Farm City: The Education of an Urban Farmer

Is urban farming really a sustainable lifestyle?

This is a question Novella Carpenter spent ten years of her life trying to figure out in Oakland, California, and it's a question she answers in her new book Farm City.

Here's a picture of the writer on her urban farm:

Novella

The book gets a favorable mention on Maud Newton's site, and the interview that goes with the mention is great.

Carpenter describes the nature of urban farming this way:

I want to send a cautiously optimistic message. Urban farming is really
intense and requires discipline, thrift, and a strong back (just like
“real” farming). While I did make some mistakes that rendered some of
my farming experiments economically unfeasible (hundred-dollar turkey),
over the years I did learn ways to make it sustainable. I think urban
farming does have the chance to change the way we eat. You know, I
finish narrating my book in December of 2007. That moment was the end
of an era of massive cultural bloat—a time when urban farming was
considered fringe-y and outsider. My how times have changed! But, I do
want people to be realistic. If you look at places like Detroit, which
has the most advanced urban agricultural scene in the US, they still
only grow 3% of the city’s produce. So it can’t replace, it just
supplements, rural farms.

Another book to read, but it sounds like a good one…

Farmcity

Published by Kit Stolz

I'm a freelance reporter and writer based in Ventura County.

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