Subscription Squash,
And Celery, And Spinach, Etc.
by Preston Stern
One of the articles in Birth, Sex & Death (IC#31) Spring 1992, Page 8
Copyright (c)1992, 1996 by Context Institute
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Community Supported Agriculture projects ensure income for farmers and
a healthy supply of fresh, robust, locally grown food - at reasonable cost
- for their members. These subscription garden projects are a growing international
movement that is recovering a lost tradition of relationship between those
who work the land and the rest of us who depend on the products of their
skill. This arrangement fosters respect and caring for agriculture and agricultural
land, and provides participants a new sense of connectedness to the land
that nourishes them and their families.
The principle behind CSA is simple - share the risks as well as the bounty.
In a CSA garden, shareholders pay for their portion of the harvest before
most of the seeds are even planted, and the farmer is able to count on a
salary.
This is how it works: project organizers draw up a garden budget. Probable
yield for the site is estimated; the costs for seed, supplies, and other
expenses, including a fair living wage for the farmer, are figured. Then
the number of shares to be sold, at a price to meet the budget needs, is
calculated.
Shares are marketed by prospectus, to inform potential members of the
crops planned and the expected time of harvest for each. Local variations
are significant, of course, but a typical garden may distribute fresh organically
grown produce to its supporters once a week from May to October, and root
crops once a month November to March. For an average project, one share
can provide about half the weekly food requirements for a family of four,
eating a basically vegetarian diet, at a cost of about $350.
The CSA movement was born in Europe and Japan about twenty-five years
ago. Original organizers were mothers responsible for feeding families.
It was they who first sought out growers committed to ecologically sound
practices and proposed a plan that became Community Supported Agriculture.
The movement got going in the United States when Robyn Van En, an organic
market gardener in the Berkshire Region of Massachusetts met Jan Vander
Tuin, an American farmer who had spent three years in Europe studying CSA.
They began the first CSA project in America at Robyn's Indian Line Farm
in 1986. They modeled it after Topinambur, a project Jan had helped found
in Zurich, Switzerland, that produces vegetables for about 400 people and
milk and eggs for about 600.
Now, six years later, Van En has organized Community Supported Agriculture
of North America (CSANA), which is an educational non-profit clearinghouse
to help support the exploding interest in CSA. There are now over 200 projects
in the US and hundreds more around the world. They come in a range of sizes:
from the largest, in Japan, which employs four farmers and feeds a thousand
families; to the smallest, in Pennsylvania, managed by one person and a
rototiller, providing for twelve families on a half-acre plot.
Though there are bound to be challenges when starting up a new project,
marketing the shares has generally been easy. Sometimes organic markets,
food co-ops and restaurants buy shares. Local businesses or Chambers of
Commerce may support a project by purchasing shares for a local food bank.
For many CSA projects, expansion beyond their own garden comes naturally.
Often other local farmers are drawn into the network to provide meat, poultry,
eggs, or dairy products.
Producers and consumers both have found that CSA provides the best of
both worlds - inexpensive, high quality food, locally grown, without unsustainable
social and environmental costs. The list of benefits seems endless. While
25% of food produced in America never makes it to a consumer, there is no
spoilage in CSA. Packaging is virtually eliminated, and distribution costs
are kept to a minimum. Growers are freed from monocrop farming. Perhaps
best of all, it is fun! Sharing common concerns for good food, sensible
land stewardship and social justice brings people together from all ages
and walks of life.
CSANA has produced a handbook, Basic Formula to Create Community Supported
Agriculture, with pointers to help fledgling projects get off the ground.
Taking examples and case stories from successful gardens, it offers tips
on planning, distribution, and marketing, and is available, for $10, from
CSANA, Indian Line Farm, RR 3, Box 85, Great Barrington, MA 01230.
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1996 by Context Institute
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