140. The Food Bank is Harvesting Solutions to San Antonio’s Hunger

This week on bigcitysmalltown, we examine the role of food sustainability and local agriculture at the San Antonio Food Bank—an organization best known for feeding more than 100,000 people each week, but less recognized as one of the city’s largest farming operations.
Host Cory Ames sits down with Mitch Hagney, Director of Food Sustainability at the San Antonio Food Bank, to discuss how the Food Bank is rethinking traditional emergency food services through innovative farming practices and climate-adapted crops. With more than 70 acres under cultivation, including fields at Mission San Juan and the Food Bank’s main campus, Hagney and his team are growing millions of pounds of fresh produce while addressing long-term food security for the region.
They discuss:
• The origins and evolution of the Food Bank’s farming initiative
• The challenges and advantages of agriculture in San Antonio’s climate and soils
• Why the Food Bank invests in drought-tolerant crops like figs, cactus, and amaranth
• San Antonio’s underutilized potential for urban agriculture and perennial food forestry
• The broader implications of building a resilient regional food system in a fast-growing city
• Opportunities and limitations for organic and regenerative farming across Texas
This conversation explores what it means for a city like San Antonio to build a sustainable and secure food future—connecting health, culture, land use, and community resilience.
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Welcome to Big City, Small Town, the show about the people that make San Antonio go grow. I'm Corey Ames, your host this week as we're bringing you a conversation with Mitch Hagney, director of food sustainability at the San Antonio Food Bank. The Food bank is widely known for serving more than 100,000 people each week. But fewer realize that it's also one of the largest farmers in our city, cultivating over 70 acres of land from its own campus to the historic fields at Mission San Juan.
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Mitch leads that work, growing millions of pounds of produce for San Antonio families, experimenting with resilient crops like figs, cactus and amaranth, and reminding us that food security starts close to home.
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In this interview, Mitch shares the challenges of farming in South Texas. He the promise of crops adapted to our climate and why rethinking our foodshed could shape a healthier, more resilient future for San Antonio. Here's my conversation with Mitch Hagney. So I'm Mitch Hagney. I'm director of food sustainability for the San Antonio Food bank, which means a couple things, but the primary thing is that I get to lead our farm team. We have a team of five farmers and then an army of volunteers who come and help us consistently on two different properties. We have 25 acres here at the San Antonio Food bank, and we have about 50 acres that we cultivate on at Mission San Juan, which is a national park site. I have been farming for quite a while in many different places. I have been in San Antonio for 16 years or so, and I own a hydroponic farm called Local Sprouts. It is also a food hub with food manufacturers like coffee roasters and food truck commissary. I have worked with the Food Policy Council of San Antonio for many years. I was the president for seven years, working on food insecurity measures, urban agriculture initiatives, and I've farmed in a bunch of other places, Massachusetts, Costa Rica, Kentucky. And I really find San Antonio to be fertile ground to grow. Well, there's a lot that we'll get into there, starting first with leading the farm team at the Food bank, because I don't imagine that that is something that many folks can say throughout the United States of comparable institutions.
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So when did that start the farming initiative with the San Antonio Food Bank? And are you the first one to hold this role? No. The San Antonio Food bank has had a farm program program since 2012. And there was a lot of foresight in the institution here to acquire land behind the warehouse here, which actually is historic farmland in its own right. It is part of a larger area of land in San Antonio that was farmed by a Belgian family, the Van der Wahleys, for almost a century. So has been cultivated kind of many, many times. The farm work as a food bank was initially set up to make sure that we had a steady supply of produce as an institution, but also to connect individuals in the city to agriculture. As agriculture gets further and further away, it's important to ground people's experiences in food connected somewhat with the land. There have been several directors of that farming program. Mike Persine is actually one of the initial Vanderwalles. He was the first head farmer for the food bank, and there have been several since as well, who have each done a great job in their own right. Something interesting happened in 2016, which is that the National Park Service, as it was expanding Mission San Juan by purchasing some former residential areas to conserve more of the park area and the historic agricultural land around the mission.
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They knew that they wanted some agriculture to take place on that site.
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They just didn't have the means to be able to produce themselves. And so the Food bank and National Park Service created this really interesting collaboration to be able to leverage this historic farmland.
