True Activist,
Sophie McAdam, March 16, 2014
In the
small town of Todmorden in the north of England, fresh organic produce is
growing everywhere. There are sweet-smelling herbs at the railway station,
vegetables sprouting in the public car park, and an apothecary garden next to
the local Health Center.
This is the
Incredible Edible movement, a grassroots campaign to provide healthy fresh food
to the whole community, while promoting local produce and educating people on
the joys of cultivating veggies.
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Todmorden in bloom |
Incredible
Edible co-founder Pam Warhurst explained how she and her friends sat around a
kitchen table six years ago, brainstorming ways to make positive change in the
world.
They began
with a simple question: Can we find a unifying language that cuts across age,
income and culture, that will help people themselves find a new way of living?
Then came the thunderbolt. Food is a basic human need, but fresh, healthy
organic food is a basic human right. “None of this is rocket science, but it is
inclusive,” Pam says. Ultimately, this is a movement for everyone. We say, ´if
you eat, you´re in.´
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Pam Warhurst (right) at a local food day in Todmorden |
What
followed was a public meeting, where Pam and her associates received a standing
ovation after presenting their plan. It was an ambitious, idealistic project
which not only addressed the issue of what we eat, but where we spend our money
and what we teach our children.
“I wondered
if it was possible to take a town like Todmorden and focus on local food to
re-engage people with the planet we live on, create the sort of shifts in
behavior we need to live within the resources we have, stop us thinking like
disempowered victims, and to start taking responsibility for our own futures,”
Pam explains.
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´Vegetable tourism´has boosted the local economy |
Three key
areas are covered: planting free food for the whole community, supporting and
promoting farmers and other local food producers rather than supermarkets, and
rolling out an extensive educational network to directly involve residents and
students with the project.
Incredible
Edible is run by unpaid volunteers and began with the planting of some small
herb gardens and the launch of a local seed bank. Now, every school (and
church) in the area is involved with the movement. They have provided chickens,
planted orchards, and installed a fish farm at the local high school, which was
such a success that a course in agriculture has since been launched. The group
also offers free staff training for primary school teachers on issues of food
awareness and cultivation, as well as adult learning schemes through ties with
the college. All the children in Todmorden can now recognize a tomato plant,
and have benefited greatly from getting their hands dirty in the community
gardens.
![]() |
British gardening expert Diarmuid Gavin with some Todmorden scouts |
The town,
population 15,000, has attracted what Pam calls ´vegetable tourists. “People
come from all over the world to poke around in our raised beds,” she laughs.
There are fruit trees, bushes, herbs and veggies everywhere: outside the police
station and the retirement home, on the towpaths of Todmorden´s canal, and even
in the cemetery. Residents have embraced the project with gusto, and many
private gardens and porches have been transformed into blooming oases of
delicious fresh produce since the scheme launched in spring 2008.
“People are
ready and respond to the story of food,” Pam points out. “They want positive
action, and in their bones they know it´s their responsibility. We are all part
of a local food jigsaw, and all part of the solution.”
The group
define their work as ´propaganda gardening´, and they made a conscious decision
not to ask permission from the local authority before planting. “We´re starting
to build resilience; we´re starting to reinvent community, and we did it all
without a strategy document,” Pam states. “We did not consult, we did not write
a report; enough of all that!”
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Even local firefighters have become green-fingered |
Despite
this maverick attitude, the local council has been so impressed by Incredible
Edible that it has donated land to the movement. Furthermore, politicians in
the area have pledged to remove obstacles stopping the use of community land
for growing, and to give guidance to other public bodies about how it can be
done.
Various
spin-off projects have been created since Incredible Edible´s early days,
including the fantastic ´Every Egg Matters´campaign. Volunteers had the idea of
encouraging people to buy and consume only fresh, local eggs from happy hens. A
map of locations was drawn up and handed out to people, with great success. As
a result, Todmorden farmers began to widen their produce range- making home-made
pies, cheeses and other artisan products that were not in demand before.
Pam and her
associates then decided to give all local food producers and market traders
some of their signs and posters to use when selling their goods, and were
amazed at the response. The Incredible Edible logo attracted new consumers and
was a huge boost to the local economy. By building a system of mutual benefit
and support, sales of local produce (cheese, eggs, beer, meat) soared, and
consumers were inspired to start growing their own vegetables, keeping
chickens, or simply boycotting supermarkets wherever possible.
Meetings
and planting days are regularly organized through Incredible Edible, creating
bonds between neighbors who would otherwise be strangers. A local history
project has been launched, with the aim of teaching people about how food was
cultivated in the area in the past. Pam and her co-creators also plan to
publish a recipe book, and a wonderful story for children (which can be
downloaded for free here) aims to teach youngsters about the Incredible Edible
philosophy (by highlighting the nonsensical idea of buying New Zealand apples
from a supermarket when trees growing nearby provide the same fruit for free).
Incredible
Edible also runs courses on grafting, permaculture, bee-keeping, edible fungi,
herbal medicine and more. Land, polytunnels and raised beds have been donated
to the cause by a local store, while a community aqua garden was funded by the
British National lottery. The movement is growing at a mind-boggling rate
(there are now over 200 groups worldwide) and the Incredible Edible team even
finds time to help other start-ups all over the world, in the USA and Japan,
Australia and India, New Zealand and Europe to name a few!
The
inspirational folk who dreamed up and executed such an awesome plan are normal
people like you and I. They have no special training or qualifications; they
have no money to invest in the project. Instead, they have achieved all of this
with a simple desire to make a difference, a huge passion for creating
alternatives, and a refusal to allow bureaucracy and red tape to stop them.
“We are not
daunted by the sophisticated arguments that say small actions are meaningless
in the face of tomorrow´s problems,” Pam says, “because we have seen the power
of small actions and it is awesome. We are starting at last to believe in
ourselves. In my book, that´s incredible.”
Sophie
McAdam is a staff writer for True Activist. She grew up in a village very close
to Todmorden (and visits regularly), so she can personally vouch for the
awesome transformation detailed in this article! You can find out more or
contact her here. If you are feeling
inspired and want to know more about replicating this project in your own
community, click here or follow I.E on facebook. All images are credited to
Incredible Edible, with an extra thank you to press officer Estelle Brown for
all her help.
Carrots in the car park. Radishes on the roundabout. The deliciously eccentric story of the town growing ALL its own veg
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Carrots in the car park. Radishes on the roundabout. The deliciously eccentric story of the town growing ALL its own veg
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Food for thought: Todmorden resident Estelle Brown, a former interior designer, with a basket of home-grown veg |
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