Watch for Signs

By Kristy Hebert, Farm and Dairy Reporter reprinted with permission, July 14, 2005 issue.

Old MacDonald had a cow

Old MacDonald had a pig

... or once he did!

Now the yellow 'dozers dig

RANDOLPH, Ohio -- Be careful driving through Portage County. The signs here might distract you.

At least Fred Maier hopes you'll be distracted ... distracted enough to first take his signs seriously and then take action.

Fred Maier is just one man but he hopes his jingles, posted on signs in Portage County, Ohio, will grab the whole community's attention when it comes to agriculture. (click for larger version) Maier's signs are a takeoff on the old Burma-Shave marketing campaign -- a series of signs, about 100 feet apart on well-traveled highways, promoting a product or cause.

In this case, Maier isn't advertising shaving cream, he's trying to save family farms.

Carrots from out west

Greens and all the rest

Import them? Why, oh?

Grow 'em in Ohio

Each line is on a separate green board and at the end is always a fifth sign that says "Save a Farm" and gives his campaign's Web site, www.saveafarm.org.

The point is to get people thinking about where their food comes from and how important it is to make sure family farms thrive.

* * *

Maier is one of those people who saw family farms disappearing and food being shipped from other countries and decided that wasn't right.

Although he has a small herd of Shetland sheep, he's a wood worker by trade, not a full-time farmer. His parents weren't farmers either and neither was his wife's family. But that didn't stop Maier from helping at a family friend's farm when he was a boy and later taking agricultural workshops through Penn State Extension.

It wasn't until he moved to Randolph in 1993, however, that he really put his passion for agriculture into play.

In the late 1990s, Portage County formed a citizens' group for farmland preservation and Maier was there from day one.

The group later morphed into the county commissioners' farmland preservation advisory board and task force but Maier ended up leaving the group two and a half years ago. He hoped that, on his own, he might be more effective in waking up the community to agriculture's issues.

So he began making roadside signs.

They appeared for the first time last summer, and this year, they're in three Portage County locations.

Maier and his wife, Carol, think up original jingles about saving family farms, keeping open space and promoting local produce. Maier switches the signs every two weeks.

This is the project's key, he said. Keep drivers watching for those signs, wondering what jingle will be next.

Maier hopes curiosity will get the best of them and they'll start looking into what's going on with agriculture.

* * *

Maier's overall goal is to chip away at citizen complacency.

Ask children where their food comes from and they'll likely say the grocery store, he said. And even if people do realize food comes from a farm, their vision of a farm is a romanticized picture far from the grit of real life.

Even farm tours are dangerous, he said. Everything looks nice and neat and people go away with a "warm and fuzzy feeling" about farming. This isn't reality, he said.

Instead, he said, the U.S. imports frozen strawberries from China and Ohio brings in vegetables from California.

Many areas can't afford to keep doing this since they have the means to produce most of the same food themselves, Maier said.

"I've never used the word 'crisis,' but it's important for people to know things aren't right," he said.

"Until the general public realizes it's in their own self-interest to preserve family farms, we aren't going to get anywhere."

* * *

As much as Maier wants the general public to take an interest in agriculture, farmers also need to step up, he said.

This year when he attempted to expand his sign project, he went door-to-door telling farmers about his idea and asking if he could put his signs on their property. He took pictures of the signs, copies of his jingles, and he told them to think it over and let him know.

They were polite, Maier said, but every farmer said "no."

Maier admits his signs may not be the answer; maybe there's something else that would work better, but at least this is a step in the right direction.

He hopes his Web site will spur further action.

It's too soon to tell how many people see his signs and, as a result, visit his site. But he does know that most of his feedback has been that people want to be able to call or e-mail him.

But Maier said there's no need to talk about it anymore, he said.

"We already know there's a problem," he said. "People need to do something." (See related article.)

* * *

Maier hopes his project is enough of an oddity that a larger group, like a regional conservation group or even American Farmland Trust, might pick it up and expand it by spreading similar signs across Ohio.

Maybe there could even be a volunteer network to put up signs in other locations, he said.

