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Plastic, Plastic Everywhere: Our Oceans, Our Mistakes and Our Champions

Midway: Plastic Island, a photo by Manuel Maqueda (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

It is September 2009 and Jan Vozenilek is on Midway Atoll staring at the corpse of a decaying albatross. This is why he is here. Nowhere on this island will he find a more striking, a more perfect image. The remains perform two tasks: announce the prevalence of plastic matter in the Pacific Ocean, and the devastating effects it has on the interactive species and ecosystems of the area.

Jan Vozenilek and one of Midway's dead albatross. (Midway Journey flickercreativecommons)

‘Ah,’ Jan think sadly as he sets down his camera and sits beside the swollen mass. The rot is fresh still, seeping. It has been a long day already, and the sun is near setting. Jan takes a moment to acknowledge this death, this one little death among thousands, before he begins the arduous task of carefully documenting it.

The Albatross

Boasting one of the longest wingspans of all extant birds, the albatross enjoys a noble reputation. It is a glider and plays upon oceanic wind currants effortlessly as it scours the water below for prey. The albatross must, after all, hunt deftly and quickly, saving its energy for the long flight home. Back upon its island shores the albatross loyally feeds its lone chick.

The family rituals of the albatross are a patient task. Taking a full five years to reach maturity, the albatross still has years to wait before its lifecycle of mating begins. The young bird must introduce itself to a colony, learn the rituals and ‘language’ of the colony before it can perform the basic steps of the mating dance. Eager as a teenage boy, the albatross’s desire is tempered by its inexperience. Only once it has taken in the lessons of its elders will it catch the eye of a mate.

The albatross pair will dance as a sophisticated duet, elaborately mimicking and perfecting each other’s movements. Only the most well suited couples will in turn mate, the others continue their search for a companion. Once the birds couple, they mate for life, forever recognizing their own movements in their partner’s dance.

The pair will lay one egg a year and spend a second ushering the hatchling to its fledgling state. It proves an arduous task, protecting, teaching and feeding the chick until it can fledge.

In the old poem Rime of the Ancient Mariner, by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the albatross is considered a good omen, bringing good weather and fortune to the Mariner and his sailors. When, in an act of great folly, the Mariner kills the albatross, the crew’s good fortune comes to a tragic end. The confused and angered crew forces the Mariner to wear the dead albatross around his neck, a remembrance of his mistake.

“Ah! Well a-day! What evil looks

Had I from old and young!

Instead of the cross, the albatross

About my neck was hung”

Not since then has the albatross been so significant, such a harbinger. At least until now.

The Widening Gyre

As Jan Vozenilek studies the carcass of the dead albatross before him, he notices it is young. “A fledgling,” he thinks to himself. He shifts his camera angle to get a better shot of the beak and eyes.

A team member points to Midway Atoll on a globe. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

On Midway Atoll the dead albatross is almost a more common sighting than a live one.  The epidemic is caused by an infamous trash gyre, a mass accumulation of plastic in the Pacific know as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch or GPGP. The span of plastic particles adrift is rumoured to be twice the size of Texas. In certain areas water samples have yielded more plastic on a parts-per-million basis than plankton. A remarkable feat, or rather, tragedy for this area.

“Plastic, plastic everywhere” the poem would now read. The water is teeming with shards of everyday plastics from bottles, food packaging, lighters and toys.

A collection of Great Pacific Garbage Patch lighters. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

When I spoke to Jan in mid June, he was preparing for his second visit to Midway.

“The last time we were on Midway there wasn’t a single live albatross left….This time we are including the baby albatrosses. It will be profound to actually seem them and meet these little guys.”

The presence of plastic has completely disrupted the albatross life cycle on Midway. The adult birds are attracted to the brightly coloured plastics circulating in the garbage gyre, which is caused by constantly moving ocean currents. Returning to their nests with a mouthful of indigestible plastic pieces, the adults feed their chicks, mouth to mouth they transfer the catch.

The chicks eventually die of starvation, their bellies bulging with a collection of unchanged, unmoved plastic particles. The pieces are brightly coloured and in the final stages of decay they shine like a ball of confetti, a miniature firework set neatly within the bird’s frame.

