10 Reasons Why a Brix Bounty Farm CSA Membership May Be Right For You

A Series Written and Published by Brix Bounty Farm Throughout the Winter 2010/2011
(“10 Reasons Why” Series Archive)

Reason #1 – Value:  More For Your Money Reducing Transportation Costs
by Steve Murray

One of the most talked about parts of CSA programs (Community Supported Agriculture) is the amount of vegetables shareholders (also known as members) get each season. Most people find that they receive more produce and of better quality then they could possibly buy for an equal exchange of money at a market. Essentially what this boils down to is Value – more for your money. A closer inspection of CSA programs, and more specific CSA programs run by biological farmers, bring about the reasons for this great Value.

We live in a world where the average piece of produce travels over a fifteen hundred miles from farm to grocery store. Just like anything else, it cost money for food to travel such distances, frequently called food miles. Generally speaking, CSA shareholders are located much closer to the source of produce, therefore drastically or totally eliminating transportation cost. Another added benefit of not having your produce shipped long distances is that they can be picked at peak quality and nutrition, last longer and taste much fresher. Most of the produce that you will be receiving through the Brix Bounty CSA will be picked the day of your pick-up, that’s fresh.

Another aspect that lowers the cost of our produce is the stability of our market. By joining our CSA you are providing us a stable market for our produce, reducing the need to find markets and ensuring that our financial well being. Having a home for our produce lets us focus on growing quality produce, increasing yields and passing the bounty on to the shareholders.

Yet another aspect that lowers the cost and increases the Value is that we are biological farmers. We focus on feeding the soil, correcting nutrient imbalances and applying sustainable soil nutrition. By focusing on creating a healthy environment we can reduce our long term fertilizer inputs and totally abstain from using herbicides, pesticides and fungicides. Those elements reduce our production costs, grow higher quality produce and increase the health of our environment.

For those focused on getting more for their money, CSA’s can really pay off. Not only do they provide fresh nutritious vegetables, they can typically provide them at very competitive prices.

In advance of Dan Kittredge’s presentation this evening at the Friends Academy, The Standard-Times printed an article on Monday written by Anika Clark focusing on the movement toward nutrient dense production.  Check it out…

Farming movement goes back to the roots for a nutrient-rich crop

http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20101129/NEWS/11290304/-1/NEWS

Thanks to the warm November and a promising 10-day forecast we have decided to keep the roadside stand open for a final 2 weeks in 2010.  Sunday December 12th will be the final day for the stand until May 2011.

We’ll still have frost sweetened carrots, root crops (beets, leeks), winter squash, & fresh cold-hard greens (including a spicy greens mix which is terrific these days)…

Visit our Roadside Stand page for a full list of crops available during our final 2 weeks of the 2010 season.

As we prepare to give thanks for a terrific 2010 harvest, we are set to open registration for our 2011 Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program.  Exciting News for the 2011 season:  includes 2 share sizes, more vibrant soil life, another vegetable grower on the team, and a wintertime CSA offering:

  • In the weeks ahead we will continue our late fall fieldwork in the fields; applying biodynamic preparations (specialized versions of compost teas) and field fertility sprays.  Each day brings new growth to our soils as we continue to build the vibrant soil life necessary to produce nutritious, nutrient dense crops.
  • Steve Murray, formerly of Kettle Pond Farm, has joined the Brix Bounty Farm team for the 2011 season.  Steve has been growing organic veggies on the Southcoast for the past 4 seasons and brings tremendous knowledge, experience and enthusiasm to our crew.
  • We are just putting the finishing touches on next year’s crop plans and are looking forward to our 2nd season offering a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) Program.  NEW FOR 2011 – Full & Partial Size CSA Shares Available. In addition to the CSA, we’ll once again join other growers at the Wing’s Court Market in downtown New Bedford, and our popular roadside stand will return in May 2011 and will be open through Thanksgiving.  For more information on our 2011 CSA please visit our website.