The possibilities, he said, are definitely out there.

(Reporter Kristy Hebert welcomes feedback by phone at 800-837-3419, ext. 23 or by e-mail at khebert@farmanddairy.com.)

Find the signs in Portage County

  • Travel north on state Route 44, just past Ravenna.
  • Travel north on state Route 44, just past the Portage County Fairgrounds in Randolph.
  • Travel northwest on state Route 14, just past Edinburg.

What can you do

  • Buy locally and tell your neighbors to do the same. Support your local growers. When you buy locally, the money goes back into the community.
  • Cook, can and freeze local products.
  • Pay attention to land-use issues in your community. Attend local zoning and planning meetings. Be educated.
  • Question local authorities. What's being done to preserve agriculture? What's being done to protect open space?
  • Talk to farmers. Ask them what the community can do to help.

Source: Fred Maier, Save a Farm

 


Index of Articles

Beyond 'Green Shopping'
by Jerry Mander & John Cavanagh. Reprinted with permission from the September 24, 2007 issue of The Nation magazine. Portions of each week’s Nation magazine can be accessed at http://www.thenation.com.

Horse Power
by Dick Courteau. Excerpted with permission of Orion magazine September/October 2007 issue.

Hurting a Small Farm Near You
Reprinted with permission of Anthony Flaccavento. For more information visit Appalachian Sustainable Development.

Put farm subsidies out to pasture
by Brian M. Riedl. Reprinted with permission of the author.

One Thing to Do About Food: A Forum
by Wendell Berry. Excerpt reprinted with permission from "One Thing to Do About Food: A Forum,"which was part of the September 11, 2006 special issue of The Nation magazine. For subscription information, call 1-800-333-8536. Portions of each week's Nation magazine can be accessed at www.thenation.com.

Farm Economics 101

"You Kill It, You Eat It" and Other Lessons From My Thrifty Childhood by Jean Bethke Elshtain. Reprinted with the permission of the author and the John Templeton Foundation, www.Templeton.org

Study Shows Potential Economic Payoffs Tied to Healthy Eating from the Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture. Reprinted with permission. The full study may be read at:
www.leopold.iastate.edu/pubs/staff/files/health_0606.pdf

Mid-sized Farms in a Squeeze
Why Worry About the Agriculture of the Middle? A White Paper for the Agriculture of the Middle Project
by Frederick Kirschenmann (reprinted with permission). The white paper included below originally appeared in the July 2004 issue of Juliens Journal. To support their initiatives on behalf of agriculture in the middle, please visit their website at www.agofthemiddle.org.

A Plea for “d”emocracy
The letter by Amalie Lipstreu printed below appeared in the Summer 2006 newsletter of the Ohio Ecological Food & Farm Association (OEFFA). Posted with the permission of The Farmland Center www.thefarmlandcenter.org.

Water
“Since widespread irrigation began in the 1950s, the Ogallala has sustained a net loss of as much as 120 trillion gallons — 11 percent of its original volume. One entire Lake Erie, plus a little. Gone... (Quoted with the permission of William Ashworth)

Charlotte's Webpage: Why children shouldn't have the world at their fingertips
by Lowell Monke (reprinted with permission). This article originally appeared in the November/December 2005 issue of Orion magazine, 187 Main Street, Great Barrington, MA 01230, 888/909-6568, www.oriononline.org. For a free copy, please visit their website.

the ostrich rhumba and the realm of the inevitable
preserving farmland

Copyright Lynn R. Miller. Reprinted by permission of the author, originally appeared in the summer 2005 Small Farmer's Journal.

Watch for Signs
By Kristy Hebert, Farm and Dairy Reporter reprinted with permission, July 14, 2005 issue.

Letter from Larksong
by David Kline, Editor, reprinted with permission from Farming Magazine's Summer 2005 issue.

Think Globally, Eat Locally
by Jennifer Wilkins, December 18, 2004, reprinted with permission from the New York Times

A Secretary for Farmland Security
by Victor Davis Hanson (reprinted with permission) from an op-ed piece in the New York Times, December 9, 2004



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