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Here’s a thoughtful tuber worth picking out of the ground and chewing on for a bit: there’s nothing stopping you from making real change right now. It is this thought that is inspiring and challenging me after seeing 8th street Urban Farm and meeting the man who runs it.
Prior to my visit, I was browsing the social internet when I came across an old friend’s profile. He had a link embedded there: 8thstreeturbanfarm. Following it, I discovered a farm in my hometown that is feeding people in need, practicing agricultural methods that restore the earth, and accepting bitcoin donations. Immediately, I think to myself, that’s quite a lot of signal. I probably set a personal record right then for how fast I completed a lightning transaction.
Because lightning is instant and I elected to add an email address to my donation, I received a message that evening from the director and lead farmer. It was clear we were both curious about each other - I wanted to know all about the project and he wanted to know who could possibly be sending sats out of the blue. So we connected over email, and in a short time I found myself standing on the corner of 8th and Lee, taking in the trellised tomatoes, picket fences and neatly plotted rows of the small-scale independent growing site, one of six in the metro area. With each day that passes, this plot of land is cultivated to bring forth sustenance that is good. It’s run with a business mind, but a servant’s heart. Everything is done like a for-profit operation except instead of going to the market on the weekend, the bundles of carrots, broccoli, cauliflower, tomotaoes, watermelon, zucchini are delivered to hospitals, food pantries and city shelters.
The existence of this urban farming operation speaks for itself. It’s unlikely and it’s hard work. It would take major conviction to grab hold of an individual for a nonprofit farm in the middle of the city to come to fruition. And that seems to be exactly what happened. A network engineer reads an article about bitcoin in 2011 and thinks to himself, hmm, that’s interesting: “I was big into decentralized file sharing back in the day so this was fascinating to me to be able to decentralize money.” Save that idea in the memory bank, come back to it later. After a series of personal journeys, the kind of twists and turns that life is generous to hand out to those who seek knowledge and adventure, he learns about growing, he lives in distant lands, finds connection with people and earth, he learns about mining, he dabbles in shitcoinery. Until finally, “Got burned obviously and then started studying bitcoin. I went way way way down the rabbit hole, have seen what cannot be unseen lol, realized it was the only thing worth owning, and that was that.”
The story of coming to know bitcoin as the money of the future is one we’re familiar with. But how many people do you see plugging into their community today to offer something better than what we’re expected to accept? Of our food, of our community, of giving and receiving, eating, storing, living, of the day to day of life? Because a bitcoin mindset is a long term mindset, I find myself disconnecting from what’s happening now, lessening the importance I place on the impact I could make in the present. We do this, we say, ‘it’s just clown world’ and we live for an unrealized future that moves perpetually into the distance. It’s too easy to abstract away reality, and with it, all the problems we could meet if we tried.
That’s what I see in 8th Street Urban Farm. I see hard work that is relentlessly meeting reality and saying, it’s going to be better today. Not for the whole world, but for this group of people right here.
This is exactly what I think bitcoin is for. It is shaking individuals out of the matrix, guiding them to realize their unique contributions.
I hope you consider a donation to the farm by zapping this post. It’s going to go a long way. I invite @8thsturbanfarm into the comments for any questions worth answering that show up here.
51 sats \ 0 replies \ @Golu 30 Sep
Poet writing a great essay. Thanks.
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Banger post.
Hustle was drinking Slurpees and eating Twizzlers with his socks off in his mommas basement before finding bitcoin.
Bitcoin and proof of work hit hustle in the stomach, turned him upside down and shook the fiat out of him.

I have a lot of homeless people in my area, every so often I buy em a sandwich or lemonade as I walk by. One of the guys at 7/11 holds the door open for people as they walk in and leave (hoping for a tip). Would be great to do more for these guys, but i'm stretched pretty thin, and am trying to save me and my wife from fiat chicanery first and foremost. These guys need a lot more than bitcoin to fix their situation, maybe a valiant bitcoiner, like the one above, will suffice.
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Beautiful!
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100 sats \ 1 reply \ @geeknik 6 Oct
I’m from Oklahoma too, so I totally get it. This place is hidden in plain sight, with hundreds of thousands passing by without ever knowing. The people there? Absolute legends—humble, hardworking, and driven by something special.
At our own small-scale farm, we play by similar rules, but it's a whole different vibe. Everything we grow gets shared with friends, family, and neighbors—or goes straight back into the ecosystem, feeding our livestock or enriching the compost for next year’s harvest. We’ve got 4 chickens, 5 goldfish, an army of red wrigglers, and an empire of isopods keeping things lively. Plus, a couple of sneaky spiders holding down the fort.
This winter, we’re stepping things up with a 250-gallon pond in the greenhouse, heating it with waste from our lottery miners to keep the water just above freezing. It’s all about pushing the envelope, right?
And next spring, if all goes well, we’ll add 2-4 ostriches to the crew. Big plans, bigger vibes. \m/
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let's go! similarly (read: embarrassingly) I am about to add an ostrich to my virtual farm (Stardew valley). No but that's awesome, sounds like a huge operation!
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I love how you interweave your perspective about focusing primarily on the long term, thus elevating his move to make a difference with his food produce now. Thank you for sharing
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One of the best thing I love about Bitcoin is it challenges you to make a difference.
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Who knew Bitcoin could grow more than just portfolios? Turns out it can sprout tomatoes and feed the neighborhood too! Dope
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Great post. Zapped with pleasure.
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I congratulate you, it is truly a beautiful initiative. I hope that every day there are more people who join Bitcoin and can change the world with small works like this.
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This is important work. Thank you. 💚
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Welcome hope it goes well
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Is this a vertical farming concept?
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no! just discovering unused land in the city, keeping it simple, they got raised beds, trellises, trees, minimal tilling
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Even more interesting. No tilapia?
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