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04-18-2008, 09:29 PM
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#3
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Newbie
Last Online: 04-26-2008 08:05 PM
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 45
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A CSA is community supported agriculture. You essentially buy a "share" of a farm's harvest for the season. You generally pay quarterly, for the season, or monthly (depends on the CSA), and pick up produce weekly.
You get stuff that's fresh, local, and in season. And because you are buying a share, the farmer gets the money that you pay up front early (to help him buy supplies & get started). You also live the highs and lows of the crop year.
We've been members of our local CSA (which runs 9 months of the year) for 8 years. We have had the "year of the lettuce" (3-4 heads per week), "year of the strawberries" (lasted until October), "year of the peaches" (last year, we got several pounds for several weeks in a row), and whatnot. We had a bad frost last year (great for peaches, bad for avocados).
But that also means that there are times (like now) when they are "between harvests" where I have to buy produce elsewhere to supplement. We got lettuce, strawberries, carrots, peas, fava beans, beets, and cauliflower this week, just not quite enough for three people.
The localharvest.org website can tell you the ones near you.
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