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Article published by Civil Eats

Written by Ruscena Wiederholt
May 6, 2024

Nearly a quarter of U.S. mammal species are on the endangered species list. Researchers say farming with biodiversity in mind may help stave off further decline.

Tom Farquhar planted several large plots of beneficial flowers around his vegetable farm in Montgomery County, Maryland. Once a conventional corn and soybean farm, the idea was to control pests at the Certified Naturally Grown operation by increasing the number of beneficial predator insects and spiders. And the method worked: “We don’t have too many big insect problems,” he said.

But the crop-free plantings have had another effect, Farquhar explained. They have also increased the number of mammals on the farm. Strips of trees, bushes, grasses, or flowers around agricultural or pasture fields can house higher numbers of small mammals than cropland. Additionally, the diversity of Farquhar’s crops and the chemical-free nature of his farm also attracted and supported small mammals, he said.

“We see lots of rabbits, groundhogs, mice, and voles in our fields,” he wrote in an email to Civil Eats. “Also, raccoons, especially when sweet corn is ripening.”

Because small animals can damage crops, the farm fortunately also has predators such as foxes, hawks, and eagles helping keep them in check. “The coyote is now a resident in our area, and that was never true until recently,” said Farquhar. “Maybe in the last 10 years, [coyotes] began to come in, and they also will eat the small mammals. So, we got nature happening out there in a big way.”

While industrial farming feeds the multitudes, it is also a main driver of biodiversity loss across the country. More than 18 percent of North American mammals are decreasing in population, and nearly a quarter of the more than 400 mammal species in the U.S. are listed on the endangered species list.

In addition to every species’ inherent value, mammals are vital in the natural order. They play critical roles in their ecosystems, sustaining and keeping in check species higher and lower on the food chain. They disperse seeds, pollinate, and transfer nutrients across landscapes, supporting healthy plant populations, and they alter their environments in ways that enhance biodiversity. They even mitigate climate change.

“Maybe in the last 10 years, [coyotes] began to come in, and they also will eat the small mammals. So, we got nature happening out there in a big way.”

The burgeoning human population, however, means agricultural impacts are only set to increase. Agriculture already takes up over half of U.S. land, with cropland expanding by 1 million acres per year, fueling habitat loss for wildlife and mammals.

Yet these agricultural areas present a golden opportunity: What if farms could help other species, especially the charismatic, furred variety? While increasing the number of mammals on farms can create some challenges, losing the bulk of small and mid-sized mammals presents challenges that are even larger. And farming sustainably—with organic methods and techniques like agroforestry that encourage on-farm biodiversity—offers a ray of hope to slow the decline of our closest relatives.

The Impacts of Agriculture on Mammals

Though the changing climate, the spread of invasive species, and pollution all negatively affect wildlife, agriculture has had a massive impact on the world’s mammals.

First of all, farmland reduces mammals’ natural habitats and diminishes their ability to find shelter as well as food and prey, explained Koen Kuipers, a researcher at Radboud University in the Netherlands. For instance, agriculture can destroy forest habitats that certain bat species, like the endangered Indiana bat or northern long-eared bat, use for roosting and foraging.

Runoff from U.S. farms is also a main source of pollution for rivers, lakes, and wetlands. Excess nutrients from fields can wash into nearby waterways, one of the greatest threats for freshwater mammals including dolphins, otter, and terrestrial mammals that gather their food from waterways.

And that’s not the only bad news. Pesticides can harm or kill mammals and can also reduce prey and attract invasive species that compete with native mammals for resources, explained Gaurav Singh-Varma, a researcher at the University of British Columbia. For instance, mountain lions, deer, coyotes, foxes, and bobcats can die by ingesting bait meant for pests or by eating pesticide-contaminated prey.

“All the pesticides and fungicides or whatever type of management that big farmlands like to use can have a direct and indirect effect on the mammals in the area,” Singh-Varma said. “It affects the type of habitats that the animals can use.”

In addition, as the largest consumer of freshwater globally, agriculture pulls directly from freshwater habitats which, in turn, harms species such as beavers, rabbits, mink, otters, and water shrews.

How Mammals Help on Farms

Mammals are vital to the functioning of natural landscapes, including those devoted to agriculture.

For example, bats are voracious predators of insects that damage crops. By one estimate, these flying mammals save U.S. farmers $3.7 billion annually. Bats also pollinate plants such as bananas and guavas grown in Hawaii and Florida, agave in California, and coconuts in Puerto Rico.

Other mammals such as skunks, badgers, foxes, and coyotes also do their part to suppress insects, rodents, and other pests, as do wolves and deer.

Meanwhile, “beavers are natural hydrologists and so the dams they build allow water to pond in one place and you get more infiltration,” explained Daniel Rath, an agricultural scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC). “And the water that’s stored in the soil is then able to be used by growing plants. It helps with resilience to extreme weather conditions such as drought and floods.”