Albatross remains reveal the plastic culprit that led to their starvation. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

“They tell us that 60% will die because they won’t even make it off the island, the starve because their bellies are full of plastics. If they do make it off the island they can’t take off from the water and they just drown. This is what we will witness when we get there. A good amount of them are able to fly away, but most of them won’t.”

Jan adds, “At this time of year there is actually a sign in one of the bays where the young birds land that says ‘no swimming.’ That is because there are so many sharks there, waiting for these birds to drown.”

The birds are weak and become flightless, weighed down by malnourishment and heavy plastic. This has evoked new ecological patterns, with sharks accustomed to this easy prey the plastic moves up the food chain.

“Our goal is to go back again two or three times to film the babies in their different stages of development so we have the full story of what happens at that critical moment when parents come back and regurgitate toothbrushes and cigarette lighters. It is important to capture this.”

There has been some controversy and skepticism surrounding the authenticity of the footage that was captured during the last Midway trip.

The team surrounds the remains of a decayed albatross. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

“People were saying there is no way that all that plastic could fit into the body cavity of a bird. That broke my heart. We have a strict code of ethics: we are not allowed to add or modify the shot in anyway.”

So now the Journey to Midway team, which includes photographer Chris Jordan and his writer wife Victoria Sloan Jordan, returns with renewed resolve, determined to expose the process in its entirety.

Jan understands the disbelief, however. He experienced it himself.

“I have always been, I don’t know if you would call me an environmentalist, but I’ve always been passionate about this world and protecting nature. If you asked me where my favourite place is, it is working alone in the forest, that’s the happy place.

So when I had the opportunity to meet Chris Jordan at a conference about a year ago and we spoke about this issue that’s where the connections was made. I was invited to join the expedition. I didn’t know what to expect so I did some research. But never in my wildest dreams would I have imagined that it was going to be as bad as it was, leaving this life impression on me.”

Jan Vozenilek. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

I asked Jan if that is something that is easy to communicate and does he have an audience for it.

“Actually, yes,” Jan says pleased. “We worked hard right away during the last trip, putting up the footage we collected on YouTube and the audience grew really quickly.”

Halfway into their time on Midway Jan got an unexpected email: “I got an email from a group in the Okanagan, asking if I could share my experience with the people there when I returned. To be honest my heart sank. I chose a profession where I didn’t have to speak publically. I liked being behind the camera.”

But Jan will tell you, he hasn’t turned down an invitation to speak yet.

“I had this profound experience when I was up early one morning. I was filming this dead albatross and his feathers were blowing in the wind and then this squall came up and it began to pour. The rain was flooding in sideways and I had to scramble to collect my equipment. It was then that I thought to myself, ‘how can I be so selfish? People need to know this. All of these products came from us.’ It was this weird profound moment.”

A common sight on Midway. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

When Jan returned from his trip he began sharing his experience, despite his fears. Putting together presentations on the topic, Jan mapped out the route of plastics, showing the great links between local waterways and ocean shores.

“I linked this trash to our own backyards.”

Accumulated plastic washed up on the shores of Midway. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

In total Jan has spoken to over 1500 people. “I’ve tied in solutions as well, which I think is important. It is important not to overwhelm people. I try to find a balance and not to leave people in that shocked space. I know what it is like to walk up to an environmental table at an event, my brain just shuts down. I feel so overwhelmed by all of these problems. So I’ve been trying to target a clear message: single-use disposable plastics.

I want people to know they can make that one change and see the connection. They can go on with their lives and I haven’t overwhelmed them.”

Jan speaks mostly to elementary and high schools, which suits him well.

“My other passion is education and kids and this is really a kid project, it’s a natural fit. The more research I do the more I realize they are our target audience. They have to be educated at an early age. They have to make better choices than I made, than our parents made.”

Speaking to a middle age school audience can be daunting though, and Jan was feeling intimidated before one presentation. “I was terrified because I heard the middle school age crowd can be really tough.”

But Jan makes his presentations accessible, giving practical examples from his own life. “At this school I shared a little story of what I do in my own life to make a difference.”

Jan recounted an experience he had recently had in a mall food court. “The Chinese restaurant caught my eye so I went over and my very first question was, ‘do you have anything that you could put this food on that is better for the environment?’ The woman said they provided paper plates instead of Styrofoam. But when the woman began dishing out the food, she put it on a Styrofoam plate and when I asked, she admitted that she actually didn’t have any paper plates.

