Georgia Organics' The Dirt, Spring 2014
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Transcript of Georgia Organics' The Dirt, Spring 2014
CONTINUED ON PAGE 8
As any farmer will tell you, it’s incredible to watch something grow. When we began our farm to school program seven years ago, we knew it could take root and expand into a statewide effort to get more Georgia children eating healthy, whole food from farms in their own backyards.
Last year was groundbreaking for farm to school (pun intended), and in this issue of The Dirt we’re thrilled to share successes from around the state, and to introduce you to some of the farmers, school nutrition directors, teachers, volunteers, and more who’ve helped make it all happen.
We’re tending to the crop of the next generation of eaters and farmers. Watching them grow is going to be great.
Growing the Next Generation2013 was a big year for farm to school in Georgia.
THE DIRT Spring 2014 We connect organic food from Georgia farms to Georgia families
GETTING A SENSE OF THE CENSUS OF AGRICULTUREWhat story do the numbers tell? 6
MEMBER SPOTLIGHT Environmental activist turned farmer Wendy Crager of Crager Hager Farm 14
INFOGRAPHICPALOOZA! Our 2013 farm to school successes, in charts 8
2 THE DIRT SPRING 2014
Farm to school in Georgia started at two elementary schools in Atlanta, where Georgia Organics developed gardens, curriculum connections, and hosted chef demos. Pretty soon we were bombarded with requests to launch farm to school programs all over the state, and there was no way we could meet the demand. So we built alliances with school districts, the Georgia Departments of Education, Agriculture, and Public Health, University of Georgia Cooperative Extension, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the United States Deptartment of Agriculture, and other key partners. Those partnerships created the Georgia Farm to School Alliance, a statewide coalition that’s still going strong.
Since Georgia Organics established the Georgia Farm to School Alliance, there were a lot of assumptions (and some discomfort) that all we were about was “organic” food. But we recognized from day one that the urgent need to get kids eating fresh fruits and vegetables trumped discussion on how the food was grown. After all, 43 percent of Georgia adolescents eat vegetables less than one time each day. (Think too many Cheetos, not enough chard!)
“Local” was a safe place for us all to land, particularly as we sought to boost local economies based on the over 1.7 million school meals served daily in Georgia.
The more we talked about the types of healthy food we want our students to eat, the more the conversation evolved to encompass organic, and by being at the table on both the regional and grassroots level, Georgia Organics is driving that conversation. In addition to fresh food in the cafeteria, we want fresh, organically grown food in the cafeteria.
So it was momentous when I attended a farm to school meeting a year ago and heard the
superintendent and others from the community use the “o” word. They not only wanted local food, but they wanted chemical-free food. And why shouldn’t they? We know that developmentally, children are at increased risk from dietary exposure to organophosphates and other toxic pesticides. In the last couple of years, scientific research has linked pesticide exposure to increased risk of ADHD and lower IQ in children. And we know that an organic diet can reduce and eliminate those residues in their bodies.
By promoting fresh, local food in schools, we are increasing demand from an entity with huge buying power. At our promising pilot project in Habersham County, 10 sustainable and organic farms within 50 miles of the county are now selling to the school district. This pilot will hopefully serve as a model for rural districts throughout the state, and it presents real opportunities to expand locally based food systems and organic agriculture at the community level.
The conversation is changing about what kids want to eat, and what kids will eat. The most surprising thing to us is kids will do more than eat it. Students are asking for fresh fruit and vegetables. They are asking for foods from farmers that they know.
So maybe my organic kale farm fantasy is not so far-fetched. Perhaps in the not-too-distant future, we will see green acres of organic kale, spinach, and lettuce dotting our rural and urban landscapes, as well as our school lunch trays.
Alice RollsEXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Kids will eat kale!But will they eat organic kale?
LETTER FROM THE DIRECTOR
200-A Ottley Dr. Atlanta, GA [email protected]
BOARD OF DIRECTORSMandy Mahoney, PRESIDENT
Linda DiSantis, VICE PRESIDENT
Ellen Macht, TREASURER
Kurt Ebersbach, SECRETARY
Robert CurreyNaomi Davis Dee Dee DigbyJessica FaganCheryl Galway Julia GaskinRoderick GilbertDiane HarrisJenni Harris Connie HayesMark HennessyCarroll Johnson Melissa Libby Cashawn MyersRashid Nuri Joe ReynoldsBrennan Washington
STAFFPERRI CAMPISFarmer Services Assistant
DONN COOPERFarmer Services Coordinator
ERIN CROOMFarm to School Director
SUZANNE GIRDNERConference Coordinator
TERI HAMLINNortheast Georgia Farm to School Coordinator
BROOKE HATFIELDCommunications Coordinator
KATE KLEINDevelopment Coordinator
ANDREW LADDDirector of Operations
SANDY LAYTONDevelopment Director
DANIELLE MOOREMy Market Coordinator
ALICE ROLLSExecutive Director
EMILY ROSEFarm to School Coordinator
MICHAEL WALLDirector of Programs
ANIKA WHITEAdministrative Assistant
THE DIRTSpring 2014• Published QuarterlyGeorgia Organics, Inc. 200-A Ottley Dr., Atlanta GA 30324, Volume 16 Issue #1 Copyright © 2014, Georgia Organics, Inc. All rights reserved.
