Are you interested in learning more about organic gardening practices or the history of our farm? Explore these resources that we have pulled together!
Farm Resources
History
It was a prophetic spring in 1998 when a group of students started a composting program, taking all the dining hall鈥檚 kitchen scraps and mixing them with mulch form the grounds department to make compost. Initial composting efforts were messy, and students would draw straws to see who would turn the compost with a pair of stilts they鈥檇 built for that very purpose. They ended up with rich, fertile compost and started planting beds and fruit trees in an empty lot in the southeast corner of campus. Soon students and folks from the Claremont area started gravitating towards the space, and it became a center for community, sustainable living and permaculture farming practice. However, the core group of founding students soon left Claremont for the summer, leaving the Farm to a self-appointed and (the first) dedicated farm summer intern. He watered the farm with one massive hand-made sprinkler, keeping the harsh, dry summer at bay. However, when the students returned the weeds had taken over and established themselves with thick, woody stalks all over the Farm. Getting the weeds cleared was a sweaty struggle that involved many broken tools and eventually a rented rototiller. But among the bramble and grass, there was a single tomato plant that had survived, and had born fruit to a single tomato fruit, small and ripe, it hung on the vine like a treasure. There was hope after all! The single tomato that survived was such a wild wondrous thing that the students were spurred to continue the project and keep working on the Farm.
The first few years mostly consisted of planting whole fields of clover to fix nitrogen and digging rocks out of the soil (the notorious 鈥淐laremont Potatoes鈥). The Farm community kept taking space and establishing its presence on campus. It became a locus for political activity, where students would gather to paint banners and amass before actions on campus. People were sleeping under a bush, cooking, making music, and generally living down at the Farm. The administration was unaware of the extent to which the land had been occupied and soon found themselves encountering a rich, vibrant community built around a now almost-farm in that abandoned corner of campus. It was supported under the guise of the Gorilla Farming Club and funded by the ASPC, the Associated Students of 麻豆传媒. Over concerns about safety and substance use, the Administration attempted to 鈥渞elocate鈥 the farm or shut it down entirely.
Thus began a long string of meeting between the students and the administration, with petitions, speeches and other actions that generally constituted the Save the Farm movement on campus. There was enough pressure from students, community and a few visionary faculty members that the school relented and allowed for the continuation of the Farm under a set of strict use guidelines. The Farm was eventually incorporated into the Environmental Analysis Program (EA) in 2005 with the hire of a part-time Farm Manager and the inception of the first full course taught at the Farm (EA 85). This class also began work on a second half of the Farm, which was originally known as the Academic Field.
In the throes of this period, students became inspired by Nader Khalili鈥檚 superadobe earth dome designs they were exposed to as part of a sustainable building class, and began a project to build the farm鈥檚 own dome. In the summer of 2002, the first earth dome was constructed, built to be small enough to not require permitting from the City of Claremont. However, the Administration still had lingering safety concerns about the structure and fenced it off and bulldozed it on the first day of class in the Fall of 2002. In April 2003, the second earth dome project was started, with funding from Ronald Fleming 鈥63 and an allocation from the president of the college. Work began that summer and the second dome was completed almost a year later, due to the labor of volunteers and students in a sustainable building class under the guidance of Geordie Schuurman 鈥99, who had been involved in building the first dome and was one of the original farm founders in 1998.
Today, the older portion of the Farm is known as the 鈥淲est Farm鈥 and the newer portion of the Farm is called the 鈥淓ast Farm.鈥 Together, both spaces occupy only about 1.2 acres of land, but are host to over 200 fruit trees, several chickens, the campus composting system, the Earth Dome, a greenhouse, and over 50 production-oriented crop rows.
For more info on the history of the Farm, please feel free to peruse the online established through The Claremont Colleges Library, or stop by and check out the history board across from the chalkboard on the West Side entrance. Additionally, take the opportunity to explore this developed by three Environmental Analysis seniors in 2017.
Alumni
With a history going back to the 1990s, the Farm now has a large network of alumni working in dozens of fields and disciplines across the country and the world. If you are a Farm alum (or a Claremont Colleges alum who supports the Farm), we鈥檇 love to have you join our alumni mailing list by contacting farmmanager@pomona.edu. Various Farm alumni and their current work can be found below. If you鈥檇 like to be added or removed from this list, please contact the farm manager.
- Geordie Schuurman PO 鈥00 鈥
- Meleana Judd PZ 鈥03 鈥
- Severine von Tscharner Fleming PO 鈥04 鈥 ,
- Bowen Close PO 鈥06 鈥
- Samantha Meyer PO 鈥10 鈥
- Sana Javeri Kadri PO 鈥16 鈥
- Scott Chang-Fleeman, Farm Manager 鈥15鈥撯16 鈥
Links
Alternative Agriculture
Organic Farming
- (WWOOF)
Permaculture
Regenerative/Sustainable Farming
Other College Farms/Agriculture Programs
Cob Building
Earth Domes