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Local food producers are quick to realize having a strong
local currency helps further their mission
Gorge Grown Food Network (GGFN) has a mission so closely related to
the GLCC’s that it’s only natural they would waste little
time in becoming a member. Aiming to promote the connection between economy,
ecology and the community, GGFN has also wasted no time making a mark
in the Gorge region.
In less than a year of existence, the organization can boast about
consistently attracting 400-500 people to its weekly farmers’ markets
in Hood River, creating a visible, successful outlet for local food producers
to sell their wares.
GGFN is a network of farmers and consumers who share in the recognition
that strengthening local communities can begin with the very food we put
on our tables. Several of the group’s members are CSA (community-supported
agriculture) farms. CSAs directly partner farmers and consumers to foster
social and economical responsibility in food production. The risks and
rewards are spread between farmers and members with the intent of creating
a sense of “appropriate land stewardship amongst the entire community.”
In community-supported agriculture, a member buys a “share” in
a farm, paying a certain amount at the beginning of a growing season with
the promise of fresh produce when harvest comes. This gives the farmers
literal seed money to plant the year’s crops. CSA members share
in the risk of a poor crop, but know more about where their food comes
from and are often encouraged to participate in the food production. When
the crops are harvested, members receive a box every week containing their
share of the bounty.
Volunteer Ann Kramer, GGFN’s usual public presenter (and GLCC
member), is passionate about the relationships between economy and community.
A counselor by trade, she pioneered a successful system helping people
prioritize their lives using puzzle pieces as an aid to visualizing a
holistic existence. The method itself promotes relationship-building,
and in a recent interview Kramer seems to practice what she preaches.
Her fervor is infectious.
Kramer isn’t the only one to see the natural connection between
community-supported agriculture and local currency. GGFN and GLCC are
both projects of the Columbia Gorge Earth Center. Ann isn’t even
the only one with dual memberships: Bruce Bolme, Munk Bergin, Delona and
Martin Campos-Davis, Humble Roots Farm & Nursery, Callie Jordan, Michael
Pilarski, Linda Short and Jaimes Valdez all share in that honor. There’s
no telling how many others are among the shoppers at the farmers’ markets
in Hood River, The Dalles, Cascade Locks and Goldendale. The GGFN aims
in coming seasons to be represented at a market somewhere in the Gorge
every day of the week..
Kristin Walrod of Hood River’s Dancing Moon Farm enjoys being
part of the Gorge Grown Food Network. She comments, “Farm memberships
are a wonderful way for consumers to buy fresh, flavorful food, straight
from the field, and for farmers to receive a livable wage for their work.
It’s a dynamic combination of the consumer being directly connected
to their food source and for the farmer to be responsive and in community
with their customers. We are growing together!”
In Dancing Moon’s first year of community farming they are providing
22 families with share boxes each week. The contents of the boxes vary
throughout the season according to what is ready for harvest. According
to their web site, early in the season (late June, early July), a box
will probably be smaller. It might include: one cucumber, two summer squash,
one sweet pepper, two heads of lettuce, one head of bok choi, one bunch
of green onions, one bunch cilantro and one pint of strawberries.
At midseason (August), you could find broccoli, cauliflower, sweet
corn, cucumbers, green beans, summer squash, sweet peppers, tomatoes,
lettuce, carrots and basil. Late in the season, your box might contain
leeks, potatoes, eggplant, pie pumpkin, summer squash, sweet pepper, winter
squash, salad mix, kale, onions and parsley.
In addition to the farm-fresh produce, one can also find seeds and
plants, eggs, fish, poultry and meat through the GGFN. Kramer comments
that Mountain Shadow Natural Beef has been one of the most successful
participants thus far, though the consensus is that the Hood River farmers’ market
has been entirely worth the vendors’ while.
Exercises in Choice
Characterizing both the steps in her puzzle system and being a consumer
as “exercises in choice making,” Kramer believes that each
person’s behavior affects the community of life. In our fast-paced
rat race world, we want things to be easily accomplished, but what is easiest
is often less healthful to our bodies, communities and environment. Ever
the optimist, Ann sees things changing, noting that people generally have
good intentions but are simply uninformed. Knowing what better choices
are available is often all the incentive needed for improvement.
Kramer emphasizes the relationship building fostered by CSAs, but loves
the other benefits she receives as well. Ann’s enthusiasm for both
CSAs and local currency are hard to match. She’s convinced the $400
she pays for a share in the CSA wouldn’t come close to covering the
cost in a store of the boxes she receives for 14 weeks during harvest season,
and it supports the local economy. The variety of produce also challenges
her to learn new recipes and expand her taste experience.
