5 young farmers who are changing the way we eat - CNN Philippines
By Anna Bueno
Updated 17:22 PM PHT Fri, June 2, 2017
Beneath Manila booming restaurant scene and a growing reliance on fast, store-bought food, theres a silent movement to slowly change the way we eat and how we source our ingredients, starting from small farms around Metro Manila. Photo by JABEZ FLORES DREI H. CASTILLO/GOOD FOOD COMMUNITY/FACEBOOK
Manila (CNN Philippines Life) There are exactly three stalks of arugula in my otherwise abundantly leafy salad.
It was Enzo Pinga, farmer and chief operating officer of Earthbeat Farms in San Pablo, Laguna, who noticed the apparent lack of the vegetable on my plate. Pingas farm, among others, supplies arugula, as well as lettuce, kale, herbs, tomatoes, and eggplant to various restaurants in Manila. The arugula I was conserving for consumption might as well have come from his farm.
Pinga laughs, then says arugula is actually difficult to grow in the summer, explaining its scarcity that season. Pinga, along with Gio Espital, Charlene Tan, Raffy Dacones, and Ana Ojeda-Osmena, is part of a small group of young organic farmers who meet up every month to share best practices and ideas in order to boost organic farming in areas near Metro Manila.
Espital, for his part, heads Elements of Tomorrow (ELMNTM), a farm based in Quezon and Mindoro. The farm has been around for two years, cultivating wild and endemic species as well as root crops and fruit trees. I first met Espital at Madrid Fusion, where he instructed me on the virtues of sangke a local leafy plant which, when its leaves are crushed and rubbed, smells like root beer.
Enzo Pinga of Earthbeat Farms. Photos by JL JAVIER
A few steps away from ELMNTMs booth that day was El Dorado Farms, which started out as an orchid farm before Ojeda, its owner, ventured into organic farming. We grow leafy vegetables, herbs, tomatoes, kalabasa, bahay kubo vegetables, she says. Like the rest, we are trying to experiment which grows best in the soil, what the local people grow. We try to protect their heritage there.
Charlene Tan of Good Food Community is of the same mind as Ojeda. Tan, like most of her colleagues, works with smallholder farmers (farmers who till small plots of land, often with their families, and often use some of its produce for their own) in different areas in Capas, Tarlac, Mountain Province, La Trinidad, Benguet, as well as indigenous farmers among the Dumagats in Rizal and Aetas in Tarlac.
We exist to bridge people with these smallholder farmers, she says. The farmers in Capas typically produce lowland bahay kubo vegetables, while in La Trinidad, they produce the chopsuey types of vegetables. The IP groups have different varieties of bananas, mostly root crops, Tan adds.
For Dacones, the vice president for operations of Teraoka Family Farm in Mangatarem, Pangasinan, the farm exists to promote the cultivation of local ingredients. We try to grow whatevers local in the area, promote whatever local ingredients we have in the Philippines, which is actually a better way to promote the Filipino cuisine here, he says.
Charlene Tan of Good Food Community. Photos by JL JAVIER
His farm specializes in leafy greens and bahay kubo vegetables, and fruits like mango, avocados, and guyabano. While his family has owned a farm since 1992, it was only in 2014 that he started devoting the land to organic farming.
At a time when agriculture faces a scarcity of farmers and going organic has become a loose term that has somehow lost its ethical implications its supposed to be awhole movement of trying to live in such a way thats in harmony with the environment, says Tan -- the five young farmers (along with other members of their community) try to raise awareness on the origins of the food that we eat, and what it means for the people who produce them.
The big gamble
To become a farmer, interestingly enough, does not require deep roots in agriculture. For each of the members of the young organic farmers group as Pinga, Espital, Ojeda, Tan, and Dacones call themselves getting into organic farming was either a tentative choice that had become a lifelong commitment, or an accident they happily stumbled upon.
Ojeda was jobless and had just resigned from government when she found herself growing her own plants in her backyard. She started with tomatoes and okra. Everyday I would be like, it was so cool that you could [see the plants] in progress. Youd have to water it, say hi to it before going to work, she laughs. You talk to your plants too? she asks Pinga.
Yes, it works, he responds, to another round of laughter.
The farmers at Teraoka Family Farm grow and harvest fruits, such as mangoes and avocados. Photo from TERAOKA FAMILY FARM/FACEBOOK
Espital also took to backyard farming in Taguig before his uncle offered up his farm in Dolores, Quezon, for Espital to pursue his interest. Having worked in an NGO focused on sustainable agriculture, Espital knew the values of planting his own food. Kailangan pala natin i-spread yung organic agriculture,he says. Wala kasing access to healthy and nutritious food. Nauubos na rin yung mga nagtatanim, yung mga gustong bumalik sa farming.
Dacones took the big gamble to quit his job after witnessing successful farming practices in Japan. I started with a 500-square-meter lot, he says. I planted veggies, basic stuff for the house, until I started building a better relationship helping farmers, helping them market their own [produce].
Tan was more motivated by the bigger philosophical questions: like how should we live in this time. How we can create new systems based on social justice, where theres more equitable distribution, she says.
I guess thats the experiment of community-shared agriculture, Tan adds. If we could just be more than customers, if we really could have a stake in farming, if we could meet our farmers, maybe that is a better solution for everyone.
Newly transplanted kalabasa seedlings need a bit of shade. Photo from EL DORADO FARMS/FACEBOOK