I feel his eyes scanning my body from top to bottom and back. When his eyes meet mine again, instead of saying good to see you after 6 months, he says: "You are still fat!" I guess best friends never lie, and I can only agree. I have indeed some extra weight on me and this road trip with the Oto, didn't help me at all (bike where are you?). What have I been eating in the USA? I once had a faint attempt to grow my own herbs and to make my own whole wheat pasta. The rat race of the Silicon Valley however pushed my good intention to the side, and I found myself more going out for lunch/dinner than cooking at home. And that starts showing, no matter how hard I trained.
After working on the –W ranch my interest on organic farming and healthy food has come back. More questions than answers are occupying my brains about what are we actually eating. After a one day wonder on another wwoofer farm (the woman didn’t know what she was doing, was way in over her head and was also mean) I take things in my own hands. I want to know for real how this farming works and where my food comes from. And so with the incredible help of J (its actually his hands), who calls all the people he knows in the farming world, I farm hop for 3 more weeks for food and free veggies. I gain more understanding of the label Organic, the ideology, Local Grown, vital companies and sustainable farming then I ever have bargained for.
Organic label
Whole Foods
Here is Austin the first Whole Foods store (a mostly organic supermarket) opened its doors 30 years ago. What started as a small store for wholesome local food became a 270 store chain selling natural and organic food.

Ideology
GreenGateFarm
At the Whole Foods you believe in the label, not in the farmer behind the food. There is no face to face with the farmer feel. For that you have to go to Green Gate Farm. Just 8 miles out of town and run by two amazing people with a mission: Cultivating Healthy Food and Communities. For 4 days I help out, as if I have never done anything else in my life then farming.




Shades of Green
With the farmboy from GreenGate and B, who works his way around the USA farming and cooking, I go on a field trip to the “organic” chicken farm Shades of Green. Three minutes after we arrive its clear I made a big misjudgment. Instead of being toured around we are put to work, and there I am standing with my dress on flipflops. The boys are laughing. Being told I was the coolest woman on the farm (even with a barn full of half naked photo models for a photo shoot) because of my Xtratuffs, I had thrown them at least last minute into the car. And so with a California flowery dress and Alaskan rubber boots, I am able to give a little bit of a helping hand. Well, the boys a little bit more then me.




Local Organic Grown
Finca Pura Vida

The dynamics between G and me is interesting due the opposite sides we have in politics. I am a socialist and G is not in favor of a central government. And so when Obamas health care bill goes through G is upset and I clap in my hands. We however find each other when it comes to food. And I totally agree with her about the absurdity that it’s not allowed to sell raw milk without certifications. I understand that consumers in supermarkets have to be protected, but when I want to buy it straight from a farm, I can judge the risk for myself. To sell a home made pie, a home made marmalade it needs to be processed in a certified commercial kitchen. Where did the USA go wrong? Luckily I am staying at the farm and G bakes what ever we like to eat. She teaches me about raw milk (I even milk a cow), about kombucha, about food in general. And we eat really really well. Thank you both so much !!!



Vital company
HomeSweetFarm
When I arrive at the HomeSweetFarm, B and J are working hard on building a new big walk-in cooler. They are wonderful people and I can totally relate to the way they set up their business. A very attractive website has inspired many CSA members from Houston and a farmers market on the farm attracts local buyers. The CSA boxes are driven 3 times a week to a distribution point, a volunteer CSA member, where people can fill up their box with the veggies of the week. When the farm doesn’t produce enough to fill all the boxes, neighbour farmers are helping out to give the CSA members a security and the neighbour farms an extra financial injection. Also here beef, lamb, poultry, cheese, eggs and dairy can be ordered from neighbour farms, to make a one point stop for customers.
But by setting it up this way, the HomeSweetFarm might be the first step to the Whole Foods concept, no face to face to the farmer anymore. For now it seems one of the only/few ways to build up a vital company and I would be definitely a customer of their CSA box, had I lived in Houston.
Sustainable
The 2 most established organic farms in Austin are not welcoming me with open arms. These farms are run as serious businesses and there is no place for a random traveling hippie. Guess its better to meet them face to face, because I have been a farm girl for almost a month now.
Boggy Creek
When I talk a little with C from Boggy Creek, I am invited for a couple of hours of cultivating. C thinks about every step on the farm in terms of sustainability. Organic bat guano from Chile as fertilizer, or “non-organic” feather meal, a waste product of a local poultry processor. With a very good reputation and an in town location, the farm stand is the only selling point, cutting away the distribution and adding the face to face aspect.
The near Austin location has also a downside. With new development spreading the town, at the end of the season the well on the farm goes dry. And like several nearby farmers, the drip irrigation system has to be hook up to expensive chloride and fluoride city water (ruining most of the strawberries last year). This is when I realize that besides the slow-food movement being new, also this country is new. In Texas water intake (ground water as well as river water) is not regulated and the person with the biggest pump gets the most water. I must have sounded very stupid when I asked several farms how the water intake was regulated, though for me coming from the Netherlands its mind boggling. Water, like air (pollution), is a communal possession and should not be left to the individual, city planners, factories or farmer to decide how much can be used. But this is the USA where cities like Las Vegas are places in the middle of the desert, where the Colorado River hardly reaches the coast, and apparently ground water overdrafting is allowed.
Tecolote
I get the change to talk a little bit with D, from the Tecolote farm. I am very impressed by his appearance. This might have to do that he borrows me a hiking book for Big Bend NP, he has farmed in Alaska, and the fact that he shows me his own build wooden telescope (danggg). But it might also have to do with the professional way the farm feels. Here produce are only grown for the spring/summer CSA members and “leftovers” are sold on the farmers market. Besides local Turkey manure, hardly any fertilizer is used and all the work is done by seasonal employees.
Its that the road starts to pull on me again, otherwise I would have loved to spend some more time talking over a good glass of wine with D and his wife K, about their farm and their philosophy.
Reflection
I met many people on this trip who don't eat everyday all of the 5 food categories (carbohydrates/vegetables and fruit/proteins/oils and fats/beverages). Its something wired in my brain to do so. Or people who don't sit down with the family to eat. My mom cooked for me every day in my childhood and we sat down with the four of us. During my studies, one of my roommates would cook for the whole house and we talked. When I started working, S could call me at work to tell that dinner was ready. Living with Tore we alternated the cooking days between us and it was a moment of rest in our lives. And now I talk with people who grown up on fast food and this totally normal lifestyle I had, has become a slow food movement here in the USA. Wow.
So what to do? No doubt eating local organic sustainable is the best. But do we really need water sucking tomatoes out of Texas, or should we get them from South America where they are native? Do we buy far away Organic or non-organic Local Grown?
We talk about food, but shouldn't we also talk about all goods we buy? A Japanese Oto in America?
I realize that every item has its own answer, has its own environmental footprint. Every person will have its own budget. With this small world also where ever it is the cheapest products will be made and shipped from.
The only thing I can ask for: buy local organic sustainable food straight from your farmer. If that’s not possible, at least think about every item you put in your shopping basket and every item you put in your mouth, where it comes from and what it really is. Its pretty healthy.
Dag,
Iris (Austin, 35322 miles)