Mexico City’s floating gardens have fed people for hundreds of years.
Now they’re threatened
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[November 04, 2024]
By MARIANA MARTÍNEZ BARBA and JULIÁN TREJO BAX
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Cassandra Garduño squinted in the sunlight, her pink
boots smudged by dirt as she gazed out over her family's chinampa — one
of the islands first built up by the Aztecs with fertile mud from the
bottom of a lake that, later drained, would one day become Mexico City.
Food from these islands has fed people for hundreds of years, but the
chinampas are under threat from urbanization. The produce grown here
doesn't fetch much money, and many families are abandoning the ancient
practice to rent out or sell their land for more lucrative uses such as
soccer fields.
“People don’t want to farm anymore,” said Garduño. “They don’t see it as
a necessity, they don’t want to produce, and people don’t want to buy
the products.”
Some of those remaining, like Garduño, are banding together to preserve
and promote the traditional use of the chinampas.
“None of this can exist without human hands, the hands of those who
worked here and created the chinampa a thousand years ago,” she said on
a recent morning as the smell of celery growing nearby filled the air.
The gardens crisscrossed by canals in the capital's southern Xochimilco
borough are built up from layers of dredged soil, held together by tall,
thin ahuejotes — a kind of willow tree — planted around their perimeter.
Xochimilco has more than 2,500 acres of protected land owned by
generations of local chinamperos, as those who farm the islands are
known.
Garduño’s earliest memories of her family’s chinampa came from peering
through her grandparents’ window at the plot of land and watching canoes
weave in and out of the canals. Even then, she saw how the chinampas
were deteriorating under pressure from urbanization and as some farmers
began to drop the practice.
When her grandfather died in 2010 and her uncles didn't want to carry
on, Garduño took it upon herself to learn and conserve generations of
farming. Her neighbors and relatives were skeptical at first, but she
bought land for her own chinampa from a friend's uncle in 2020 and now
grows an assortment of produce, including sunflowers, eggplant, and the
Mexican marigold “cempasuchil.”
Now the 32-year-old Garduño is one of the growing collective called
Chinampa Refuge, started by the National Autonomous University of
Mexico, and she and other famers encourage chinamperos to preserve their
land. They follow ancient growing techniques but are trying new
commercial approaches to compete with cheaper produce grown on massive
farms elsewhere in Mexico. That includes a special tag — Etiqueta
Chinampera — that tells buyers the produce came from a chinampa, and may
tout things like water quality or the chinampa's status as a
biodiversity refuge.
“Change comes with educating the new generations,” said Garduño.
“Talking about the origins and efforts to conserve and why it’s
important to do it.”
Luis Zambrano, an ecologist from the National Autonomous University of
Mexico who has worked in Xochimilco for decades, said the fields are
largely self-sustaining. Nourished by the lake, they can produce three
to five crops of vegetables a year without the need of chemicals or
irrigation, he said.
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Manuel Serralde works in a floating garden in the Xochimilco borough
of Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Felix Marquez)
Moreover, the ecosystem of Xochimilco benefits the sprawling city. Many
different species of birds and fish thrive there, and the extensive
canals help reduce the city's overall temperature, he said.
But now, on weekends, it's common to see more soccer players boating to
islands in their jerseys and cleats than farmers tending their crops.
The soccer fields stretch for miles along the canals after what Zambrano
called “a massive increase” over the past two to three years.
In Xochimilco, many people are reluctant to talk about transforming
their chinampas to soccer fields. One landowner who declined to be
identified for fear of legal or community backlash said keeping the
chinampas productive required more work and financial investment and
yielded less revenue. Instead, she has established multiple businesses
on her land — a soccer field for weekend games, a food stand and
kayaking tours for foreign visitors.
“If you do well (farming) you could earn $5,000 to $10,000 (100,000 to
200,000 pesos) a year," Garduño said. "In the tourist area you could
have that within a couple of weekends.”
But converting the agricultural fields carries ecological impact. While
traditional farming methods avoid insecticides and fertilizers, the
soccer fields are another story.
“It doesn’t look that detrimental because there’s no construction,” said
Zambrano. But “it’s just as damaging because the amount of chemicals
that are used, the amount of pollution that is generated is very, very
large.”
The chinampas are among the significant features that led Mexico City’s
historic center and Xochimilco to be recognized as a world heritage site
by UNESCO. But any protective measures are up to federal, state and
local authorities. Carlos Vasquez, director of the Natural Protected
Areas under Mexico City’s Environmental Department, said they are
working on proposals to address the soccer fields.
“Many are counter to the conservation of the ecosystems,” he said.
“We’re looking to regulate these activities.”
After a long day’s work out in the sun, Garduño and some neighboring
farmers congregate under Garduño’s makeshift hut for a feast of chicken
and tortillas. They catch up on their tasks and outline what’s left to
do.
Juan Ávalos, 63, and his brother Salvador Gonzalez Ávalos, 55, have been
working on chinampas all their lives. Their family has several plots in
Xochimilco's San Gregorio neighborhood. A year ago, after some
convincing by Garduño, the brothers joined Chinampa Refuge to adopt a
more holistic approach to their farming.
Salvador said the approach is a continuous reminder of his family's
legacy in maintaining the ancient practices — something they want to
pass on to their grandchildren.
“That’s something we need to work on as grandparents,” he said. “That
they integrate themselves with a taste for this earth.”
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