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So now our food bank manages acreage here, but we also manage acreage on the oldest annual farmland in the city of San Antonio. That's really incredible, and I'm sure something that many folks myself, until I chatted with you, didn't know, but can you talk about Morrison? You mentioned this briefly. The role of farming, of the agricultural programs for the food bank in the greater means of how the food bank serves its, I think, 100,000 families every single week, say a little bit more for us as to how that fits into the bigger picture. So, as mentioned earlier, the strategy or the language that we try to use to think about what our role is, is to provide food for today, food for tomorrow, food for a lifetime.
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Our farm produces nutritious crops. We generate those organically for food for today. So we feed the line with the highest possible produce. The same quality produce that would go to the most gourmet restaurants in San Antonio or Whole Foods. Those are going to families that really need it. And so hundreds of thousands of pounds, millions, over the course of the farm program at the food bank, have directly gone out to distribute that food. That's a very reliable source of really high quality product to be able to get out to those families. If there are price changes elsewhere in the country or the world that affect our ability to get that really nutritious product. We are somewhat insulated from that because we're able to generate a portion of not the majority, but a portion of that produce ourselves. So that's something that's quite significant.
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We also, at the same time, are able to connect mentally the relationship between food and the land for the people who are in the city. We know that kids who are around cultivated environments, if they see a carrot growing, they're more likely to eat a carrot. If you can connect agriculturally with food, then you're going to consume healthier products over the course of your lifetime. So it's an amazing nutritional intervention. And it's also really important, as we think about what foods are going to be economically viable moving forward, that you can conceptually connect where that food is coming from. And something else that we work on really hard as a farm team is to focus on crops we think are going to be really productive over the course of the next 50 or 100 years. We know that conditions are changing. We know that droughts are becoming more intense, that heat spells are very intense, soils can be very degraded. And so we as a nonprofit can choose to cultivate things that we think are going to be forward looking. So we've planted large volumes of nopal cactus, for example, or figs. We're looking into grain programs like amaranth that we know are going to be drought tolerant. Different crops that we think are well adapted, we can take on some risk, try to cultivate those, integrate them into our offerings so that as time moves on, other farmers might be able to learn from that example and adopt what succeeds and avoid maybe what doesn't succeed as much. Well, I'd love to dive into that further as to what is the environment like of farming and cultivating food in San Antonio. Like, what's something that laymen like myself certainly wouldn't understand about what it requires and what's unique about San Antonio area. But also I think maybe what's unique about San Antonio, this community, historically, our relationship to agriculture. San Antonio has some real benefits when it comes to crop cultivation. And it has some real challenges.
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We don't have huge volumes of vegetable production around our city. There are other parts of Texas that have a lot more. Around the Valley, there's also an area of Texas called the Winter Garden. And then there's huge areas, obviously in Mexico. There's reasons for that. Our climate is very challenging. Our summers are very, very intense.
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We have a benefit in that you can grow year long here, but you have to be quite selective about what you're cultivating, it's very challeng grow tomatoes in this region, for example, now more so than it even used to be. And perhaps there are other regions of the country where those crops are better suited. Our soils, if you're further away from river areas, can be fairly thin, and our rainfall is relatively minimal. So you must irrigate if you're going to produce any large volume of crops. That irrigation can be challenging.
