On my way to the
Vuelta a Tacos in September I rode by Chicago's
City Farm on Division and was really stricken with the beauty of a verdant patch of agriculture in the middle of the city (especially as harvest approached).
Since then, I've become enamored of the idea of urban farming. Actually, I've liked the idea since I read Karl Hess' Community Technology some time ago. (It's an account of grass-roots efforts to develop local food sufficiency in Adams-Morgan, Washington DC, and even had some interesting accounts of aquaculture!) It seems like we could use a thread here dedicated to urban farming, so here we go.
On my recent trip to New York, I coincidentally stumbled across the
Red Hook Community Farm and snapped a few photos.
I was tickled to see a tractor crossing sign in Brooklyn:
I cut through the farm on the way to Ikea... I'd heard about a free water taxi from the Ikea to Manhattan, but learned (to my chagrin) that it doesn't run until 1:20, although some info I'd found on the web earlier indicated that it started at 10 am. Anyway, on my way through I ran into someone who worked there and he invited me to come back on Saturday for their Harvest Festival...
Petting Chickens at Red Hook Community Farm Harvest Festival
Peppers at Red Hook Community Farm Harvest Festival
As a bonus, I was able to mix that in with a visit to the fabled
Red Hook Food Truck Vendors on what apparently was their next-to-last weekend for the season. During the warmer months, about a dozen trucks representing a variety of latino cultures set up around the soccer fields and sell food. It was hard to get good pictures of them all because of trees, depth of field, etc, but here's one (which I didn't patronize):
On my way to the harvest festival, I had a fantastic grilled corn on the cob (gringo style, just butter and salt, thanks). After I came back, I picked up a Chilean empanada, which had ground beef, raisins, some hard-boiled egg, and probably a few other things in it. It was juicy and drippy and very tasty. And for my last eat in New York, I had a very fine barbacoa (goat) taco from another truck, which, now that I think of it, was also juicy, drippy, and tasty. The vendor scene was actually pretty subdued, but put together with a visit to the harvest festival, it made for a nice last morning in the Big Apple.
Red Hook Community Farm
6 Wolcott
Brooklyn, NY 11231
Red Hook Food Vendors @ Soccer Field
Clinton St & Bay St
Brooklyn, NY 11231
Joe G.
"Whatever may be wrong with the world, at least it has some good things to eat." -- Cowboy Jack Clement