Even negatively viewed mammals can be beneficial. Deer, for example, help cycle nutrients and fertilize soil. In addition, burrowing mammals like mice and moles increase organic matter and water infiltration in soil, explained Rath.

In addition, despite concerns that the sustainable practices that support mammals may reduce crop yields, some indications point to the opposite conclusion.

“By diversifying the system, you provide a lot more habitat for these natural pollinators to pollinate crops,” said Singh-Varma. “And there’s research to suggest that in these diversified systems, you can have smaller plot levels, or farmland, but still have an equivalent amount of output that you would get with conventional pesticide-heavy agricultural systems.”

He explained this boost may come from increased nutrient cycling and an abundance of species both above and below ground including native pollinators, birds, mammals, fungi, microbiota, and earthworms.

Supporting Mammals With Biodiversity

Though agriculture represents a top threat to mammals, when carried out with an eye toward biodiversity, it can also be a force for good.

“Diversification is an important step in acknowledging that agricultural systems are part of wider, complex natural ecosystems that are deeply interconnected and provide numerous benefits to society,” said Rath. “A diverse landscape that has a variety of plants, a variety of inputs, and a variety of land-use types can really help with that [wildlife] diversity.”

For instance, adding natural elements like hedgerows, or uncultivated strips about 15 feet in width, alongside agricultural fields can greatly benefit mammals, because they supply food and shelter to a variety of wildlife, including hedgehogs, bats, voles, and mice.

Agroforestry, or adding trees and shrubs to crops or pastures, is also advantageous—supporting a diversity of mammals including deer, black bears, squirrels, and bats, along with a variety of birds and invertebrates. The patches of shrubs in agroforestry provide protection and food for mammals, supporting these higher levels of diversity.

A recent study led by Kuipers looked at the benefits of diversifying agricultural landscapes in the U.S. and around the world for several mammals including bats, rodents, opossums, and hedgehogs. “We found that when these natural elements were included in croplands, and also for forest plantations, that species abundance and species richness can be similar . . . to natural reference conditions,” said Kuipers. Conversely, without the addition of hedgerows, trees, and other uncultivated areas, the abundance and diversity of lactating critters was reduced by up to a third.

Agriculture can play another important role for mammals: connectivity. Wildlife-friendly practices like planting grassland or forest strips and diversifying crops on farms can help animals move across the landscape. In turn, this allows gene flow between mammal populations, migration between summer and overwintering habitats, dispersal of individuals into new areas, and range shifts north spurred by global warming. But the context of the diversity matters, Kuipers found. Mammals were more likely to move through agricultural areas surrounded by natural vegetation than development.

Still, some mammals may benefit more than others from diverse farm fields. In his study, Kuipers found that the composition, or the particular set of mammalian species, varied between cropland and natural habitat.

“Even though the average abundance and richness of species is similar in cropland and natural habitats, we also found that the species that do occur there are slightly different,” he told Civil Eats. “So, there is an impact.”

This difference may come down to the type of mammal considered.

Specialist mammals, which occur in only a few specific habitats, were impacted more by the agricultural sites than species that inhabit a variety of habitats, explained Kuipers.

While diversified farm fields have proven to help wildlife, organic agriculture also supports habitat for many species, as it prevents the emission of hazardous chemicals that harm wildlife, along with their prey and habitat.

A good example is Christina Allen’s 10-acre farm in Maryland. With development sprawling across her neighborhood, the property she runs with organic practices with her husband appears to be something of a refuge for mammals.

“We have other critters like skunks, woodchucks, lots of possums, foxes, and even coyotes on occasion,” Allen wrote in an email to Civil Eats. “With development pressure, we notice the poor critters come here as they have to move somewhere . . . but I don’t consider them farm animals; they are wildlife. As long as they do what they do naturally, we coexist with them.”

Fishers, small mammals resembling a cross between a bear and a cat, are another notable appearance on Allen’s farm. Once extirpated from Maryland, they were reintroduced in the 1960s and made a strong comeback in the western part of the state. The fact that Allen’s farm is in eastern Maryland and beyond the lines of their known range shows even rare mammals call their farm home.

This bounty of mammals may have to do with some of their practices. They avoid using pesticides and heavy equipment that could compact the soil, plant flowers in their gardens to attract beneficial insects, and maintain meadows with native plants.

When Mammals Cause Damage

Despite their benefits, mammals can also cause headaches for farmers by eating their crops and farm animals. Organic farmers tend to have a more positive view of wildlife than conventional farmers, who often see them as a problem that needs to be controlled.

“Mammals and humans want to occupy the same landscape,” said Rath. “Because of agricultural expansion that’s increasing conversion of natural ecosystems to ranch land or farmland, we encroach on these natural habitats, and so these organisms come into conflict with us. One of the main examples is the wolf population in the American West—and you have in Montana, Idaho, and California issues with predation of livestock by predators.”

