners to grow extra produce for donation, and New Jersey-based Grow-a-Row, are similar to Huffling's.
"Because of the rising food costs and gas costs people are unable to buy what they need," said Carol Ledbetter, program administrator of the Virginia-based Garden Writers Association, which began sponsoring Plant a Row for the Hungry in 1995. "There's a greater need for the food and so our program is even more important."
Helene Meisser, director of the Northwest New Jersey Community Action Program Inc. in Phillipsburg, said that last year her food bank received about 70,000 pounds of produce from the New Jersey Grow-a-Row through a combination of volunteer farming and food gathering. The food was distributed to charitable agencies in three counties.
At the same time that costs are rising, demand is surging at food banks and pantries around the nation.
Produce donations can't come fast enough in a country where almost 11 percent of households had trouble getting everyone enough food in 2006, according to the latest U.S. Department of Agriculture estimate. About 4 percent, or 4.6 million households, experienced some form of hunger.
Huffling says demand at Fall Mountain has shot up from 30 to 40 families a week last year to more than 130 this year, and she can no longer afford to stock the pantry with milk, cheese and fresh produce.
Nationally, America's Second Harvest, a national hunger-relief organization based in Chicago, said some food banks are reporting demand 20 percent above last year's. Spokesman Ron Fraser said the increase is higher in places, and food pantries have even had to close because of shortages.
There are no known statistics on the national impact of programs like Grow a Row. Fraser said that is because donations are made locally and aren't always tracked.
One of Huffling's first volunteers was Susan Esslinger, 53, a high school job coach who runs a farm in nearby Alstead with her husband.
"I know people who are disabled and who are not working," said Esslinger, who planted extra tomatoes, cucumbers, carrots, beets, lettuce and green beans in May. "I also know people that have a lot of children and just can't make ends meet. Many people in the town go to the Foodshelf to help extend their dollar."
Crossman, 63, and her husband, a former electrician and service engineer, were financially stable until two years ago, although she said a workplace accident had forced her to stop working. The Crossmans were even able to help their three daughters pay for their weddings.
Then Crossman's husband had two heart attacks. He stopped working and lost his health insurance as operations produced hefty medical bills.
Sharon Crossman said they were hungry until they found the Fall Mountain Foodshelf about six months ago. She said they didn't have any bread and were eating a lot of oatmeal. They stopped celebrating holidays and considered a chocolate bar she received from the pantry on Mother's Day as a "real treat."
Now she and Huffing are looking forward to the first batch of donated fruits and vegetables this summer.
"When you don't have lettuce, tomatoes, peppers or anything else that's fresh vegetables, you miss it," Crossman said.
© 2008 Associated Press

32 Comments so far
Show AllGot your garden in? With 5-6 dollar gas in our future we all need a garden. Support your local farmers. Less gas to your table. Cheaper food.
Got your garden in? With 5-6 dollar gas in our future we all need a garden. Support your local farmers. Less gas to your table. Cheaper food.
I volunteer in my town to pick too ripe for the local food bank. That tomato may not be perfect, but its still yummie!
I sell vegetable starts (tomatoes, etc.) at our local farmers market and wish i had started more of everything this year, all the veggie starts are just selling so fast . . .
Sold whole flats of starts to a guy who said his garden is made up of "twenty-five bathtubs" which he has retrieved from dumpsters over the years, he said he feeds his whole family from his 'raised bed' garden . . .
A lot of people use the five-gallon bucket system with good results, the important thing is to allow for proper drainage no matter what you use . . .
Old wheelbarrows with drainage holes drilled in the bottom would also work great . . .
Anyone with some sun and water and a little bit of space can start a small-scale bedding plant operation for minimal cost by collecting used containers for the plants and buying seed in bulk . . . coming up with a good inexpensive soil mix (it has to be fertile and also drain well) is the hardest part but there are some good soil recipes on the internet . . . it is fun and satisfying to grow bedding plants that will do well in the local environment . . .
Tore up almost 1000sq ft of grass this year and planted all kinds of vegies, squash, mellons. Doing this has inspired some neighbors to do the same or expand on what they are currently doing.
