María Inés Catalán was born in Santa Teresa, Guerrero, Mexico, in 1962. She immigrated to the United States in 1986 and picked broccoli and carrots in the Salinas Valley of California. Her father was also a migrant farm worker, but her grandfather had owned land that the family farmed in Mexico. Catalán’s life took a different turn when in 1994 she entered an organic farming training program at the Rural Development Center in Salinas. (This was an earlier incarnation of what is now known as ALBA, the Agriculture & Land-Based Training Association program). This incubator program helps farm workers become organic farmers by providing training in farming and marketing, and leasing them land.After graduating, Catalán became the first Latina...
Grace Palacio Arceneaux, a Mexican-American resident of Watsonville, California, was interviewed in ...
The first oral history we conducted for this project was with Bernard “Barney” Bricmont. On March 7,...
“Tiene que irse para sembrar” “You have to leave [home] in order to farm [at home].” This is a sayin...
María Luz Reyes and her husband, Florentino Collazo, run La Milpa Organic Farm on land they lease fr...
José Montenegro grew up in Providencia, a small farming community in the state of Durango, Mexico. A...
Nancy Gammons is both a longtime organic farmer and the manager of a weekly downtown farmers’ market...
Lippert tells the inside story of eight Mexican migrant workers at a farm that practices progressive...
Catherine Barr manages the Monterey Bay Certified Farmers’ Markets (MBCFM), a consortium that includ...
Jerry Thomas grew up in the Los Angeles area and attended college at San Fernando Valley College (no...
This two–part interview with Janet Brians and her son Grant Brians, conducted by Ellen Farmer on Jul...
As with many members of the organic farming movement, Zea Sonnabend’s passion for organic agricultur...
Fabiola Cabeza de Baca Gilbert, a New Mexico Cooperative Extension Service agent, was devoted to tea...
One of the most widely experienced and influential figures in California organic agriculture, Amigo ...
Born in Pacific Grove, the descendent of pioneers who came to California with the De Anza party in 1...
Roberta (Robbie) Jaffe grew up in New York in the 1950s, and moved to Florida when she was sixteen. ...
Grace Palacio Arceneaux, a Mexican-American resident of Watsonville, California, was interviewed in ...
The first oral history we conducted for this project was with Bernard “Barney” Bricmont. On March 7,...
“Tiene que irse para sembrar” “You have to leave [home] in order to farm [at home].” This is a sayin...
María Luz Reyes and her husband, Florentino Collazo, run La Milpa Organic Farm on land they lease fr...
José Montenegro grew up in Providencia, a small farming community in the state of Durango, Mexico. A...
Nancy Gammons is both a longtime organic farmer and the manager of a weekly downtown farmers’ market...
Lippert tells the inside story of eight Mexican migrant workers at a farm that practices progressive...
Catherine Barr manages the Monterey Bay Certified Farmers’ Markets (MBCFM), a consortium that includ...
Jerry Thomas grew up in the Los Angeles area and attended college at San Fernando Valley College (no...
This two–part interview with Janet Brians and her son Grant Brians, conducted by Ellen Farmer on Jul...
As with many members of the organic farming movement, Zea Sonnabend’s passion for organic agricultur...
Fabiola Cabeza de Baca Gilbert, a New Mexico Cooperative Extension Service agent, was devoted to tea...
One of the most widely experienced and influential figures in California organic agriculture, Amigo ...
Born in Pacific Grove, the descendent of pioneers who came to California with the De Anza party in 1...
Roberta (Robbie) Jaffe grew up in New York in the 1950s, and moved to Florida when she was sixteen. ...
Grace Palacio Arceneaux, a Mexican-American resident of Watsonville, California, was interviewed in ...
The first oral history we conducted for this project was with Bernard “Barney” Bricmont. On March 7,...
“Tiene que irse para sembrar” “You have to leave [home] in order to farm [at home].” This is a sayin...