
Leopardi,
24, a military brat originally of Texas and a University of Utah graduate, also
loves being close to the land and close to food. A former vegan, Leopardi now
eats animal products, but only from her boyfriend’s family ranch in Lehi or her
own chickens, ducks and bees she keeps in a backyard near Trolley Square. The
former resident of Boing House, an anarchist/community-service collective, is
passionate about environmentalism, social justice and food security.
She’s
farming an eighth of an acre spread between three backyards—owned by people who
are compensated with veggies—and one community garden plot, all on Salt Lake
City’s east side. She has 80 beds of 25 feet by two feet in which she grows 160
tomato plants of 20 varieties, about 20 varieties of carrots, 50 varieties of
greens and 40 unique species overall. She often works 16-hour days, has cramps
in her body that she’s never had before, and estimates that currently she’s
earning about $2 per hour, which doesn’t include the months of prep work. She’s
not complaining, though; she’s hopeful the coming years will get easier.
“The
first year is always supposed to be the hardest … but I should be able to pay
my rent,” she says with a smile. “You have to be really motivated to get up at
4:30 in the morning and work your ass off.”
She’s
off to a good start. She’s sold produce to local restaurants Pago, Lugano and
Stoneground Pizza, and collects food waste from Coffee Garden, Sage’s Cafe, Vertical
Diner and Cali’s Natural Foods to keep her compost heap fed. She sells at the
downtown and Sugar House farmers markets. She says about 60 percent of her work
is in the garden, 40 percent doing business things like marketing and sales.
Leopardi
uses a farming method known as SPIN, or small-plot intensive farming, a
high-yield, organic, urban-farming strategy developed by a pair of Canadians
about 20 years ago. SPINFarming.com, where farmers can congregate to share tips
with fellow SPIN farmers, says first-generation farmers, like Leopardi, are
attracted to SPIN because it “removes the two big barriers to entry—land and
capital.”
Well,
the barriers are lessened, but not eliminated. Leopardi used about $7,000 to
get started, some provided by Slow Food Utah as a grant, some borrowed from the
bank.
Leopardi’s
learning to loosen up. For example, initially she worked diligently to cut
spinach stems—sometimes 30 pounds at a time—so that they were relatively
uniform in length. Now, she lops off the stems with gusto—uniformity be damned.
“Everyday I’m learning to be more efficient and make it less work,” she says.
She
distributes crops to shareholders weekly through a community-supported
agriculture project that she started after learning she had way too much food
to sell at farmers markets alone. She now has 40 people subscribed to her
food-share program, with food for dozens more.
She’s
also stretching the palates of the local restaurant-goers. While many farmers-market
attendees seem to buy more pastries than vegetables, she says, the restaurants
she sells to enjoy an adventure. “Pago wanted to buy my craziest green, and
they loved it!” That spicy green, which has a hot-pink stem, was hong vit, a
member of the radish family.
It’s
been only six years since Leopardi first put spade to soil as an amateur
gardener; since then, she worked with Wasatch Community Gardens and a Mesa Farm
Market in Cainville. But she’s never worked harder than she is right now.
While
her tone and mannerisms still seem upbeat and positive, she’s honest about
occasional discouragement. “I’m back and forth all the time on whether it’s
worth it,” she says. “I think it is. I have to get idealistic about it again.”
To
do that, the environmental-studies and geography graduate reminds herself that
the industrial food system is “pretty much the biggest contributor of greenhouse
gasses and environmental degradation,” and that all of her shareholders live
within five to 10 miles of her gardens. She also accepts food stamps as
payment, so she’s providing fresh, healthy food to lower-income individuals who
often have less access to it. “I see this as a way of improving our local food
security. … [And] it’s rewarding to be so connected to the seasons.”
For
more information, go to BackyardUrbanGardens.com.