Imagine every yard full of stupid grass (nothing against grass just the dumbness of watering something only to cut it down) transformed into gardens. Great way to meet and bond with your neighbors.
So glad I don't live in some gated community with their home owners associations.
I live in Florida and, sadly, corporate-farmed produce (shipped in from all over the world) is waaay less expensive than the local stuff I buy from the community market every Saturday.
It's completely crazy.
Last Saturday, my wife and son, took 25lbs of lettuce and kale that was grown in the children's section at the local arboretum, to the catholic action centre. This was not be the first pile of food we've taken to local shelter, nor will it sadly be the last.
Though personally I don't make a point to grow an extra row for the hungry, I often have more of something than I can use, and no one's refused the food yet.
My son (aged 9) sells some food to our neighbours with 50∞ going to charity. Last year he gave away $65. He hopes to beat that total this year.
There are so many ways to help, you just have to dig up the lawn first.
Clever guy, the one with the bathtubs turned into raised gardens. I saw a story about a similar effort involving "keyhole gardens" to help the poor and elderly in Kenya feed themselves.
Like Frosty Bunny, I live in Florida though, fortunately, I've found some of the produce prices at farmstands reasonable, even compared to WalMart. I'm also very excited to see my first corn starting to come in, along with wild blackberries and strawberries. What's especially neat is that I've noticed wheat -- yes, wheat -- growing from my compost heap where I've been dumping my uneaten parakeet seed! Still waiting for the tomatoes, though.
"But lately, the only fresh produce available at the Fall Mountain Foodshelf where she volunteers has been shriveled potatoes and sprouting onions"
I've found this to be true at our food pantry, where I volunteer. I make a point to bring extras from my garden or to stop at the grocery and pick up fruit for that night's clients.
Great idea to plant a row or to give away the extras.
FORGIVENESS: I'm slowing eating away at the lawn in my yard. It is ridiculous to spend so much time mowing a crop I can't even eat!
Food is more expensive at our farmer's market, but it's LOCAL, so I'll pony up the extra.
Just posted a story about container growing - The Strawberry - on my blog at http://goodwordswan.wildflowerstew.com
It's great that we are growing food and looking out for each other but I think we should also be looking at why on earth more and more people in this country need a handout! Are we accepting the fact that if you get sick or become disabled you may not even have enough food to eat? While the oil companies and the pharmaceutical companies make trillions in profits?? Where is the indignation? Where is the outrage? Where is the change?
What we really need more of is guerilla gardens to feed the poor. I walk around my town and I see so many empty lots that could be used to grow food for the homeless and/or hungry. But the landowners (who may never set foot on the place) don't want a garden there.
I suggest that instead of donations, we teach these hungry people how to make gardens of their own or to forage in the city. You'd be surprised at what there is to eat.
Whatever happened to "teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime" ? These days, it seems like all we're doing to feed the hungry is giving them scraps of fish.
Too bad the CIA won't introduce organic gardening to the ghettos like they did with crack cocain.
ebishirl:
What variety of corn are you growing? And how are the strawberries doing? I live in Central Florida and thought those crops wouldn't do well here.
PS. We have wheat growing from bird seed, too! It's the stuff that's fallen out from the feeder outside.
We bought a house in December. Then a rifle. Then we built the raised beds. We filled the larder about half way so far. We have the food in: tomatoes, potatoes, radishes, carrots, garlic, onions, oregano and basil, rhubard, lettuce, spinach, beans, and peas. Next we'll put in the woodstove and buy the wood. We've cut 7 trees, but they are not split or stacked. It should be ready to use winter '10.
I've concentrated on filling the larder with things that will be difficult to get here in the mountains: salt, coffee, cooking oil, rice, sugar, vanilla, pepper, tea, baking soda and powder, and flour.
I've felt for a long time that the end of our good times economy was in sight and it would appear that I was correct. I have a little Ford Aspire (40 mpg) and a little Honda motorcycle (75 mpg). I live within 2 miles of my job and the grocery store, so I only need to use a vehicle when I get sent to an out of town part of the college.
