Texarkana Gazette

A GROWING NEED

Microsoft tech manager says urban farming a side hustle to reduce family’s food expenses

- ALEXANDRA SKORES THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS

Jefferson Braga works 9-to-5 as a Microsoft customer success manager, but the rest of his day is dedicated to the massive urban farm in his Irving, Texas, backyard.

The 35-year-old bought his home and one next door just to raise peppers, lettuce, tomatoes and more with his family. His 7-year-old son Faris helps tend the crops planted in 90 beds in his two backyards.

It’s a side hustle that cuts costs for the Braga family and reduces produce runs to Whole Foods. His weekly harvests provide $500 to $1,500 of profit per bed in a year when the family sells its crops at the Dallas Farmers Market.

“You’re not going to be able to bring it all to market, but it’s going to be available for you,” Braga said.

Braga’s urban farm isn’t unusual in a diverse economic region like North Texas. Farming in city settings is a pastime that can bring in extra income, especially during periods of high inflation.

The number of farms on less than 10 acres in Texas has been rising steadily, with the state adding over 7,000 in a five-year period through 2017, according to the most recent data compiled by the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. A new count is underway this year.

The government doesn’t specifical­ly track urban farms, but since most are less than 10 acres, they would be included in that data, according to a national organizati­on devoted to sustainabl­e agricultur­e. In 2017, 11.2% of Texas farms were 9 acres or less.

Urban farming dates to 3500 B.C., when Mesopotami­an farmers began setting aside plots in growing cities, researcher­s at Aurora University reported. The practice sprouted elsewhere around the world, including the Peruvian landmark, Machu Picchu. Land and water scarcity forced ancient agricultur­al minds to think differentl­y about the urban environmen­t.

Urban farming today Today, urban farmers cultivate, process and distribute fruits and vegetables from large gardens in city and suburban neighborho­ods.

Brian Guse, director of the office of urban agricultur­e and innovative production at the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, said the department’s definition is broad and takes in everything from community gardens and rooftop farms to hydroponic, aeroponic and aquaponic facilities.

“Urban farms mean local, healthy food and nutrition access,” Guse said. “Part of resilient, local food systems, urban farms are sustainabl­e models that empower communitie­s.”

At Braga’s farm, he has created everything on his own.

He used the inside of one of the two properties he owns to create his own refrigerat­or with an in-unit air conditione­r he tuned up to cool the produce before market. In his backyard, he uses everyday household appliances, like a washing machine, to create a system that will wash the produce and let it dry. It’s his own personal “harvest station.”

“I’m an IT guy,” Braga said. “I love systems. It’s my main passion.”

The cost to start an urban farm is like any other business, said Azlan Zahid, assistant professor of controlled-environmen­t agricultur­e engineerin­g at the University of Texas A&M’S Agrilife Extension.

It’s hard for Braga to determine how much he has invested since starting to farm, but he estimates it’s over $100,000. He said many micro-level farms begin by spending around $5,000 in the first year.

But the return is up to 10 times higher per square foot, he said.

“If you grow in the field versus in a greenhouse, this can be up to 10 times more dollars per square foot compared to the same crop grown in the field,” he said.

Being close to the consumer is key because it cuts down on travel and transporta­tion costs, Zahid said.

Guse said he works with urban farmers on how to set aside space to sell or share their produce with the community on a regular basis. Growing locally

Jeff Raska, horticultu­ral director and master gardener volunteer coordinato­r for Dallas County, has helped run a 12-acre urban farm in Garland. The farm grows on asphalt.

“These models are much easier,” Raska said. “We can grow a lot more food; we can almost double the amount of food in a raised bed situation than we can in the ground.”

Raska said the farm concentrat­es nutrition for the crops in small patches rather than a big field of land.

In a partnershi­p with Dallas County, Texas A&M Agrilife Extension Service mobilized the Texas master gardener volunteer network as a way to combat local food insecurity by teaching residents about vegetable farming on a small scale.

The partnershi­p inspired urban farming across the county and provides food for several Dallas-area homeless shelters. Fruit and vegetables planted at the location include tomatoes, peppers, okra and onions.

“What if each county property that is empty had one of these on it? What if we could do that?” Raska said.

The Garland farm can produce 8,000 pounds of fruits and vegetables in a year with its seven demonstrat­ion gardens, an orchard and a vineyard. Urban growers can work with the USDA for resources on how to finance and promote their gardens.

“Urban agricultur­e plays an important role in growing fresh, healthy food, often where grocery stores are scarce,” Guse said. “They provide jobs and increase sustainabi­lity and resiliency in the local food system.”

It’s systems like Dallas County’s and Braga’s that could change the way people view agricultur­e and get their produce.

“Most importantl­y, people in urban areas can support their local food system — and the farmers — in their own city,” Guse said. “It doesn’t get much more local than that.”

 ?? (Liesbeth Powers/ Dallas Morning NEWS/TNS) ?? Jefferson Braga picks a leaf of sorrel from the greens his family grows at their urban farm in Irving, Texas.
(Liesbeth Powers/ Dallas Morning NEWS/TNS) Jefferson Braga picks a leaf of sorrel from the greens his family grows at their urban farm in Irving, Texas.
 ?? (Smiley N. Pool/dallas Morning NEWS/TNS) ?? Jefferson Braga, bottom right, works in his family’s urban farm in Irving, Texas.
(Smiley N. Pool/dallas Morning NEWS/TNS) Jefferson Braga, bottom right, works in his family’s urban farm in Irving, Texas.

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