Even Farquhar feels some frustration. “You want to see the mammals thrive, but we’re happy that nature has its own predators for the mammals that would eat our little vegetables,” he said.

In Maryland, Allen had to add extra measures to protect her chickens from predators. “I did have to put huge aviaries up to protect my poultry from coyotes and sometimes a persistent fox,” she wrote in an email to Civil Eats. “The poultry get locked in their big open-air aviaries every night so the wild things can do their thing . . . hopefully, eat mice and rabbits!”

Singh-Varma echoed these sentiments about human-wildlife conflict. “It can directly impact animals through farmers often killing mammals that start to encroach on their agricultural land, especially big predators,” he said. “That’s a common phenomenon and a common problem all around the

There are better ways to protect livestock from predators, however. These include keeping guard animals such as dogs, maintaining areas with food and prey away from the farm, putting up fencing, and providing housing for farm animals as Allen did.

Rath also explained that nonlethal removal and relocation are also options for minimizing conflict.

Supporting Mammals

The world’s need for food is predicted to increase by 60 percent by 2050—and likely won’t stop there, as human population levels are expected to climb until 2080.

As mammals face ever-increasing threats to their existence, diversified agriculture could become increasingly relevant to their survival.

Farmers interested in supporting mammals are in luck. Agencies like the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resource Conservation Service promote sustainable agriculture practices benefitting both rural communities and wildlife.

A variety of nonprofit organizations, like the National Wildlife Federation and NRDC, also work with farmers to promote sustainable practices while maintaining and improving wildlife habitat.

“There are enormous benefits to the global environment associated with sustainable agriculture,” Farquhar said from his Maryland farm. “We love what we’re doing.”

Read the original article and see images of some of the mammals mentioned here at Civil Eats.

Article published by Michelin Guide

Written by Michael He
May 1, 2024

Nine ways a small urban family farm regenerates the environment.

Five miles from the heart of Orlando, Certified Naturally Grown Everoak Farm powers some of Orlando’s most flavorful restaurants. Husband and wife duo Mike and Nikki Garcia run the show. “We’re trying to go beyond sustainability. We really want to close the loop on the farm,” begins Mike Garcia.

Starting his career in kitchens, Garcia became curious with how food was grown. Teaching himself, he eventually launched Everoak Farm in 2019, five miles from downtown Orlando. Garcia says, “If you can work in a kitchen, you can definitely work in the field.”

Not only does he grow the freshest and tastiest produce, he does so with the environment in mind. Here are nine ways the Garcias pursue more thoughtful farming:


1. Biointensive Farming

“We do a lot of biointensive planting. The idea is to grow smaller and smarter, and fully capitalize on every square foot. Planting as tight as possible, but without sacrificing our yield,” explains Garcia. “Our garden beds are all tended by hand with hand tools. It’s pretty much my wife and me.”

2. Pastured Poultry

The chickens help regenerate the land. Garcia explains, “During the summer, the garden goes to rest. We cover crop it and then run pastured poultry through it. They’re looking for the grass and grubs. And on top of that, they’re dropping the manure, so it’s feeding the soil.”

3. Agroforestry 

The farm is inspired by Ernest Gotsch’s syntropic agroforestry (crops and trees working together), using techniques like stratification (stacking crops at different depths) and photosynthesis maximization (more sun for plants).

Garcia grows support species such as trees, grasses, and legumes – a natural forest garden. He adds, “I don’t spray at all to encourage more life and diversity. Sprays don’t choose which insects to kill. Whatever you’re spraying is going to kill the good and the bad.”

4. Restaurant Partnerships

Everoak partners with local restaurants, adapting what it grows to what they need, and vice-versa. Fascinated by Orlando’s culinary landscape that showcases Southern, Latin, Caribbean, and Asian cuisines, Garcia is happy to grow produce with origins from around the world.

MICHELIN Green Star Kaya is a Filipino restaurant. Chef Lordfer Lalicon uses Everoak’s green stem cauliflower in his cauliflower afritada (braised cauliflower), purple radishes in the sinigang (sour soup), and gem lettuce in the lumpiang sariwa (fresh spring rolls). He describes, “The green stem cauliflower has such a robust sweet earthiness. Purple radishes have a great bite, spice, and color. Gem lettuce is crisp and juicy.” Garcia also grows a Filipino staple: ube (purple yam). He grins, “[Lalicon]’s actually the one that encouraged me to grow ube.”

Chef Alda Rees of Bib Gourmand The Strand has recently served Everoak’s bok choy, curly kale, daikon, chicken livers, and chicken hearts. She says, “Our experience with Everoak Farm has been phenomenal. When they walk in with a delivery, it’s one of those moments that reminds you of why we are in the business— to feed and nourish people. The produce is always outstanding and fresh— when you see beautiful food you just want to eat it.”