All in all I think I'm ready. I'll feed my own. If I have extra I'll barter it for what I need. When all of my needs and my families' needs have been met, I'll donate. I've talked with others who are preparing in a similar manner. It's not a matter of armagheddon, it's a matter of our economy having been built on a finite resource. Sooner or later we will be unable to sustain it. I don't just plan to survive, I plan to live.
And the hell with Washington and that group of morons. I'm a secessionist at heart and I think Vermont ought to tell the other 49 adios. Certainly the people of Vermont can do a better job of managing our own affairs.
Keep your garden as close as possible to the kitchen/dining room and pick ripe right before meal preparation when possible. Nutritionally this makes a huge difference. Minimizing the cooking temp. and time also makes a big difference. Crawling through the garden on your hands and knees and grazing like a cow is optimum.
A variety of species is important as is a variety within species. Indigenous and non-western cultures tend to propagate much more nutritious varieties, also look for heirlooms and wild varieties. Extend growing seasons with coldframes and passive solar greenhouses. Preserve food by sun drying when possible. The difference in taste (and nutrition) is huge between sundried tomatoes and fresh grocery tomatoes, partly because the sundrieds are allowed to ripen on the vine, and partly because the cultivar is selected for taste (nutrition too). For maximum benefit, seek herbs/spices for flavors and depend less on sweet and salt, meat and dairy for flavors.
Compost the waste and return it to the garden, and water the garden with greywater and rainwater. To minimze insect and pathogen damage, interplant the various plant species to put some distance between individuals of the same species.
Eating "raw" organic food that is served as soon as possible after picking, is another excellent way to improve your nutrition.
Planted tomatoes and yellow peppers yesterday! First time ever anything besides cannabis...wonder if it will really work?
Am excited for sure, outside my window, thank you God.
Does Monsanto and ADM know about this insurrection of gardeners?
Aren't crock pots a good way to keep nutrients in food?
I am buzy tearing up a neighbor's yard and putting in raised beds. My neighbor and I saw this all coming this Spring and decided eatimg was more important than grass. Many of our other neighbors have never seen raised beds and are very 'puzzled' about the 'beds' in the former back yard. Now, they seem amazed at our beds and the amount of things we are growing in such little space. I see it as food security and don't understand why more people aren't doing the same. I am now placing bets on how long people are going to pay for gas to mow a usless lawn. We have 33 tomato plant in a bed 4'x 16'. Everyone can do this!
I have found that many of the seeds at the grocery store will sprout. Unmilled wheat and rice - potatoes etc. grow well in containers. Herbs and spices work as house plants in sunny windows. Every little bit helps for a victory (or a depression) garden.
I'm learning how to make almost edible bread. Store bought bread and (MAD) cows and (MRSA) pork is too expensive and I think of bird flu whenever I see dead chicken and e-choli at the vegitable counter. I wonder what the filthy rich eat. Surely not the coprolite they feed the working classes. Perhaps we should all fill our cars with E100, get a long straw and call in well for a year...
has everything to do with this article, even though i didnt read it all...
msn website front page article on mcdonalds/walmart pulling tomatoes from shelves..scary stuff-note how article hits five or six days AFTER the original recall. Can we really trust Corporations when they are in bed with Governments?
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25062058
HEMP FOR VICTORY. see you in 2009, help me get to Canada, the last bastion of hope! usa not a ok
Too bad most of you want to take away their food by reducing carbon emissions.
http://www.financialpost.com/story.html?id=569586
"Then, in the 1980s, ecologists realized that satellites could track production, and enlisted NASA to collect the data. For the first time, ecologists did not need to rely on rough estimates or anecdotal evidence of the health of the ecology: They could objectively measure the land's output and soon did -- on a daily basis and down to the last kilometre.
The results surprised Steven Running of the University of Montana and Ramakrishna Nemani of NASA, scientists involved in analyzing the NASA data. They found that over a period of almost two decades, the Earth as a whole became more bountiful by a whopping 6.2%. About 25% of the Earth's vegetated landmass -- almost 110 million square kilometres -- enjoyed significant increases and only 7% showed significant declines. When the satellite data zooms in, it finds that each square metre of land, on average, now produces almost 500 grams of greenery per year.