FOLLOW US!@georgiaorganics
www.facebook.com/ GeorgiaOrganics
GEORGIAORGANICS.ORG 3
Students are asking for fresh fruit and vegetables. They are asking for foods from farmers that they know.
April 26, 2014, DuluthThis one-day conference will be packed with semi-nars and workshops on best practices for humanely raising meat. There’s also a pre-conference all-day tour at White Oak Pastures in Bluffton!
www.southeasternsustainablelivestock.org
4 THE DIRT SPRING 2014
AND NOW FOR OUR AWARD WINNERS! Georgia’s organic agriculture community honored two of the state’s foremost leaders at our 17th annual conference.__________________________And congratulations to another win-
ner! Theresa Cantrell of Macon won
a full 2015 conference registration for
filling out our online evaluation form!
Celia Barss 2014 Land Steward of the Year
Celia Barss of Wood-land Gardens in Ath-ens, Ga., is a farmer whose skill as a grower is matched by her busi-ness savvy and dedica-tion to supporting the state’s organic agricul-ture community.
“This year’s honoree is a true leader and teacher today, not because she has sought those roles, but because she knows the direction to go and has so much knowledge to share,” said Daniel Parson of the farm at Oxford College-Emory University, who presented the award. “And as a mentor she is legendary because of her incredible track record of mentees who are still farming.”
The Land Steward Award honors an indi-vidual who has contributed greatly to the or-ganic movement in Georgia both on the farm through environmentally friendly production, and off the farm through leadership, education, and outreach.
Teri Schell 2014 Barbara Petit Pollinator Award
As a founding member of the Forsyth Farmers’ Market, Teri Schell has been on the ground floor of Savannah’s good food community, and as co-chair of the recently formed Savan-nah Chatham Food
Policy Council, her passion and knowledge con-tinue to grow that movement.
“She quietly and doggedly keeps all these pieces moving because of her passion for equality and lucky for folks in this room she uses her love of food as the framework for change,” said award presenter Kristin Russell, owner of popular Sa-vannah café The Sentient Bean.
The Barbara Petit Pollinator Award’s namesake is a committed leader, culinary professional, and organizer who was president of Georgia Organ-ics from 2003-2009, and the award acknowledges exceptional success in advancing Georgia Organ-ics’ mission by spreading—pollinating—the movement throughout community life, such as the food industry, faith communities, public agencies, schools, and institutions.
2014 Conference
Over 900 growers, educators, chefs, volunteers, and more spent a fantastic weekend on Jekyll Is-land for Green Acres, the 17th annual Georgia Organics conference. Everyone learned about the myriad ways our collective work is vital to our physical and environmental health.
Presenter Becky Striepe summed it up really beautifully in a conference wrap-up post on her blog, Glue & Glitter: “I went home on Sunday full of good food and gratitude.”_________________________________
Check out all of our conference photos
on our Facebook page! facebook.com/georgiaorganics
900 PEOPLE STRONG!
38 TEACHERS
68 STUDENTS 82 CULINARY PROFESSIONALS
300 FARMERS/MARKET GARDENERS
100 AG PROFESSIONALS 78 SPONSORS
SAVE THE DATE! The 2015 Georgia Organics Conference will be in Athens! More details to come!
EXPO EXHIBITORS
68FARM TOURS
7WORKSHOPS & EDUCATION SESSIONS
42
GEORGIAORGANICS.ORG 5
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5127 Echols Street • Covington, GA 30014-1305www.phillipsturfandornamental.comKirk Phillips 404-580-0203
2014 Conference
SAVE THE DATE! The 2015 Georgia Organics Conference will be in Athens! More details to come!
6 THE DIRT SPRING 2014
Getting a Sense of the Ag Census
Farmer Services Coordinator Donn Cooper, our man in the field
Georgia is making positive steps toward a local and
sustainable food sys-tem—after compiling the new edition of our Good Food Guide, we
can definitively say there are more organic farmers, farmers markets, restaurants that buy local, organic food, and businesses sup-porting the good food movement than there were two years ago.
But sometimes the news is discouraging.In February, the USDA National Agri-
cultural Statistics Service released its pre-liminary report of the 2012 Census of Ag-riculture. As one of only five states to suffer significant decreases in both the number of farms and land in farms, Georgia really takes it on the chin.
From 2007 to 2012, farms in the Peach State declined from 47,846 to 42,257—a loss of 5,589 farms. And even worse, begin-ning farmers—which the USDA classifies as those with ten years or less experience— took the biggest hit. Of Georgia’s total farm loss, 76 percent were beginning farmers.
But it’s not just that beginning farmers dropped out. In the last five years the num-ber of people embarking upon farming ca-reers declined by almost 36 percent.
As a result, the age of the average farmer in Georgia actually inched up two years to 59.9 (the national average is 58.3). The only age group that experienced growth areas was farmers 65 or older.
At least Georgia’s experience falls in line with the national average, and it’s too early to extrapolate too much. The effects of a supercharged real estate market followed by a severe recession certainly show up in the data. But so do signs of encourage-ment, like the growing number of Latino and Asian farmers.
