More Americans Growing Food on Small `Hobby Farms'
GEM, Ind. - Most evenings, Gary Mithoefer can be found at the end of a long gravel driveway off a busy highway, tending two garden plots filled with white sweet potatoes, squash, cabbages and a dozen other vegetables still thriving in early fall.
The 62-year-old, who gardens after his workday ends at his state highway job, is one of a growing number of Americans rolling up their sleeves and digging into the dirt to raise crops or livestock on a small scale.
The produce and meat raised by these small farms, sometimes called "hobby" or "lifestyle" farms, provides much of the food found at the nation's farmers' markets and roadside stands, said Maria I. Marshall, an associate professor of agricultural economics at Purdue University. Many of the farms raise specialized crops and practice organic or sustainable farming.
Mithoefer, who sells whatever produce his family doesn't eat, freeze or can at a Saturday farmer's market, said he loves working outdoors with a nephew who helps him till, plant, weed and harvest plots covering about a half-acre just east of Indianapolis along U.S. 40, the famed National Road.
The Greenfield, Ind., resident recently sat in the fall sunshine near his fields vigorously washing buckets of cucumbers, squash, turnips and beets for the farmer's market as the air hummed with the din of cicadas and crickets.
"We do it for the enjoyment," Mithoefer said as he scrubbed dirt from a cucumber.
"We make some on it - it doesn't lose money. We try to be reasonable with our prices and give the customer a good quality product for a reasonable price. Not much goes to waste."
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's most recent farm census shows that while the nation's largest farms keep getting larger, a growing number of small farms also are sprouting across the nation.
February's census report found that the number of farms under 50 acres soared nearly 15 percent between 2002 and 2007 to about 853,000 nationwide. Farms under 10 acres grew even more, with their numbers rising about 30 percent to 232,000.
Nearly 300,000 new farms began production since the last census in 2002, and they tended to have fewer acres, lower sales and younger operators who also work off-farm, said Ginger Harris, a demographer with National Agricultural Statistics Service, a branch of the USDA.
Although the census numbers show a growing interest in small farms, she said farmers weren't asked their motives for starting their farms or why farming isn't their primary occupation.
"We don't know if they do something else because they can't make enough money with their farms, and they would like to be a full-time farmer, or it really is just a hobby," Harris said.
Denise Beno Anderson started her 5-acre chicken and vegetable farm in central Ohio in 2003 with her husband. They divorced this year, and Anderson now runs the operation with the help of a cousin and her 17-year-old son, Peter, who works as a farmhand.
Anderson said she moved from Columbus, Ohio, about an hour to the south, to the small town of Mount Gilead in part because she wanted to start a farm like the one she grew up on.
"I had my taste of the city, and I got tired of the sirens and the helicopters and the traffic and the smells, and I felt more comfortable in a rural setting," she said. "I had to get back out to my rural roots."
Anderson, 46, raises about 500 chickens from six old-fashioned layer chicken breeds, including Barred Plymouth Rocks, Rhode Island Reds and Americanas, which lay green eggs. She also raises vegetables and a few hogs, lambs and rabbits - all without chemicals, antibiotics or hormones.
Her farm has about 50 customers who pay for regular allotments of either eggs and vegetables or eggs and selected meats - or both. Anderson also sells vegetables and meats twice a week at two Columbus-area farmer's markets and to retail stores.
She also works part-time as a trail ride guide at a local horse stable.
"I can pay the mortgage on the farm, the utilities and other things," Anderson said. "We're not living a life of luxury over here, but we're not on food stamps, either. We're able to make a living."
Mithoefer, who grows his crops on a tiny slice of an 85-acre grain farm owned by his mother and two cousins, started farming as a child. In the 1970s, he took over some of the vegetable fields his maternal grandparents had tended for decades at their farm.
Mithoefer estimates he sells between $1,000 and $1,500 worth of vegetables each year at a local farmer's market. When he retires, he plans to keep his current fields but plant a wider variety of crops to extend his harvest, which now runs from June through November.