We plan on offering a limited number of Wintertime CSA Shares beginning Nov 2011 through Feb 2012.  Please note, wintertime shares will initially be limited to 2011 CSA members.

Just Announced:  Roots Down New Bedford – Tuesday July 12th at 4PM – a special Roots Down workshop at Brix Bounty Farm (858 Tucker Road) focusing on drip irrigation systems and foliar fertilizers, as well as a farm tour and general conversation about summertime crops.  Roots Down New Bedford is a free organic gardening workshop series presented by Brix Bounty Farm.  Come join in our conversations aimed to help make your garden more bountiful and nutritious.

Here at Brix Bounty Farm; we are on a path toward growing high brix, nutrient dense crops.  We feel that a focus on producing nutrient rich crops will result in better flavor and nutrition for the wide variety of vegetables we grow for our CSA and markets.  In April, we presented a short webinar hosted and now archived by the Environmental Leadership Program:

Nutrient Dense Foods for Consumers, Gardeners, and Farmers from Environmental Leadership Program on Vimeo.

The focus on nutrient dense production has been around quite awhile, but it’s really picked up steam in the past few years.  Each growing season, more farmers and gardeners are beginning to focus on the nutrient quality of their crops; perhaps we are on the verge of a tipping point toward broadscale interest in the relationship between soils, health, and nutrition.  Dan Barber, the influential Chef at Stone Barns in New York, referenced refractometer use as a in his recent interview with the TED Blog:

While we support organic farming, we do so in a thoroughly modern context, employing the most innovative, up to date, and efficient technologies to move food forward. One example is the refractometer—a small, handheld device that measures Brix, the sugar content of a fruit or vegetable.

Looking for more information?  Our Farm&Garden Resource Page has a variety of tip-sheets including one focusing on Growing Nutrient Dense Foods. Here are four links which will provide perspective on the concepts behind Nutrient Density:

  • Allan Balliett, a biodynamic growers in West Virginia offers a nice blog entry focusing on refractometer use, posted by Hartke is Online in February 2010.
  • Jon Frank from International Ag. Labs and High Brix Gardens shares his answer to What is Brix?
  • The Real Food Campaign led by Dan Kittredge is a leader in the Nutrient Density movement in the Northeast and nationally.
  • Michael Astera’s blog The New Agriculture provides a more nuanced discussion of the matter; and provides a lengthier introduction.

I’m looking forward to squeezing in a break from fieldwork later today to listen to Carol Mosley Braun speak at UMass Dartmouth.  She’ll be presenting information and a talk about her current passion; Ambassador Organics, which markets organic and biodynamic coffee, teas, and spices.

Since we arrived on our land here on Tucker Road we have been working with the Josephine Porter Institute, who supplies Biodynamic Preps (think of them as a mix of compost tea, homeopathic energetics, and a method for farmers to bring new spiritual energies to our farms) for growers who aren’t currently able to produce their own preps.  Later this month, as our fields continue to warm up for the season, we’ll be applying field sprays of horn manure and equisetum.  These preps are only one part of our fertility plan which aims to bring vibrant life back to our soils here on the farm; if you drive by on Tucker Road and see us with a backpack sprayer we are likely applying a biodynamic prep, compost tea, or fish fertilizer; all of which play a crucial role in reinoculating our land.

Much like Rudolf Steiner who wrote and lectured on a wide array of topics, Robert Karp who is the Executive Director of the Biodynamic Association in the U.S. recently penned a terrific essay examining economic relationships inherent to sustainable agriculture systems, Toward an Associative Economy in the Sustainable Food and Farming Movement”, link available through the BD association website.

In the spirit of recycling near Earth Day, here is a blog post from the original Brix Bounty Farm Blog  from December 2008 with a few good links regarding Biodynamics:

Biodynamics is a field of agriculture that has developed from an initial series of lectures, Spiritual Foundations for the Renewal of Agriculture, presented by Rudolf Steiner in the summer of 1924.

