Over here in the UK I have been following the programmes of Hugh
Fearnley-Whittingstall, a TV chef with a difference. As he has
journeyed into self-sufficiency over the past ten years at his
smallholding River Cottage, his programmes have charted that journey...
whilst he himself has been involved in and even started several
campaigns regarding organic eating and self-sufficiency, mostly aimed
at showing how anyone can do it.
His latest programme, River Cottage
Autumn, has featured a number of initiatives springing up over here
lately (among them Guerrilla Gardening and Transition Towns) in
between Hugh cooking up feasts foraged from the countryside around
him and laying on quirky menus at the recently opened River Cottage
Canteen. The newest project of his was revealed here on his most
recent series. It is called Landshare.
At present the Landshare project is just a website seeking
subscribers. In the vein of Guerrilla Gardening and aspects of the
Transition Town movement it hopes to get people growing on unused
land and allotments, whether you live in the town or the country. For
example, one person featured on the show lived in a flat with no
space to grow things. Through the Transition Town network, she got
together with someone in her community who has a garden and they now
both eat freshly grown vegetables. Whilst these other projects
incorporate other aspects or approaches to dealing with peak oil,
Landshare focuses on this one vital aspect.
Image by benliney, courtesy of Creative Commons license.
Currently, you join by categorising yourself as one of four things: a
Grower (one who seeks to grow but has nowhere to do so); Landowner
(those with land to share or offer, whether its a back garden or even
a rooftop space); Land-Spotter (people who might know of unused,
derelict-looking land that may be available to grow on or that is
owned but might become available if the owners are willing); or a
Facilitator (those able to offer any kind of general help from
helping the elderly and others having trouble getting involved with
Landshare to paperwork, meetings, computer skills and, of course,
advice on growing fruit and vegetables). The project is looking to
launch properly in early 2009, having garnered support of those who
sign up to get involved now, whatever category you fall into.
This is another of several projects that extends the ideals of co-
operation and empathy to those in your community. These days we are
often left at a loss for what we can do to positively affect the
outcome of a seemingly unsurpassable world situation, but with
projects such as this we are enabled once more. Apart from meaning
that we interact with our community more and can make a concerted
effort at leaving a lighter footfall on the planet, whichever way the
cookie crumbles, there are undoubtedly hard times ahead. Hugh
Fearnley-Whittingstall has drawn upon the idea of government
ministers of wartime Britain who urged the public to 'Dig for
Victory' to provide themselves with healthy food in a time when mass
produced goods were rationed.
I personally do not doubt that we are only seeing the tip of the
iceberg with regards to food shortages in certain countries around
the world now and that the current financial situation and global
climatic condition could present problems greater than where we get
our food from. But what better way to try and deal with now than this
kind of activity? It gets you meeting people in your community for
the specific purpose of helping one another, you get fresh air and
exercise, you do something soulful and earthy (in every sense of the
word!), you learn new skills, and you get to eat (and probably share)
the end result!
Ideas such as Landshare, Transition Towns or Guerrilla Gardening all
started as just that – ideas. They are great examples of simple grass-
roots organisation, meaning anyone can start one or get involved in
one, anywhere. It is the sort of thing that has ridden on the back of
the success of the permaculture movement, which has managed to apply
its principles to numerous diverse situations and contexts around the
globe. Yet it all seems like a little bit of history repeating ... or
should that be history evolving? As mentioned, the Ministry of Food’s
nationwide campaign during the scarcity of wartime Britain succeeded
in encouraging people to be more self-sufficient. But this also
smacks of agrarian brotherhoods of the much yonder past – namely, the
seventeenth century “Diggers”, who organised in protest against land
laws and what was effectively a redistribution of common property of
the time. By planting and working on common ground, the Diggers
formed what were essentially communities on this common land as a
reaction to rising food prices, drawn together in adverse times for
survival.
Many of us are not quite yet facing such shortage and adversity, in
the West anyway. But many of us are so detached from our earthly
skills and abilities, alienated from nature and community themselves,
that it needs refreshing. With the help of technology like the
Internet, projects like Landshare give us hope of nurturing that
which is slightly less technological. They can enable small ways in
which everyone in fringe, alternative communities and those more
mainstream can reconnect with the Gaian cycles of the planet. It is
an excellent site of where the spiritual and material intersect, and
the skills and knowledge in both areas could prove utterly necessary
if we are headed towards times of greater scarcity.
Just imagine (and I offer this partly in speculation, for further
discussion) if we got a strong foothold of common land now. The idea
of land belonging to and providing for many people could prove
invaluable if a situation similar to that which caused the Diggers to
react as they did arose again in our future. The period of British
history in which such a defiant declaration of common rights became
necessary is often associated with the phrase "The World Turned
Upside Down", which appeared in all manner of literature and culture
of the times. Maybe our world will get turned upside down. Maybe it
is being. At least we will be firmly rooted to the earth.
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