top of page

THE UPLIFTING OF UJAAMA, BONNETTA ADEEB & NATHAN KLEINMAN


FOODSCAPING - with Brie Arthur. Photo courtesy of Brie Arthur, all rights reserved.


Now more than halfway from the winter solstice to the spring equinox, many of us have seeds of spring and summer foods on our minds (and hearts).


So, this week we continue our celebration of Black History Month, and love stories, centered on the cooperative, and communal concept of Ujaama, in conversation with Bonnetta Adeeb of Ujaama Seeds, and the Ujaama Cooperative Farming Alliance, and Nathan Kleinman of the Experimental Farm Network, a member and collaborator in the Ujaama alliance and all that it is growing – which is both uplifting and delicious.


Bonnetta Adeeb is a career-long educator focused on food, applied economics for the benefit of community, and restoring ancestral foods to their people She is the president and founder of STEAM onward, a non-profit working to bring more underserved youth into science, technology, and agricultural fields.


Nathan Kleinman is a cofounder of the Experimental Farm Network, which "works to facilitate collaborative plant breeding and sustainable agriculture research in order to fight global climate change, preserve the natural environment, and ensure food security for humanity into the distant future. We believe participatory plant breeding on a massive scale can lead to breakthroughs to help us not only adapt to climate change, but one day actually stabilize the climate. Founded in 2013, EFN is composed of professional and amateur farmers, gardeners, plant breeders, and researchers. The network's main organizing tool — this open-source website — is free to use and open to all. The work of revolutionizing our food system to save our planet is generational in scope: it will take generations to undo the damage already done. Let's get growing!

EFN is administered by a Philadelphia-based 501(c)(3) non-profit cooperative committed to social, racial, and economic justice, and dedicated to practicing organic agriculture along agroecological principles. Our Mission: To accelerate innovation in sustainable agriculture by facilitating unprecedented collaboration on research and the free sharing of resources.


Join us!


Photos Courtesy of Ujaama Cooperative Farming Alliance, all rights reserved. Photos of groups credits to Bonnetta Adeeb; photos of Nathan and Sunflower, Barron Bixler.


You can follow Bonnetta's work at Ujaama online at: https://ujamaaseeds.com/ and https://ujamaafarms.com/; and on Instagram @ujamaafarms/


You can follow Nathan and the Experimental Farm Network online at: https://www.experimentalfarmnetwork.org/ and on Instagram at: @experimentalfarmnetwork/


Follow the HEIRLOOM COLLARD PROJECT ON LINE HERE: https://heirloomcollards.org/



IF YOU LIKE THIS PROGAM,

you might also enjoy these Best of CP programs in our archive:




JOIN US again next week, week we continue our celebration of Valentine’s Day, and African American Heritage Month, and the growing season in conversation with Bonnetta Adeeb of Ujaama seeds, and Nathan Kleinman of the Experimental Farm network. They are growers, breeders, activists, and inspiring souls. Listen in.


Cultivating Place is made possible in part by The Catto Shaw Foundation, supporting initiatives that empower women and help preserve the planet through the intersection of environmental advocacy, social justice, and creativity.




Speaking of Plants and Place.....


Speaking of Plants and Place this week, we focus on one of the many seeds the Ujaama collective, Bonnetta and Nate are involved in: The Heirloom Collard Project and Collards themselves. The Project is working for the "recognition and respect of collards as a key component of American food culture so their seeds and stories will never be forgotten."


The heirloom collard project is comprised of a “COLLABORATION OF COLLARD LOVING PEOPLE AND ORGANIZATIONS – A CROCK POT OF SORTS, WHERE THE INGREDIENTS ARE EACH RESPECTED, BUT THE TRUE MAGIC IS IN THE POT LIKKER.”


According to the Encyclopedia Brittanica: "collards are botanically Brassica oleracea, variety acephala), and their common names include name colewort. They are a form of cabbage, in the mustard family Brassicaceae. They are an excellent source of nutritionally important minerals and vitamins A and C. "


According to HCP: "Collards share a botanical name with kale. Collards are usually grown as annuals, but are in fact biennials that, like most brassicas, produce yellow four-petaled flowers, for collards these loose clusters appear in their second year, which then become dry capsuled siliques filled with the seed you can save. Like other mustard family plants – collards are susceptible to cabbage looper moths and their larva, as well as aphids. In cultivation, you can harvest the lower, outer leaves on the plant progressively to extend the season of your plant, as well as to hold it over to its seed-bearing second season.


The Heirloom Collard Project coalesced in 2016 around 60 varieties of collard seed jointly requested from the USDA by Seed Savers Exchange, in collaboration with Ira Wallace at Southern Exposure Seed Exchange. The seed of these rare heirloom collard varieties, most of which had been collected by Edward H. Davis and John T. Morgan from seed savers across the Southeast, mostly in North and South Carolina, were then trialed at the Seed Savers Exchange farm in Iowa. The goal was to regenerate this seed and share it with seed savers across the country."


