
Above Photo: Hjulsjö 103 in Sweden is a de facto rural innovation hub. Gathered together here, for a meal of heritage potatoes and breads, are: an award-winning baker; the founder of a sustainable food lab; a farmer experimenting with agritourism; a telecoms designer interested in P2P rural networks; a nature reconnection service designer; an agroforestry researcher; a university professor of gastronomy and sustainability; the owner of an art farm; and the co-curator of a back-to-the-land summer course.
A new course in Sweden poses the question, âwhat will a self-sufficient HĂ€llefors Municipality taste like in 2030?â
Students on the course act like talent scouts. They search for unrealised food-growing potential across the region â people, unused land, forgotten traditions.
An example could be a farmer whoâs started to grow heritage wheat, but cannot find customers. Or a school teacher who wants to connect his students with a working farm.
A student might spot an abandoned field near her home and and explore new ways to grow food there. Another might develop snacks to sell to a mountain bike business in the forest.
At the end of each course, students pitch their ideas to real-world professionals â for example, chefs, farmers, or food production businesses.
Chef Paul Svensson, whoâs teaching on the course, is a âconnectorâ between the course and potential partners. The best ideas will be developed as product and service prototypes with help from Ărebro County and other local food system actors.
For course leader Annika Göran Rodell, a priority is to develop new collaborations between academia, municipality and business. She is optimistic that the best student proposals can generate new livelihoods or be developed into new companies.
The course prepares Orebro County for the near the future â but it also takes inspiration from the past.
Students explore what was grown or eaten 250 years ago â and how â and come up with new ways to grow, prepare and serve forgotten staple foods.
Mathias Lindberg, a local entrepreneur, has prepared the ground by âlooking in the rear view mirror. What did it look like here 250 years ago? We see a plate that was rich in fish, poultry and vegetables from the municipalityâ.
In this way, inspired by how people lived the end of the 18th century, students are enabled to compare that time with todayâs conditions. Students work on the gastronomic potential of unfamiliar or disliked foods â many of which used to be staples in local diets.
More recent history can also be an inspiration. In the early twentieth century, the area around HĂ€llefors was a mining region. As one local historian told this writer âback then, everyone grewâ.
On a pilot of the course last year in Grythyttan, students came up with new ways to cook roach fish. Roach is a delicacy in other countries, but has fallen out of favour in Sweden.
Students did not only develop new ways to serve roach. They also used the meal to celebrate the ecological restoration of the regionâs lakes.
Peas, too, were a staple crop for millenia before the global food system arrived. Making these staple crops delicious is an important contribution to food resilience.
Dr Magnus Westling, a noted expert on the history and potential future of the pea is working with the founder of a food lab, designer Corina Akner, on hummous made with yellow peas.
âWine people pay close attention to the âterroirâ where a grape is grownâ says Westling, âThe influence of climate, landscape, soil, and geology on how a wine finally tastes. We are developing a similar appreciation for cereals, or peas â and the new course is part of that innovationâ.
âWorking with food is a life-giving process. By training as chefs and sommeliers, our students play an active role in ecological restorationâ.
Hjulsjö 103
Magnus Westling is a chef with several hats. Together with his partner Marta Westling, a prize-winning baker (see photo) he also runs Hjulsjö 103 a small family run cider house, sourdough bakery and coffee roastery
âWith the Bergslagen forest as our closest neighbour, we explore what can be created out of a selected few, regionally-sourced productsâ, Marta explains. âThe grain, the apple, the cheese: they have longstanding history of cultivation and rich tasteâ
In their ongoing exploration of traditional food varieties, Marta and Magnus have learned about historical patterns of agriculture, meal cultures, craftsmanship, traditions, and biodiversity in food production and consumption.
Her constant search for new ingredients also brings Marta in contact with farmers across the region. She is also active in a growing network of fifty âreal breadâ bakers around the country.
In only a few years, Hjulsjö 103 has become a de facto rural innovation hub.
Non-Timber Forest Experiences
Christina Schaffer, at Swedenâs University of Agricultural Sciences, has been investigating an ecosystem-based approach to the forest economy for her PhD. Schafferâ applies an ecological vision to sustainable forest management. Her approach involves adopting the natural forest as a model, and creating a managed forest that helps maintain biodiversity.
Sweden used to have thousands of âforest farmersâ â and that tradition is emerging once again. Forest farming, silvopasture (grazing livestock), forest gardens, and alley cropping, can all be viable alternatives to a timber extraction economy, Schaffer has found.
As students in HĂ€llefors Municipality develop new uses for berries, leaves, elk, and boar, the hope is that their interest will encourage a new generation of forest farmers to try other experiments, too â by growing new kinds of nuts, fibers, and dyes.
âHistorically, forest farming was always multi-useâ Schaffer explains. She has concluded, now, that the economic category âNon-Timber Forest Productsâ could be much more varied than it is at present.
Back To The Land 2.0
Schaffer poses this potential as a challenge to designers on a summer course called Back To The Land 2.0.
Hosted by the design school Konstfack, in Stockholm, designers on the the six week course develop a variety of service and product ideas ideas to do with Non Timber Forest Experiences.
As these diverse experiments diversify, and deepen, the vision of a resilient cluster of municipalities on Ărebro County is coming into focus.
But itâs not not just a vision. By turning âwould-be-niceâ ideas into tangible prototypes and scenarios, design has shown that it can catalyse the emergence of new livelihoods and jobs. This turns the notion of a just transition from an aspiration into a practice.
A missing element in Back To The Land, until now, has been a âclientâ in the region, to whom the design proposals are given when each the course ends.
The Good Work In Urban-Rural
- Edible Food Forest
- Alternative Trade Networks
- School-Farm Biocantines
- Social and Care Farming
- Soil Care Workshops
- Non-Timber Forest Experiences
- Farm Hack Camps
- Farmer Live Streaming
- Cooperative Grain Networks
- Fibersheds and Leathersheds
- Nature Reconnection Tourism
- Ecological Restoration Camps
- Wetland Watershed and River Restoration
- Storying 0f Place
- Ecomuseums and Forest Schools
- Coders in the Countryside
- Folk High Schools
The cluster of initiatives described in this story are taking shape as that âclientâ. Together with Konstfack (which has just launched a new Design Ecologies Masterâs Programme )a discussion has started about the kind of platform, based in Ărebro County, would best support relationships among these actors and stakeholders, going forward.
The author publishes this **Back To The Land Reader** each year.
Source: Popularresistance.org