We’ll wait for the full report. We already know farming isn’t easy. And thanks to the work we do every day with organic farm-ers all over the state, we know one report doesn't tell the whole story.
In The Field
For a decade, the Georgia Organics Men-toring Program has connected beginning farmers and ranchers (10 years or less ex-perience) and producers transitioning to organic production systems with experi-enced farmer mentors.
Funding for the current Farmer to Farm-er Mentoring Program has come from the USDA's Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Grant for the past three
years and expires later this year.Our retooled program will provide or-
ganic certification cost share for 30 farmers and technical trainings that will support farmers who are seeking organic certifica-tion, including business and marketing workshops and materials._____________________________For more information about
our mentoring program, go
to www.georgiaorganics.org.
Celebrating 10 Years of our Mentor Program
77 FARMERS have gone through the program
32 are still farming. That's a 42 PERCENT SUCCESS RATE!
PIEDMONT
35%
MOUNTAIN
14%
OUT OF STATE
10%
METRO ATLANTA
17%
WEST COASTAL
PLAIN
14% EAST COASTAL
PLAIN
10%
2013 MENTEE LOCATION BREAKDOWN
AVERAGE MENTEE FARM ACREAGE
LESS THAN AN ACRE 1-5 ACRES 5-10 ACRES MORE THAN 10 ACRES
4
12
4 5
2013 MENTEE MARKETS FOR PRODUCE
CSA 15
FARMERS MARKET 14
RESTAURANTS 12
DIRECT SALES 7
ONLINE 5
CHURCHES & SCHOOLS 2
CO-OP 1
WHOLESALE 1
U-PICK 1
Most similar programs have a success rate of 20 PERCENT.
GEORGIAORGANICS.ORG 7
That’s why Kaiser Permanente supports Georgia Organics for their dedication to connecting healthy foods from Georgia farms to Georgia families. Together, we believe in helping communities thrive.kp.org/georgia
Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia, Inc. Nine Piedmont Center 3495 Piedmont Road, NE Atlanta, GA 30305 404-364-7000
60212209 03/14 ©2014 Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia, Inc.
The following content is provided by Kaiser Permanente as part of the sponsorship of the Georgia Organics 2014 conference.
MRM#: 60212209Date: 03/10/14File Name: 60212209_2014_GA_Organics_Newsletter_Grassroots_Ad_March_Dead-line_FINAL.indd Designer: Jason Sherriffs
Document Size Flat: 7.5” w x 10” hPrints: 4/0; CMYKPages: 1; Sides: 1; Bleeds: FullNotes: Files Deliverable Hires PDF
Here’s to growing a healthy future
60212209_2014_GA_Organics_Newsletter_Grassroots_Ad_March_Deadline_FINAL.indd 1 3/10/14 3:56 PM
8 THE DIRT SPRING 2014
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
JANUARY Launched our farm to school pilot program in Habersham County. FEBRUARY hosted the 4th annual Farm to School Summit in Atlanta. MARCH Presented the first Golden Radish Award to school districts procuring local food.
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NOVEMBER Chosen as a new host site for FoodCorps’ expansion into Georgia, AND named a Groundbreaker by Atlanta Magazine.We also organized organic lettuce taste tests at the Sunbelt Ag Expo!
HABERSHAM COUNTY FARM TO SCHOOL PILOT
The farm to school pilot program in Habersham County Schools is a collaboration between Georgia Organics and the Food Bank of Northeast Georgia that includes building school gardens, taste tests of local products, training work-shops for cafeteria staff and teach-ers, and working with local farmers.
This comprehensive program is the first of its kind in Georgia, and in its first year we worked with 10 farms within a 50-mile radius of Wilbanks Middle School, all of whom grow organically or sustain-ably—"They're all good stewards of the earth," says program lead Dr. Teri Hamlin.__________________________To find out more about the program,
go to northeastgafarm2school.
wordpress.com.
hose sweet faces are all Certi-fied Naturally Grown, Certi-fied Organic, or use organic best practices. “They’re all good stewards of the earth,” Hamlin says of the growers participating in the pil
“We are proud to be one of the farm to school farmers. It’s important to give our children good, healthy produce with the knowledge of where what they are eating came from."—Phillip Franklin, Wide Bottom Farm
We worked with 10 farms. All grow organically/sustainably.
Total food purchased from these ten farms?
2,840.5 lbs.
More than
A TON!
TOTAL VALUE OF 2013 LOCAL PURCHASES
$16,312.85
Additional GA Grown purchases: $14,358.85
$1,954 VALUE
CHATTOOGA BELLE FARMKitty and Ed Land
LEAH LAKE FARMBrooks Franklin
LIBERTY FARMSherri, Jerry, and Wesley Gerrin
MELON HEAD FARMJoni and Harold Kennedy
MILL GAP FARMAmy and Chuck Mashburn
MOUNTAIN EARTH FARMRonnie Mathis
SHOOK’S FARMAngel and Steve Rushing and Thelma and Michael Shook
SYLVAN FALLS MILLLinda Johnson
TRILLIUM FARMSteve Whiteman
WIDE BOTTOM FARMJames & Evelyn Franklin, Phillip & Teresa Franklin, Brett & Mau-reen Franklin, Madison Davis-James, Carey Madigan, Nancy Kollock, and Robin Workman
October is National Farm to School Month, and we cel-ebrated it with Lettuce Try it, a state-wide effort to get kids across Georgia to eat (and fall in love with!) fresh, local let-tuce. Schools that signed up got resources and lesson plans involving lettuce for every grade, and students across the state did everything from make leaf rubbings to taste test salads made with tasty, healthy dressings we gave them recipes for. The follow-ing infographics are based on results from a survey we sent to Lettuce Try It participants.
