I
was bottle feeding a kitten on the back step when I heard Paul Buxman’s voice
talking into the answering machine Tuesday. I caught the phone before he finished,
wanting to catch whatever wave he was riding.
This one was tidal.
“Do you know the name Will Scott
Jr.?” he asked. A two-second mental
search produced 149 entries for “Will,” “Scott” and “Jr.” but zero for all
three together. When Paul told me some
of the details, however, I realized I’d been clipping articles on Will for
years.
Will Scott Jr. is a black organic
small-scale farmer near Raisin City who’s been actively getting people back on
the land, particularly other black farmers and Fresno’s urban youth. He started farming 45 acres after he retired
from the phone company, growing vegetables once common in the diets of rural
black people that had kept them healthy, selling them at the Mandela farmers
market in Oakland where those now-urban black folks could benefit. He organized black farmers in the Fresno area
to provide much-needed support, and began training black youth to farm,
reclaiming the invaluable parts of their rural roots (go to his website, www.scottfamilyfarms.net, to see some of
his efforts.)
But now his well is going dry. This year he was able to farm only 5 of his 45
acres, and his future looks bad.
Featured recently as one of the “Faces of the Drought,” he was quoted as
saying “We’re on the verge of losing a lot.”
I don’t think he was referring
simply to himself. The loss of too many
of our remaining small farms in this drought, with its uncertainties of water
supply in the future and the groundwater robbers and high-dollar land
speculators acting like vultures, has been giving me nightmares 24/7, but that awareness
is largely missing in the media. I think
his sentence captures it perfectly.
But Paul Buxman saw or heard that
sentence and the facts about his well, and it lit his jets. Paul doesn’t need a burning bush to get his
attention: the fire burns inside him,
fuels his every step. This one started
him on a marathon, and if we follow his lead, we’re all going to finish first.
“We can’t lose this man,” he
said. “We’re going to raise $40,000 to
deepen his well, and this is how we’re going to do it. I’m going to offer signed and numbered
lithographs of four of my paintings, one for each foot of well drilled, which
is around $50. All we need is to get the
word out,” noting that’s where I come in.
But before I could get one word on
paper, Paul had recruited Alice Daniel of NPR’s “California Report” and Dale Yurong
of Ch. 30 Action News (to view Yurong’s beautiful piece, go to www.abc30.com and look for
“Drought Hasn’t Dried Up Dinuba Farmer’s Generous Spirit.”) Thirty minutes after Yurong’s piece aired on
TV Wednesday, a man drove to Paul’s house with a $100 check. “I hope this primes the pump,” he said
seriously. He went home with two Buxman
lithographs, portrayals of the very human landscape we’re trying to save. I have no doubt that, before this is over, we’ll
be able to drill a well to China if we have to.
Why would Paul Buxman go to this
level? Let’s just say it takes one to know
one. Paul began farming organically when
he discovered too many friends with cancer.
He organized small family farmers needing support into a marketing co-op
called “California Clean,” whose motto is “We won’t charge you extra for not
poisoning your food.” He’s taught urban
youth the joys of farming, painting and cooking on his Sweet Home Ranch with
his wife Ruth, and participated in innumerable festivals, conferences and
workshops concerned for our agrarian future, including the Forum on Church and
Land in 1992 (which I have mentioned in this column more than once.)
How deep will we go? Together, it won’t take much to Drill for
Will the well he needs to keep going. If
you’d love to help and have a piece of this beautiful history to hang on your
wall, watch this column for further details or visit www.trudysnotesfromhome.blogspot.com for
up-to-the-minute news. As Paul said, in
this drought it’s not hard to paint yourself into a corner, but maybe we can
paint Will, literally, out of this one.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trudy Wischemann is a
rural advocate who is grateful for this ray of hope. You can send your rays to her c/o P.O. Box
1374, Lindsay CA 93247 or leave a comment below.
How neat, A Farmer helping a Farmer. I took my check over to Paul.....the lithographs of his paintings are beautiful. The story on ABC News 30 was very touching http://abc30.com/news/generous-response-to-valley-farmers-well-fund/1020474/
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