Milwaukee's urban farmer
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Whenever Will Allen arrives in a neighborhood, scores of curious children seem to come out of nowhere to see what he鈥檚 about. His pickup truck carries spades, hoes, earthworms, seeds, and a truckload of compost 鈥 all the components needed to make a garden.
Mr. Allen knows a garden not only gives inner-city kids something to do, but it can also feed them good, nutritious food and invigorate the community at the same time.
This vision of symbiosis between an urban setting and locally grown food is what prompted Allen, a 6 ft., 7 in. former professional basketball player, to purchase the last three farm acres in Milwaukee 16 years ago and invite inner-city youth to help him grow vegetables.
鈥淔ood is at the very foundation of community development,鈥 Allen says.
His efforts have paid off in significant ways. Today his nonprofit, Growing Power, operates a handful of urban farms and community growing centers around Milwaukee and downtown Chicago.
In addition, Growing Power is helping to develop urban gardening sites and training centers in several other states and two international centers in Kenya and Ukraine. Its website, , posts research on its farming techniques as well as various how-to gardening videos.
Allen鈥檚 low-tech, low-cost farming approach has earned him a reputation as a leader in the urban gardens and sustainability movement and a 鈥済enius grant鈥 from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
Yet Allen doesn鈥檛 want to just grow food, he wants to build healthy communities. The strength of Growing Power鈥檚 success is centered on the philosophy that a community must literally be grown from the ground up.
鈥淓very human being should have access to affordable food,鈥 he explains. Around this concept of good food for all, Allen has built a network of relationships among neighborhoods, schools, universities, government, and funding agencies. 鈥淓veryone has to be involved. Everyone!鈥 he says.
Hands-on education
Children are the immediate beneficiaries of urban gardens. By involving scores of youngsters in his projects, Allen hopes to give them a sense of purpose and belonging as an alternative to joining gangs.
Through Growing Power programs young people gain practical skills such as operating power tools and teamwork. They learn marketing by selling their produce at farmers markets.
And they absorb gardening know-how such as building 鈥渉oop houses鈥 (greenhouses with arched roofs) and raised beds, vermiculture (worm farming), and composting.
Applying their reading and math skills in the garden also helps to improve their grades at school. As a result, an increasing number of schools are signing up for Growing Power鈥檚 six-week hands-on courses to learn about sustainable farming methods, entrepreneurial skills, and healthy eating habits.
The simplicity and practicality of Growing Power鈥檚 mission has attracted attention from the halls of higher education as well. College students from Grinnell in Iowa and Oberlin in Ohio have worked in Growing Power鈥檚 greenhouses, milked goats, fed animals, and made compost.
The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's Great Lakes WATER Institute consults with Allen鈥檚 aquaculture (fish farming) operation, which raises 10,000 yellow perch and tilapia a year on its urban farms. Allen鈥檚 system costs $3,000 to build, as opposed to a $50,000 conventional system.
鈥淵ou need an engineering degree to operate one of these [conventional] systems. I can teach you our system in a five-hour workshop,鈥 says Allen, who also consults Madison鈥檚 microbiology department. 鈥淥ur object is to make it as simple as possible.鈥
Urban farming has its challenges, and the key to its success is the soil, especially when the land may be contaminated from past uses, he says. 鈥淲ithout good soil, crops don鈥檛 get enough of the nutrients they need to survive. When plants are stressed, they are more prone to disease and pest problems.鈥
To achieve an organic label for its produce, Growing Power makes 6 million tons聽 pounds of compost for its soil each year from the collected food wastes of grocery stores, wholesale produce companies, and moldy hay.
But the success of Growing Power relies on more than just rich soil. Its programs are a shining example of 鈥渟ustainability,鈥 a key buzzword in the local-food movement.
In addition to providing local alternatives to processed food found at corner stores, its viable urban farms create jobs, develop small businesses, and keep precious dollars in the community, says Jerry Kaufman, a professor emeritus of urban planning at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Growing new farmers
Allen hopes to recruit and nurture a new class of farmers from among the young people he meets through Growing Power鈥檚 presentations, demonstrations, workshops, and weekend seminars. He strives to show them that small farm operations are not only doable but essential in promoting sustainable agriculture.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e the ones to take this forward,鈥 he says.
Allen鈥檚 passion for agriculture springs from his childhood on a farm in Maryland where he and his brothers cultivated their own garden. Although they were never wealthy, Allen recalls the many times his mother kept a stirred pot on the stove in order to be ready to feed dozens of family, friends, and neighbors.
He never expected that he鈥檇 return to farming in his adult life, but Allen discovered during his professional basketball days in Europe that he just couldn鈥檛 resist the pull to dig around in the soil.
His daughter, Erika Allen, continues the family tradition by serving as director of Growing Power鈥檚 Chicago projects.
In September Allen was awarded a MacArthur 鈥済enius grant鈥 of $500,000, which is given to individuals described as 鈥渃reative, bold, energetic and promising of more achievement.鈥
Allen plans to use his grant money to continue providing fresh produce to the poor while he searches for new and creative ways of improving the health and diet of inner-city communities.
(NOTE: To go to the Monitor's main gardening page -- which contains articles and blog posts on many topics --聽click here.)