POPULAR LETTUCES
SPINACH
ROMAINERED LEAF
BIBB
BU
TTERCRUNCH
111,609 STUDENTS ACROSS THE STATE PARTICIPATED
HOW STUDENTS DESCRIBED LETTUCE
GREEN
STICKY
AWESOME!SPREAD WIDE WAVY
SILKY
LETTUCE TRY IT!
62%said Lettuce Try It was the first time they'd participated in farm to school.
WE HAD 390 SIGN UPS!
174 Preschools
186 Schools
19 Other
11 School Districts
Can we have more?—Quote after a green leaf lettuce taste test
VISIT FROM A CHEF 1%
FUNDRAISER FOR F2S PROGRAM 3%
VISIT FROM A FARMER 5%
FARM FIELD TRIP 7%
COOKING ACTIVITY 17%
LOCAL LETTUCE IN SCHOOL MEAL 32%
NUTRITION EDUCATION 36%
SCHOOL GARDEN ACTIVITY 64%
LETTUCE TASTE TEST 71%
LETTUCE TRY IT ACTIVITIES
SO WHO PARTICIPATED?
PRESCHOOL 13% ELEMENTARY SCHOOL 59% MIDDLE SCHOOL 17% HIGH SCHOOL 11%
THE 10 WILBANKS MIDDLE SCHOOL FARMS
AUGUST Led cafeteria staff workshops for Commerce City Schools.SEPTEMBER Hosted the first ever state-level Farm to Preschool Summit.
2013
GEORGIAORGANICS.ORG 9
MARCH Presented the first Golden Radish Award to school districts procuring local food. APRIL Talked to thousands of teenagers in FFA at an event in Macon.
NOVEMBER Chosen as a new host site for FoodCorps’ expansion into Georgia, AND named a Groundbreaker by Atlanta Magazine. DECEMBER Got the results of our 5 Million Meals campaign, and oh boy were they exciting!
GOLDEN RADISH AWARDS
5 Million MealsDuring the 2011-2012 academic year, 3 million meals featuring a local food item were served in more than 650 Georgia schools. We launched the 5 Million Meals campaign in October 2012 to increase that number to 5 million.
Forty school nutrition directors pledged to purchase and serve local food in their cafeterias, and in December a University of Georgia report confirmed that the end result was nearly three times our original goal. Georgia students ate a record-breaking 14 million meals that included a local food item during the 2012-2013 school year, according to a report from the University of Georgia’s Center for Agri-business and Economic Development.
“School nutrition directors stepped up and found ways to get the fresh-est foods for their students while supporting Georgia’s dedicated farm-ers,” said Farm to School Director Erin Croom. “This study is a great snapshot of farm to school’s growing momentum and impact.”
2011-20123 million
OUR GOAL FOR 2012-20135 million
ACTUAL AMOUNT IN 2012-2013
14 million!
# OF MEALS WITH LOCAL FOOD ITEM
MOST POPULAR LOCAL PRODUCE SERVED
* % OF DISTRICTS PURCHASED
Strawberries 70.8%*
Cabbage 62.5%*
Sweet Potatoes
62.5%*Carrots 58.3%*
Apples 58.3%*
The total value of those purchases?
$2.1 million!
63.2% included classroom education
57.9% used special signage
42.1% did taste tests
26.3% mentioned the local food item in their newsletters
87.5% PROMOTED THEIR LOCAL FOOD.
15.8% had farmers visit
5.3% featured cooking demos
In 2013, we worked with the Georgia Departments of Agriculture and Education to create the Golden Radish Award to acknowledge school districts for their efforts in local food procure-ment. In 2013, the Golden Radish Award was presented to school districts who took the 5 Million Meals pledge to serve local food.
After the presentation of the first Golden Radish Award, Georgia Organics
continued working with the Depart-ments of Agriculture and Education, and partnered with the Georgia Department of Public Health to create a comprehen-sive list of specific criteria for the award which acknowledges all aspects of farm to school programming.
The Golden Radish Award will be given annually to school districts and Local Educational Agencies (LEAs) in Georgia who are doing extraordinary work in
farm to school. The upgraded Golden Radish Award is
presented by the Georgia Department of Education, Georgia Department of Ag-riculture, Georgia Department of Public Health, and Georgia Organics._____________________________To find out more about the
criteria and how to apply, go to
www.georgiaorganics.org/
for-schools/goldenradish
AUGUST Led cafeteria staff workshops for Commerce City Schools.
2014 Onward to greatness!
JULY Led a cafeteria staff workshop in Dougherty County. JUNE Hosted the first NE Georgia school nutrition director meeting. It's now a regular thing!