I said ‘no thanks’ and told her about the effects of Styrofoam on the environment. I told her I would come back when they had something better for the environment.”

To Jan’s surprise, the entire audience burst into triumphant applause. Not bad for such a tough crowd.

“We gave them this power, this hope and choice. I don’t know it its just the rebellious nature of the group, but in the end, you are giving them the power to make choices as individuals.”

But, Jan admits, “this is all new to me.”

Before leaving the school, Jan saw two students staring dumbfounded at the vending machine. “I’m trying to buy something not wrapped in plastic,” one of the students said looking towards Jan. Eventually the student decided to not purchase anything from the machine. This episode happened, luckily, in front of the group of teachers Jan was speaking with.

“It was really worth my time being there that day. That’s how the torch gets passed.”

And the passing of the torch will continue as Jan and his teammates prepare for their return journey.

“In terms of the next part of this project, going back, we have a sort of pipeline of people who care about this. Between Facebook followers and the Plastic Pollution Coalition, its been exciting to see this grow and go back through that media”

“That’s actually one of the key factors that inspired Chris Jordan to go there in the first place. There wasn’t anything available on the Internet to see what was happening out there. People spoke about this floating island of trash and they thought you could dock your boat there and walk on it.”

But the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is more insidious than this. It is a consistent circulating patch of plastic shards, debris and particles that are dispersed throughout the water, shallow in some places, deep in others. The larger pieces may be easy to pick out, but as the plastic breaks down it begins to mix with the water on a particulate scale. Because of this, it is beyond any known clean up method.

The plastic to varying degrees becomes food for many species, not just the albatross. Small and large fish species, crabs and other birds all feed on the plastic matter. In this way the plastic floods the entire food chain, right through to the species we commonly eat.

As Manuel Maqueda, a writer and social media expert who joined the team on Midway, puts it in one of his blog posts, “And like the albatrosses on Midway, we carry the garbage patch inside of us.” (www.midwayjourney.com)

Like the Ancient Mariner, we wear our folly literally, a new take on an old curse.

Hope 2.0

“You would think one of the world’s remotest islands would be the cleanest,” Jan muses during our phone conversation.

“Probably the most moving thing on Midway is the stark contrast between the death and the life. Amongst all of these thousands of decaying albatrosses all over the island are other bird species that are flying up in the air, in the trees. The place is still teeming with life. While we were on our bikes the white terns would hover overhead and make chirping sounds, almost like angles. It was almost spiritual, this hovering overhead, giving us strength.”

Jan photographs a white tern on Midway. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

The team plans to make a documentary about their experiences on Midway Island.

“It was amazing to see this, alongside this species of bird that is basically going extinct. We want to have a scene in the movie about this experience – what does hope 2.0 look like? Where are we going from here, when, in just a short sixty years since plastic has been around, look what we’ve done?”

Plastic shores. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

I asked Jan is he was feeling apprehensive about returning to Midway.

“That’s a good word for it. Yeah, I am excited to return again, to see it again. But I am afraid of what I am going to see. We’ve been talking about this with Chris in the last few weeks, the psychological impact Midway has. I know what it did to me last time.

I look at the world with a whole new set of eyes. I was the one who liked to go to Starbucks for a frappuccino, with a plastic cup, lid and straw. Now I see what happens.”

Bright blue plastic, defiant in Midway's sand. (Midway Journey flickrcreativecommons)

Jan’s awareness, and his outspokenness about this issue, is bringing people out of the woodwork. He is experiencing firsthand the growth of this movement, a movement to ban plastics from shopping centres, municipalities and regions. It is a movement to personally avoid single-use disposable plastics and to eventually move to non-plastic and reusable alternatives.

The Journey to Midway team is preparing to travel back to Midway on July 1st, 2010. They will be continually updating their blog with photos and video footage.

But the torch doesn’t stop there. This is a movement that is largely dependent on viral exposure and they need all of the media attention they can get. So while you are checking in on the team’s progress, be sure to share the news. After that, look into your local policies on plastic use, use reusable bags and cups, buy bulk and reuse your plastic bags.

If we have created such a mess in the last sixty years through carelessness, imagine what the next sixty years could produce if we were thoughtful, diligent and careful.

