dicksond wrote:We all like affordable luxuries, and local food definitely falls into that category for most of us here. But is anyone here saying they really buy it just because it is local, or because it is generally much better? If the answer is that it is much better, then isn't the locavore name misleading? Isn't it the "buy better food"or buy handcrafted food movement? Yeah it is great that it also may reduce our carbon footprint, though if and how much tends to depend a lot on what you include and what assumptions you make (you know, lies, damned lies and statistics), and it is not why we (most people) buy local anyway. Otherwise, Motorola would still be making local TVs.
Well, Dickson, I thought about this game of whack-a-mole.
The above statement suggests that there is no intrinsic value to local food. Rather, if good things happen when we eat local food, both in our mouth and in the mouth of society, it is, well you seem to suggest it, it is just, what, luck? I said up-thread that l found so often, that local was the means. Why is that? Let's look at some of the qualities of local foods/non-local foods.
- If you have to ship a fruit or vegetable many miles, it must be a version of said fruit that can withstand said shipping. Likewise, it is said version that has the best shape and size for extended travel.
- If it takes you many, many days from harvest to sale, you cannot pick at peak.
- If you need to ship your produce many thousands of miles, you need to package it in layers and layers. Often this layers are of the worst eco-friendly materials. Just pick up an imported Asian pear my friend.
- If you need to sell large quantities, you cannot offer little known objects like gooseberries. Also, is there a mass market for the hard to crack black walnut? Who wants seeds in their grapes?
- Can you trust the organic label? It's not just tainted spinach, look at the practices associated with many of the companies selling organic milk. I'm not saying that local is a panacea for all issues, but I believe it is a better indicator of sustainable and earth friendly production.
- If we can barely trust the organic label, what are we to think of the standards in other parts of the world. Do you really want your milk from China for a dollar less a gallon? Will you really be saving money?
- Food miles do matter. Yes, a New Zealand sponsored study tried to show why New Zealand lamb shipped to the UK used less petroleum than the lamb right there in merry ol' England. Ignoring the assumptions within this study, I still got to say, so what. If at best we can say that in some cases, food miles are not supreme, it does not mean that generally, it helps to reduce food miles.
- Transportation is not the biggest energy user in food production - A-ha the Freakonomics team showed. Again, I say, so what. Instead, ask yourselves which variables can you have input.
- What about meat, it uses way more energy - And...this has anything specifically to do with local. If there are generally good things to do, why not do them both? Moreover, paying the truer cost for meat, as you do when getting local meat, by it's nature tends to get you to eat less of it.
- Those pesky farmers use so much damn energy driving to the markets in their broken down pick-ups (or those farmers are such yuppies driving the latest SUVs) - A writer at Slate went to a market and seemed to find all the sellers using so much energy with their smaller cars, but I repeatedly spot the opposite. Most farmers I see, drive to the market in decent sized trucks.
dicksond wrote:So buying local is a good thing in some ways - it certainly feels good. But with more success it would lose a lot of the benefits it offers today. For better or worse, that is not really a risk anyway, since its success is limited to those who can afford the luxury. Encouraging people to buy local is a good thing, too, so long as we are not trying to guilt them to do it, for while it is good for them if they can afford it, it will not change the world. Buying a fresh pint of delectable blueberries is a much better choice than supersizing it for the consumer, but I do not accept that the other choice is bad for the world in any significant way. Yeah, it sucks and will reduce your life expectancy, but that is your choice. Neither McDonalds or Jewel's produce are going away any time soon, and if they do I suspect the replacement would not look anywhere near as different as we hope.
So, cynical are we not! What frustrates me (and I believe some others), is not the notion that we are trying to guilt people into doing something, but rather the opposite; that people want to toss aside good ideas because they do not like feeling guilt tripped. On top of that, as this thread has also shown, there seem instances where the benefits of local food can be bypassed because of the perceptions of the people who eat local or stereotypes of what eating local is all about. Listen, a good thing is a good thing.
Eating local works for me and my family, but it is not a system that is without flaws. I could catalogue the problems of trying to eat local for many more pages. Needless to say, I believe that the flaws in the system do not over-ride the reasons cited above for eating locally.
Before I end this polemic, let me also touch upon the issue of cost. I flatly reject the notion that eating locally is vastly more expensive than eating conventionally. How many of you are addressing this issue from deep experience? You see one pint of strawberries at the market and extrapolate. Do you take into account the huge decrease in restaurant meals you would have. Math question=compare the cost of a farmer's market meal to the cost of one meal for four at Chipotole or Five Guys or other moderate family restaurant. Do you know how much money prepared foods and packaged foods and junk food costs? Do you think you would spend less on that if you ate local? If you found tomatoes at their surplus, bought many, and canned them, do you think you would be spending the same as if you need to shop for those things now? If you spent a few hundred dollars and invested in a freezer, could you not buy meat by the quarter or side and spend less that $3/lb for it?
What ever "locavore movement" exists is you and me. There is no club. No sticker we put on our cars. We do not demand adherence to strict guidelines. If you select Michigan apples but Washington pears at Costco, I'm happy you got part of it right instead of dwelling on the other half. Take things one step at a time. Find what works. Find what is doable. There are many, many reasons to eat local, including many, I am sure I have not even realized yet.
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.