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It can use a lot of water, which can be expensive. It can use a lot of materials like drip line, which can also be expensive. And it requires some real technical know how to be able to do that installation and maintenance efficiently. But we also have some real advantages. The fact that we only have a couple freezes per year means that our winters are relatively productive. The fact that we do have some rivers in our region so that our soils, some of our soils are quite rich, that's quite a large asset. And some of our native plants here are actually very edible and delicious. Pecans evolved right around San Antonio. Nopal and prickly pears evolved in the same place. Chili pequins. There's lots of different things that our region is well adapted to be able to produce just based off of what perhaps indigenous peoples propagated and what is just naturally here. And so we have a lot of natural food assets if we're willing to leverage those. But they won't look exactly like the annual tomato that our supermarket tells us is what our cuisine might look like. So over the course of maybe this last year, what's been the most productive crops for y'? All? We have really, really good experiences with squash, in particular our butternut squash. There's some varieties that we're able to produce all through the summer that were intensely productive. We got about£20,000 out of a two acre plot that we were able to put down. That's a good yield for an organic production, and that's our summer production. There's other things that are really productive during that time as well. Okra, eggplant. Summer is one season for us, but winter is even more productive. We are getting huge volumes of cabbages and brassicas in general, which includes cauliflower, broccoli, brussels sprouts, kohlrabi, kale, Swiss chard, all of those. Incredibly productive through the wintertime. And root vegetables, things like onions, beets, turnips. And we're actually very, very good at growing radishes. Because we grow organically. We don't use herbicides, so we can struggle a little bit with weed pressure. One really Nice thing about radishes is they grow so fast you can actually outpace the weeds. And so we have a large harvest coming this week, actually. What have been the greatest challenges for you to step onto this acreage when you first started the position?
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That's a reasonable amount. And you've been mostly in urban farming in your career, at least in San Antonio, as far as I understand it, and even closet hydroponic systems with local sprout. So when you started the position, 75 acres, what were some of the biggest challenges for you to understanding the land and working with it most productively? Farming at scale is fundamentally different than gardening at a small scale. And that's especially true in terms of what supplies you're going to need, ways to most efficiently utilize your labor, and ways to leverage your equipment effectively. So we utilize tractors, for example, we do some tilling, we put down drip line irrigation, and there's no way to weed by hand at the volume that we're playing with. We knew that we did not want to leverage herbicides and large volumes of pesticides. We knew, especially if we're growing on park conditions like at Mission San Juan, and when we're directly distributing what we grow to families, we want to be as organic as possible. And, and transitioning from being able to leverage those chemicals to not requires a lot of really specific production styles. So one thing that we've gotten a lot better at, that we struggled quite a bit at the beginning, was how can we manage these weeds mechanically, at scale, without taking out all of our plants, but also managing enough of those weeds that we can actually get a good yield at the same time. It will be a lifelong learning process, but we are getting much better at those techniques over time by getting precision in the tractor implements that we utilize to go around those crops to try to remove what we don't like as much. Long term, we really want to leverage cover crops to replace the seed bank of weeds that we don't really like as much with plants like oats and peas that we can terminate at the right time just before we're able to plant so that we're able to suppress those, those other, those other plants.
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The key for us is, I think, the key for the food system in general, which is we want to think perennially as opposed to in a single season when we're growing trees.
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Like, we just planted a five acre fig orchard. We're planning on planting a plum orchard this spring. We already have a really successful peach orchard. You really have to think long term, not just how Can I maximize my irrigation or my cultivation this time?
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But how can I continue to push that forward for multiple years at a time?
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That's obvious for trees, it's very important for our annual crops as well. So when we're thinking about COVID cropping and rotating our crops from one place to another and avoiding herbicides and protecting our soils, it's not about your yield for one season at a time. It's about how you're able to create land that will be able to produce for you over a long period. And I think for the food system in general, that same transition is what we ultimately need to get some resilience and stability is not to just extract as much as we can for this season, but to make sure that we're sowing the seeds and increasing the fertility of the ground to protect the food supply as we move forward. Transitioning a bit more broadly to talk about the food system in San Antonio, not just what's being produced at the food bank. You've talked a lot about this with your work at the Food Policy Council. I'm curious, where do you feel like San Antonio's greatest opportunities are for securing our food system? And yeah, let's start there. Where would be on you on a list of priorities if something were to change or adapt about San Antonio and our relationship to urban farming? Because the farms at the food bank are quite close in proximity to city center, where would you begin? We have great assets in terms of the land that's available. So just in terms of city owned properties that potentially could be leveraged for urban agriculture, we did a study with a group at Stanford called the Natural Capital Project to utilize satellite images to determine how much city owned acreage is potentially viable for cultivation.
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And we found about 16,000 acres. That's really big. That's bigger than certain other cities in the United States just on their own. Urban farms are really challenging, I think, to do at scale. I think that you need equipment like tractors, you need efficiencies that come with the economies of scale.
