Red Hook Farms: A Hub for Community, Food and Education
Red Hook Farms is a green oasis in the heart of Red Hook, Brooklyn, that provides much more than food to its surrounding community. The organization centers on providing youth with a space to learn about food and farming, to escape the stresses of urban living for a moment and build community. The 1.5-acre farm is one huge raised bed bordered with cement blocks and filled primarily with compost that produces an impressive amount of food for locals. We talk with the staff about their history, their work and the future of the farm. We filmed this profile as part of our Realizing the Promise of Urban Agriculture project which is a report and a series of online classes for aspiring urban agriculture practitioners. The video will also be featured in our free Plan Your Farm online course. To read the report visit: https://smallfarms.cornell.edu/projec... To learn more about our work or visit our free Plan Your Farm online course visit: https://smallfarms.cornell.edu/online...

Urban Community Composting: How to Build a Windrow

Sweet Land Vacuum Seeding and Growing Transplants

Why Small Farmers Are Disappearing | Joel Salatin

NYC Urban Farming Revolution: Inside the Most Innovative & Impactful Agriculture Projects

Foundations for Farming - Thermal Composting

How to Build an Air Prune Bed

Reiche Ernte auf minimaler Fläche | ARTE Re:

How Traore is Magically Growing Real Apples in Desert?

How This Urban Farm Creates 300,000 lbs of Compost by Hand

My Golden Retriever Heals a Terrified Rescue Kitten in Just 3 Meetings!

This Japanese Method Will Finally Fix Your Lawn Forever (No Fertiliser, No Sprinklers, No Scotts)

How a 1/8 Acre Garden Feeds a Family of 6 ALL YEAR!

Urban agriculture education: Red Hook Farms

I Visited a True Pasture Raised Egg Farm to Learn the Truth Behind Eggs

One Rule Compost

How China Turned Barren Desert Into Massive Farmland Producing Millions Tons of Food

Pour Cement into Pallets and see what most people don't even imagine happens! Creation Daily

Wisconsin Life | Will Allen

Marias Garten: Warum alle ihr Gemüse wollen | Doku

