Urban Edge. . . beautiful new homes at the edge
of a soybean field, North America.
In many ways, what lies ahead, what the future holds for us, is not so
much to be found
beyond some distant horizon, but rather directly underfoot, for, in many
respects, how we
husband and care for our soil -- much like how we nurture and
protect our young --
forms the basis of what is to come. And throughout the Great Plains of North
America,
there is much cause for concern. According to the American Farmland
Trust, " America
loses over one million acres of our fertile farmland every year to sprawling
cities and endless
suburbs.
[...] At this rate, in just 25 years America will lose an area of rich,
productive cropland
equal in size to all of New England! [...] Short sighted, destructive farming
techniques and
misguided government priorities are causing irreversible damage to many of
the farms that
remain. In fact, each year TWO BILLION TONS of fertile, irreplaceable topsoil
are lost
forever to erosion..." [...]
The mathematics of development are revealing: The average price for a new
family home
in North America is currently about
$350,000. The current
market price for a bushel (36.37 liters)
of soybeans is about
$4.85. That makes a
house equal about
72,165 bushels of
soybeans.
Now, the parcel of freshly planted land in the foreground of the photograph
is about
40 acres (+- 16 hectares) and might produce on a good year between
20 and 40 bushels
per acre. For the sake of our argument, at 30 bushels per acre, it would
take about sixty
years to grow that many soybeans. This sounds at first like a pretty fair
deal, were it
not for the fact that the farmer needs to make at least $5 a bushel just
to break even.
But, of course, if the farmer were to cash in on the current market
value of suburban
land going at, say, $5 to $10 thousand dollars an acre, he might then purchase
a house.
(Photograph was made Friday, the 7th of June, 2002)
| back to Picture/Poems: Central
Display | go to
P/P Photoweek: Archive
|
|
Map
|
TOC:
I-IV |
TOC:
V-VIII |
Image Index
|
Index
| Text Only
| Download
Page |
Newsletter
|
About
P/P |
About Cliff
Crego |
Photograph by Cliff Crego © 2002 picture-poems.com
(created:
VI.9.2002)