Resources:

www.MidwayJourney.com

www.plasticpollutioncoalition.org

Midway Journey on Facebook

Twitter: @midwayjourney

Jan’s Wordpress Blog

The Jury is In, Actually: James Hoggan on the Campaign to Deny Global Warming

James Hoggan author of Climate Cover-Up: The Crusade to Deny Global Warming

The first time I met James Hoggan was in March 2010 at a panel discussion entitled “Climate Change and the Media: Scientists, Scribes and Spinmeisters” hosted at the University of Victoria by the Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions (PICS).

James was decidedly out of place on that panel. Alongside him were Lucinda Chodan editor-in-chief of the Times Colonist, Victoria’s local newspaper, Tom Pedersen, dean of Climate Studies at the University of Victoria and Peter Calamai, lead reporter for the Toronto Star.

Recently, Mr. Hoggan published a book that sent waves through the scientific and journalistic communities in North America.  Climate Cover-Up: The Crusade to Deny Global Warming has had both “climate change experts” and reporters aghast and pointing fingers. Just one of the reasons behind the panel discussion taking place at UVic in March.

But Mr. Hoggan is neither a scientist nor a journalist. He does not specialize in climatology.  He doesn’t teach journalism or vie for the journalistic integrity of the CanWest news world.  So, what was he doing there?

As a leading Vancouver PR guru, James Hoggan specializes in spin. Well, not that he uses those rakish tactics himself, you see. Sure he knows the ins and outs of corporate public relations spin as well as the rest of them, or perhaps even better, but he is morally opposed to it. And besides: it’s bad for business. All of this is helpfully outlined in more detail in Hoggan’s other book: Do the Right Thing: PR Tips for a Skeptical Public.

And doing the right thing is exactly why Hoggan was invited to sit in on the climate panel at UVic. Recently in print, and hitting the climate racket with riotous force, is Hoggan’s Climate Cover-Up. The book is a culmination of years of journalistic sleuthing and the collaboration of reporters regularly contributing to Vancouver’s famed DeSmogBlog. (www.desmogblog.com)

Hoggan, founder of DeSmogBlog, in partnership with journalist Richard Littlemore, set out to discover why, despite undisputed consensus within the scientific community, there was a raging ‘debate on climate change.’ What Hoggan discovered was that this phony debate was the careful creation of PR architects and media experts, who, in short, were doing the wrong thing and doing it with oil and gas funds.

“This is a story of betrayal, a story of selfishness, greed, and irresponsibility on an epic scale. In its darkest chapters, it’s a story of deceit, of poisoning good public judgment – of an anti-democratic attack on our political structures and a strategic undermining of the journalistic watchdogs who keep our social institutions honest” Hoggan begins in the book’s preface.

“It is ultimately a story that drove me and those closest to me to outrage and to activism. And although it is not my purpose to make you angry, I hope that you may through the coming pages, come to understand the sense of indignation and injustice that brought me to write this book.”

What Hoggan uncovered is a public relations scandal not seen since the inglorious fall of the tobacco barons and their louche campaign to hide the ills of second hand, or airborne, cigarette smoke.

I began reading Hoggan’s Climate Cover Up when I was about 106 pages into Lawrence Solomon’s 2008 The Deniers: The World-renowned Scientists Who Stood Up Against Global Warming Hysteria, Political Persecution, and Fraud* *And Those Who Are Too Fearful To Do So.

I had begun reading Solomon’s diatribe against global warming ‘orthodoxy’ to do my due diligence on becoming informed on both sides of the climate debate. But what I was to soon realize, through Hoggan’s book, is that this is exactly what the ‘Deniers’ wanted me to do.

The quagmire of climate science and public opinion is somewhat akin to the sordid pairing of sustainability and consumer responsibility. Somehow, in the ruckus, the consumer has become responsible for corporate industrial waste, toxins and unrecyclables. It has become our moral obligation and duty to ourselves, our bodies, and our children, to recycle, to perpetually ‘green’ our lifestyles.

But all this offsetting of responsibility onto the consumer accomplishes is the continual deferral of stricter industrial regulations and heavy corporate taxes. It is a strategy designed to obscure the issue at hand: industrial scale polluters and government inaction.  As long as we feel like it is our responsibility, and it can be solved through bi-weekly recycling programs and green consumerism, the industrial heyday will continue.

