Thursday, September 24, 2009

Community Supported Agriculture at the South Plains Food Bank Farm


The South Plains Food Bank's Carolyn Lanier Youth Farm offers a CSA. CSA stands for Community Supported Agriculture. This is a program where farmers pre-sell all or part of their harvest at the beginning of the year, in order to have funds for seeds, plants, etc. The pre-purchasers are referred to as shareholders of the farm. In the case of the food bank farm, we sell only a portion of our harvest in order to have funds to support our youth project, GRUB (Growing Recruits for Urban Business). GRUB is a life skills and job skills training program for teenagers, and it is based on our 5.5-acre urban farm.


Teens in the GRUB Program volunteer on Saturday mornings during the school year and, if they put in the hours and prove themselves to be good workers, they are eligible to apply to our paid summer program. Selling approximately half of the crop through our CSA program helps the food bank fund a portion of the summer salaries for 10 to 12 deserving teens. This is a win/win situation for all concerned. The food bank farm gets a trained and able-bodied work force during the labor-intensive summer months, the food bank gets the other half of the harvest to distribute to those in need, the shareholders get locally grown, chemical-free produce (and the satisfaction of helping out our GRUB Program), and the youth in the GRUB Program have a summer job and earn their own money.


This week is the final harvest of the summer crop and the end of our 2009 CSA season. I always hate this final week, it reminds me of the last day of summer camp. We tell our shareholders, our friends, goodbye until next year and the farm goes into fall and winter mode. We compost the spent plant matter and put in cover crops or let some areas lie fallow. One shareholder told me she would need to spend some time alone at the farm to grieve the end of the season. I know exactly how she feels.


But, before we know it, a new growing season will be upon us. New growth will emerge, shareholders will return, and more teens will have an opportunity to learn and grow at the South Plains Food Bank's farm. It is all part of the cycle of life on our farm, and it will be another win/win year for everyone.


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