Calling it a “treasure chest,” Kramer quickly lists some
of the things she received in a recent share box and most notable are the
varieties of tomato, easily half a dozen. How often do you see that in
a grocery store? Are they ever as juicy and flavorful as one grown locally?
Eating seasonal food grown locally also reinforces one’s connection
to the land, an important quality of life aspect. Kramer recognizes that
people move to the Gorge for quality of life, and the “fabulous land” makes
it easy to connect to our food and how it is grown. New people, including
families, she notes, are bringing a new energy to the area and building
these relationships.
Teaching Kids and Families
Not only does GGFN support local food production, one of their main
goals is to educate the public in organic farming, healthy eating and local
economy, beginning with our children. Realizing that teaching good habits
at a young age improves the chances of the lessons persisting in the long
term, GGFN makes a conscious effort to present learning experiences that
engage children in food production. Each week the Hood River farmers’ market
provides activities designed for children. Several times this season, Pachamama
sponsored a Kids’ Area program entitled Fun with Food. In one session,
attending children learned about markets and food in storytime. A more
creative but wind-challenged July session explored texture and made art
using vegetables as stamps. The Hood River market also includes the middle
school students known as “Becker’s Kids.”
Michael Becker instructs Hood River Middle School children about the
math and science of agricultural development. For about two years his classes
have worked on a native plant arboretum, using plants acquired as a grant
from the Hood River Soil and Water Conservation District. They built trails
and the trees and shrubs planted are establishing themselves well.
This year, plans are underway to develop a larger garden space to produce
food for local farmers’ markets. Hosting the Hood River farmers’ market
is a logical complement to Becker’s school program. He notes that “the
connection between what we were doing at school and the goals of Gorge
Grown link together so well that it seemed a natural fit to have the market
at school.”
In addition to their plans to sell produce next season, Becker’s
classes are able to offer demonstrations to the public that coordinate
with their lessons. It gives the children an outlet to showcase their knowledge
and hard work. This summer, students designed and built a cob oven. Cob,
Becker explains, is a traditional building method utilizing sand, clay
and straw. It supplemented their ancient culture studies AND baked delicious
chocolate chip cookies!
The importance of local food production
Why is local food production important? It supports small family farms
who are your own neighbors, helping to stabilize a community economically.
Small farms are also more likely to practice environmental stewardship,
using little or no artificial chemical additives, crop rotation and integrated
pest management to produce healthier and often organic food.
Dancing Moon Farm is not certified as such (the cost of certification
is often prohibitive to small farmers), but they use biodynamic organic
methods to grow their produce and flowers. Munk Bergin’s crops are
heirloom varieties, grown from breeds nearly lost to monoculture farming.
This seems to be typical of local community farms.
Food grown locally also travels a much shorter distance from the farm
to your plate. Kramer says that people are often shocked to learn that
the average meal travels about 1500 miles to arrive in your kitchen. box:
Did you know? With the price of gas now consistently over $3 a gallon,
it will not be long before the increased cost of transportation finds its
way to store shelves. Food also begins to lose nutrients from the moment
of harvest, so the less time it spends in transport the healthier it is
to eat.
History of the GGFN
Ann Kramer was involved with CSAs for ten years in Tampa, Fla, before
moving to the Gorge last year. After the Columbia Gorge Earth Center’s
(CGEC) presentation in August 2005 of Sierra Club’s, The True Cost
of Food, she asked in the discussion afterwards if there were any CSAs
in the area. Few knew anything about them, but there seemed to be some
interest, so about ten people met at a later date to talk further.
By October, the group grew to around 20 people, and when 2006 rolled
around, they realized the interest in CSA farms had spread through the
entire Gorge region. People were attending from The Dalles to Stevenson,
Parkdale to Underwood. They decided on a name and mission statement, and
with early encouragement from the CGEC, Gorge Grown Food Network became
the second group under its non-profit umbrella.
As the Gorge Grown Food Network’s first season draws to a close,
everyone involved seems really enthused about the group’s future
prospects. A demand for locally-produced food is being well established,
and GGFN’s commitment to economic and community building should help
continue to improve the quality of life throughout the Gorge. Their market
manager accepts a portion of her pay in RiverHOURS, as well as several
farmers/vendors, helping distribute local currency more widely. The GLCC
is excited to include them as part of the economic infrastructure being
built with RiverHOURS.
published September 02006, RiverHOURS trade Directory, Vol. 2 Number
2
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May 25, 2008
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