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But we really think that food forests and perennial trees are great assets, not just for food production, but for providing other environmental services like urban cooling water infiltration at the same time. So if I saw an easy opportunity for us, it's to look at things like floodplain areas that aren't great avenues for residential or commercial development. And consider what if those are pecan orchards or for figs or other relatively low maintenance orchard sites that would be able to produce multiple cross cutting benefits at the same time, including food so that's one just in terms of materials. Culturally, we are so close to Mexico that I think we have an opportunity to steer our culinary environment towards more resilient foods. Mexico has this fabulous tradition of growing and eating cactus, for example, an extremely resilient crop, leveraging different protein sources like insects, Thinking about really resilient and sustainable foods as a culinary opportunity, not a constraint. I think San Antonio's creativity gets us to be able to move in that direction in a way that other cities will ultimately be quite jealous of because we're able to take advantage of.
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Of our lands and our climate in beautiful ways. What do you think is, like, the realistic impact of taking, say, that research that was done with the group out of Stanford? We're not going to cultivate 16,000 acres, obviously. And there's also this very big issue we have in the United States, the housing crisis. And so I'm sure much of that will become residential, if that, you know, thinking far out, what do you think is one, realistic, but two, the impacts of actually taking some sort of action on this. Like, what would be a different experience of San Antonio for the community? Like, what does a greater security in our food supply chain mean for the community, as well as some of those ancillary benefits, you know, what trees can provide for the community with the perennial food, forestry. What would we be experiencing that we otherwise aren't in this moment by having that underutilized acreage? So urban agriculture in general is never going to be able to solve all of hunger in a city, particularly in a city like San Antonio that's growing this rapidly. It can provide some baseline volume of food, maybe up to 5% of consumption in a region. But urban agriculture is just part of the agriculture in general that the city can rely on. It's very easy for folks to understand watersheds because water drops in one location and it's easy to watch it flow. But foods move in similar ways. And thinking about the food shed of San Antonio, I think is pretty important. If we can connect urban agriculture as a city conceptually for. For kids, for people who are moving into new workforce development training programs to allow them to farm, it doesn't necessarily have to be on public land or in your backyard. Regionally, there are opportunities for cultivation.
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There's also opportunities for ranching. There's opportunities for trapping wild hogs, for thinking about food resources in a broader way as a food shed, not just as a city. The boundaries of San Antonio are not the most important ways to think about how things are moving in and out of the city. We need to think about regionally. How is food in Bernie? How is food in Castroville? How is agriculture in those regions affecting food supply here? Because ultimately, we need to be able to produce regional product to increase the resiliency of our community. We know that there will continue to be international crises that affect the price of those products. And as those crises occur, they can affect the prices of food that will make it very challenging to have good.
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That will also affect the nutrition that's available. So products that stay good for a long time are often not as nutritious. We want to make sure that we have access to good produce in order to maintain better health outcomes, reduce diabetes and obesity. So when I think about producing as a food shed and even producing as a food bank, we're trying to make sure that we are healthy and we are economically viable for the next 50, 100 years after that.
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Because if we don't invest in a resilient type of agriculture in our region, then food banks are going to have too large a job to even be able to process on their own. And so shoring up regional farmers, regional soil production, regional food availability, all of that is necessary to shorten the line ultimately and provide food for a lifetime. And so, I mean, we talked about some of the tactics, but maybe the will or more of, like, where action needs to be taken in the greater ecosystem of San Antonio for us to secure the future of our food in our region. Is it, you know, encouraging more young people to pursue farming and agriculture as perhaps a profession? Is it something strictly coming down to the city, providing greater incentive to perhaps cultivate land within the city limits? Like, where do you see those levers besides the tactics of actually doing it, Cultivating more land, how do we execute on that? We need more farmers, there's no question about that. We also need to be able to protect, farm, and conserve farmland. Between 2017 and 2022, almost a million acres of Texas farmland, farm, and ranch land was lost.
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That's pretty challenging when there's only 23 million acres to start from. Lost to what? Lost to residential development, Lost to commercial encroachment, Lost to the failed economics of the farms themselves. So things that we can do to intervene, There are local policy, things that we can do to leverage land to plant, to make it easier to start urban farms and to start regional farms. There's culinary practices that we need to take.