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10 THE DIRT SPRING 2014
Many Fold Farm As told by Rebecca Williams, photographed below with her husband Ross
Basically, my English major background and love of word origins combined with farming practices is where the name came from.
When I was trying to think of a name, the philosophi-cal concept of polyculture over monoculture was really important to me. At some
point the word “manifold” popped into my mind. I took out a dictionary and looked up the definitions and etymology. I found that embedded in the word “manifold” are the words “many” and “fold”. These two words convey the concept of the multitude over the singular, the concept of that diverse multitude working as distinct pieces of a unified whole. The word “fold” was especially interesting: a bit of ground on a farm, especially associated with sheep (see: sheepfold); it can also indicate multiplicity and things increasing in number.
So there it was. What we do and how we try to do it all rolled into this name. It was a purely cerebral exercise. _________________________________________To find out more about Many Fold Farm, check
them out at www.manyfoldfarm.com.
HOW'D YOU NAME THAT FARM?
April 1-June 15,
Come to the Oakhurst Garden at435 Oakview Road, Decatur, GA 30030
•50 Types of Tomato, including Heirloom•30 Types of Pepper•20 Types of Eggplant•Basil•And many other fun summer goodies will be available!
For regular updates like us on Facebook
Offering 10 years of affordable classes on Gardening, Husbandry, Food, Health and Wellness.
More classes and info at wyldecenter.org
• Create Your Own Vertical Garden Sunday, April 27, 2:00pm-4:00pm
• Simply Delicious: Foraging and Medicine Making
Tuesday, April 29, 7:00pm-9:00pm• Chickens are Easy! Intro to
Keeping Chickens Saturday, May 3, 10:00am-
12:00pm• Simply Delicious: Late Spring
Harvest- Asian Style Tuesday, May 6, 7:00pm-9:00pm
• The Magic of Mushrooms Sunday, May 18, 2:00pm-4:00pm
Spring 2014 Plant Sale
Winter farm supply, by the numbers
44Farmersparticipated
TOTAL SALES
$24,552.70 LARGEST SINGLE ORDER
$3,485.75
SMALLEST SINGLE ORDER
$46
That's
22 TONS!
WEIGHT OF A LL SUPPLIES ORDERED
44,000 lbs.
NUMBER OF MILD TO MODERATELY SORE GO EMPLOYEES 3
__________________________________________________For more information about the farm supply program, go to
www.georgiaorganics.org
GEORGIAORGANICS.ORG 11
CHEF SPOTLIGHT
Drew Belline of No. 246
Drew Belline is the executive chef and partner at Decatur’s No. 246 and a staunch supporter of Georgia Organics and local, sustain-able producers.
You’ve gotten a lot of attention as a foraging chef. How does for-aging inspire the dishes you cre-ate? Since I was a kid, I have always loved to be in the woods. However, as I began to spend most of my adult life in kitchens, my time in the outdoors began to dwindle. I remember when I found my first chanterelle on the banks of Lake Rabun while perch fishing in July of 2003 and my love for the woods was reignited. Now I had an excuse to get out of the kitchen and back into the outdoors for an hour or two a day, clear my head and pick some great mush-rooms. Of course I use what I forage in dishes at the restaurants, but I wouldn't say that it really inspires the dishes that we create, it just makes me more sensi-tive to the seasons. The seasons are what inspire new dishes for me—what grows together goes together! What percentage of your dishes do you estimate contain local items, and why is that important to you? It's important to us at 246. Aside from the obvious reason of global climate impact, I need a good story. We take a sense of pride in knowing where are products come from, and we love to tell our products’ story. ____________________________To read the entire interview with Drew,
check out our blog post!
Meet Kate Klein, our new DevelopmentCoordinatorGeorgia Organics Development Co-ordinator Kate Klein has been lighting up our lives since January, and between our conference in February, taking on membership duties, and coordinating events, she’s been a busy woman!
What was your previous job?I worked as the Campus Food Day Coordinator and Regional Field Orga-nizer for Real Food Challenge. The primary campaign is to help college students shift $1 billion of university food purchasing away from industrial farms and junk food and towards local/community-based, fair, ecologically sound, and humane food sources—“real food”—by 2020.
Who/what has inspired you to do the work you are doing today?In college, I became quickly over-whelmed with the harsh realities of the CAFO and industrial ag’s severe toll on our environment. I ran into some folks at Real Food Challenge, most notably my mentors Nina and David, who helped me develop the skills, tools, and confidence to build powerful campus campaigns for real food. Throughout that time, I got to work with tons of resilient, justice-seeking better-world-builders, and I was hooked.
What do you want to accomplish for Georgia’s farmers? I want to shape a robust statewide support network so that farmers can pursue a healthier, cleaner, more just Georgia with ease. I want their occupation to be admired and respected.
If you became a DJ, what would your DJ name be? DJ K8
SMALLEST SINGLE ORDER
$46
the
DAILY DIRT georgiaorganics.org/news-center/blog
75 108
2011 2014
RESTAURANTS
2011 2014
174
300
FARMS
96166
2011 2014
FARMERS MARKETS
40
2011 2014
BUSINESSES
73
There's a new Good Food Guide on the streets!We can definitively say there are more organic farmers, farmers markets, restaurants that buy local, organic food, and businesses supporting the good food move-ment than there were two years ago.