5. Seasonality

Growing crops in season decreases energy needs. Garcia says, “That’s the beautiful thing about farming, as you’re connected with the seasonality of it. Our prime growing season goes from September into the beginning of June.”

Chef Lalicon explains, “Our menu is designed to take advantage of ingredients that are at their peak locally. We think hyper-seasonally and often switch out ingredients in our dishes to reflect what our farm partners are harvesting.” Chef Rees adds, “Both my husband and I were raised eating seasonally (I guess everyone was back then) so utilizing what’s in season seems natural to us.”

6. Home Kitchens

In addition to serving restaurants, Everoak serves individuals directly. Locals can pick up produce at its weekly farm stand or join its Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program, which provides 50 members with weekly produce. Garcia explains, “A typical bag would look like a bag of lettuce, a bag of arugula, a bunch of curly kale, a bunch of kohlrabi with maybe some zucchinis, so you just get a whole mix.”

7. Florida Farm Education

“We do farm dinners too. It’s more of an educational experience. The whole menu is 90% of what we produce here,” describes Garcia. He teaches about local cultivars built for surviving the Florida heat and pests, such as the South Anna Butternut Squash – a mix between the Waltham Butternut Squash and the Seminole Pumpkin.

8. Composting

“We partnered with O-Town Compost, which collects from hotels, resorts, and the restaurants we serve,” explains Garcia. “When making compost, you’re using carbon material and nitrogen material. Our nitrogen [is] wasted food scraps from our community, and our carbon [is] woodchips [from local arborists].”

Chef Lalicon adds, “It’s super cool that we both work with O-Town compost – so some of the byproduct that goes into the compost bin at the restaurant end[s] up nourishing the land that provides us with produce at Everoak.”

9. Community

Born and raised in South Florida to Cuban parents, Garcia has embraced Orlando as his home for over 15 years. The Orlando community has been vital to Everoak’s environmental success. Customers reduce emissions by buying locally, and Florida as a whole is an “ag friendly state” according to Garcia.

Chef Lalicon says of his Everoak neighbors, “Mike and Nikki are the best. They take feedback, are super accessible, and focus on quality. They are growing food in very thoughtful ways, from non-pesticides to rotational cropping.” Rees adds, “Once you meet Mike and Nikki there’s no going back. They are the epitome of what a small local farm should be. They really love what they do, and it shows in their product.”

Garcia concludes, “True sustainability comes at a local level, and you want to keep your community thriving. So, we all need to kind of help each other.” 

 

See the original article, with more great pictures, at Michelin Guide.

Article published by The Community Paper

Written by Kelly Alfonzo
April 21, 2024

A small family business run by Mike and Nikki Garcia has become a go-to fresh food source for residents and businesses in the Orlando community.

Everoak Farm is a biointensive and regenerative farm, which essentially means planting at a high density and fully capitalizing on every square inch while maintaining soil health, according to Mike Garcia, co-owner of the farm.

“The idea is to grow smaller and smarter, not larger, because you’re concentrating a lot more of your resources,” Mike Garcia said.

The farm started in 2019 after the Garcias spent some time farming in Sorrento and decided to try urban farming.

“We’re ‘Certified Naturally Grown,’ which is the equivalent of being ‘USDA Organic,’ but without having to do the whole bureaucracy and all the hoops through becoming certified organic,” Mike Garcia said.

In addition to being certified as naturally grown, Everoak keeps bees and raises chickens with a focus on pasture-raised poultry. They also make their own compost in collaboration with O-Town Compost.

“We actually take some of the food scraps that they collect from their customer base, and we go ahead and compost that here on the farm, which then gets turned in, spread into, and used in and around our farm,” Mike Garcia said.

The farm also serves restaurants such as Mid Drive Dive, The Strand and Kaya. In addition, they offer workshops to help promote sustainability.

“I always encourage people to grow their own, and if you can’t grow your own, the next best thing is to support a local farm,” Mike Garcia said.

Everoak Farm covers three acres of land just outside Orlando’s city limits, and it serves as a place for other small businesses to do pop-ups at their farm stands to promote their products.

According to Mike Garcia, the farm offers mini farm stands every Saturday and invites other local vendors to make the market’s experience more fun.

 

View the original article at The Community Paper

Article published by Juneau Empire

Written by Joe Orsi
February 15, 2024.

As a follow-up to a recent “My Turn” article in the Juneau Empire by Colin Peacock on prioritizing food security for Alaska, I would like to give the perspective of a small-scale farmer.

I believe both Alaskan agriculture and food security could be improved by involving farmers via 1) a property tax reduction, 2) a sales tax exemption, 3) business purchasing incentives and 4) a local food-sharing network of Alaskan growers.

