Posts Tagged ‘local food’

Have you heard of listener-supported radio? When I heard that KDFC was having its first ever fundraiser (yes, we *love* classical music), the hosts talked about listener-supported radio. And it made me think about our community-supported farm. In some ways they are similar. With our farm, without a community of eaters working with us, well, we will not be able to grow produce. If not enough people join the Vegetable CSA, we won’t have the operating funds to carry out the growing season.

If you’re not familiar with community-supported agriculture and why it’s so important for revitalizing local food production, please check out our recently updated About CSA page. And contact us if you have any questions! An associative economy – the essence of CSA – is a wonderful alternative to the current food distribution system, and you can participate in this new paradigm with us, Mendocino Organics CSA.

While you’re at it, see what Events we have in store this year for our CSA members. Why not reconnect with the food production system in a new way and see how your food is grown? And yes, yes, there will always be good eating involved with our farm!

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Hi, out there! Just wanted to let local folks know that we will be at the Willits Farmers Market this Thursday, October 27. We have not been going to the Willits market very regularly, partly because getting away from the farm for more than one market per week is hard on the three of us doing all the farming. But we’re excited to be at City Park this Thursday from 3pm – 6pm. We’ll be bringing our delicious sausages as well as some Berkshire pork, lamb, the last of summer’s cucumbers & eggplant, fall’s first cruciferous greens, and much more. Plan on making a delicious dinner with farm fresh goodies!

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Bay Area friends – consider attending the Slow Money National Gathering in San Francisco October 12-14! Vandana Shiva and Wes Jackson are just a couple of the keynote speakers. Paula from Mendocino Organics will be there on a panel, “Building Tomorrow’s Local Food Systems: Next generation food entrepreneurs share their vision and experience.” It will be a great event for investors, entrepreneurs, concerned citizens, and activists!

From the Slow Money website:

Thousands of Americans have begun affirming a new direction for the economy. It’s called Slow Money.

Inspired by the vision of Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money: Investing As If Food, Farms and Fertility Mattered, published in 2009, the Slow Money Alliance is bringing people together around a new conversation about money that is too fast, about finance that is disconnected from people and place, about how we can begin fixing our economy from the ground up… starting with food.

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Farming is like dancing – there are slow dances and fast jigs and every pace in between. We’re at another hurried hustle this time of year. Summer crops like tomatoes, eggplant, and cucumbers are giving bloated harvests that call for routine attention.

Making tomato sauce with black plum tomatoes.

Yet under the guise of bounty, nature is slowly inching toward the quieter time of the year – fall and eventually winter – when crops slow down and the land lays still. So we are simultaneously prepping the ground and planting cool weather crops (those biennials like broccoli, lettuce and carrots) and preserving summer’s warm wealth in curing, pickling, making sauce and making sauerkraut.

Romanze potatoes that supplemented Live Power Community Farm CSA shares a few weeks ago.

With the higher food output this year, we’re also striving to consistently provide for markets we haven’t worked with regularly in the past, like Ukiah Natural Foods Co-op and Ukiah Brewing Company and Restaurant. We’re also finding that the markets and nearby restaurants can’t absorb all that we are producing, and CSAs are not in high demand here, so much of our food is shipping to the Bay Area. Hopefully, we are serving our community not just with our food but by bringing outside revenue in during these challenging economic times.

The pick-up truck loaded with an evening harvest of Riverside onions and Russian Banana fingerling potatoes.

As busy as we have been expanding farm production this year, we haven’t had much time to write about the process here. But, we’ve been striving to document with photos the daily work we do to grow as much nutritious, flavorful food as possible. Part of the process has been spending money. As they say, you have to spend money to make money. This season alone, we’ve acquired many tools to help us grow more food so it’s more affordable to buy and so that we don’t strain our bodies:

  • three-bottom plow
  • flail mower
  • Farmall 100 cultivating tractor
  • toolbar & flex planters
  • 5.5 HP water pump
  • hog panels
  • poultry netting
  • 30′ x 70′ high tunnel
  • sunblocker shade structure

One of the flex planters on a toolbar we purchased in the Delta.

The shopping list goes on, and that’s only major capital investments. Fortunately, we don’t always have to buy things outright. Other farmers are lending us equipment or letting us make payments. A community of growers is so essential particularly when when you start out with nothing.

Berkshire pigs enjoying cucumbers

We’re also raising another round of pigs that will be ready in time for the holidays. Not only is pork really tasty, but our pigs will happily eat vegetable culls or whatever does not sell at the farmers market. Heritage Berkshire pork is delicious, so we’re definitely raising those pigs again!

The sheep grazing on irrigate pasture in Potter Valley.

We also bought a few more ewes and lambs to increase our sheep flock. Hopefully by the end of this season, we’ll have about 100 ewes. Our new Shropshire ram, Macho, should be getting familiar with the ladies now…

So, we continue to refine our farming system – doing trials of different crops to see what we can grow well, trying new feed rations and growing better hay and pasture for cost-effective yet delicious meat, fine-tuning all the mechanical processes, and improving relationships with all our customers. We’re very excited to be growing a lot more food this year. It’s a challenge, but the hard work is rewarding when we are able to partner with nature and people to nourish ourselves and our community.

