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Nathan Moomaw
by Nick Kotecki, photo by Lisa Marie
Knapp
Nathan Moomaw has his hands in the
dirt. He runs the show every Sunday at the Riverwest Gardeners
Market. He keeps the grounds clean. He coordinates the vendors. He
assists customers. He makes sure everyone’s happy, fills the
five-gallon jug of ice cold drinking water. He sets up tents and
tears them down at the end of the day.
“Do you want help taking down the
tents?” Lisa Knapp, his co-organizer, asked.
Nathan put a hand to his forehead,
shielding his eyes from the afternoon sun, scanning the lot, the nine
or so tents. “No,” he said, “It's easier if I do it by myself.”
Now, Nathan might be a little tall, he
might be a little dark from being in the sun all day, and yeah, sure,
he might be a fairly handsome dude, but Nathan wasn't showing off his
tough guy bravado one bit, he was just being practical: setting up
and tearing down is part of his day job. “I take down five tents by
myself every time I work,” he explained.
In addition to running the neighborhood
gardener's market, every week he also travels to several others
throughout southeast Wisconsin. He works for the Mukwonago-based
Simon's Gardens, holding down their stand, selling their fresh
produce and vegetables, setting up and tearing down the display
booths.
That's now. Before Nathan came to
Milwaukee he was in Portland, Oregon. He grew up there. After high
school he moved. He went south, did a brief stint in San Francisco
studying film, and then went back up the West Coast to Seattle, where
he got a degree in audio production.
After graduating he decided to make the
move to the Midwest. His first stop was Chicago. He left Seattle with
friends of his to put their degrees to use and work on their dreams.
In Chicago, they would build their own business and recording studio.
Things ended up different than Nathan
had planned. “I basically had a mobile recording studio in my car,”
he said, laughing. Throughout his six years in the recording
industry, most of his gigs were with Roosevelt University's Chicago
College of the Performing Arts. “I recorded whole orchestras
playing, with over 200 people,” he said. The experience was one of
those once-in-a-lifetime deals. He was able to record in the
Auditorium Theatre, renowned for its unique acoustics. It was built
in 1889 by the highly acclaimed architectural team of Louis Sullivan
and Dankmar Adler and was a world class performance venue for its
time. The Auditorium Theatre is also a National Historic Landmark.
There are times when an itch must be
scratched, when cups must be filled. Things change. Lives change.
There are chances which beg to be taken, desires to be put out of
arm's reach and in hand's grasp. One such time came to Nathan. This
is when he left Chicago and his recording business, when he moved to
Beloit, Wisconsin to work on a farm. This is when Nathan fell in
love.
“I love growing things and love
helping growers. I love fostering community,” Nathan said. Soon
after his tenure as a farmhand in Beloit, the opportunity to move
came again, this time to Milwaukee. His wife (sorry ladies, this man
is taken) had just landed a position at the Milwaukee Art Museum as
the Assistant Director of Visitor Experience. “We had three weeks’
notice,” Nathan said. They packed their bags and began the
nerve-wracking search of finding a place to call home in an
unfamiliar city. They settled on a house across the street from La
Escuela Fratney, the bilingual feeder school of the Lincoln Center of
the Arts, and have been living there ever since.
That was two years ago. Now, Nathan is
here in Riverwest, working in sunny Garden Park every Sunday doing
what he does best: helping local farmers make local connections,
giving back to the community.
Nathan gives an example of his work:
“One of the bakers here, Erma, she bought rhubarb from the Chang
family and used it to make rhubarb pies for the market. The next
week, the Changs were buying her pie, eating their own rhubarb.
That's the lowest carbon footprint there is.” The Chang family has
been regulars at the Gardeners Market since long before Nathan moved
to the Midwest, eleven years to be exact. Erma's bakery, on the other
hand, is new on the Gardeners Market scene.
Nathan stresses that the Gardeners
Market is an important asset to Riverwest. He's quick to point out
that many of the growers here rent the fields they work in and do not
have the manpower or machinery to produce in bulk. “It's
sustainable,” he said. “It's free for the community.” Local
growers are able to have face-to-face contact with their customers
and ask them questions about the food they buy – a rarity in this
age of large scale, mass agriculture. Many of the products here are
cultivated by hand, including the Chang's produce line and the plants
of nine-year Gardeners Market veteran, Jan Posik.
He can't do everything by himself
though. Even with co-organizer, Lisa Knapp, there is still work to be
done in Nathan's eyes. He doesn't seek to expand the market so much
as tighten up what he sees as loose ends. He would like to have
biographies of the vendors on the website (riverwestmarket.com) and
see more prepared food, dairy, meats, and orchard fruits like
cherries and apples available for sale. He wants the Gardeners Market
to evolve into more of a “Gardeners Picnic.” How is this work
going to get done?
“We need more volunteers,” he said.
So what does Nathan like to do outside
of the Gardeners Market? “I don't even know anymore,” he said,
laughing. “I don't have time for hobbies. My hobbies turn into my
work.” Although he's only been here two years, he's left a sizable
(non-carbon) footprint on the neighborhood. He's been on the Board of
Directors of the Riverwest Neighborhood Association, helped create a
community garden in Harambee with Off the Grid, a non-profit
organization, and regularly throws his hat in the ring to help out at
neighborhood events. At the Riverwest Follies this year, he put his
recording skills to use, mixing the various soundtracks each
performer used for their sets. He also built and designed the
Riverwest Gardeners Market website which launched this year.
Find Nathan Moomaw at the Riverwest
Gardeners Market on Sunday afternoons. Join the picnic. Grab yourself
a bouquet of fresh cut flowers for your lover or friend, maybe a
bundle or two of garden vegetables to make that fine meal you've been
craving. Come on over, catch a seat at a picnic table, and bask in
the cool shade of the umbrella that Nathan raised for you.
Do all of this – just make sure to
say, “Thanks, Nathan!”
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