The Korea Herald

피터빈트

Agriculture and suburbia find common ground

By Korea Herald

Published : Aug. 27, 2014 - 20:20

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Lyndsay Luff, 6, of Pittsburgh, tosses a green pepper into the crate as she and her brother Brandon Luff, 12, pick vegetables at the Common Ground farm in Upper St. Clair, Pennsylvania, on July 31. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/MCT) Lyndsay Luff, 6, of Pittsburgh, tosses a green pepper into the crate as she and her brother Brandon Luff, 12, pick vegetables at the Common Ground farm in Upper St. Clair, Pennsylvania, on July 31. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/MCT)
PITTSBURGH ― Lyndsay Luff, 7, held out two salsa peppers as long as her hand. She smiled coyly and didn’t say a word, her eyes cast down at the first chilies she had ever picked. They sat loosely on her palms like miniature rolling pins.

A slim, bright-eyed woman stood beside her, nodding in approval. Just two years ago, Sue Myers and a smattering of other volunteers had settled on a 0.4-hectare slice of Upper St. Clair’s Gilfillan Farm, part of the Historical Society of Upper St. Clair., Pennsylvania’s 6-hectare parcel of land in the heart of suburbia. The group was incorporated last September as Common Ground Community Agriculture, a sustainable farming and educational nonprofit that gives 90 percent of its outputs to food pantries around town.

Since the closure of Bedner Farm last year, it has been the only working farm in Upper St. Clair.

Myers wore hoop earrings, tall galoshes and a faded Boston Red Sox cap. She squinted at a row of musk melons that would be harvested that afternoon, bound ― along with cabbage, lettuce, squash, zucchini and more ― for free distribution in a food-deprived part of Pittsburgh’s Mount Washington neighborhood.

That morning, as with almost every morning, Myers arrived at the farm at 7 a.m. She and Carole Ortenzo, 57, an intern from Pittsburgh’s Chatham University, started by checking the plants for bugs. From there, they proceeded to plant and weed, and instruct the volunteers who arrive every Tuesday and Thursday.

“This is a dream job,” Myers said. “Look at what I get to do every day.” Lyndsay and her 12-year-old brother, Brandon Luff, were sorting through green peppers in a wooden basket. Myers continued, “I get to watch kids pick peppers and taste food they’ve never tasted before.”

Before she became the full-time executive director of Common Ground’s entirely volunteer-run operation, Myers was a teacher. She worked both as an adjunct and a special-education assistant in different schools around the city, and it is clear that she hasn’t left the classroom far behind.

She glanced at Lyndsay and Brandon while she recounted this career switch. “This is my passion,” she said. “Teaching people about food.”

Thursdays are harvest days. This recent volunteer session (they run from 9 a.m. to noon) began with a tour of the farm’s historic grounds. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places, Gilfillan has all the trappings of a complete 1800s farm, from a spring house to an outhouse, a chicken coop to a pig pen.

Today, the site is largely absent of animals, save for the two “fierce” barn cats and the monarch butterflies. Common Ground recently installed two nest boxes in the hopes of attracting barn owls.

“I must ask that you don’t touch the cats,” Myers said as one brushed up against her legs.

(MCT Information Services)