About 1/3 of the onions

The durum wheat should be harvested soon.

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A sign posted at the produce section of UNF Co-op for the past week.

If you didn’t know, most of the winter produce – organic or otherwise – you find at the store is grown in the desert of very southern California, Mexico, and the southwest (Arizona). The Oakland Tribune ran a good article on why produce prices are seemingly higher right now. Apparently, “the desert” experienced some winter weather themselves.

Produce Profile: Blame high produce prices on the weather

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Local Meat – Lamb

Yesterday, the Press Democrat ran an informative article about the lack of meat processing facilities in the region, and the obstacle this presents to local ranchers and customers seeking local meat. We at Mendocino Organics have to cope with the lack of local food infrastructure (aka value-added processing near us). For example, today, we had to take our lambs to Occidental for slaughter.

How many miles are we taking our lambs? How many hours are we on the road? What are we doing to try to make these trips more efficient?

The day started with us rounding up most of our sheep in Potter Valley and pulling the 6 lambs ordered. 5 for Bar Agricole in San Francisco, and 1 for Patrona in Ukiah. From Potter Valley to Panizzera in Occidental was a 1.5-hour, 84-mile drive.

When we got there, we unloaded the sheep from our truck (we don’t have a livestock trailer yet) into a holding pen. After the lambs are slaughtered, on Thursday, someone from Bar Agricole will drive to Occidental to pick up the 5 lambs whole. The 1 for Patrona will be delivered to Sonoma Direct near Petaluma where it will be cut and wrapped because they requested it as such.
If we sell lamb retail, we also have to get them delivered to Sonoma Direct or elsewhere to get cut and wrapped in a USDA-inspected facility.

To make the drive down to Sonoma County more worthwhile, we went to Hunt and Behren’s, the mill from which we get organic feed for our chickens. We can buy it at the Farm Supply in Ukiah, but it’s less expensive directly from the mill…and we were already down the road.

At the end of the week, we’ll again drive south to Sonoma County – to Sonoma Direct – to pick up the cut and wrapped lamb for Patrona.

In many ways, we are very fortunate to be working with the restaurant, Bar Agricole. We don’t have to worry about the second step in processing, and we don’t have to drive back to the processing facility to deliver it to it’s final destination. That means less expense for us in time and fuel. Hopefully, we are contributing to a more sustainable regional food system. Until our local food system (aka Mendocino County) provides more demand and/or infrastructure is created that we can legally sell more of our lamb here, our farm will most likely continue to be a part of this larger food system.

Here is an interesting article from Choices Magazine, a publication of the Agricultural & Applied Economics Association about sustainable regional food systems. “Local food” seems very popular now, and it’s a great ideal, but what about regional food?

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Pure Mendocino 2010

We’ll be at the annual Pure Mendocino tasting and dinner this year! Come to Dark Horse Vineyard in Hopland this Saturday, August 28. We will be at the tasting grilling beef & veg skewers, and you can bid for 5 of our free-range, organically-fed meat chickens at the silent auction. Come support the Cancer Resource Centers of Mendocino and enjoy good food, wine, and company!

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5th Annual Pure Mendocino Celebration

To Benefit the Cancer Resource Center of Mendocino County

August 29 & 30, 2009

We will be at the Pure Mendocino Food & Wine Tasting at the Philo Apple Farm, Sunday, August 30, 3pm-7pm. We’ll be grilling up some of our yummy meats and pouring Golden Vineyards wine to go with it.

Be sure to check out the Silent Auction, where we’ve donated a half winter CSA share to the cause!

Adam & Paula

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Dear Local Food Supporters,

We heard that there was a demand for local, eco-friendly, healthy food in Mendocino County. We heard that there are people unhappy with the current food system of nutrient-deficient, oil-dependent food products. We heard that people in Mendocino County want to support local businesses and young farmers.

We are trying to grow local, biodynamic produce that will nourish you and hopefully, bring people together as a community. We are located in Redwood Valley, and at 30 and 27 years of age, we have decades ahead of us to farm food.

We chose a career in farming food because we believe in the difference of fresh, tasty, healthy food. We farm in Mendocino County because we cherish this land and wish to steward it as best we can. Supporting your local farmers is how we can change the current food system. Remember what it is like to eat with the seasons, connect with the land and the people who grow it, be a part of a community based around the source of life – food. Think of it like an investment in a truly viable local food system.

If you really believe in supporting local food in Mendocino County, sign up for our winter CSA today. We farmers want to grow food for you, but you have to play a part, too. Don’t worry – we’ll be out in the field watering the vegetables when it’s 100°F and harvesting when it’s pouring rain.

USE THIS FORM TO SIGN UP

Info on why supporting local farmers is important

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