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If you are a cook, a home cook that wants to make a difference, showcase resilient crops, showcase figs and nopales and Lots of different products that we know are going to continue to be viable as time goes on. And show your friends, make them delicious, innovate recipes that can become a unique culinary environment. We need to value what is grown regionally. So if you have to pay a small surcharge for organically produced or locally produced products in order to invest in that person being in the future for the next 10 years, I think that's an investment worth making. And go participate in farming, go to a pick your own strawberry patch, engage with those farmers, meet them, learn them, become part of the community, become part of the food shed.
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As opposed to only trying to source food from centralized locations that are getting that product from far away.
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How important do you feel like. And maybe you could offer some basic definition is organic versus non organic for farms in our area? And maybe the feasibility, I mean, I think I'm like, I wish all food was organic for one. But you someone who has on the ground experience, what is the practicality of that? And then maybe even venturing into new territory of more of like a popular buzzword in sustainability circles of regenerative organic. So I'm curious what you think about that spectrum there and what are the impacts of opting for maybe as a consumer's perspective, you know, one versus the other, or likewise, you know, whether you're at the farmer's market or just at the grocery, being able to understand what the differences are between who you're procuring your produce from. At a basic level, organic production means that you are not utilizing synthetic herbicides, pesticides, fungicides, in order to cultivate your product. In practice, that gets quite confusing and conventional, which is what we call the alternative to organic.
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We owe a lot to large scale conventional production.
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In the 1950s, new chemicals and agricultural production techniques vastly increased the yields, leveraging mechanical and scientific breakthroughs that occurred during World War II. When World War II ended and the workforce returned, both scientifically and in terms of actual manpower, we hit the ground running. We really increased our yields and we consolidated those farms. Family farms closed down as farming became more of a large corporate production and prices of foods dropped.
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There was in fact an overproduction of food such that we started to feed corn to cattle, for example, rather than leveraging grass as the primary feedstock. We got used to that system.
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We got used to really cheap food that we were overproducing in pretty destructive ways. But at the same time, that was not the most hungry time because the price of food was lower for Americans than it has been per capita for almost any people in the history of the world and still in the United States, our per capita food pricing is lower than almost any other place. Even though inflation feels like to us these prices are out of control. If you go to anywhere else in the world because of their agriculture production, it's more expensive, but it didn't come without a cost. Organic production gave us an alternative away from large scale pesticide uses that have really dramatically decreased insect populations. They have poisoned rivers. Large scale synthetic fertilizer use has affected riverways and ultimately coastal ecosystems. Because nitrogen effluence causes algal blooms, it causes big challenges for oxygen levels in those aquatic ecosystems that can cause large fish, fish die offs. That nitrogen fertilizer runoff can also volatilize into the air and is one of the most powerful greenhouse gases, even more powerful than methane, which itself is more powerful than carbon dioxide. And large scale herbicide we know has had serious health effects. Glyphosate, for example, which is what Roundup is, the science is relatively conclusive that it does increase cancer rates when used in large volumes in agricultural communities. And agriculture workers, whether those are Anglo farmers that have historically worked in the Great Plains region or in the valley in Texas through California, primarily low income Latino, often temporary worker migrants, they're experiencing the brunt of what those health effects are. Organic gives us an imperfect move away from those systems where you're using many, many fewer herbicides, fewer pesticides, fewer fungicides to decrease the impact of those. But if you were to mandate from the top today that only organic production is possible, the price of food would skyrocket and hunger would really be exacerbated pretty quickly. It's on us to figure out, I think internally what is our personal relationship to those things, how much would we like our individual purchasing to affect those as an economy and as a community to think about what economically viable alternatives look like. There are transitions towards more controlled environment agriculture systems like hydroponics, which don't leverage pesticides or herbicides because they grow in very different conditions, they are very expensive to build.
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These farms are very expensive in terms of capital outlay. And so making them viable with soil based conventional farms will continue to be very challenging.
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Certain crops, they're already doing fairly well. Large scale greenhouse tomato production and hydroponics in West Texas and Arizona are at real scale that's been economically viable for about 15 years. Leafy green production, it's getting closer. But getting away from conventional corn production towards controlled environment corn production, it's just not going to happen. But drones Robotics, precision sensing, precision execution of these things may decrease the waste of many.