I have a passion for growing food and have sold produce commercially in Juneau for more than 15 years. My seasonal, part-time business, Orsi Organic Produce, is a small-scale farm with about 1/3 an acre of cropland selling more than 2,000 lbs. of produce annually. I recognize the rewards and challenges of growing and selling produce, however, trying to make farm economics work out is sometimes difficult.

The rewards: There is nothing more satisfying to me than looking over thousands of square feet of green produce surrounded by the sights, smells, and sounds of nature and thinking: “Thank you Lord.” I currently enjoy supplying several Juneau vendors with produce, namely: Amalga Distillery, Juneau Natural, Rainbow Foods, and the Salt and Soil Marketplace. I know customers appreciate fresh, top-quality local produce — often sold within 24 hours of harvest — which is important because most produce loses 30% of their nutrients three days after harvest.

The challenges: Growing commercial quantities of produce in Southeast Alaska’s short cold season and wet maritime climate is difficult. Our soils are poor, the topography is steep, we have unpredictable weather patterns and it is a labor-intensive endeavor. However, I am blessed to have a good friend, Sam Bertoni, who volunteers his labor often. Consequently, it’s not too surprising only 5% of the food consumed in Alaska is grown in Alaska.

The economics: Economics works against farming in Alaska. This is really apparent here in Juneau which has high land values and associated property taxes. Shipping costs are also high of all farm-related products to Alaska.

Here is how I think we can improve agriculture and food security in Alaska:

1) Property tax relief. Why not extend the $150,000 senior citizen property assessment discount to include validated farmers? A validation could be assessed from municipal sales records for a farmer that either sells a threshold amount of produce ($10,000?) or a percentage of sales compared to an adjusted gross income (more than 10%)? The State of Alaska currently offers a Farm Use Assessment Application (AS 29.45.060) to reimburse municipalities for partial Farm/Agricultural land use. This exemption allows farmers to temporarily not pay tax on assessed farmland — BUT in the fine print — if a farmer changes land use (or sells it?) he is liable to pay up to seven years back taxes at 8% interest to the state/municipality. This liability disclosure discourages farmers from using this exemption.

2) Sales tax relief. Why not eliminate municipal sales tax on “Alaska Grown” food products? The State of Alaska Division of Agriculture oversees the Alaska Grown Program, and farmers can readily apply and become registered in it.

3) Incentivize businesses using Alaska Grown produce. Why not reward businesses that purchase Alaska Grown products with a partial property tax exemption? For example, if a business purchased $5,000 of Alaska Grown product, then they could deduct a percentage (10%?) of that amount from their property tax ($500) up to a certain amount ($2,500?).

4) Build a local food security network of growers. If local farm production increased, this would enable farmers to network and supplement food pantries and shelters with fresh local produce in their communities. I know from visiting many farms around Southeast Alaska that farmers are a generous lot and I believe would rally to support their local community with food donations. In addition, as of 2015, small-scale farmers can deduct some food donations off their federal income taxes.

If our governing bodies are willing to provide some tax relief to farmers and associated businesses, this would be a win/win for Alaska agriculture and local food security, particularly in geographically isolated communities throughout the Last Frontier.

• Joe Orsi is a master gardener and owner of Orsi Organic Produce in Juneau.

View the original article at Juneau Empire

Article published by Centre Daily Times

Written by Holly Riddle
April 13, 2024.

Chris Hench is one of Centre County’s newest farmers. He and his wife, Amber, own Blackbranch Farm in Julian. However, Chris’s background is far from agriculture. After art school, he traveled the world as a freelance photographer — but farming was always his end game.

“My whole adult life, my end game goal was to find somewhere suitable to homestead and live off the grid,” he said. “That was my exit strategy from working in Hollywood, doing this freelance photography work and feeling burnt out all the time. How could we make money homesteading … full-time? The answer was farming.”

Blackbranch Farm is in its third year of production. Launching in 2021 came with its own challenges, as the world navigated the first summer following the COVID-19 pandemic. Not only, Chris said, were they building a farm — infrastructure-wise — from scratch, but they were also attempting to build relationships with chefs and enter farmers markets for the first time. Now, though, you can find Blackbranch Farm at the Pine Grove Mills Farmers Market, and online through Centre Markets and State College Market. The farm also works with farm-forward restaurants around the area, such as Allen Street Grill, Pine Grove Hall, Creekside at the Gamble Mill, Grace at Carnegie House and Four Ways Pub & Eatery.

Blackbranch Farm is thought to be one of the only no-till, intensive market garden-style farms in Centre County. It’s a rare farm model due to the labor intensity, Chris said, but it’s healthier for the soil.

