Saturday, September 25, 2010

Autumn Bounty






While the activities of Forage Oakland have been whittled down to the bare minimum (while I work with Youth Radio to figure out how to reorganize the project), Monica and I were able to reap a bit of the fall bounty yesterday afternoon. It was appropriately windy and chilly, like a proper autumn day, and early fall fruits were in great abundance in Temescal. The pineapple guava will be ready for harvest in the coming weeks (as well as the passion fruit), but in the meantime, there are copious amounts of apples, quince, pears, and figs.

Here are photos from the day.



Harvest Tomorrow Morning, 09/26


Hi Friends,

Tomorrow morning, Forage Oakland & friends will be taking a walking tour between CCA and 18 Reasons (located at 18th/ Guerrero in the Mission), charting fruit trees and harvesting ripe fruit. If you or someone you know has an especially ripe fruit tree and would like it harvested tomorrow late morning, please call (510) 499-6315. We will be meandering along 17th Street, at the edge of Jackson Park, and harvesting olives, tree strawberries, and (hopefully) apples along the way.

Please only call the above phone number if you have an abundant fruit tree located within meandering distance of CCA and/or 18 Reasons. You can also reach Forage Oakland by email at forageoakland@gmail.com.

Thank you!

Asiya

PS: Welcome home, Monica (featured in the above photo).

Saturday, September 18, 2010

the Forage Oakland Maifesto




This is the Forage Oakland manifesto, which I wrote almost two years ago; while Forage Oakland has evolved and taken a new form since its inception, I still believe in the articles of faith on which this project was founded, and believe it's important to share this mission every now and again:

Forage Oakland is a project that- at its core- works to address how we eat everyday, and how everyone can benefit from viewing their neighborhood as a veritable edible map, considering what is cultivated in any given neighborhood and why, and what histories influence those choices. The gleaning of unharvested fruits; the meeting of new neighbors; the joy of the season's first hachiya persimmon (straight from your neighbor's backyard, no less); the gathering and redistribution of fruits that would otherwise be wasted- can be powerful and can work to create a new paradigm around how we presently think about food in our collective consciousness. Imagine gathering several friends for morning, midday, evening or weekend foraged city bicycle rides through your neighborhood. Rough maps are drawn, noting the forage-ables that can be found at each location and 'cold calls' are made to your neighbors asking if you can sample a fruit from their backyard tree. You have the courage to introduce yourself (despite the pervasiveness and acceptance of urban anomie) and they reward your neighborliness with a sample of Santa Rosa plums, for example. Later, when you find yourself with a surplus of Persian mulberries, you- in turn- deliver a small basket to said neighbor. With time and in this fashion, a community of people who care for and know one another is built, and rather than being the exception, this could be the norm. This is not idealistic, rather it is necessary, pragmatic, and creative-- especially in times when much of the world is suffering from lack of access to healthful and satisfying fresh food. Forage Oakland is a project that works to construct a new model-- and is one of many neighborhood projects that will eventually create a network of local resources that address the need and desire for neighborhoods to be more self-sustaining in meeting their food needs.

This project is about viewing food as a shared pleasure and a shared resource, redistributing it to those who will enjoy it. Invite your neighbors to exchange their surplus peaches for their neighbor's surplus blackberries. Fruit baskets are left on doorsteps: apples by the pound, Santa Rosa plums, sour cherries, persimmons, pineapple guava, and apricots. New associations are formed, and new geographies are created. The street corner where Ashby Street and Martin Luther King, Jr. Way meet is no longer marked by its corner store, rather it is defined by the prolific fig tree on the northeast corner. Encourage your neighbors to share their backyard bounty and barter what they don't intend to use. Hop on your bicycle and redistribute the surplus to another neighbor, making a note of the location of the harvested bounty. An edible landscape can be formed that is interactive, a bit different every day as fruit ripens and falls and as the seasons change. The barter can translate to other areas of urban living, and can create a community of people who'd rather do it for themselves and play an active role in their consumerism. When there are plums in your neighbor's backyard, enj
oy them with your neighbor.

November 14, 2008

Friday, September 17, 2010

Architecture in the City Harvesting Tour Rescheduled.

Hi Friends,

The Architecture in the City/ Forage Oakland Fruit Harvesting Tour has been rescheduled for this upcoming Sunday, September 26. I believe there are several spots still open, so if you haven't signed up and would like to, there's still time.

When: the tour will begin at the FARM at CCA, 11:00 am
Where: we will meander through the Mission, making several harvesting stops along the way; we'll return to 18 Reasons for light refreshments (from the neighborhood) and a chat about the myriad reasons why every community could (possibly) benefit from an urban gleaning project.