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Much fewer herbicides, much fewer pesticides, for example. As a country, we should really be investing in ways to continue to produce these things at scale, leveraging our technologies really effectively. To tie it off a little bit here, Mitch, I'm curious to talk a bit about water and your thoughts on its availability and access in San Antonio.
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Is there any different way that you think about our relationships to water as it relates to agriculture within the San Antonio area?
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Should we think about that in any particular way that we might not be already?
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The reason why San Antonio is where it is is because agriculture was viable due to springs and rivers. And so thinking about the future viability of San Antonio requires that whatever foodstuffs our city relies on continue to have some durable volume of water access moving forward. Even at Mission San Juan, where we are leveraging historic infrastructure, the acequia that's on site, that acequia is affected by regional weather patterns and the availability of water in the San Antonio River. Legally, we have access to water coming out of that river, and we will as long as there is water in the San Antonio river, which there will be. But in general, the effects of increased and prolonged drought make it more challenging to cultivate in general, but they give us a real opportunity to think about ways to cultivate much more efficiently. There are certain crops we've mentioned already that are more resilient to drought over time. Figs and nopal being just two of those. Drip line irrigation is the transition away from flood type irrigation that we used to use. Drip line irrigation is much more precise. And as we move forward, water sensors that go in those individual fields are going to be able to determine where those locations are over time as well. We need to manage that water effectively and we need to individually make choices for where we think that water should go.
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Are lawns worth having our crops, our most and highest, our best and highest use for those water systems, or do we want to try to only use controlled environment agriculture systems that are going to have enclosed cycles of water? I think we're going to have some interesting conversations moving forward. We know that some volume of climate change is happening. We know that we're going to have to make some difficult choices.
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I think your question is an important one that we're not going to avoid entirely the conditions that are going to make previous production techniques more difficult. The question is, what production techniques do we want to leverage? Which ones are we comfortable with and which ones do we hope for so that then we can make those investments to move towards in the future. And do you see there being any way in which agriculture, given its size and scale both regionally and then state in United States, can make an impact on the changing conditions? Like are these strategies, whether it's organic or otherwise, or particular ways in which we work with water or think about the retention of water, Are there things that can be done to help maybe mitigate the severity of these conditions over time? I think we can frame agriculture in the future as producing net more in the future than it does today, using less water, probably fewer workers that have unlivable conditions. Everything about agriculture in our region can be better if we choose to invest in systems that we find replicable and ethical. It requires changing what's on our plate, requires us thinking seasonally, and it requires thinking about agriculture as land use with other aspects. So we know certain regions of our community are going to flood. We know that certain trees adapted to be able to withstand occasional floods. Pecans, for example, evolved to be on riverbanks. If we decided to allocate flood prone areas to be agricultural, not only would you get more production, but you would be able to reduce the tragedy of when that flooding does occur. But it requires us to be proactive about anticipating those problems that we're quite confident are going to emerge. So I'm excited about the prospect of reframing our culinary culture here around what will be viable.
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I'm hoping that it doesn't require multiple shocks to our prices and our system before we're willing to make those adaptations. Because it's going to be an exciting process to choose what the culinary region in San Antonio is going to look like in connection with nature. We have to be connected with the soil. We have to be connected with where that food is coming from. And it's an inspiring thing if you're able to harvest crops from your own garden and bring them to your kitchen. There's something that's fundamentally validating about that. It feels really amazing. We as a city need to think that same way about how we're pulling from our food shed and bringing it into our city's kitchens. And do you personally know of any chefs or restaurants that yet you're quite excited about within San Antonio who are taking this type of approach?
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Oh yeah, there's amazing farm to table folks in San Antonio.
