On Food: Farm + Food Lab’s micro-farm is growing ‘healing food’
The Farm + Food Lab in Irvine is home to a project that organizers say is Southern California’s first zero-waste urban “regenerative organic” farm.
Thanks to a $20,000 grant from Bank of America, Farm + Food Lab visitors can see how this micro-farm is making nutrient-dense vegetables in ways much of O.C. and Southern California can replicate.
The key to that success is the SoxxBoxx Gro System, an elevated tray containing rows of polypropylene socks filled with rich soil. The plants grow inside the socks within ideal conditions that retain water and keep cool temperatures even on hot days.
The trays come in 4 feet by 4 feet, 4 feet by 8 feet and 3 feet by 6 feet. A 4-by-8 tray would retail for around $1,000.
During a recent tour of the micro-farm, Erik Cutter, managing director for Alegría Fresh, which designed, owns and maintains the SoxxBoxx system, noted how it also sequesters carbon and blends organic, aeroponic and hydroponic practices. The plants grown have such a strong immunity system that they don’t require pesticides, Cutter added.
“If you ate vegetables like these, you wouldn’t be deficient,” he said. “That’s why I say we’re growing healing food.”
The micro-farm has been in place since January. Its most recent crop took about six weeks to grow.
“We’re thrilled to bring in new exhibits, a new demonstration and new technology that gives a better idea of what we can do,” said Nathan Gipple, senior director of Solutions for Urban Agriculture, an Irvine-based group that manages and programs the Farm + Food Lab.
The SoxxBoxx system can also be found in a Laguna Niguel senior community but the folks behind the micro-farm are looking to grow SoxxBoxx into many more locations.
“Imagine all these empty lots in Orange County with something like this,” said Shari Battle, Bank of America Orange County’s senior vice president, market manager.
For Bank of America, Battle added, the project helps achieve the bank’s environmental goals. It would also create sustainable, living-wage jobs for people tending and selling from their own SoxxBoxxes, she said.
SoxxBoxxes are so mobile that they could basically go anywhere, Gipple noted. “The flexibility of the model is really the exciting thing,” he added.
“You’re going to get healthier by eating anything in this dirt,” Cutter said.
IF YOU GO
What: SoxxBoxx Gro System at the Farm + Food Lab
Where: 14280 Cadence, Irvine (at The Great Park)
When: Tuesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Information: (949) 724-6247; cityofirvine.org
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Bradley Zint writes about food for TimesOC. Follow him on Twitter at @bradleyzint
For more news and features about Orange County, visit TimesOC.com or follow us on Twitter @timesocofficial.
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