Andy Douglas| Press-Citizen opinion writer

Why do we always think we have more time?

More time to address climate change, more time to stop the coral reefs from bleaching?

Fred Meyer, Backyard Abundance director, thinks its because were in a perpetual state of denial. And yet deep down we know our actions are destabilizing the ecosystem to the point where it cannot recover.

You may know Backyard Abundance as a local organization helping people turn their yards into food landscapes. Founded in 2006, the group continues to evolve, especially when it comes to addressing the urgency of climate change.

Meyer and I sat on his back porch last month, overlooking his own abundant yard, musing about the Iowa prairie, a large ecosystem destroyed in the span of 80 years. Before founding Backyard Abundance, Meyer had gone through Master Gardener training, but wanted to do more.

My fascination was with growing food, specifically in ways that helps increase the resiliency of the land, he said.

He soon learned about permaculture, a concept coined in the 70s as a response to the industrialized way growing food was despoiling the planet.

Meyer decided to travel to California for a two-week certification course.

We learned techniques to actually increase the resiliency of land while growing food, he said.

Putting these techniques into practice in his own yard, he felt the joy of working in harmony with nature, especially every time a bee visited the beebalm, or robins communed with the anise hyssop.

I had this idea that people could enhance the environment by making small changes to the landscape. So I thought I should start a group to work on this local level, Meyer said.

He began meeting with people from environmental organizations, and met many folks who had done the work of enhancing their own yards, people who would go on to serve on Backyard Abundances board. As a first project, they created a yard tour to demonstrate what was possible. The first presentation: Meyers own backyard, on a sweltering July day.

One of the first mistakes I made was to have a yard tour in Iowa at noon in July, he laughed.

But 100 people showed up, as well as reporters from two radio stations, and several TV stations and newspapers, demonstrating the level of interest in this approach.

Backyard Abundance established itself as a nonprofit in 2009, and began offering classes. In 2011, it started to offer landscape design services. One of the first projects was the childrens discovery garden on the north side of the Iowa City Rec Center.

Next came the Wetherby Park edible forest. It was a fertile period, as the nonprofit developed a garden in McPherson Park, and an edible classroom also near the Rec Center.

Many people benefitted from this work. Im one of them, as BA consultants 15 years ago helped me start a vegetable garden, which is still going strong.

But Meyer was thinking ahead. Permaculture had taught him to look at the landscape and try to understand its gifts. And his concern about climate change was intensifying.

This carried him down a path of learning wilderness skills, going into resilient landscapes and learning how to thrive on the land.

Basically, observing a healthy ecosystem, he said, and trying to understand what was really going on.

He and I agree that the prevailing human story is too often one of domination, the idea that nature is this messy thing we need to control.

To evolve out of this, to create life-enhancing landscapes, we need a completely different way of thinking, one of cooperating with nature.

Backyard Abundance has recently been organizing wild harvesting workshops.

The first class was named meet our edible friends. Everything we do is about experience and immersion and helping people to learn and connect, Meyer said.

The nonprofitreworked its mission statement, with a focus on "wellness."Meyer sees the mental health crisis as related to our disconnection from the natural world.

Were offering classes around therapy in nature. After all, were a part of nature, he said.

Lately, he has been teaching edible forest gardening classes at the university and saidhis students have a level of awareness that he didn't have at their age. Theyve been handed a future, he said, that is laughable.

The Union of Concerned Scientists did a study and found that Iowa will eventually have the climate of Oklahoma, he noted. Well have the same amount of rainfall but with big deluges and big droughts. Were going to need to learn how to collect rainwater.

Why do we always think we have more time?

Andy Douglas is the author of"Redemption Songs: A Year in the Life of a Community Prison Choir" and"The Curve of the World: Into the Spiritual Heart of Yoga."

Excerpt from:
Opinion: Nonprofit shows we can take the time to help the climate - Iowa City Press-Citizen

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