Community Supported Agriculture, Farmers' Markets and Market Days
4:00 AM | Posted by
Donald
The image of a table laden with a bountiful harvest isn't just for Thanksgiving. Local farmers' markets and Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) programs are available throughout the United States providing fresh, locally grown produce during the growing seasons. In other countries, markets are a part of daily life.
Even during the cold months of winter, some market farmers continue to sell products such as honey, eggs, cheese, nuts and meats. At the North Carolina Farmers' Market there are peanuts, pecans, cabbage, sweet potatoes and apples available for purchase in December. Additionally, there are jars of jams, jellies and other home canned goods.
Now is a good time to find farms in your area that participate in the CSA programs. With a CSA program, you subscribe in advance to receive shares of the locally grown, fresh produce from area farmers. By buying these shares, you help ensure that the farmer will be able to cover their expenses and salaries to grow and deliver the produce. By subscribing in the winter months, the farmer can plan how much to plant and order seeds for the next growing season.
Through a subscription with a CSA farm, boxes of fresh produce are sized according to the number of people to feed in your family. Many of the CSA farms will deliver the boxes to your home each week during the growing season, or provide a pick-up point in a nearby location. The CSA program is so popular in the Triangle Area of North Carolina that there are even waiting lists to subscribe with some of the local farms.
Whether you live, or travel, in another country, you're probably not very far from a market. For example, there are lists of market days for villages in France. Other countries publish similar lists. If you are traveling, you can also ask at the tourist information office. When my son lived in London, he shopped daily to purchase fresh produce from his neighborhood market.
Buying from a local market is not only a great experience, but a wonderful way to get to know the farmers who grow the produce. If you're a traveler, you may be introduced to fresh foods that you would not find elsewhere.
Story and photos by Freda Cameron
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Categories
- artists
- Asclepias
- Asclepias incarnata
- book review
- butterfly garden
- Container garden
- cottage garden
- Deer
- deer resistant
- drought and xeric
- environment
- Europe
- favorite accent
- favorite combination
- Flower
- flower bulbs and seeds
- food
- fragrance garden
- Garden
- garden design
- garden inspiration
- Gardens
- Gravel
- gravel garden
- home
- Home and Garden
- Hunger Games
- Irises
- Japanese iris
- Leaf
- Little Lime
- meadow
- Monarch
- Monarch Butterflies
- Monarch Butterfly
- Monarda
- Monet
- musings
- North Carolina
- nursery review
- Pest and Disease Control
- Plant
- plant care
- Plants A-F
- Plants G-L
- Plants M-Z
- Public
- Purple milkweed
- rabbit resistant
- Recreation
- rose_campion
- seasons
- Shopping
- Shrub
- sources
- Stemware
- Sweet pea
- technology
- travel
- United States
- Wayside
- wildlife
- Wine
Archive
-
▼
2008
(109)
-
▼
November
(30)
- Herd in the News: The Deer Went Over the Mountains
- Petite Perennial: Scutellaria suffrutescens
- Corkscrew Willow Provides Indoor and Outdoor Decor
- Evergreen Herbs for Gardens and Cooking
- Community Supported Agriculture, Farmers' Markets ...
- Cryptomeria Japonica: An Evergreen Conifer
- Child-Friendly Garden Plants
- Lovely Lucca
- Garden Design: Working with a Professional
- Technology Time: Martha's Photo Albums
- Baffle the Squirrels and Feed the Birds
- Art in the Garden: NC Sculptor Joel Haas
- Hiding Out: Praying Mantis in Manettia
- Eastern Aromatic Aster, Native Perennial Wildflower
- In Search of a Garden Gate
- Garden Inspiration: A Cottage Garden
- It's November. Do You Know What Your Plants are D...
- My Deer (the Buck) Stops Here
- Free Yourself and Your Oven: Grill the Turkey
- Gardens in Art: NC Artist Mary Jane Haley
- WWII Veteran and Gardener: Arthur's Story
- Planter's Punch: Crape Myrtle Color
- The Magic of Mougins
- Great Blue Lobelia, Native Perennial Wildflower
- When the Gardening Gets Tough
- Gardens in Art: A Tribute to Artist Eleanor Seng
- Google Garden Clippers
- Red, White and...Blue Sky
- Fainting Goats and Flowers at Fearrington
- A Gardener's View of Blogging
-
▼
November
(30)
Powered by Blogger.
Popular Posts
-
The image of a table laden with a bountiful harvest isn't just for Thanksgiving. Local farmers' markets and Community Supported Agri...
-
By Freda Cameron Although the weather has passed for planting, this is a great time to plan a garden with the children in your family. Durin...
-
George Washington's Mount Vernon is a reminder of the self-sufficiency of farms of historical significance. Did you know that Washingto...
-
Coreopsis ' Star Cluster ' in bloom with companions Eucomis 'Sparkling Burgundy' ( foliage left) echinacea (multiple...
-
There are few plants in the garden that are virtually maintenance-free. My favorite foliage plant is carex hachijoensis 'Evergold' ...
-
I tried to make a garden plan when I spread the soil in fall 2006 to create the outer gardens. I researched and researched the right plant...
-
These "green" disfigured coneflowers were removed and destroyed. I didn't plant any new " green bloom " echinace...
-
Katie and the Giant Cabbage The idea for Katie’s Krops began with a 9 year old girl and a 40 pound cabbage. In 2008 Katie brought home a ti...
-
May I see your identification please? Theft comes in many forms and recently garden bloggers have discovered that there are bad guys who wi...
-
By Freda Cameron What is the process of working with a professional garden designer? I asked this question at a local garden center that ha...
0 comments:
Post a Comment