An enormous THANK YOU to the 24 people who contrib-uted to our scholarship fund. Because of you, we raised $9,025, which means we sent 82 people from 49 farms to our conference this year. (We were able to send an ad-ditional 41 people through grant funding.)
MA
UR
A F
RIE
DM
AN
12 THE DIRT SPRING 2014
Savannah, March 12, 2014 GLORIOSA, ART IN BLOOM, A GARDEN CLUB OF AMERICA FLOWER SHOW PRESENTED BY TRUSTEES’ GARDEN CLUB SAVANNAHCheck out this beautiful, award-winning display that features our Good Food Guide! We partnered with Georgia Organics member Anne Murray of the Trustee's Garden Club of Savannah on this lovely exhibit. It won the Garden Club of America's Marion Thompson Fuller Brown Conservation Award for creating "an exhibit of exceptional educational and visual merit that increases knowledge and awareness of the environment." Thanks to Anne and the Trustee's Garden Club for the opportunity!
Atlanta, Oct. 10, 2013SEEDS & SOIL SOCIETY-HOSTED BOOK SIGNING FOR ANNE QUATRANO Thank you to our members who attended the Georgia Organics Seeds & Soil event at the home of Louisa and Michael D’Antignac. We so appreciated your presence at what was a truly special event honoring one of Atlanta’s preeminent chefs and a true good food pioneer, Anne Quatrano. We enjoyed introducing you to the important work we do and Anne’s book, "Summerland: Recipes for Celebrating with Southern Hospitality." Our movement still has much to accomplish, and our state’s organic growers and all who benefit from their work need your support. If you would like to become a member and learn more about the Seeds & Soil Society, please contact Sandy Layton at [email protected] or (404) 481-5006.
Follow us on Twitter for gems like this: @georgiaorganics “You don’t want to keep farming to yourself. It needs to be a local thing and a global thing.”— Rachel Bean #greenacres twitter.com/georgiaorganics
Hamilton, Oct. 20, 201347TH ANNUAL WEST GEORGIA FARMER'S COOPERATIVE FUNDRAISERFounded in Harris County in 1966, the cooperative is transitioning to sustainable agriculture under president Darrell Cope-land. This new generation of leadership is reenergizing the local farming community.
Atlanta, Feb. 18, 2014GOVERNOR'S ADVISORY COUNCIL ON CHILDHOOD OBESITY MEETINGGeorgia Organics hosted this meet-ing at Burgess-Peterson Academy in Atlanta. We shared how we are using farm to school to shift the paradigm on healthy eating, and Burgess-Peterson staff and students showcased their program, includ-ing a tour of their organic garden.________________________
Check out the photo album at facebook.com/georgiaorganics!
Americus, Oct. 15, 2013 SUNBELT AG EXPOFor the second year in a row, we organized the Organic Pavilion at the Sunbelt Ag Expo, North American’s premier farm show. Over 100,000 people attend each year, and in addition to a tent full of vendors for organic producers, our farm to school staff also conducted lettuce taste tests using organic lettuce from White Oak Pastures in Bluffton.________________________
Check out the photo album at facebook.com/georgiaorganics!
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ON THE ROAD WITH FARMER SERVICES PRESENTATIONS
Donn Cooper continued his barnstorming tour across Georgia (and even Alabama and Texas), giving presentations to beginning farmers and agricultural professionals on organic production, the economics of operating a small sustainable farm, and the work of Georgia Organics’ programs. Georgia Organics was also proud to partner with outstanding agricultural organizations such as the West Georgia Farmers Cooperative, the Athens Land Trust, UGA Cooperative Extension, USDA NRCS, and local Resource and Conservation Districts.
Follow us on Twitter for gems like this: @georgiaorganics “You don’t want to keep farming to yourself. It needs to be a local thing and a global thing.”— Rachel Bean #greenacres twitter.com/georgiaorganics
AROUND THE STATE Oct. 2013–March 2014
JAN. 8-12 Southeast Regional Fruit and Vegetable Conference Savannah
JAN. 13 Northeast Georgia Farm 2 School Farmer Meeting Clarkesville
JAN. 16-18 Southern Sustainable Agricul-ture Working Group (SSAWG) Conference Mobile, Ala.
MARCH 11 UGA Co-operative Extension Organic Grain Produc-tion Training Tifton
SEPT. 10 Multicultural Sustainable Agriculture Conference Duluth
SEPT. 11 Seeds of Growth Conference Lawrenceville
SEPT. 24 Auburn Com-mercial Horticulture Cooperative Extension Training Opelika, Ala.
