Rural/Urban Connections
Nature’s Metropolis, by William Cronon, makes the case that there is no distinct line between “urban” and “rural.” Chicago grew to its great size and its unique character by relying on the railways that connected it to the “hinterland” and the lumber, grain, and meat that the railways carried to the unimaginable large (to me) Windy City. Farmers and ranchers thrived because of the lumber, the grain, the meat they could sell into the great city.
Writes Cronon at the end of his book: “To do right by nature and people in the country, ones has to do right by them in the city as well, for the two seem always to find in each other their own image. In that sense, every city is nature’s metropolis, and every piece of countryside its rural hinterland. We fool ourselves if we think we can choose between them….We can only take them together and, in making the journey between them, find a way of life that does justice to them both.”
Our nonfarmer members embrace these rural/urban connections and have committed to supporting Iowa farmers with their PFI membership, their food dollars, and their hearts.