Why the increase? Their 2004 study, and other more recent ones, point to the warming of the planet and the presence of CO2, a gas indispensable to plant life. CO2 is nature's fertilizer, bathing the biota with its life-giving nutrients. Plants take the carbon from CO2 to bulk themselves up -- carbon is the building block of life -- and release the oxygen, which along with the plants, then sustain animal life. As summarized in a report last month, released along with a petition signed by 32,000 U. S. scientists who vouched for the benefits of CO2: "Higher CO2 enables plants to grow faster and larger and to live in drier climates. Plants provide food for animals, which are thereby also enhanced. The extent and diversity of plant and animal life have both increased substantially during the past half-century."
Lush as the planet may now be, it is as nothing compared to earlier times, when levels of CO2 and Earth temperatures were far higher. In the age of the dinosaur, for example, CO2 levels may have been five to 10 times higher than today, spurring a luxuriantly fertile planet whose plant life sated the immense animals of that era. Planet Earth is also much cooler today than during the hothouse era of the dinosaur, and cooler than it was 1,000 years ago during the Medieval Warming Period, when the Vikings colonized a verdant Greenland. Greenland lost its colonies and its farmland during the Little Ice Age that followed, and only recently started to become green again."
The CO2 warming hoax is a scam to get you to buy into the carbon trading scheme which will make you all poorer.
IPCC is a political institution who cherry picks scientists with the right opinions to market this evil and terrorizing people into giving up more of their liberty and money. Not to say Big Oil does not spin it also, but in this case I agree with Big Oil scientists, having arrived at the conclusion independently (at one time I was with Gore on this issue before looking into it myself).
Yup the Carbon Tax is a Huge Scam. Money in their pockets, not ours...
yeah, in my point of view just about every tax out there that they dole out is a scam. (especially the income tax)
MiMiCcS, in response, that those CO2 cycles are caused by natural earth cycles; not sudden jolts brought on by man with the internal combustion engine. Those cycles had a wavelength (zero point)of thousands of years! Draw that down to sudden changes within decades or perhaps hundreds of years, you get a much higher frequency, more chaos essentially. Something must be done about our energy situation. Soon!
sorry for any misspellings..
MiMiCics; Hello; I think you left out a huge variable; in the earlier times you refer to it was humid. Not the dry heat we'll see w/ global warming.
You mentioned warmer temperatures....yes, when all life was reptilian. For a return to chapter one, burn baby burn. more coal right? blast the mountantops to dust, strip-mine coal and burn it. Why? To help hungry people. You Be Serious Mon?
The carbon trading "credits" scheme may be SNL material; but global warming is hardly a good thing or conducive to feeding humankind; Shucks! It causes droughts! Mudcakes now-not fifty years ago.
Peace From Maggie's Farm.
I hope the commentor about global warming has a head. Do you understand acid rain? Acid rain is sulfuric acid dipping on all this greenery you are discussing. Think of that with the lovely sceanario of a 'greener planet'. CO2 is more than a fertilizer!
Ignore the MiMiCics behind the curtain.
Frosty bunny, I've got two varieties of corn so far: organic sweet and popcorn (started from ordinary popcorn seeds). Like I said, so far, so good! The strawberries are doing well, too, though I have to beat the slugs and snails to the ripe fruit.
Interestingly, I also discovered wild blackberries growing all over various parts of the wooded areas of my backyard this year. They're native, so doing great!
For most of my life I had at least one 'hobby farm' where my orchards and gardens were the envy of the area. I grew much more than I needed, even after I'd eaten my fill and frozen enough for the winter, so I always had plenty to give away. (My parents both had green thumbs and put in truck-gardens as a hobby when I was young.)
