Comments Laura Hess has made
Re: the point about access to land
In the five years I've spent working at the Yale Sustainable Food Project, I've come to know many farmers who grow food sustainably. They fall into three major categories:
- Those who farm on inherited land: the third-generation apple grower, the third-generation dairy farmer.
- Those who derive income from another profession / the dual-careerists: the lawyer-farmer, the psychologist-farmer. This category also includes the landscape-architect-turned-farmer and the investment-banker-turned-farmer, who bought land and started farming in middle age.
- Those who manage farms owned by rich people.
I--and many of my friends--would like to be farmers, and we have degrees from fancy schools like Yale which do us absolutely no good in this endeavor. To Ron Steenblik: when I was in school here, never once did I hear a professor mention in even the most hypothetical of terms that a student might go on to work in some capacity, ANY capacity, related to agriculture. Message: Yale students do not become farmers, or agricultural researchers, or what have you. There's your systematic devaluation. And I majored in Environmental Studies, so it wasn't my department.
On Much depends on finding a new generation to put dinner on the table posted 1 year, 6 months ago 10 Responses- Those who farm on inherited land: the third-generation apple grower, the third-generation dairy farmer.