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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-09-11 08:09 AM
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Growing Demand: Crop Swaps Gaining Ground

from Civil Eats:



Growing Demand: Crop Swaps Gaining Ground

October 7th, 2011
By Sarah Henry


Heads up, green thumbs struggling to offload excess edibles: Aid is out there. A growing movement, designed to help people eat well, save money, and get to know their neighbors, is planting seeds in communities around the country. Crop swaps–meet ups where people exchange their surplus backyard bounty–are thriving from the San Francisco Bay Area to Boston in city and suburban enclaves and online, too.

Of course, there’s nothing particularly new about this phenomenon; who hasn’t been the beneficiary of the guy next door’s abundant squash plot or the woman across the street’s surplus spinach bed? Informal, low-key fruit and veggie trades have gone on since humans began cultivating crops. But these days, with the economy and the environment on many people’s minds, bartering food in a systematic manner is making a comeback. (For more on this, see Shareable’s story on food swaps.)

These weekly or monthly gatherings attract edible garden growers for different reasons. Some simply want to give away excess produce and, in exchange, get a little more variety in their diet. For others, including Transition Town movement members, crop swaps are part of a survival strategy, a way to build more resilient local communities to withstand not just financial hard times, but also energy shortages, climate change, and global warming. For some, it’s simply a positive way to socialize with fellow residents.

“We hope this will be a place for people to connect with others in the community who grow produce and exchange ideas about growing food and recipes, too,” said Carole Bennett-Simmons, co-organizer of Transition Berkeley‘s two crop swaps that started this summer, which attract about 30 to 40 locals. A retired public school teacher, she tends a plot at a local community garden, where she grows Swiss chard, bok choy, and beets. ..........(more)

The complete piece is at: http://civileats.com/2011/10/07/growing-demand-crop-swaps-gaining-ground/



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shraby Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-09-11 08:15 AM
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1. We gave older people who live around us some of our
excess tomatoes, corn and cukes but the bulk of it went to the local food bank. The squash are going down there next. Last year we had a lot of volunteer squash come up..almost all of it went to the food bank.
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