Just about everywhere I've lived in the last 20 years bans (with local ordinances, zoning restrictions, etc) any kind of garden that contains edible plants. Right now I live in a building that had a community garden for decades - but it was torn out (actually, there were 2 gardens here) 5 years ago. I used to bring lots of stuff - tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, beans, strawberries, lettuce, melons, etc - to the local social services center and senior citizens home, and gave the pumpkins to the kids for Halloween. But a few neighbors complained about having vegetable gardens in town instead of lawn - and I watched in pained horror as the work of years of lovingly tended gardening was roto-tilled under in a matter of minutes. Of course, it took a couple years to get the grass growing - but finally the last of the herbs and daffodils and self-seeding flowers were killed off. Now there is nothing but quack-grass, dandelions, clover, vetch, and weeds where a flourishing garden once stood. Oh, but that 'eyesore' is gone.
Just what kind of sick deranged disturbed people make such rules and laws? My parents also live in a retirement community where gardens are banned - but it's okay to have cholla around the yard-wall perimeter! (At least they can have fruit trees behind their 6-foot high walls - built to keep the Mexicans from destroying everything, of course - you run into that in Arizona.) Even clotheslines are banned - despite the high energy costs to run dryers...
When I owned (rather than rented), I always had orioles, hummingbirds, wild canaries, grosbeaks, cardinals, tanagers, buntings, killdeer, etc in my yard - as well as the local wild bunnies, squirrels, chipmunks, deer, and even possums and the occaisonal porcupine - or uninvited skunk. But there is something truly ugly about real estate companies and home-owner's associations that HATE birds, small animals, children, pets, and gardens. They seem to hate everything but money...
Where I now live (and rent), we are not even allowed to have bird feeders - the real estate company claims the seeds and bird droppings are an unwelcome eyesore. Since sewer and water utilities are included in the rent, we couldn't even put a garden on the adjoining lot - which my neighbors graciously offered when they found out that our gardens were going to be torn out. (There were established strawberry beds and a prolific herbal garden as well.) I was so upset (as were other tennants) that I even got rid of my house plants. I just couldn't stand to look out my window anymore, or even go out in the back yard. (Yes, I'd love to move - but I am unable to do so right now.)
All this talk about gardens is fine - so long as you own your own property and are outside city limits - but for those of us stuck in the 'real world' there is no such option.
And let me remind you that each and every one of you is just one accident away from losing everything - no matter how much health insurance you have. Insurance companies - especially in 'healthcare' - are in business to do only one thing - DENY BENEFITS. (I know - my sister is an underwriter.) And once they screw you, you can say 'goodbye' to your healthy diet - or any kind of healthy life. (I recommend the movie 'Rainmaker' - fiction that's painfully close to reality for all too many people who can no longer remember the taste of fresh fruit and vegetables - to remind you of just how savage, barbaric, and antisocial this country has become - it's SOP.)
Also, I once took a neighbor to a 'Second Harvest' offering, and found rotting fruits and vegetables, bulging out-of-date meat packages, and other insulting items that were once salvaged only by pig farmers. My, how America has devolved - and in less than 30 years! Homeless 'working poor' families, rampant unemployment, relentless inflation, and an antisocial predatory corporate structure to make Machiavelli drool... at least the 20-somethings (and younger) don't know what they're missing: a chance for a decent, happy, fulfilling life in a FREE country.
PS - Gardens aren't going to save us from the psychopaths. I remember post-WWII Europe - and that's our FUTURE - if we're lucky, that is. It could be far worse.
whatfools - don't try planting store-bought garlic - it's treated so it won't sprout and grow. But you can order garlic and get it going in your garden for next year, and keep it going for years after that. (Asparagus is also difficult to start, but hard to kill once it's established - it grows 'wild' here in road ditches...)
In addition to feeding people, gardens provide a little chapels of health and quiet beauty in a very disturbing world. Gardening has the rare quality of being both an escape and a solution to problems. It is good to hear about what other posters are doing.
Unfortunately the scale of private gardening is too small to address the situation in dense urban areas. There are some good efforts, but they tend to be small and fail within a year or two due to vandalism, legal challenges, land grabs etc. For truly local crops, we would have to grab some real estate and have an urban gardening program similar to the parks movement of Olmstead and Vaux. And of course support small local farms on the periphery and provide safe areas for farmers' markets in all neighborhoods in cities, help bodegas to install produce areas etc.