Farmville in Huntsville
Monday, January 25, 2010 at 8:43AM 
I have heard the FarmVille chatter in recent months, however, I was absolutely floored when I spent a few moments with my daughter, Ashley, and had her educate me on this cultural phenomenon.
Did you know that there is a farming revolution underway? Every day, over 15 million Americans are intensely, personally managing farms? This could be very exciting were it not for the fact that these farms are virtual farms, meaning they are virtually worthless beyond their sheer entertainment value. They don't produce a single calorie of food, and one can farm wearing a suit and never break a sweat.
What if this virtual obsession were to become a real obsession? What would it look like? It would look like what the 7 acres of ground and rooftops that make up Lincoln Mills will look like over the next few years. The relocalization of food in Huntsville will find Lincoln Mills at its epicenter.
When I asked some of my obsessed friends and relatives who play FarmVille if they would like to become urban farmers for real, they laughed and said, "No way. That would be way too hard."
Yes, it is hard to grow food and tend to animals. But it is fulfilling and, I believe, more critical to our future success as a country than most realize. Ask most people where their food comes from, and they reply "Publix."
Speaking of fulfilling, I had a fulfilling speaking engagement before the Northeast Huntsville Civic Association tonight. This town is chocked full of good people.
For those bored enough to view the entire Question & Answer session, please click here.
Wayne |
3 Comments | 
Reader Comments (3)
Rent or buy the movie, Food, Inc. (http://www.foodincmovie.com/)
After viewing and ingesting its disturbing news, it will be hard for us not to have our own patches of land to dedicated to growing food rather than ornamentals.
Perhaps you're familiar with Wendell Berry's writing. If not, I would suggest (for a start) the essays "Renewing Husbandry" and "Agriculture from the Roots Up," both of which are included in The Way of Ignorance, a 2005 collection of his pieces.
Much enjoyed your presentation the other night at Optimist Center. Thanks for doing it.
Maybe Lee McBride can really help people move from the virtual "farmville" to the front yard garden with his new "Food Scapes" operation, it is a shame that people will spend hours playing "farmville" games but won't invest 10 minutes a day into a small sustainable home garden.
Andrew Rodgers