In much the same way, the duty to understand and resolve climate change and the more general issue of sustainability has been offset onto the individual, who, for the most part, has minimal scientific discernment. The complexities of climate science are often too much to cram into the measly side column of, say, The Province and so the more difficult issues are reduced down to their simplest and inexact components.

This leaves the “debate” victim to the sharks of the PR world, the media spinsters and the occasional scientist, gone rogue and willing to pocket oil and gas money for an exchange of credentials. The news audience, unwittingly and often too easily assuaged, is an easy target for the denial machine.  Heck, we almost want someone to tell us that climate change is a giant hoax and that we can go on with our Hummer road trips plans and yes, we’ll take that latte to go.

This, unfortunately, is not the case as any reputable climate expert will tell you. But where are these experts or reputation, Hoggan asks? And where are the journalists of integrity, bringing the undisclosed truth to their hungry and dependent readers?  Where indeed?

These are some of the questions Hoggan provokes in his book, alongside his tale of the CO2-stained tailings of oil and gas funds which have found their way into the pockets of some of the world’s most prominent ‘deniers.’

In a recent interview at Mr. Hoggan’s downtown office, I asked him, “So, what can we do to counteract all of this confusion?”

“Demand more of leaders,” came as a quick first response, “political leaders and particularly people in the media.” Alleged climate experts should be questioned about their credentials and qualifications and perhaps more importantly about their funding.

Currently in both Canada and the United States grassroots organizations under certain circumstances do not have to disclose their funders.  This allows donors to give charitably without publicly advertising their affiliations or partisan leanings.  In this instance, it also serves as a discrete conduit for large corporate givers to flood the alleged grassroots movement with oil and gas funded representatives.

“We need to demand politically that there is a change in this policy…these people should be stripped of the right to hide their funding.”

Aside from the policy overhaul, Mr. Hoggan also had this to recommend: “I also think, and this is probably the most difficult piece of advice but I don’t know that there’s any way around it, is that the real anecdote to propaganda and misinformation is understanding.”

So who is on Hoggan’s recommended reading list?  Elizabeth Colbert as aperitif with Andrew Weaver for the main course.  To those in need of more still, he recommends realclimate.org.

“Today, along with poverty and population growth, there is no bigger issue than climate change.  It is the biggest environmental issue of our day” and so, Mr. Hoggan insists, “this is something that is actually worth spending time to learn about.”

For those of us on the lookout, he adds one last caveat: “Keep in mind that you can never overestimate the capacity of [the Deniers] to be deceitful.  It shocks me what lengths they are willing to go to.”

Reading Climate Cover-Up amounts to a lesson in vigilance, vigilance of the mind, of the perspective, of the opinion.  We live in an information-saturated age where even the fittest are outrun by the sheer volume and quantity of published information.  What Mr. Hoggan reminds us of is the importance of the challenge.  The difficultly of acquiring straight information should not discourage us, but only strengthen our resolve.

If it is shocking what lengths the denial campaigners are willing to go to, well, then, I want to be down right scandalous in my efforts.

Waste=Food? Or, How to Reimagine Sustainable Design with William McDonough

The Canada Expedition is all about the search for solutions to a sustainable humanity. For some this search is a desperate one, one bound to failure, one limited by the imminent unsustainability of humanity. But for architect and designer William McDonough, sustainability isn’t about lack, its about abundance. Yes, that’s right, abundance. A word we are all but unfamiliar with these days. In a world of dwindling resources, peak oil and retreating ice caps, where does the concept ‘abundance’ even fit in?

William McDonough copyright 2010 The Henry Ford www.oninnovation.com

Nature, naturally. Abundance is how William McDonough sees nature. With its ever renewing, self-purifying, self-fertilizing and mutually beneficial systems, McDonough sees nature as the veritable structure of sustainability. Abundance and prosperity are the key principles of nature. In addition, natural ecosystems provide for a vast range of organisms while producing no waste.

This was the clincher for McDonough. No waste? Why? How? Well, because in natural ecosystems, one organism’s waste is another’s food. Which lead McDonough to the pared down conclusion waste = food. Despite the slightly unpalatable look of that equation, it is revolutionary. Waste = food. Could humanity become as sustainable as natural ecosystems by honing in on this one principle?

