Food

The Lexicon of Sustainability

The Lexicon of Sustainability is based on a simple premise: people can't be expected to live more sustainable lives if they don't even know the most basic terms and principles that define sustainability.

57 (The Average Age of the American Farmer)

2m 46s

If the average age of the American farmer is 57, what happens when they retire? From Edible Schoolyards to Green Collar jobs, young people are learning how to grow their own food, eat healthy and engage with land and community. Learn about terms like “Greenhorns”, “Growing Farmers” and “Horticultural Literacy”.

Episodes

  • Unconventional Agriculture: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Unconventional Agriculture

    S1 E11 - 4m 31s

    Today, half the world’s food production—what we eat—depends on chemical fertilizers and herbicides. These are the foundation of Conventional Agriculture, but they pollute our soils, drinking water, waterways, and oceans. Unconventional farmers focus on building soil fertility by working with nature, not against it.

  • Seeds: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Seeds

    S1 E10 - 3m 1s

    In the last century nearly 75 percent of U.S. agricultural crops have disappeared. Traditionally, farmers would save and share seeds with each other, yet today most seed production is controlled by just a few companies. Vandana Shiva explains the importance of protecting the culture and biodiversity of seeds. It’s what she calls seed sovereignty.

  • Community Supported Agriculture (CSA): asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Community Supported Agriculture (CSA)

    S1 E9 - 1m 44s

    What if you could buy fresh fruit and vegetables each week, grown by a local farmer? Anne Cure of Cure Organic Farm in Boulder, Colorado explains how CSAs, which stands for Community Supported Agriculture, allow consumers to purchase subscriptions from local farmers, and in return, receive weekly boxes of fresh produce while getting to know the people who grow their food.

  • Economies of Community: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Economies of Community

    S1 E8 - 2m 46s

    Economies of scale allows for industries to consolidate and become more efficient. Benzi Ronen of Farmigo in Brooklyn, NY explains how economies of community can help people connect, build and rebuild local food systems.

  • Wheat or White?: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Wheat or White?

    S1 E7 - 3m 1s

    Consumers learn how to tell the difference between whole wheat and white, while farmers tell the rich story of heritage and identity grains and innovative bakers reintroduce the grains of their youth.

  • Food Waste: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Food Waste

    S1 E6 - 4m 19s

    Did you know nearly 40 percent of food that’s grown, distributed, and bought never gets eaten? Learn why "ugly" food gets a bad rap. Through actions like food rescue and redistribution, composting and eating head to tail, people are doing something to reduce the food we waste.

  • Local vs. Organic: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Local vs. Organic

    S1 E5 - 3m 16s

    Two farmers, Edwin Marty of Alabama’s Jones Valley Urban Farm and Jay Martin of Provident Organic Farms in Bivalve, Maryland weigh in on local vs. organic and why a piece of paper may not insure you’re getting the best food available.

  • True Cost Accounting: The Real Cost of Cheap Food: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    True Cost Accounting: The Real Cost of Cheap Food

    S1 E4 - 2m 57s

    By considering all of the external expenses factored out of the cost of food, an economic principle called true cost accounting helps consumers understand the real cost of the food they buy.

  • The Story of an Egg: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The Story of an Egg

    S1 E3 - 6m 3s

    Can learning the meaning of a single term actually help change the food system? David Evans and Alexis Koefoed think so. These poultry farmers explain the real story behind such terms as cage free, free range, and pasture raised so that consumers can make informed decisions when they go to their local supermarket.

  • Local: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Local

    S1 E2 - 5m 40s

    As consumers take increased responsibility for what they eat, many choose to become locavores, favoring foods grown or produced in their communities. By voting local with their pocketbooks when they go to the supermarket, these consumers keep money in local economies while supporting and strengthening local food systems. They also decrease their “food miles” and their carbon footprint.

  • Forage: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Forage

    S1 E1 - 6m 35s

    Our earliest descendants were hunter/gatherers who foraged for their food, were in tune with their surroundings, and ate with the seasons. After foraging was essentially replaced by agriculture, people became increasingly detached from where their food came from. Foraging offers people a way to reconnect with nature and shows that food is all around us.

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