Crop Mob video from Georgia

These folks put together a crop mob of 140 people. Check out the video and see what can happen with this many hands!

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New Blood for the Old Body- Photography from inside the new agrarian movement

I’ve known Trace Ramsey since the first Crop Mob in October 2008. I’m not sure that we actually met that day, anyone that knows Trace knows he’s not a talker. But Trace has a presence about him, a weighty silence as he works the red clay of Chatham County, NC punctuated by the click of his camera. The images he captures speak his voice and the voices of many others breathing life into a movement.

From 6-9pm on this Friday October 15th, Trace opens his first solo exhibit New Blood for the Old Body- Photography from inside the new agrarian movement at Hotel Hadley Studios in Siler City, NC. Going through Trace’s photographs one can’t help but notice a parallel to the photography of the Farm Security Administration, the New Deal program that attempted to collectivise agriculture and sent photographers to document the effects of the great depression on rural people. It is these iconic FSA images that gave a face to the great depression. It’s interesting that now at the time of the greatest economic turmoil since the depression images of a similar style are speaking to people but the message they convey is drastically different. The labor is similar, the tired bodies and dirty knees are the same, but the emotional tenor of the photographs is different. The faces of these new agrarians express hope, possibility, strength, determination, and joy. It’s not that exhaustion, heartbreak, and sorrow are absent from their lives but these feelings don’t consume them.

Kathryn

Brandon plants garlic

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City folk gone country

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“Crop mobs” spread in local, organic food movement

From Free Speech Radio News -

As interest in locally grown, organic food increases, a new way to get involved is sprouting up all over the country and it’s known as a crop mob. During these events, a group of volunteers converges on small and urban farms and lends a hand on specific projects. Lynda-Marie Taurasi recently joined a crop mob in Hillsborough, North Carolina – where the initiative started. She files this report.

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Crop Mobbed: Reclaiming community agriculture

From the Morgan County Citizen -

Principles like these inspired the day of work. One of three founding members of Crop Mob Atlanta, Kimberly Coburn, read about the original North Carolina Crop Mob in a New York Times article last February. She thought the concept was brilliant and contacted the original founders for guidance in establishing a subsidiary group.

After kicking off Crop Mob Atlanta with a Website and a recruitment meeting at the Peachtree Road Farmers Market last March, over 50 “mobbers” attended the first workday at a farm in Douglasville on May 5. Tewksbury Farms marked their sixth farm event.

Full story

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Crop Mobs Are Farmers’ New Allies – AARP

From the September AARP magazine -

At 8 a.m. on a Saturday under a blue summer sky, Denise Sharp, co-owner of Sharp’s at Waterford Farm in Brookville, Md., is preoccupied with a sick goat. On top of that, she’s preparing for visitors.

“Usually there is pandemonium the first time a volunteer group comes here, because they don’t know what to do or how to do it,” she says.

Full story…

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Crop Mobs build community on the farm

Crop Mob was featured on NPR’s Marketplace last week. A favorite quote from the show was from first time crop mobber Jeffrey Bailey -

Our generation, and the generation behind us have this blatant sense of entitlement. I think we’re realizing that everything has come a little too easy for us. So putting our hands back and actually sweating a little bit is a lot more fulfilling than just being able to look something up on Google.

Full story

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Stealthy Crop Mob forges local agrarian bonds

Las Cruces Crop Mob in the news -

Stealthy Crop Mob forges local agrarian bonds: Grassroots Press

Like a stealthy tomato, hidden beneath the camouflage and chaos of leaves, Crop Mob is a rogue (well, sort of) grassroots group, rich and potent with a passion for local farms, local foods and the connection we often miss with those who do the growing. Crop Mob is primarily a group of landless and wannabe farmers who come together to work on and build an interconnected agrarian community.

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Invasion of the Crop Mob – Black Mountain News

On a recent Sunday, my farm was host to a new example of the old timey “barn-raising” phenomena that is sweeping the country.

It is called the Crop Mob. It consists of a group of folks that just like to get involved with a farm and with others that have the same aspirations. Many of them live in the city and just want to learn and some are actual farmers themselves.

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Crop mobs sprout up on farms – USA Today

Crop mobs sprout up on farms

The first U.S. crop mob was formed in North Carolina in 2008, and now there are more than 30. “It’s going to explode,” predicts Kirsten Santucci, organizer of a crop mob in Washington, D.C., that’s in its first season and has about 200 members.

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