In 2006 and 2007 I farmed at Hawthorne Valley Farm in Harlemville, NY. While I focused primarily on the 12 acres we had in vegetable production, the farm also had a dairy herd that played a central role in the life and fertility of the farm. Hawthorne Valley has played a leading role in the development of Biodynamic Agriculture in the eastern United States, alongside: the Pfeiffer Center in Spring Valley, NY and the Josephine Porter Insitute (JPI) for Applied Biodynamics in Virginia.

Biodynamics has a national certifying agent, Demeter USA. I’m not aware of any certified biodynamic operations along the Southcoast though there are a few growers who are using practices associated with Biodynamics.

On a slightly different note, I’ve been working on a brief resource list for Know Your Vegetables. One site I’m sure to include is ATTRA (the National Sustainable Agricultural Information Service), they are a great resource for gardeners and farmers of all experience levels; they regularly publish information on a wide array of relevant topics. Back in 1999 they published information on Biodynamic Farming & Compost Preparation.

In the recent years, Biodynamic Agriculture has continued to grow in both interest and practice throughout the States.  I reckon the movement will continue to grow well in the future, thanks in part to the development of a North American Biodynamic Apprenticeship Program.

Before we get to the celebration of our community, this Sunday evening I would like to brings two interesting  articles/op-ed pieces to folks attention:

There are quite a few points in Entis’s editorial which I take exception to, not the least of which is his claim that, “since genetically engineered crops have been planted, there have been no incidents of harm to man, beast, or the environment.”  Entis is correct in stating that many conventional growers have come to appreciate the technology in genetically engineered crops, which allow them to streamline herbicide applications from 4 or 5 chemicals to 1 chemical (e.g. glycoophosphate, commonly the brand name Roundup).  I was able to observe this on a farm tour through Boulder County Colorado last June, where sugar beet growers were affirming that without roundup ready technology they wouldn’t have planted Sugar Beets.  But before we adopt wide scale application of a technology, I believe it is necessary to consider the impact of our decisions.  Contamination of non-gmo (genetically modified organisms) seed with gmo traits is in my mind a clear example of “harm to man, beast, or the environment”.  Whether its the case of Canadian grower Percy Schmeiser whose Canola crops were contaminated by Roundup Ready Canola, or the current concerns held by the organic table beet or chard seed producers, planting of gmo crops continues to have major implications for our society.  Hopefully we’ll see a well written rebuttal to Entis’s op-ed piece; maybe even a perspective which includes the proper role of soil stewardship in continuing to feed and nourish our globe, as opposed to the strong bias toward technology as the silver bullet of the future.

While Entis states, “genetically engineered crops are now under develop to address this constraint” (fresh water scarcity), organic and biologically minded conventional growers have already been practicing methods of agriculture for decades which works to build soil organic matter, thereby increasing carbon levels in our soils.  As we increase organic matter in our soils, we build the resilience necessary to face the impact of climate change, new rainfall patterns, and the availability of irrigation.  But a stark difference is at the heart of focusing on improving our soils rather than relying on technology… that difference would be who profits from such action.  A reliance on new seed technology fosters long-term dependence on seed companies and their “patented” seeds, while improving our soils builds profits for the farmer.  No doubt, as a vegetable grower I’ll vote for the latter.  Unlike the ballot cast at recent town elections, or with our dollar in the marketplace, this vote will take the form of remineralizing of our soils, sowing cover crops, reinoculating our soils with mycorrhizal fungi (which will help us build glomalin levels in our soils) and beneficial bacteria.  I consider myself lucky, at the farm we get to vote every single day for the future we would like to help manifest; and we invite you to join us.

Springtime is a busy one around the farm… along with the usual farm activities:  seeding in the greenhouse, spreading amendments and field sprays of fish and biodynamic preps, getting the apprentice crew up to speed, we have been enjoying a rather productive couple of weeks engaging with our local community.  Through a dynamic process of sharing and learning we aim to add our threads to an ever stronger network focusing on sustainable agriculture in SE Massachusetts.

