From Deseret News archives:
Sharing the harvest
Farm program feeds Utahns and the local economy
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Borski is enrolling customers through April 30. But the number of customers he and other community-supported farmers can accept is limited, and space is filling up fast, so customers need to sign up soon.
Williams said community-supported agriculture benefits individuals and the local economy.
"It allows you to eat a local diet," he said. "And there's not a lot of transportation costs involved."
Transportation for food in a typical meal in the United States is about 1,200 miles, he said. But community-supported farms generally draw customers from within about 50 miles. Buying local produce keeps more money within the local economy because profits remain here rather than being sent to a large national chain, and transportation costs are vastly reduced.
"The real benefit economically is it keeps dollars in this community," Williams said.
Debbie Stone, a resident of Salt Lake City's Avenues neighborhood, has been a "shareholder" for five years in East Farms, based in West Point. She said she enjoys using community-supported agriculture to teach her children about ecology, farming and diet.
Stone eats a mostly vegetarian diet, and with her East Farms food, she has gotten creative with vegetables she wouldn't normally buy, such as turnips and rutabagas.
Her spinach lasagna with walnuts and mushrooms is most popular with her children.
"Our rule is they have to try everything, and if they don't like it, that's OK," said Stone, who like many supporters of community-supported agriculture has read Michael Pollan's book "Omnivore's Dilemma," which describes the adverse affects of most Americans' diets.
Borski has one of the oldest community-supported agriculture programs in Utah. A family friend showed him an article about community-supported agriculture 15 years ago, but Borski didn't think the idea would take hold in Utah, telling the friend, "I think you're crazy. People feed their families hot dogs and fish sticks in this state."
But the family friend offered Borski $1,000 for a box of food a week over a growing season, and Borski built clientele mostly through word-of-mouth.
Borski's acreage in Kaysville and Layton can support about 400 shares. He usually has so many applicants that he has to return checks.
"I'm about 30 percent CSA, 30 percent farmer's market and 30 percent restaurants," he said.
E-mail: lhancock@desnews.com
Recent comments
I would have to disagree with you sam hill. Large scale farms, while...
Anonymous | March 31, 2008 at 9:45 p.m.
It is not carbon footprint that matterns. Even though the benfit of...
Phil | March 31, 2008 at 9:35 p.m.
More power to yah! Keep it up!!!
russ | March 31, 2008 at 9:01 p.m.
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