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Some of my favorites are Steve McHugh from Cured, Elizabeth Johnson at Farmtable, Jeronima Lopez at Hotel Emma. And we have just an amazing culinary tradition already. In terms of being creative, I would Pay as much attention to those folks as I would pay attention to families in the south side that are leveraging figs that are growing in the neighborhood, that are leveraging nopales and tunas. Because some of the best things in San Antonio don't come from a gourmet restaurant. They come from the street corner in the same way as the rest of the world. When they're really paying attention to what's available, it's not the most expensive product. It's the one that they're able to source effectively, play with over time and perform effect. And I think that our food bank, our region, is increasingly able to draw connections between that agriculture and those culinary products. I love what you say about reframing it into an opportunity and a very exciting challenge because I think that there's a real interesting balance in agriculture as it seems how we move forward, because there is rightfully so a lot of previous resistance to what was thought of as conventional farming, at least in, you know, people are in the spaces of sustainability or organic farming.
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And so for good reason. But it is, you know, you mentioned the sensor, water sensors for one. It's this balance of high tech and as well, some ancient wisdom and understandings of how to know and work with land.
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But then as well, I think that there's just a litany of opportunities to bring food closer to home. You know, whether that's something that provides food security for the entirety of the San Antonio community, that's one thing. But to just have people and young people, children specifically, I think experience that on a. On a day to day basis more so I think that's very impactful. I mean, my son will eat anything off of a tree or bush that we grow in our yard, but he's the pickiest eater just out of the fridge, you know, and that is. So he'll just try it. He'll just want to know, what is that? Oh, it's a peach. And he loves it, Absolutely devours it. And so you see that firsthand. You're like, it's so impactful and to see where food comes from.
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So I love what you say about that. It is an incredible opportunity. I believe it. There's some sense that there's sacrifice, but I really love the framing that, no, there's a more abundant future ahead. You know, if we really buy in, I think we should to the challenges that are before us, because I think it can be a very exciting time. And as you mentioned, some of the chefs in our town have already done so. But one last Question for you, Mitch, to wrap up maybe along these lines, if you could wave a magic wand and have everyone in the greater San Antonio community start to understand one thing that you feel like you know or understand about agriculture and our food systems here in San Antonio, what would you hope that other people took with them and start started to understand themselves? If we are what we eat, and we are all the cells in your body over the course of seven years will cycle through.
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You are only in existence because of what you're able to consume, then you might as well eat your region because you are an expression of this place. We have a really cool crop that we're playing around with at Mission San Juan that has a lot of ancient wisdom, but it has a lot of potential for the future. So amaranth was cultivated at large scale by the Aztecs. It was some say up to about 50% of the calories that were produced from the people in central Mexico at that time. When the Spanish came in, they decided that they didn't really want much amaranth to be produced for various reasons. They thought that it was associated with pagan rituals, which it was in a couple different contexts. But they also probably wanted the residents of this region to be consuming western crops. So wheat and ultimately some version of corn, which was native to this area but ended up being produced at large scales in very different ways in the Great Plains, became the foundational staple crops of this region. Over the course of the last 300 years or so, peoples from this region ended up having to change their diets away from things that they had adapted to, towards this Western European diet.
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At the same time, we see diabetes rates and obesity rates increasing.
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When those same people consume more amaranth and nopal and mesquite, for example, we see those chronic disease rates decrease because we are expressions of the place where we are. I think there's. If you're proud to be a Texan, if you're proud to be a San Antonion, there's no better way to celebrate that than to take and cultivate what is here and let it express itself through you and through your actions. And knowing that you want yourself and your people to continue in the future, you should make sure that that agriculture is one that will continue to be viable, one that is resilient to the conditions where we are. The droughts that we know are coming, the water scarcity that we know is coming, and the beautiful 300 some days of sunshine are able to produce something that you can then push out through your own behavior and actions. All right. I think that's a fitting place for us to end. Mitch, thank you so much for taking the time. I really appreciate it.
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Thanks for listening to or watching this episode of Big City. Subscribe Small Town if you enjoyed it, please send it to a friend, share it with a colleague, helping us to keep telling San Antonio's most meaningful stories. And if you haven't yet, sign up for the San Antonio Something, my weekly newsletter where I share things to do, places to explore, and people to get to know in this city. Just head to coriames.com to subscribe. Also, be sure to check out Monday Musings, Bob Rivard's weekly newsletter at BigCity. Small Town.com Big City Small Town is brought to you by Weston Urban Building, the city our children want to call home, and by Geekdom, where startups are born and smart ideas become businesses. Thanks again.
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We'll see you next time.