In the latest edition of the touch the soil was an article about the reasons people grow food by Robin Kortright.
This is a summary of what was found about why people garden
1. Cook’s gardens The most common type of food garden among the respondents interviewed, cultivated in order to assure access to a variety of pesticide-free, fresh and flavourful produce.
2. Teaching gardens Generally small scale and diverse food gardens cultivated by parents in order to encourage children to interact with and respect the natural world and to make eating fresh produce exciting and enjoyable for children.
3. Environmental gardens Food gardens cultivated to reduce the household’s environmental footprint by growing locally, using organic methods, and conserving water. These gardens were generally fairly substantial in size in order to provide as much as possible for the household’s needs.
4. Hobby gardens These were gardens in which food was cultivated as a hobby, for the pleasure and satisfaction of caring for the plants. Generally these gardens were substantial in size and included a wide variety of crops.
5. Aesthetic gardens These gardens included a small amount of food, cultivated as much for the beauty of the food plants as the harvest they might produce.
The website for the research is here and if you go to #9 you can download the pdfs
http://www.utoronto.ca/cuhi/research/foodrig.html
The summary is only 4 pages long and the report is larger and the final report is 147 pages. But there are a list of the questions, and consent forms. For those people interested in promoting food this might be an interesting starting point for a community action,
The contact information is below
Robin Kortright, Master of Arts 2007, Department of Geography, University of Toronto Tel: 416-835-2832, Email: robin.kortright@utoronto.ca.
Sarah Wakefield, Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of Toronto Tel: 416-978-3653, Email: sarah.wakefield@utoronto.ca.
This research was conducted with the support of the Centre for Urban Health Initiatives (CUHI) at the University of Toronto. For more information please see:
http://www.cuhi.utoronto.ca/.
pax
John