He hopes his nephew, who's 25 and wasn't even 10 when he started helping him with the fields, will take over someday.
"He's one of the reasons I'm still at it - because he still wanted to do it," Mithoefer said.
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20 Comments so far
Show AllThis is all wonderful and just in time for our economy.
For those interested in growing for personal use or sale here is a great way to control water; place a container in the soil below the plant creating a constant water table reservoir exactly like "bottom land". Saves on water and provides consistant moisture needed for good growth.
If interested in more info wilddog_202@yahoo.com
With food as with everything else, the sine-qua-non is *organising*. Unless we get into the unbreakable habit of acting together, the scum will always win. They'll make it illegal to live without paying them.
At present, nominally at least, some of us have the opportunity to not be wage slaves. But if the corporatocrats have their way, as noted by tonyryan, they will make all styles of life except wage slavery effectively *illegal*. If people effectively can't sell their excess crops (or whatever) for money to buy what they can't make, they're stuck.
In late-1780s Pennsylvania, farmers distilled their excess grain and sold the whisky, which was considerably easier to transport over the lousy roads than the grain would have been.
Partly to establish social control, Hamilton had a law passed that taxed the farmers at a much higher rate than the elite owners of big distilleries were being taxed. When the farmers protested, Hamilton reminded President Washington (who just happened to also be an elite owner of a big distillery!) of what we now call Shays's Rebellion and got him to use his personal prestige to organise a 13,000-man army and crush the farmers.
Fortunately, and unlike the four unlucky farmers in western Mass., none of the "whisky rebellion" farmers were actually hanged for protesting their unfair treatment. But the farmers had been shown the power of the new federal government, and since they could no longer make any money for their distilled grain they ceased to be a "problem" for the elites.
That's what the elites will do to everything, unless we organise to stop it.
Unlikely as it may seem, Big Agri, supermarket monopolies, and Monsanto work on margins to break their opposition; but small sustainable farmlets, hobby farms, balcony and backyard production systems can actually damage the ruthless giant's prospects in a serious way.
They ain't dumb; they have anticipated such developments and are currently pressuring governments in every country to place bans on homegrown food; and on the use of old-stock fertile seed and traditional animal breeds. The usual argument is based on health concerns; that health officials do not have the opportunity to inspect domestic production methods and thereby protect consumers.
In Australia, main road farmers had honesty boxes at their gates, with excess domestic eggs for sale. This is now illegal.
How does one overcome such unprincipled hegemony on the right of choice of food? Well I can tell you now that a gaggle of home farmers throwing rotten eggs on the roof of the relevant politician's office will definitely alert him as to the likely consequences of siding against the people.
But make sure the rotten eggs are commercial; it makes for better post-event journalism.
Back to the land! I'm there, and this 8 acres of awesome land can provide a living, and a great way of life. Might not get rich, but quality-of-life is EVERYTHING.
A great book that can be found used for a fair price is "Five Acres and Independence," but it's possible to be independent on two acres or even less depending on your climate zone and land. The problem with smaller plots is that it's hard to grow a large enough cash crop that will provide the monies to pay property tax and purchase items you can't trade for.
Sounds suspiciously like subsistence. Property tax rebates! Some other restrictions are; how many adults can live in a single house, making outhouses illegal , contaminated wells- groundwater make it expensive to have to dig deeper ones.
Why is Living lightly restricted or made too expensive couldn't it actually be supported? Didn't most live this way not so long ago?
"Didn't most live this way not so long ago?"
Yes, but it's called self-reliance or self-sustaining, not subsistence. The book I cited was first published in 1935 to help educate the many who fled the city for the farm. A lot of opportunities could be created for many of the un- and underemployed if massive agribusiness farms were busted up like the Trusts of yore.
I wasn't arguing I was agreeing. Not only did people live subsistence not long ago, millions still do. The word is merely taboo.
Those words all mean the same thing.
self-reliance self-sustaining, subsistence
From the dictionary:
subsistence |səbˈsistəns|
noun
1 the action or fact of maintaining or supporting oneself at a minimum level : the minimum income needed for subsistence.
