Feeding the Soul
Eating close to home feeds your body and soul
by Gerard Bentryn
One of the articles in A Good Harvest (IC#42) Fall 1995, Page 50
Copyright (c)1995, 1997 by Context Institute | To order this issue ...
Gerard Bentryn owns the Bainbridge Island Vineyards and Winery located
less than a mile from IN CONTEXT's offices. Gerard promotes farming on the
island through public advocacy, and through sharing his land, machinery,
and know-how with other local farmers.
While collecting data for a graduate program in Strathcona Provincial
Park in 1970, I met an elderly native Canadian who helped set me on what
has become one of my life's themes. He told me how sorry he was that I could
only be a visitor living on Vancouver Island rather than being of Vancouver
Island as he was. He explained how his father and his father's father are
part of the earth around him. Everything he eats or drinks comes from that
earth and the rivers that ran through it. Every meal is an act of communion.
The food I ate came from distant fields, as did his children's food and
his grandchildren's. Our bodies were made of California or Mexico or Illinois
or Chile. His body was of Vancouver Island; we would be forever alien invaders
of the land unless we chose to share in its bounty.
His words brought me back to a conversation I had with a brew master
in southeastern Germany in the early '60s. During my first, army-subsidized
time in Europe, I hung around farms to learn about European agriculture.
As we sat eating at an outdoor table or a hilltop gasthaus, the brew
master told me of his journey to America and how he could not comprehend
the contrast of the unspoiled beauty of the natural landscape against the
ugly sprawl that Americans lived in.
He held up the plate he was eating from. "The potatoes come from
that field to the west," he said pointing, "the cabbage to the
east. The barley and the hops of this beer grew closer to the horizon, and
when the wind is right, you can smell the pigs that made the wursts. America
will become even more ugly because you can't see where your food is grown.
The secret of the beauty of Europe is the ring of small farms that circle
every village and city."
From these two men I learned of the spiritual and the aesthetic meaning
of food and of its ability to enrich our lives.
Becoming Part of the Landscape
According to researchers at Cornell University it takes about 1.3 acres
to feed the average American each year. That comes to about 120 square feet
per day, the size of a small room. Your own daily 120 square feet can lie
just outside your town, or it can be hundreds or even thousands of miles
away. If you can see it, you feed on its beauty as well as its calories.
If you eat it you become literally part of the beauty of the landscape as
its atoms and molecules slowly replace the anonymous supermarket ones of
which you are now made. We have heard of "empty" calories, of
food bereft of vitamins. Imported supermarket food is truly empty: empty
of any meaning.
Food grown where you see it provides the natural land use buffering and
beauty that has been a mainstay of civilization since the birth of cities
(made possible by agriculture). Food with no origin is anonymous. Food from
your neighboring farm is synonymous with both intrinsic meaning and a sense
of place. Eating locally, from fields you can see each day, feeds you calorically,
aesthetically, and spiritually.
Growing grapes for wine does the same for me. I helped build the first
communications satellite at Bell Labs, helped double the size of the New
Jersey Pinelands Protected Areas, and developed what I believe is an elegantly
simple climate classification system. Yet I am most excited by the continuing
act of survival as a wine grower. Growing any foodstuff for a living, without
outside income, is to live by your wits, at the whim of God and nature.
A weather forecast has meaning beyond mere discomfort; it speaks of survival
or failure. Operating a small farm is the antithesis of boredom and the
embodiment of intensity. It provides an in-your-face realization of your
frailties and strengths.
A primary goal of mine is to promote greater appreciation of locally
produced foods so that wine growing and farming outlive me on Bainbridge
Island. If islanders could come to truly cherish island food and wine, our
winery and at least two others could endure. One bottle of island wine per
month per household would keep three wineries our size alive with no sales
to off-islanders.
We have helped another winery get started on nearby Whidbey Island, with
both knowledge and loaned equipment. We do not see them as competitors,
but rather as fellow pioneers in the effort to show that food and wine grown
in our area is economically feasible, even as it provides beauty and meaning
to both their lives and ours. We also share our 25-acre farm with Akio Suyematsu
and Karen Selvar who grow strawberries and raspberries. Although they both
pay us just $1 per year for the use of the land, they make relatively little
money from the direct sale of the berries. We share our land for the selfish
desire to preserve the beauty of the land as well as those who farm it.
Supermarket food and wine is industrially grown and made because small
family producers who do their own field work cannot sell to supermarkets
and survive. The vast majority of what supermarkets sell is both highly
processed, and extremely packaged. This processing and packaging can only
take place in a system in which vast quantities of cheap product can be
delivered to highly specialized industrial plants. The 50 percent of the
retail price that distributors and supermarkets take can only be made up
through outside subsidies or by exploiting farm workers.
Planting Seeds
The system that feeds us now is self-limiting because of looming water
shortages and because we are running out of money to subsidize the suburban
services, agro-industrial irrigation projects, and the long-distance transportation
inherent to the system. The system will eventually implode through its own
irrationality.
In anticipation, we can work to maintain what local food production remains
by buying directly from local farmers (within an hour's drive of our homes).
We can individually institute a program of "one percent for the landscape,"
buying only locally grown for at least one major meal per month. We can
celebrate that meal with family and friends, emphasizing the connectedness
it brings to our lives. If we who care can show others the spiritual and
aesthetic meaning of food, we are literally planting the seeds for a new
food future.
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