McDonough seems to think so. Working with a German chemical engineer, Michael Braungart, McDonough has re-envisioned the very way products are produced to capture the essence of waste = food. Products, down to their parts per million, are produced in manner that prepares for their eventual re-entry into the earth through biodegradation or for their future recycling. Waste becomes food for the earth. What cannot become food for the earth is manufactured to ensure its recyclability. It is “ecologically intelligent design,” holistic biomimicry.

From this simplified foundation McDonough has built an empire, an ecologically sound empire. He has already been scouted and hired by major producers Ford, Nike and Herman Miller. Most recently McDonough has been hired by China to implement large-scale eco-cities, sustainable living complexes entirely crafted to emulate the efficacy and simplicity of nature.

Innovators like McDonough and Braungart are forging the path of sustainability. Solving the daunting task of eliminating unnecessary waste is monumental in our time. The waste = food system, however also in turn addresses the related crises of energy production, emissions and effluents. With developments like these in our midst, pretty soon we’ll be throwing our used tires into our garden beds for next years fall harvest and spring wild flowers. Well…we’re getting there.

You can read about McDonough and Braungart’s case studies on McDonough’s website: http://www.mcdonough.com/full.htm. Information about a documentary featuring their work can be found at http://thenextindustrialrevolution.org/. You should also check out their book, available on Amazon, Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things.

Is there Power in Earth Hour?

By Shepard Fairey for Earth Hour 2009 from Flickr Earth Hour Global

On March 27th, 2010 a record number of participants celebrated Earth Hour by turning off their lights in settings across the globe.  The incessant blaze of nocturnal city lights was slightly lessened for this single hour as (some of) the globe’s population sat in darkness or flickering candle light, protesting their own reliance upon emission creating technologies for comfort, for light. Like a wave, Earth Hour cast a moving, lightless shadow over our world, chasing the night westbound through the time zones.

And yet, what is the purpose of Earth Hour? Does it in fact do anything?

Earth Hour’s intention is to inspire individuals to shut off their lights for one hour from 8:30pm to 9:30pm local time and to spend that dim-lit time thinking about conservation and the climate.  Perhaps more significantly, this event provides an opportunity for mass collective action regarding climate change, and becomes a tremendous demonstration of public engagement on an international level. This movement, a celebration of the earth, is also a strong political protest, made ever more impressive for its disregard of borders.

After the tragic failure of climate talks at the recent Copenhagen Climate Summit in December, the international community was in great need of a momentous and powerful symbol of commitment to the pressing concerns of climate change.  Earth Hour is not just about unified participation in an earth-conscious event: it is also a global call to action directed at world leaders.  This event has become one of the most strategic and collaborative climate rallies in operation today.

Started in Australia in 2007, Earth Hour has grown with tremendous success.  This year Earth Hour boasts the participation of not only record amounts of countries, but also the participation of national monuments and world heritage sites such as London’s Big Ben, Rome’s Coliseum, and Athens’ Acropolis. Seeing the light dim on these iconic monuments is enough to excite even the uninspired climate advocate. While these events are not revolutionary, nor even that drastic, it is amazing what one can see when we are no longer shining the spotlight upon ourselves.

In this era, rife with ‘lazy environmentalism,’ there are plenty of current events to dismay the disconcerted environmentalist, so, when there is something to celebrate, it is best to don your party hat. Any step, even a small one, in the right direction is a victory over defeat.

Urban Harvest

Promising garlic plants in one of City Farm Boy's local gardens.

How interesting to be a part of a time and place, a movement, whose heroes are those humble local gardeners, the sweet spirited urban farmer, splitting time between family and radishes and that special wasabi root patch that will hopefully take this season.

One such hero is Ward Teulon of City Farm Boy in Vancouver, British Columbia. I paid Ward a visit this week at his garden and home so he could show me the ropes of urban farming. Since 2006 Ward has acquired about 8000 square feet of local garden space alongside walkways and in backyards where he plants a yearly crop that gets divided up between his shareholders. Ward’s access to land is worked through a combination of agreements where he sometimes rents and sometimes gardens the space for a small cut of the harvest. There are some arrangements where he is given access to the plot for free, because the owner is just that supportive of his initiative.