• the means of doing this : the garden provided not only subsistence but a little cash crop | the agricultural working class were deprived of a subsistence.
Thank you for your reply.
Okay--All three words, then, and more!
The economy has mandated the return (so far voluntary) of 'victory gardens' and a renewed interest in the '100 mile diet'.
Good thing too.
Because very soon, most of the US is going to be , *ahem* 'enjoying' a lifestyle very similar to what Cuba has been living under for decades! (With possibly better internet access, at least for a short while...)
Cuba imports a very small percentage of it's needs (mostly luxury and medical items), and they have a thriving economy based on reuse, recycling, and repurposing of almost everything.
Get used to living VERY local folks.
I've been growing a home garden for better than 10 years now. Some years it is pretty amazing how much food you can get out of a relatively small plot of land.
Can people get around HOAs by growing potted vegetables? Or how about those hanging tomato planters? Neither are permanent plantings so they might be exempt. Just a thought.
The topsy turvey had no issues but it was when I used a rectangular pot for planting that they had a problem just because it looked like it blocked the balcony windows. Crazy rules but I did get enough of my neighbors to team up and convince those board of directors to understand. The HOA rules can be subtle and twisting.
Thank you, Common Dreams, for publishing these positive articles.
One of the best ideas for getting out from under the control of the government and large corporations is to grow your own food or buy local.
I am currently in an apartment but try to buy as much food locally from farmer's markets.
It would be even better if HOA (Home Owners Association) were completely eradicated. Don't talk to me about style and aesthetics. Even growing a pot of veggies isn't always possible when one lives in an apartment, condo, or townhouse thanks to HOA hell which infects 90% of them so don't bother getting me started on "well just move to another home". With the mortgage crisis ongoing and more people turning to apartments, condos, and townhouses to save money and get used to living in smaller spaces because maintaining a big house and garden can be a chore of its own depending upon one's job, marital, financial, etc ... status, we're a long ways from catching up. And don't forget the looming HR 875, Big Agri's wet dream as if HOA weren't bad enough.
P.S.: I was lucky to get some older neighbors of mine to sympathize and join me in trying to get the cornfed board of directors to give an exception. It worked after a lot of great difficulty. I wished I could own an HOA free home too but I'd have to be earning twice as much to be comfortable affording such homes that are obscenely overpriced.
Hey Jennifer, i saw this really cool story on tv last week and thought of you. It was about rooftop gardens. does your building have a flat roof? Most hoa's can be convinced to allow rooftop gardens because they are pretty much hidden from view.
I have seen the idea come up in St Louis City but haven't seen that in the suburbs. The condo complex does not have a flat roof unfortunately. :(
I'm still able to get by with the topsy turvey for most vegetables. It was when I wanted to try out my parents' long abandoned rectangular planting pot that I ran into trouble earlier this year. Both are ok now. :)
P.S.: My new roommate who moved in last month likes to tweak my small garden in the balcony. He thinks he knows the best angles to best tilt the plants to improve growth in the plants. This might get interesting though I don't know how it will work out since the cold season will be approaching. He also thinks he can tweak the plants indoor as well. Again, this looks interesting. I guess it will be that and the trips to the local farmers' markets. I could also head out for the rurals and try finding more sprouting local farmers out there as well. :)
Hi Jen--You can turn your balcony into a large cold frame/greenhouse by enclosing it with translucent plastic sheeting and perhaps heating the are with a small space heater. That ought to allow you to grow peas and lettuces as they stand cold well and don't need much sunlight.
Thanks for the tips on the peas and lettuce. I always wanted to avoid frozen peas from the store as well. :)
It's too bad subsistence is taboo. Who wants to go backwards away from "progess"?
“The greatest fine art of the future will be the making of a comfortable living from a small piece of land.”-Abraham Lincoln
"Civilization is the limitless multiplication of unnecessary necessities."
Mark Twain
This is how we RESIST Monsanto, et al. Grow our own food locally, buy locally, put food by for winter. All sounds simple, not quite so simple in the doing, but do-able. This is our future - if we're lucky.