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organic farmer

Joan Abad

With the change of the mil­le­nium, Joan Abad de­cided to make a rad­i­cal change in his life, which up until then had been a very urban one, and tried his hand at or­ganic gar­den­ing. He chose a place far away from any pol­lu­tion in La Gar­rotxa, on an old es­tate called El Ser­rat del Pont. Though the area had been highly pop­u­lated until the 20th cen­tury, in the late 1960s there had been an ex­o­dus of lo­cals to cities, leav­ing the area prac­ti­cally un­in­hab­ited. Today, Joan pro­duces or­ganic veg­eta­bles on some 10,000 me­tres of cul­ti­vated land, which he makes sure is well in­te­grated into the nat­ural sur­round­ings of fields and forests .

1. 14th cen­tury manor house lo­cated in the so-called Gratacós neigh­bour­hood. After the Llierca bridge was built in the 15th cen­tury, the name of the neigh­bour­hood changed to Veïnat del Pont. The house is lo­cated on a cliff which dom­i­nates the Llierca. Nearby, down the hill, there are some ar­chae­o­log­i­cal re­mains from the Bronze, Iron, Cop­per, Iber­ian, Roman and Me­dieval eras.

2. Olive tree more than 300 hun­dred years old.

One of the few olive trees that sur­vived the great freeze of 1956. That year, al­most all of the olive trees in north­ern Cat­alo­nia (Em­pordà, Gar­rotxa, Pla de l'Es­tany, and so on) died. Around the house there are still great holes where the trees used to be after local peo­ple up­rooted the trees to use as fire­wood. This is the far­thest north that olive trees can pos­si­bly flour­ish, as nor­mally they don't do well in more north­ern areas.

3. My dog, Brull. When I adopted him, he was one year old and his name was Mano­lito. I changed his name and taught him to look for truf­fles. He's a real ex­pert at it now.

4, 5, 6, 7. Pump­kin, broc­coli, cab­bage and green sal­ads, freshly picked from my veg­etable gar­den. Pro­duc­ing veg­eta­bles while re­spect­ing as much as pos­si­ble the frag­ile Gar­rotxa en­vi­ron­ment is my aim, some­thing that is sim­ple and yet com­pli­cated at the same time. I can count on one ad­van­tage, though: the Llierca river, which crosses the Massís d'Alta Gar­rotxa and which has ex­cep­tion­ally high qual­ity water due to there being no in­dus­trial ac­tiv­ity in the area. Each plant gets the right quan­tity of water it needs, and we don't spoil a drop of it. The prin­ci­ples of my or­ganic agri­cul­tural pro­duc­tion are based on re­spect for the en­vi­ron­ment, giv­ing pri­or­ity to the health of the con­sumers. I don't use any chem­i­cals and I use only the best seeds in order to achieve the high­est qual­ity veg­eta­bles. Lit­tle by lit­tle, I'm chang­ing this en­vi­ron­ment to re­turn it to its ori­gins.

8-Ro­tary hoe

www.​ver​dure​sdel​serr​at.​com

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