Each season Ward’s duty is to his shareholders to whom he supplies a batch of fresh and organic vegetables each week for 20 weeks throughout the harvest ready summer months. Already, in early April, he is busy transferring his newly germinated seedlings into waiting garden plots, most of which are within five kilometres of his Vancouver home.

Ward's shade loving wasabi plants

Once harvest begins, shareholders collect from batches of potatoes, onions, beets, radishes, kale, carrots, lettuces, fava beans, snap peas, chives and oregano to name a few, not to mention the experimental crops of shade grown wasabi which Ward describes as hot with a distinct sweet aftertaste. Real wasabi, Ward insists, is not what you get at your favourite sushi joint: that is an imposter wasabi made from horseradish. But, he says, you really must try the real thing. Ward is also growing real varieties of garlic, thick, juicy, giant garlic, a far cry from what we have come to expect from the grocery store. And did I mention the shitake mushrooms that he is trying to grown on an old stump? Well, we’ll see how those turn out too.

A Kenyan style beehive by City Farm Boy

Also new to garden plots this year are Ward’s Kenyan style top bar beehives, fully of still slumbering bees. We talked about potential yields as we watched a brave scout test out the spring air. These humble boxes, some of which Wade constructed out of scrap wood from his deck repairs, could produce up to 100lbs of honey in a year. But, he says, he isn’t concerned with any yields this year: just as long as the bees are comfortable enough to stick around. It is amazing what you can get from a swarm of flies, he adds with a grin.

And I suppose that is the beauty of how Ward sees it, and he is right. It is amazing. It is also amazing what you can get from a few seedlings, planted alongside your property fence, or from a community of like minded people who realize just how easy it can be to grow your own organic food.

Ward has run up against some criticism and discouragement in neighbourhoods where local residents are unfamiliar with the hues of straw bale and beetroot. Its not always pretty, Ward will tell you. And he laughs, once it does look pretty, I’ll be by to hack it all down.

Despite this Ward enjoys the healthy support of his shareholders, many of whom are his neighbours. Gardeners are on the rise in that area, with much of the city block bearing food throughout the summer months.  Hardly a wasted spot can be seen on Ward’s block with even the city space between the sidewalk and street sporting snap pea seedlings.

Emerging city styles for the urban farmer

Ward makes it all look so incredibly easy and accessible. If you wish you had a little garden space producing these crops in your own backyard, well, Ward does that too. A major part of his business is building backyard gardens for people all across Vancouver. He will turn your weed patch lawn into a fully functioning vegetable garden and to your specifications.

And you just might want to, especially if you consider the benefits. Have you ever calculated your salad’s carbon footprint? This may have been a perplexing concept at one point, but now it is a difficult question to avoid. Do any of us really buy a package of giant strawberries in January without at least considering where they have come from? Or place a bag of spinach in our carts without considering, even if just to ignore the fact, that those crisp, out-of-season leaves have just travelled a gazillion miles in a refrigerated truck?

Eating is a complicated endeavour these days and is becoming increasingly so. Issues of food security, food safety, food transport, agriculture subsidies and transportation are fast becoming a part of the growing public debate on sustainability. If your interest is in local economies, health care, climate change or fresh kale, then you are probably cued into the current agricultural industry in some way. At no time before has your dinner plate been so heavily politicized.

And at no time before has there been such a surge of ready alternatives. Between farmer’s markets and community gardens our options for fresh, local and organic produce are increasing. Even large-scale grocers are responding to consumer interest in local products and are in turn supporting neighbourhood farms.

There is an element of heroism in these local, organic farmers and deservedly so. They represent a sort of victory over the heavily corporatized and industrialized system that has done a shoddy job as of late at providing shoppers with products that are healthy for the body, the community, the economy and the environment. An integral part of the movement towards a sustainable future is local food autonomy. The individuals working to make this sustainable future a present reality are becoming increasingly respected and celebrated figures.

Wade Teulon of City Farm Boy

So if you are feeling inspired and would like to know more about Ward Teulon, City Farm Boy and urban farming, you can check out his website at www.cityfarmboy.com or if you are not in the Vancouver area, look up local gardening collectives in your city to get connected.

If you are interested, after all, in calculating your salad’s carbon footprint, you may want to check out the carbon calculator at www.eatlowcarbon.org or google ‘carbon calculator’ to see what you can find.