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Food and Drink Essential to sustain life; near the top of the hierarchy of needs

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Old 06-08-2013, 02:14 PM   #1
fargon
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CSA

WE got our first delivery today from our CSA.
WE got: rhubarb, radishes, green onions, mint, butter leaf lettuce.
It has only cost me $190.00 for $5.00 worth of vegetables.
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Old 06-08-2013, 10:09 PM   #2
orthodoc
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How many weeks does your $190.00 cover?
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Old 06-09-2013, 06:20 AM   #3
fargon
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There is one more payment of $85.00 due in July. And we get a box of produce every week until the middle of October. Hopefully there will more stuff in the boxes, in the future.
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Old 06-09-2013, 06:29 AM   #4
richlevy
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fargon View Post
There is one more payment of $85.00 due in July. And we get a box of produce every week until the middle of October. Hopefully there will more stuff in the boxes, in the future.
Sorry that you were disappointed. If it's any consolation, this is probably why they lost the Civil War.

After my bulk beef adventure, I've been thinking about trying something else in the farm to table area.

How does it work? Do you pick the kinds of produce?
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Old 06-09-2013, 07:04 AM   #5
orthodoc
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We have a CSA program in smalltown that I bought a share in a couple of years ago. For a flat fee of roughly $300-400 you get a weekly box or bag of seasonal produce spanning May - Oct. Well-established programs will have produce available early via cold frames, greenhouses etc. They also may ask you for a list of things you really don't want. With other programs you get what they send, no choices. Some programs bring the boxes or bags in to a designated pick-up point in town; some have doorstep delivery.

It may be a little frustrating if you have a new CSA program locally and quantities aren't quite what you expect. sometimes it takes them a season or two to adjust exactly how much they need to produce to meet demand. But you get fresh local usually organically grown produce that hasn't been harvested by what is essentially slave labor, and that hasn't required tons of petrochemicals to store and truck it thousands of miles, you support your local small farmers, and you get to see what's really seasonal. Many people have no idea that asparagus is a spring-only vegetable, or that grapes, tomatoes, and cucumbers are mid to late summer. With 365-day availability of anything we want, we lose the sense of progression of the seasons and nothing is really special when we don't have to wait for it.

Anyway ... CSA programs are worth your support, even if your local one is starting on a small scale.
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