“One of my guiding principles to farming is, I wanted to farm as naturally as possible and beneficially to the earth as possible. I didn’t want to take and not give,” he said. “I follow very regenerative farming practices. … We don’t till, so we aren’t coming into the fields and ripping up the soil biology and destroying layers of soil. We establish the fields and then just leave them be, with cover crops in the off season to feed the soil. … It’s a whole philosophy of farming as naturally as possible.”

The farm is Certified Naturally Grown, a certification that comes from a non-governmental organization, and with somewhat stricter standards than organic certification. The farm also does not use any tractors in the fields, and all three acres are hand-tended. Because of this approach, the farm, according to Chris, can produce the same quantity that a traditional 12-acre farm might — which leads into the farm’s “intensive market garden-style” of farming.

“We’re selling at the farmers market, then have permanent standing orders with local restaurants, then bagging a hundred-something bags of lettuce for the CSA, and we can do that week to week and never run out because of the intensive planting,” he said. “We’re mostly transplanting, so when one crop’s done, there’s already another crop in the nursery that’s been growing for 30 days, and we can swap out for that crop.”

Both originally from the Lancaster area, Chris said that one of the elements of farming that he and Amber love most is simply the food. “We like eating healthy. We like cooking… We like cooking and high-end culinary…” That, and a desire to work with area chefs and high-end restaurants, has informed the farm’s crop choices.

“We grow, in one season, 80 or 90 different varieties of produce,” Chris said. “This is also partly because we run a pretty large CSA and the CSA is free choice. Each Sunday, members log into their account online and build their farm share box. They’re customized each week, so I want to have a big variety.”

“We grow a lot of different leafy greens and specialty mixes, like spicy mixes, frilly mixes… We do candy-striped beets and rainbow carrots and rainbow-colored radishes — a lot of the stuff the chefs we work with want. We don’t do any melons or corn, but we do buy corn from a local organic farm for the CSA, just because everyone has to have their corn in the summer,” he added. The farm also has a large microgreens operation.

The farm’s summer CSA program, which offers both pick-up and delivery, has grown rapidly since the farm’s founding and runs May through September. CSA spots for the upcoming season are still open and available, at blackbranchfarm.com.

 

View more pictures of Blackbranch Farm in the original article at Centre Daily Times.

Queens County Farm Museum to launch all-new immersive agricultural program April 18th

Article published by Morning AgClips

Written by Hayden Lees Cubas, Queens Farm
April 16, 2024.

FLORAL PARK, N.Y. — Blooms at Queens Farm, an all-new immersive agricultural experience this spring, introduces a sprawling field of over 70,000 U-pick tulips and vibrant photo opportunities to visitors of all ages at Queens County Farm Museum. This ultimate seasonal celebration will kick off April 18th and continue Thursdays through Sundays until May 19th, 2024. Gate admission to Queens County Farm Museum is free, and Blooms field entry tickets are $6–$8. Blooms guests may pick their own tulips for $2/stem.

A showcase of colorful tulip varieties will bloom throughout the event, including Algarve Early, Orange Brilliant, Jan Van Ness Triumphs, Texas Flame Parrots, Queen of the Night and many more. Throughout the year, flowers on the farm help support important pollinators such as bees from the farm’s apiary and a variety of butterfly species, including endangered monarchs. All crops at Queens County Farm Museum, including flowers, are grown using regenerative agricultural practices, and are Certified Naturally Grown.

As guests wander throughout the three-acre field of stunning tulip rows, they are invited to pick their own unique bouquets to bring home and enjoy. From rich reds, vibrant variegated oranges, vivid yellows, soft pinks, deep purples, delicate creams and more, blooms are available in a stunning array of hues that make each U-pick collection one-of-a-kind.

The Blooms tulip field is set among Queens County Farm Museum’s historic 47 acre grounds, which guests are invited to explore with free daily admission. As the natural scenery transforms to welcome a new growing season, visitors can enjoy the fresh spring air while learning about the rich agricultural legacy of New York City, meeting the farm animals, visiting the Farm Store and Plant Shop, hopping on a hayride, and touring the historic Adriance Farmhouse (weekends). Queens County Farm Museum’s Farmstand also opens for the season on May 8th, 2024.

Blooms at Queens Farm is part of an impressive lineup of spring events and education programs coming up at Queens County Farm Museum. Additional highlights include:

• Apple Blossom Children’s Carnival (April 20–28) – With Spring in full fling, visitors can enjoy carnival rides, hayrides, games and local food and drink while paying a visit to the farm’s array of friendly animals. Tickets: $16.95–$23
• Bee-a-Pollinator Earth Day Service Day (April 22) – Guests are invited to get outside and protect the planet at Queens Farm’s volunteer service day marking the 54th anniversary of Earth Day. Tickets: Free
• Grow and Gather Family Program (April 23–May 26) – This parent-child program will teach fledgling gardeners to plant, grow, and harvest vegetables, herbs, and flowers outdoors in Queens County Farm Museum’s new Edible Teaching Garden. Tickets: $25
• Teen Gardening Club (April 23–May 26) – Tweens and teens will enjoy a unique outdoor learning adventure while honing skills in indoor and outdoor gardening, hydroponics and urban gardening. Tickets: $25
• Celebration of the Three Sisters (May 4) – Guests will celebrate the Three Sisters Garden, learn more about Native American agricultural expertise, discover the rich history of Three Sisters planting and harvesting practices, and create inspired mosaics. Tickets: $25
• Sheep Shearing Festival (May 11) – The only event of its kind in NYC, guests are invited to learn about the cycle of wool production as the farm’s sheep get their much-needed spring haircuts. Tickets: $12-$15
• Wild Edibles Walk (May 16) – Expert guided exploration of a variety of wild edible plants in Queens County Farm Museum’s woodlands, pollinator gardens, and pathway edges, led by plant expert and author Marie Viljoen. Tickets: $55
• Art on the Farm (June 6–27) – Queens-based artist Denis Ponsot will help guests find their inner artist on the bucolic grounds as they experiment in the media of watercolor, pen and ink. Tickets: $55
• Strawberries: A Sweet Celebration (June 1) – Guests of this intimate event will take in the beauty of the growing fields during an evening guided tour. Farm-fresh berries, light fare and wine pairings included for an unforgettable evening. Tickets: $40
• Milk and Honey Month (June 1–30) – Queens County Farm Museum hosts this month-long celebration in honor of National Dairy Month and National Pollinator Month, both in June. Tickets: Varies by program; free and paid programs available.
• Cheesemaking 101 (June 12) – This introductory, hands-on class will guide students through the rich history and science behind curds and whey as they make two types of soft cheeses. Tickets: $55

 

Queens Farm offers free admission 354 days out of the year in addition to its robust offering of family-friendly events and educational programs. For more information, including full detail and registration links for the events summarized here, please visit queensfarm.org.

Article published by National Geographic

Written by Leah Worthington.
March 13, 2024.

The difference between organic, non-GMO, and certified naturally grown—and whether they’re worth paying a premium for.

Grocery shopping can be a dizzying experience these days.

If choosing among a dozen different yogurt flavors wasn’t overwhelming enough, there’s also the growing, confusing list of buzzwords on packaging labels. Is there a nutritional difference between organic Greek and regular? Is naturally grown healthier? What does it even mean for yogurt to be bioengineered?

While ostensibly created to educate consumers about how food is grown or processed, excessive labeling can have the opposite effect.

“Food labels can be very useful. And I’m saying ‘can be’ because sometimes they’re not,” says Ariana Torres, an agricultural economist and associate professor at Purdue University. The problem, she says, is that too much information can muddy the waters—making it harder for consumers to determine what labels actually mean and distinguish real certifications from empty marketing.

Food marketing experts weigh in on the most common food labels to demystify the claims and help consumers make educated choices about whether to pay the premium.

Organic

The term “organic,” which was first used in reference to farming in 1940, has come to describe a multi-billion dollar industry that represents nearly 6 percent of all retail food sales in the United States. And market research has shown that, while price premiums have fluctuated over the years, they’re generally trending upwards, with consumers willing to pay an average of 58 to 92 percent extra for organic over conventional produce and nearly 200 percent more for products like eggs. But what does organic mean, exactly?

Organic encompasses a broad spectrum of factors, from soil quality to pest control and use of additives, according to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), which regulates the market through its National Organic Program (NOP). For a product to receive the ubiquitous green “USDA Organic” label, it must meet a long list of requirements for growing, processing, and handling. At least 95 percent of a product’s ingredients must be organic to be certified.

Broadly speaking, organic products are guaranteed to be grown without synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, contain no artificial preservatives, colors, or flavors, and are produced without certain prohibited practices, such as genetic engineering. The term genetically modified organism (GMO) describes any plant, animal, or microbe whose DNA has been changed through the use of technology. All organic products are GMO-free, though not all non-GMOs are organic.

Organic farmers are also required to use methods that “foster resource cycling, promote ecological balance, maintain and improve soil and water quality, minimize the use of synthetic materials, and conserve biodiversity,” according to the USDA.

Kathleen Glass, associate director of the Food Research Institute at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, describes purchasing organic as “a lifestyle choice,” adding that there’s no evidence that organic is more microbiologically safe than conventionally grown foods.  Compared with 50 years ago, she says, the amount of pesticides and herbicides allowed on food are well below levels that could cause long-term health impacts.

Robert Paarlberg, an associate in the sustainability science program at the Harvard Kennedy School, says that there’s “no convincing evidence” that organic products are better than conventional from a nutritional or food safety perspective.