OCT. 3 New and Begin-ning Farmer Conference Watkinsville
OCT. 12-16 Beginning Farm-er and Rancher Program Conference McAllen, TX
DEC. 17 Agricultural Ini-tiative and Outreach Workshop Shellman
FEB. 25 Georgia Organics/UGA Small Business De-velopment Center/UGA Cooperative Extension Workshop: Starting a Small Farm Business, Watkinsville
MARCH 13 Presentation to Georgia Food Policy Council—Production and Distribution Work Group Atlanta
EXHIBITING/TRAINING
The Farmer Services department continued its outreach to farmers by exhibiting at the major agricultural conferences and events in the Southeast, including the Sunbelt Agricultural Expo, the Southeast Regional Fruit and Vegetable Conference, and Southern SAWG’s annual conference. Georgia Organics also played key roles in each—which, in addition to coordinating the Organic Pavilion at Sunbelt, involved helping to organize the organic production track at SRFVC and participating in a roundtable on the future of regional farmer organizations at SSAWG.
Demorest, Oct. 8, 2013HARVEST CELEBRATION AT WILBANKS MIDDLE SCHOOL Over 400 people attended this festival, which was a culmination of nearly one year of work at Wilbanks Middle School in Habersham County and celebrated the people who have made farm to school a reality in their community.
Savannah, Oct. 1, 2013FARM TO SCHOOL WORKSHOP This Farm to School Workshop in Savannah was a chance for teachers, chefs, parents, and farmers to connect with each other and learn more about hands-on cooking and gardening with kids. The workshop was a collaboration between Chatham County School Nutrition, PTA, Cooperative Extension, and the many teachers sustaining farm to school on the coast.
Valdosta, Jan. 25, 2014 SOUTH GEORGIA GROWING LOCAL CONFERENCEThe crowd at the South Georgia Growing Local Conference was a great mix of farmers, gardeners, and good food advocates, including several members of the South Georgia Permaculture Guild. Georgia Organics boardmember and organic peanut farmer Connie Hayes led a session about certification, and farmer/author Janisse Ray led a session about seed-saving.
USDA-ARS researchers Carroll Johnson and Dan Evarts demonstrating weed control equipment in Tifton.
14 THE DIRT SPRING 2014
Husband and wife Bryan Hager and Wendy Crager run Crager Hager Farm in Carroll County, Georgia. You can find them at the Cotton Mill Farmers Market, the Peachtree City Farmers Market, Little Hawaiian, Sun-set Hills Country Club, or get their food delivered weekly by Farmers Fresh CSA. We talked to Wendy about why she and Bryan are committed to growing organically and why they're members of Georgia Organics.
Why do you farm organically? Bryan and I come at it from the perspective of be-ing environmental activists–we’ve worked on enough issues to know we don’t want to mess with chemicals. The entire hazardous materi-als production process–whether you’re talking about manufacturing or waste–is problem-atic. In my mind, why go through the labor of growing your own stuff if you’re not going to do it organically? Everybody that comes to the farm and sees the bounty of what we’re doing is impressed.
The best feedback to hear is when our mar-ket customers come back the next week and say “I can’t believe kale could taste so sweet and amazing,” or “Those strawberries remind
me of when I was at grandma’s house eat-ing her strawberries.” They come back with a twinkle in their eye – it brings back those memories of what things should taste like.
Why are you members of Georgia Organics? It’s a great umbrella organiza-tion to help connect farmers with customers. Georgia Organics does great outreach in all directions, whether it’s for new rules and leg-islation, getting customers excited about real food, or for farmers with the conference and all the on-farm workshops. It’s the go-to orga-nization that brings us all together.
One time I remember I came back from a Georgia Organics workshop on growing shii-take mushrooms, and I’m like, “we gotta do that!” Bryan first just kinda rolled his eyes, and now 5 years later, we’ve got 300 shiitake logs. There’s always something inspirational that we bring back to the farm from a Geor-gia Organics event and utilize. It may not be a brand new crop, but it’s something on weed control or some new variety of crop that doesn’t bolt so quickly or some tool that makes planting twice as fast.________________________________Read the entire interview on our blog at www.georgiaorganics.org
MEMBER SPOTLIGHT
Wendy Crager, Crager Hager Farm
MEMBERS MAKE OUR PROGRAMS A REALITY!
Join Georgia Organics Today!WWW.GEORGIAORGANICS.ORG
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Did you know that you can support Georgia Organics in your company’s employee giving
campaign? You can donate to Georgia Organics through EarthShare of Georgia and have a small donation taken out of your paycheck, which adds up to a significant contribution at the end of the year! Call Alice to enroll: 678.702.0400
Events CalendarHave an event coming up? Send information to [email protected]. For more events, check out the calendar on our website: georgiaorganics.org/goevents/
APRIL 26 Southeastern Sustainable Livestock Conference, Duluth Join
farmers, slaughter plants, students, extension agents, food systems advocates, and others to learn more about sustainable meat production. This day-long conference will be held at the Gwinnett Center, and will cover topics specific to the sustainable meat industry such as production and processing, marketing and business strategies, and consumer outreach and education. For more information, go to www.southeasternsustainablelivestock.org.
APRIL 26-27 Georgia Organics Member Weekend at Preserving
Place, Atlanta Need to grab something for mom for Mothers’ Day? Come on out all weekend to Preserving Place to get a Georgia Organics members-only 10 percent discount (Super secret discount code: strawberry jam). If you drop by on Saturday from 1:30-4:30 p.m., you’ll also get a chance to snack on some local, organic products, wine, and enter to win a free canning class. For more information about Preserving Place, check out www.preservingplace.com.
