How You Can Help America’s New Agrarians

The New Agrarians are the next generation of organic farmers, and they need our help.

As the popularity of farmers’ markets grows, more people are seeing small farming as a career path. But land is not always that easy to come by.America is experiencing a food revolution, and one of the most exciting aspects is the number of people who want to farm and raise healthy food. The better-food movement is being driven by people of all ages and backgrounds—young and old, new college graduates and second-career retirees—people I call the “new agrarians.” This new generation of people who want to farm are driven by a passion to put their hands in the soil and the desire to grow fresh, healthy food—most often organically. Their goal is to feed themselves, their families, their communities, and collectively our nation. The desire to farm is as traditional as human culture, and in 2012 we celebrate the 150th anniversary of three formative actions that shaped America’s food and agriculture history. In 1862, Congress created the USDA, passed the Homestead Act, and founded the land-grant university system by enacting the Morrill Act. These forces remain at work in America’s food system and will help write the next chapters of our food future.

America’s new farmers are coming from different places: Returning veterans, second-career seekers, and college grads are just some of the groups looking for meaningful employment and exploring what agriculture has to offer. The article on the Elma C. Lomax Incubator Farm in Organic Gardening’s June/July 2012 issue revealed how these folks can acquire the skills to farm. My focus in this essay is on the rest of us. What if we can’t be farmers ourselves? What actions can we take to help America’s new agrarians?

Read more: http://www.organicgardening.com/living/how-you-can-help-americas-new-agrarians