Akademik

SPIN
adj.
Relating to the dense cultivation of vegetables and other crops on small plots, particularly in urban settings. [From the phrase Small Plot INtensive.]
Example Citations:
Some cities, most notably Vancouver, have websites that match urban landowners who don't care to garden with those who have no space but want to immerse their hands in soil. Here and elsewhere, a few entrepreneurs, engaging in SPIN, or Small Plot Intensive, agriculture, rent backyards — several at a time — to grow produce for sale.
—Peter Gorrie, " In gardens, a design for the city: http://www.thestar.com/news/insight/article/591261," The Toronto Star, February 22, 2009
John Taylor is tending Swiss chard, arugula, collards, spinach, turnips and herbs this fall. The crops follow a summer bounty of tomatoes, string beans, peppers, cucumbers, okra, eggplant, sunflowers and other goodies.
Located not in New Jersey farm country or even a suburban backyard, Taylor's farm project is brightening a fenced-in half-acre in downtown Newark. It's a neatly arranged quarter-acre garden that uses some principles of small plot intensive, or "Spin" farming, a concept Canadian farmer Wally Satzewich turned into a company after his experiment in downsizing proved fruitful.
—Jennifer Weiss, " Farm fresh, in the city: http://www.nj.com/homegarden/garden/index.ssf/2008/10/farm_fresh_in_the_city.html," The Star-Ledger, October 9, 2008
Earliest Citation:
The Philadelphia Water Department and the Institute for Innovations in Local Farming are leading the way at Somerton Tanks Farm, a prototype sub-acre urban farm that takes the conflicts posed by increasing urbanization and turns them to the farmer's advantage. Its pioneering small-plot intensive (SPIN) farming methods provide a viable new economic business model for both experienced and aspiring farmers. And as SPIN farming becomes practiced more widely, it will create new farmland closer to metropolitan areas, which in turn will produce environmental, economic and social benefits.
—Roxanne Christensen, "Help for farms," Philadelphia Inquirer, August 1, 2005
Notes:
Here's another Philadelphia Inquirer citation that offers some helpful links for anyone interested in finding out more about SPIN:
Learning to SPIN
Information about SPIN-gardening or farming can be found at these Web sites: http://www.spingardening.com/: http://www.spingardening.com/, http://www.spinfarming.com/: http://www.spinfarming.com/ or http://www.somertontanksfarm.org/: http://www.somertontanksfarm.org/. The last highlights Somerton Tanks Farm, a demonstration SPIN-farm on a half-acre of city Water Department property in the Far Northeast. Now closed, the farm produced more than $68,000 in gross sales in 2006, its fourth, and last, year.
—Virginia A. Smith, " Profitable backyard gardening in Philadelphia: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/magazine/20090130_Profitable_backyard_gardening_in_Philadelphia_.html," The Philadelphia Inquirer, January 30, 2009
Related Words:
100-foot diet
extreme gardening
farm to fork
food miles
foodshed
garden-to-fork
guerrilla gardening
locavore
ruralpolitan
window farm
Categories:
Food and Drink
Plants and Gardening
Acronyms and Abbreviations

New words. 2013.