Remove Ecology Remove Forage Remove Industrial Agriculture
article thumbnail

Listen to Plants, Says Indigenous Forager and Activist Linda Black Elk

Civil Eats

The Indigenous ethnobotanist and food sovereignty activist foraged with her mom and grandmother in the Ohio River Valley as a child, then made the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota her home alongside her husband, Luke. My mom was an Indigenous woman from Korea, and she grew up foraging and growing her own food as a matter of survival.

Forage 141
article thumbnail

Farmers Can Adapt to Alternating Droughts and Floods—Here’s How

The Equation

While a small number of winter crops such as small grains (wheat, oats, barley) and forage and pasture crops such as alfalfa can use some winter rain and snow, western agriculture largely depends on a steady supply of irrigated water that has led to extreme groundwater mining.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Summer reading 2024: Our recommended food and farming reads

Sustainable Food Trust

The author’s journey into landscapes of the past and the foods they provide takes him far and wide – starting in Çatalhöyük where humans first settled on the land becoming place-based, cultivating emmer wheat and barley, yet still hunting and foraging their food. Agriculture had not yet quite arrived as a practice and food was abundant.

Food 98
article thumbnail

Our Summer 2024 Food and Farming Book Guide

Civil Eats

Nina Elkadi Medicine Wheel for the Planet: A Journey Toward Personal and Ecological Healing By Jennifer Grenz “To use only fragmented pieces of [Indigenous] knowledge is to admire a tree without its roots,” Nlaka’pamux ecologist turned land healer Jennifer Grenz writes in Medicine Wheel for the Planet.

Food 145
article thumbnail

Op-ed: Egg Prices Are Soaring. Are Backyard Chickens the Answer?

Civil Eats

The ability [of] birds to forage and express natural behaviors also helps reduce stress, so the bird has a healthier immune system. In a pasture-based system, the key is having enough space and sunlight for the birds so that the pathogen load does not become too great.

Poultry 133