Among the long list of the past few week’s hi-lights:

A final note, at the end of March, President Obama declared the 31st Cesar Chavez day …  For more info see http://www.chavezfoundation.org/ or the link to a PBS program on the subject – http://www.pbs.org/itvs/fightfields/.  Quite a worthy tribute to one of the heroes of the American agricultural labor movement, and good reminder for us to be thankful for the folks who grow our food both here in the USA and the crops which are imported across our borders.

Spring has arrived in full force.  After last week’s heavy rains and the abundant sunshine green is everywhere on the farm.  We can also gauge the coming of spring by our continued busy list of workshop presentations; including a free workshop on plant and seed selection in Fall River this Tuesday the 6th (see the Brix Bounty Events page).

On this Saturday, April 11th, we will be one of 10 locations around the state hosing a hands-on Organic Gardening Workshop in partnership with NOFAMass.  To pre-register of for more information please visit the NofaMass Programs Page.  The workshop will run from 9AM to noon.

Spinach

Spinach in the GH, March 2010

This past week has provided a lot of media coverage regarding our industrial food system.

Perhaps the biggest newsmaker has been the debut of Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution this past Friday night on ABC.  While Jamie might not do the best job hi-lighting the ongoing work of folks already working to improve school nutrition, for example Debra Eschmeyer; it’s absolutely exciting to have a network television station pick up a show focusing on the real implications of our current food system.  Hopefully it will stimulate wider discussions in our communities over the coming weeks.

ABC also ran a story this weekend examining the destruction of surplus Strawberry crops, I’ll let the story speak for itself…

Our industrial food system is broken.  While it has achieved dramatic success in producing amazing increases in yields over the past couple of decades; it has built this success on the unsustainable use of fossil fuels for fertilizers, heavy application of harmful pesticides, unfair labor practices, and a general neglect for producing and distributing healthy foods to everyone in our society.  A case in point is the widescale adoption of High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) as a sweetner in processed foods.  Numerous studies are beginning to show the negative health implications of HFCS in our diet:  see this web story about research at Princeton University and Dr. Joseph Mercola’s terrific appraisal on the Huffington Post a few weeks back.

What are some of the solutions?  Traditional sugar for some; though in 2008 we started planting GMO sugar beets in the U.S., opening up another conversation altogether (I know farmers who stated that without the introduction of GMO technologies for Sugar Beets they would have quite producing sugar beets altogether).  For a small group of growers and bakers in the Northeast it’s a return to heritage wheat and local grain production.  Though I have a hard time imagine any serious scale production of commodities that are comparatively easy to ship from the breadbasket.  For your consideration… according to the Mass. Dept of Ag. Resources the state of Massachusetts has a little more than 500,000 arable acres available for agriculture.  In comparison Cass County in North Dakota cropped a half-million acres in soybeans alone this past year.  The production in Cass County contributed to the estimated 77 million acres of soybeans planted in 2009 in the United States.  Let’s recap – The united states plants more than 150 times the arable land in Massachusetts in one crop:  soybeans.

Relocalization of grains in the Northeast is an interesting idea to consider, but it will necessarily involve production in the larger production areas outside of Massachusetts (i.e. New York State, Aroostook County in Maine). Continuing to improve access to fresh fruits and vegetables makes sense; but we should be aware that there are many reasons fruits and vegetables cost more at the grocery store… especially if you exclude tomatoes and potatoes the cost per calorie produced is much higher for most vegetables than commodities like corn and soybeans.  A farmer may be able to survive (sic) selling a bushel of feed corn for as little as 10 cents/pound (note:  the current price is around 7 cents), but as the ABC story shows when prices for fresh market strawberries drop to 25 cents/pound it doesn’t make sense for the growers to spend money harvesting the crop.

Sometime in the coming weeks I’ll try to contribute a post on the thriving and essential importance of our local food systems; which should be celebrated for not only what they currently contribute to our community health, but also their role in stabilizing our economic systems…

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