“Certified Organic does not mean much from a nutritional standpoint,” says Walter Willett, a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at Harvard. While organic products will have lower levels of pesticides and herbicides, he says that the health benefits of that are still unclear. “If the cost is similar, I would suggest the organic option, but for those on a limited budget, eating plenty of healthy foods would be more important,” he says.

Certified Naturally Grown

Consumers wanting to steer clear of synthetic chemicals and genetic engineering might also look for the “Certified Naturally Grown” label—and should be aware that any product claiming it’s “naturally grown” is not quite the same.

Though the standards are essentially the same as organic, the verification process differs slightly, says Alice Varon, executive director of Certified Naturally Grown, the independent nonprofit and certifier. “Certified Naturally Grown means that the food was grown without synthetic inputs or GMOs and that the practices of the farmer were verified through a peer-review inspection process.”

Founded and run by farmers, Certified Naturally Grown was created as an alternative for growers and producers intimidated by the “onerous,” national organic verification process, Varon says. Unlike organic, the CNG label implies locally grown and primarily covers minimally processed or non-processed foods like fresh produce, honey, sauerkraut, and salsa.

Whereas terms like “all natural” and “free-range” have no formal definition and can be used as an unverified, unregulated marketing ploy, Chris Berry, associate professor of marketing at Colorado State University, says that CNG—and other government or third-party certifications—are “something that consumers can rely on.”

Still, there’s always a margin of error, according to Varon. Unlike GMO certifiers, the CNG doesn’t conduct post-production lab testing, so cross-pollination with nearby conventional GMO corn fields, for instance, could potentially go unnoticed. “It’s entirely possible that there’s some contamination,” she says, adding, “That’s the nature of the food system.”

Non-GMO and bioengineered

While there’s widespread agreement that GMOs are as safe as any other foods, many consumers still want to know which is which. Though only a handful of GMO crops are grown in the U.S., several—including corn, soy, and sugar beets—are major players in the food market, both as ingredients and as feed for livestock.

One way to tell the difference is to look for products with the Non-GMO Project Verified label. The private nonprofit certifies goods free from organisms modified through any form of biotechnology. That means that, in a bag of non-GMO chips, not only must the potatoes be free from GMOs, but also any processed ingredients, like the canola oil used to fry the potatoes into chips.

While the Non-GMO Project sets the standards and makes the final certifying determination, independent companies conduct the actual genetic testing. These contractors use a lab technique called polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to test for the presence of genetically modified materia in DNA, says Hans Eisenbeis, the director of mission and messaging at the Non-GMO Project. To put it simply, he adds, they’re looking out for products that “can’t occur in nature and can only occur in a lab.”

Per Non-GMO Project standards, certain “high-risk ingredients,” like apples and canola, are allowed to contain a small percentage of genetically modified material.

“Contamination happens,” Eisenbeis says. Still, if you see the label, he adds, “you can be really confident that you are meaningfully avoiding every GMO that a human being can avoid.”

The USDA regulates a similar, but inverse label—bioengineered—to identify foods with a detectable amount of genetically modified material. The Non-GMO Project defines GMOs broadly and includes genetic modifications used at any point during food production. The federal designation, on the other hand, is much narrower. Bioengineered uses a higher threshold for contamination and excludes processed foods made from bioengineered crops with undetectable amounts of modified genetic material.

From a nutritional standpoint, there is no difference between GMO and non-GMO foods. However, Non-GMO Project certification could help justify manufacturers in raising product prices, which also reinforces—as premiums often do—the idea that the non-GMO option is somehow better. Recent studies have shown that non-GMO foods can cost anywhere from 10 to nearly 75 percent more.

Labels can often be a “marketing tool” more than anything else, Torres says. “We need to educate consumers…because some labels actually don’t have a real value or added value to a product is just a label.”

While consumers may prefer to eat non-bioengineered foods, a USDA spokesperson emphasizes that the label is meant only as “a marketing standard and does not convey information about the health and safety of foods.”

Find the original article at National Geographic.

This article was originally posted by the Staff at Ark Valley Voice.

The March SOIL Sangre de Cristo “Speaker Series” is set for 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, March 13, and it will feature guest speaker and owner of Rocky Mountain Garlic, Tiffany Collette. Those wishing to attend should RSVP to receive the Zoom Link.

Collette has received two zero-percent interest loans from SOIL Sangre de Cristo. With the equipment and supplies purchased with these loans. Rocky Mountain Garlic’s production and connection to the communities has increased significantly. Tiffany and her husband Mike Collette now offer a diverse array of fresh vegetables, garlic and eggs.

Rocky Mountain Garlic (RMG) is the only Certified Naturally Grown Farm in Chaffee County. This designation is a grassroots alternative to USDA Certified Organic. RMG is committed to regenerating their soil; no herbicides or pesticides are used.

This event will be recorded for future reference in the “Speaker Series Archives”.

It will be simultaneously translated into Spanish during the live presentation.

 

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