Thursday, January 29, 2009

Become a member of a local CSA farm!


Our local farmers need your support all year long. You can help them and help yourself by selecting a CSA now, before shares sell out.

What is a CSA?
A CSA, (for Community Supported Agriculture) is a way for the food buying public to create a relationship with a farm and to receive a weekly basket of produce. By making a financial commitment to a farm, people become "members" (or "shareholders," or "subscribers") of the CSA.
Each CSA farm has its own unique character: shares vary in price, pick-up days & times, vegetables grown, you-pick options, etc.
Some CSAs also require that members work a small number of hours on the farm during the growing season.

http://www.berkshiregrown.org/map.html?search=C.S.A.


Click on CSAs to explore the local farms!

New CSA member farms in Berkshire County

We're excited to announce two new CSAs in the Berkshires:


River Valley Farm
345 New Lenox Road (just south of Pittsfield -- a CSA in Central Berkshire County!)
Regular ($500) and summer ($375) shares.
413-822-9621
e-mail: Lisa@raresheepwool.com

http://www.raresheepwool.com

Wolfe Spring Farm on Hewins Street in Sheffield, MA
A share is $550 or $500 with three hours/season work.
Shares for sale beginning February 1 until they sell out.
413-229-2012

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Food democracy on the web

http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/2715/t/3528/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=265
The Center for Rural Affairs hopes you will sign their letter to Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack to urge him to fulfill Obama's vision for rural communities and family farmers.

The food democracy website founder wants you to support advocates for sustainable agriculture as under secretaries in the Department of Agriculture. Read about these wonderful candidates:
http://www.fooddemocracynow.org/

Tom Vilsack - Chosen for Secretary of Agriculture

Read more about Governor Tom Vilsack -- Obama's choice for Secretary of Agriculture:

A controversy has heated up on the web:

The Organic Consumers Association is trying to stop the appointment, here is an excerpt and a website for more information:
http://www.organicconsumers.org/vilsack.cfm

"While Vilsack has promoted respectable policies with respect to restraining livestock monopolies, his overall record is one of aiding and abetting Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) or factory farms and promoting genetically engineered crops and animal cloning. Equally troubling is Vilsack's support for unsustainable industrial ethanol production, which has already caused global corn and grain prices to skyrocket, literally taking food off the table for a billion people in the developing world."


A group who support Vilsack's appointment have created this website:
http://www.supportvilsack.com/

Supporters include: Denise O'Brien, the organic farmer who ran for secretary of agriculture of Iowa; Walter Robb, co-president of Whole Foods; Bob Scowcroft, executive director of the Organic Farming Research Foundation; Wayne Pacelle, CEO of the Humane Society of the United States; and many others.

Here is an excerpt from what Gary Hirshberg, founder and CEO of Stonyfield Farms writes:

"I need to be very clear that I am neither blindly nor universally supportive of all of Governor Vilsack’s positions. Indeed, as he is very well aware, I disagree with a number of his past decisions. But even on the issues about which we disagree, I have found Tom to be an open-minded, excellent listener who is genuinely interested in opposing views, and who is actually able to change his views based on new findings. My support for his candidacy as Ag Secretary derives less from his specific views and historic voting record and more from his overall character, outlook, judgment and capacity to hear all sides of an issue and then make reasoned and sound decisions.

"With that said, I will add that I do agree with most of Tom’s judgments, and believe that we could not find a better leader for an agency that is in desperate need of a deep renovation and a long-term vision that truly embraces sustainable solutions. In a nutshell, Tom Vilsack gets it.

"He deeply understands issues of sustainability, of climate change and of the toxification of our nation’s air, water and soils that have resulted from short-term, short-sighted thinking. He has taken principled and visionary positions on biofuels and courageous stands in a corn state that corn is NOT the long-term answer. He deeply understands the critical role that family farmers must play in a resource-stressed planet and believes in the need for new, out-of the-box thinking and solutions that will not just slow the deterioration of our nation’s farms, soils, ecosystems and biodiversity but will actually begin the process of restoring these broken systems. He respects ecology.

"Tom believes in technologic innovation but is not blind to the threats and problems posed by, for instance, biotechnology. Just as he has been among the nation’s truly visionary politicians with wind power, he also sees the promise of the organic foods industry and will be the best organics champion we’ve ever had in that role.

"Tom will also be a leader in an area that gets too little attention – the nutritional quality of our nation’s foods, especially the foods we serve to those in need."