APRIL 26 Benderdinker: A Festival on the Water, Evans This festival on the water supports slow foods & silent sports. Enjoy live music and local foods all from your canoe & kayak, as well as eight food & music stops along a four mile island and a whole menu of locally grown foods from the water. For more information, go to www.benderdinker.com.
Organizations
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Georgia Organics is proud to be the fiscal partner for The Homestead Atlanta, an educational resource that has forged a community around urban homesteading.
APRIL 19 Design Your Edible LandscapeOffered in conjunction with the Atlanta Beltline Partnership and Trees Atlanta, this workshop will help you transform your backyard into a food forest that's as delicious as it is beautiful. Learn how to use the land you have to your advantage and how to design the growing space you've always wanted. Apply key perma-culture and smart design principles in a guided design of a landscape like yours. Make Atlanta more resilient and delicious - starting with your yard.
APRIL 26 & 27 Weekend Immersion: Build a Pack BasketWant to feel like a total boss at the farm-er's market? Carry your finds in a super sweet pack basket of your creation. Get to know the basics of basket making and cre-ate a project as beautiful as it is functional that you'll be proud to show off.
Georgia Organics members get reduced rates. THEHOMESTEADATL.COM
MAY 3 White Oak Pastures Mushroom Cultivation Workshop, Bluffton Learn about mushroom life cycles and various methods for the cultivation of different species of culinary mushrooms. Hands-on activities will include inoculating hardwood logs and propagating oyster mushroom spawn. Each participant will take home a bag of propagated oyster spawn with instructions on how to grow their own oyster mushrooms. Participants will learn about safety when foraging for wild mushrooms and how to use a dichotomous key for wild mushroom identification. For more information, go to www.georgiaorganics.org/goevents/
MAY 29 Spring Team Agriculture Workshop, Douglas This free, one-day workshop for small, beginning, and limited resource farmers will cover: Grazing management; organic certification; financing small farms; olive production; USDA / Farm Bill update, and more. For more information, email [email protected].
JUNE 10 Feel Good Tuesday at Yeah! Burger, Atlanta Where
else can you support GO Farmers twice in one night? Grab some pals and meet us out at Yeah! Burger in Virginia Highlands form 6-10 p.m., and 10% of the proceeds will go straight to us. (And see if you can spot the GO farmers on the sourcing board while you’re there!) For more information on Yeah! Burger, visit www.yeahburger.com.
JUNE 14-15 OMG! Oh My Georgia Festival and Farmers Market, Perry We will have arts and crafts, home made Georgia products and fresh flowers, fruits and vegetables! Come on out and support your local Georgia businesses. Georgia Organics members get a 20 percent vendor booth discount! For more information, go to www.peachstatewomen.net.
JUNE 28-29 Georgia Mountains Farm Tour, Rabun,
Habersham, White, & Stephens counties Tour some of Northeast Georgia's best sustainable farms, share conversation over farm-fresh meals, and grab some produce along the way! Your farm tour ticket purchase helps the Georgia Mountains Farmers Network purchase shared equipment, group insurance, and serve as a place for sharing new ideas and innovations for successful farms. This event is sponsored in part by Georgia Organics. For more information, check out georgiamfn.blogspot.com.
WHO IS FARM TO SCHOOL IN HABERSHAM COUNTY?
FARMERS TEACHERS SCHOOL NUTRITION STAFF STUDENTS DISTRIBUTOR ADMINISTRATION
CHEFS STATE AGENCIES COMMUNITY PARTNERS
Our mission statement here at Georgia Organics is to connect organic food from Georgia farms to Georgia families. So where does farm to school fall into that vision?
Georgia Organics is committed to farm to school because feeding students fresh, local food, and teaching them where it comes from will give us healthy kids, healthy communities, and healthy futures. Students these days are more removed from where their food comes from, which makes it critically important to educate them the on the value of organic agricul-ture; they will literally be the consumers who decide what kind of future food system will thrive in Georgia.
Farm to school also presents important market opportunities for our state’s organic growers. School districts have huge buying power; school cafeterias are often the biggest restaurant in town. The food served is grown somewhere, and the more that’s grown close to home, the better. The food is fresher, and for every $1 spent locally, $3 ends up circulating in that community’s economy.
But health and economic benefits aren’t all that commit us to farm to school. Kids learn something very important when they grow a tomato themselves, or they eat one for lunch that was grown by a farmer they’ve met: They learn where food comes from.
In our current out-of-sight food system, it’s easy to believe that food comes from the store. Caring for a plant for weeks, waiting to eat the literal fruits of their labors, students learn that producing food is hard work. And a field trip to a farm or a taste test served by a farmer shows students there is a face behind their food, and there is land in their community that helps sustain them.
Farm to school programs make the youngest in our state a little bit more aware. They are already nudging their parents toward fresh, whole food. When they buy for themselves, where do you want them spending their money?
Join Georgia Organics Today!Members make our programs a reality! WWW.GEORGIAORGANICS.ORG
WHY WE'RE COMMITTED TO FARM TO SCHOOL
Kids learn something very important when they grow a tomato themselves.