In the UK, signs of a kitchen garden revival
The proof that we are going back to our roots is seen in Britain's 330,000
allotments. Thirty years ago thousands of acres fell into disuse and were
taken back by local authorities for development. Today, almost all allotments
are full and it is nearly as hard to get one as to get a place in a good
school. "I've got people climbing all over me for allotments. Our waiting
list is closed and there's no chance of even getting on to it. It's becoming
a real bun fight," said Bruno Dore, site secretary of the Shepherds Hill
allotments group in north London. The city is now believed to produce nearly
16,000 tonnes of vegetables a year. "There's definitely a big increase in the
demand for allotments," said Geoff Stokes, secretary of the National
Association of Allotment and Leisure gardeners. "Sites which were vacant for
years are now full." The reasons given for the shift to vegetable growing in
the most urbanised country in Europe range from a political desire to not be
beholden to large supermarkets, to a new awareness about healthy food and the
environment, and deep dissatisfaction with industrially grown food. "It's the
fact that chefs are beginning to take up the idea of healthy foods and
concern over chemicals," said Mr Stokes. "Fifty years ago people turned to
vegetable gardening to save money. Now it's for fresh food and lifestyles."
"I find it the best way to relax, the nearest thing to personal and political
freedom," said Joanne Nutley, 25, a Manchester allotment holder. The seed
sellers also detect a profound shift taking place, with people wanting to
grow old varieties of vegetables that the industrial food system has left
behind and legislation has made hard to grow. A myriad of specialist seed
clubs has been set up because it is technically illegal to sell seeds that
are not on the government-approved national seed list, designed to provide
large scale farmers. Yesterday Prince Charles added his weight to the
heritage vegetable seed movement, urging people to grow older varieties to
maintain biodiversity. Speaking on the 60th anniversary of Radio 4's
Gardeners' Question Time, he said it was "crucially important" to preserve
genetic diversity. "What could be crazier than to reduce ourselves to fewer
and fewer varieties? [Or] to have the kind of EU legislation that makes it
impossible to sell the seeds of all those varieties? Hundreds of varieties
[of vegetables] that our forefathers took a lot of trouble to develop are
being lost. The old varieties are not hugely productive, but they have
disease resistance." Garden Organic, Britain's leading organic research
organisation, now has 10,000 members in its heritage seed "library". Members
exchange and distribute over 800 old vegetable varieties. "There is a big
increase in interest in growing older varieties. Our courses are well
over-subscribed," said Andy Strachan, an adviser with Garden Organic. Seed
sellers also say that vegetable growing is no longer for middle-aged men.
"Now there a lot of young people getting interested," said Ben Gabel, a
director of the rapidly expanding Real Seed catalogue, a specialist club
based in Pembrokeshire, south Wales. "There are very definitely two classes
now and a big age gap between them. There's the traditional allotment holder,
but definitely a younger group, people around the age of 30 who are more
adventurous in what they grow." "Allotments are teeming with with upwardly
mobile types and ecologically motivated people trying to break free from the
grip of the supermarkets", said Frances Jones, a young Manchester allotment
holder. The grow-it-yourself food movement is increasingly controlled by
women, says the Horticultural Trades Association. They now account for 77% of
the total spend on herbs, 59% on young edible plants and 47% on edible seeds.
Moreover, around 80% of the total expenditure on grow-your-own vegetables
gardening is from households without children. But the grassroots grow your
own movement goes far further than vegetables, with as many as 200,000
households keeping chickens, and 35,000 beekeepers. "There are more bee
keepers in London now than in years," said John Chapple, head of the London
bee keepers association. "All the associations are growing, and where it used
to be that it was all men of a certain age, it is now young professional
women. There's been a big swing."
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