The Heirloom Collard Project organizes the collards the collaborative is stewarding into general groups based on their morphology, or how they look: including, heading collards, cabbage collards, glazed collards, tree collards, curly leaf collards, and colored collards.


The fact that many of the varieties bear the names of the people from whom the seed was collected, or the place where the seed had been stewarded—such as Tabitha Dykes, Buddy Brickhouse, Lydia Gibbs, Drusilla Delone, Louisiana Sweet—speaking eloquently to the long-term loving relationship that is people, in their places, with their plants, selecting each other over years, miles, generations.



Thinking out loud this week:


Ok – well – this episode is making me hungry. And happy – how about you?


Some of you may have noticed I have been very quiet on social media recently – and while I think I have mentioned this in passing before, I am excited to share that I have just passed off the copy edited manuscript of my next book to the publisher.


Three years almost exactly in the writing, and a lifetime in the germinating – this is a book of my heart. Titled What We Sow – on the personal, ecological, and cultural significance of seeds, it is in fact something of a love letter itself to seed – and in large part to the seedkeepers of our world, it is set to be out in late September of this year.


I'm tired from the final stretch of the work that bringing a book into this world is, but I am also content. You will hear more as I know more and see more during this final phase of the germination.


And of course, I will be sharing much more about it at some of my upcoming talks – including a joint talk for the Master Gardeners of Nevada County and the California Native Plant Society’s Redbud chapter on March 11th, and in Minnesota for the Minneapolis Institute of Art’s annual Art in Bloom on April 27th.


You can always check out the details for my upcoming events at Cultivating place.com/events.


It’s going to be a good growing year gardener friends – happy to be together in it.



WAYS TO SUPPORT CULTIVATING PLACE

SHARE the podcast with friends: If you enjoy these conversations about these things we love and which connect us, please share them forward with others. Thank you in advance!

RATE the podcast on iTunes: Or wherever you get your podcast feed: Please submit a ranking and a review of the program on Itunes! To do so follow this link: iTunes Review and Rate (once there, click View In Itunes and go to Ratings and Reviews)

DONATE: Cultivating Place is a listener-supported co-production of North State Public Radio. To make your listener contribution – please click the donate button below. Thank you in advance for your help making these valuable conversations grow.

Or, make checks payable to: Jennifer Jewell - Cultivating Place

and mail to: Cultivating Place

PO Box 37

Durham, CA 95938


1,337 Comments


sẻ se
sẻ se
4 hours ago

Mình biết tới ALO8 khi thấy xuất hiện trong một số trao đổi nên ghé vào xem. Mình chỉ xem nhanh để hình dung cách trình bày chung. Nhìn chung, nội dung khá mạch lạc.


Like

ok baoah
ok baoah
18 hours ago

Gần đây khi đọc qua một vài chia sẻ trên mạng, mình thấy có người nhắc đến CM88 nên tò mò vào xem thử. Mình chỉ xem sơ qua giao diện và cách sắp xếp tổng thể chứ chưa tìm hiểu kỹ nội dung. Ấn tượng ban đầu là trang được thiết kế khá gọn gàng, bố cục rõ ràng nên nhìn vào cũng dễ theo dõi.

Like

Du Phúc
Du Phúc
a day ago

Vì chủ yếu chơi trên điện thoại nên mình khá chú ý đến trải nghiệm mobile. Khi thử chuyển từ slot sang thể thao rồi qua game bài, mình thấy tốc độ tải khá nhanh. Nội dung được phân chia rõ nên việc điều hướng cũng nhẹ nhàng. Lúc mình vào game sc88 xem kỹ hơn thì thấy bắn cá và nổ hũ cũng được bố trí khá gọn. Theo mình, cách tổ chức này giúp mang lại trải nghiệm khá liền mạch.

Like

hh dhdh
hh dhdh
2 days ago

Tôi thường ưu tiên những bài giới thiệu nền tảng giải trí được viết ngắn gọn, rõ ràng để có thể đọc nhanh trên điện thoại mà vẫn nắm đủ thông tin chính. Phần nhắc đến bắn cá nổ hũ được đặt ở giữa bài nên mạch nội dung khá tự nhiên, không tạo cảm giác quảng bá quá sớm. Bài viết giới thiệu nền tảng theo hướng dễ hiểu, thao tác ổn định, cùng nhiều danh mục quen thuộc như slot, game bài, mini game để người đọc dễ hình dung. Tổng thể khá dễ đọc nên theo dõi khá thuận lợi.

Like

Tịch Chủ
Tịch Chủ
2 days ago

Tối qua mình đọc các bình luận trao đổi trên một diễn đàn, mình bắt gặp Link sc88 được chèn vào giữa câu chuyện. Mình bấm thử xem cho biết, chủ yếu là để xem cách trình bày và cấu trúc nội dung. Lướt nhanh thì thấy tổng thể khá gọn gàng, tạo cảm giác đáng tin cậy. Xem qua xong mình quay lại theo dõi phần thảo luận.

Like
bottom of page