you can ensure a clean, local and GM free supply of food for your family. Support a local farmer, help keep urban and suburban land open and fully of beautiful plants and animals -- an environmental oasis.
If interested in learning more, just google CSA or community supported agriculture. You will turn up a wealth of resources.
Here's one link:
Robyn Van En Center for Community Supported Agriculture
http://www.csacenter.org/And here's a link to an essay on the topic:
http://www.chiron-communications.com/communique%208-1.html...snip...
A CSA farm is a community-based organization involving consumer households and growers. The households live independently but agree to provide direct, up-front support for the local growers by investing in a share of the harvest. The growers in turn agree to do their best to provide sufficient quantity and quality of food to meet the household needs and expectations of the shareholders.
CSA farms typically produce a sizeable share of a family's fresh vegetables and fruits; many CSAs also offer shares of milk, butter, eggs, meat, and flowers; some also have formal links with consumer coops, giving shareholders access to a wide variety of goods.
Within this web of economic relationships, the farms and families form a network of mutual support, whether the community is based in an urban neighborhood, a suburb, a church, a school, or some other social constellation. CSA has wide latitude for variation, depending on the resources and desires of the participants. No two community farms are entirely alike.
As CSA pioneers conceived of it -- and as it is being practiced at many farms -- CSA is not just another new and clever approach to marketing. Rather, community farming is about the necessary renewal of agriculture through its healthy linkage with the human community that depends on farming for survival. It's also about the necessary stewardship of soil, plants, and animals: the essential capital of human cultures.
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