Celebrate Earth Day all season long through Community Supported Agriculture!
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Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) is a growing movement that is nurturing relationships between consumers and their food, the land their food comes from, and the farmers who grow it. In exchange for advance payment, farmers offer weekly boxes of the best picks of their harvest. These are usually available through convenient pick up locations such as at a farmers market.
CSA farms are usually small enterprises, often family farms, growing
food sustainably and committed to fresh, high-quality products. CSA farmers can start the season with much needed income and a guaranteed market, while consumers receive a variety of just picked fruits and vegetables (and sometimes eggs, cheese, milk, meat- even flowers!) throughout the season. Every CSA is unique with some offering farm tours, work days, weekly newsletters with recipes for the week's picks, updates from the farm and field, and opportunities for work exchange.
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FEATURED PRODUCERTempel Farms Organics 17970 Millburn Rd Old Mill Creek, IL
Chris and Tania Cubberly are the proud managers of Tempel Farms Organics where they produce vegetables and pasture raised chickens and eggs. They moved onto this land in February 2009 and have 8 tillable acres for vegetables and 400 layer hens. Prior to this move, the Cubberleys farmed as Red Tail Farm at the Farm Business Development Center at Prairie Crossing Farm in Grayslake, IL.
Helping Chris and Tania with the work on the farm is Edward, 3 years old. Chris and Tania are training Edward to collect eggs "but he keeps throwing them." The Cubberlys are expecting another child this summer; they hope he will grow up to be a better egg collector than his older brother. Chris and Tania employ organic agriculture practices and will apply for organic certification in 2011. You can find their products at the Logan Square Farmers Market, Grayslake Farmers Market, and through Irv and Shelly's Fresh Picks.
What is your growing philosophy? To employ sustainable business practices as well as sustainable organic agriculture that enriches our soils, feed and teaches our children and neighborhood, and provides us that knowing pleasure that we are future minded, responsible stewards of the land.
What is your favorite part of being a farmer? Growing healthy food for our community and ourselves.
What's your least favorite part? Tracking mud in the house and saying goodbye to summer.
What makes your farm special? The harmony of farmers on the field, water splashing on the growing vegetables and chickens happy in the fresh air and sun.
Where do you see your business to be in the next year? 5 years? 10 years? We would like to continue to grow our CSA program, have a store on the farm, diversify our livestock operation and create an educational/learning farm for children.
Can you shed some light on your CSA? Our CSA is $540 for 20 weeks starting June and running through October. Our CSA member have first "crack" at pre-ordering eggs for an additional charge that would be picked up along with their box of veggies. We have a pick up location at the farm on Thursdays from 4-7pm, 17970 Millburn Road, Old Mill Creek, IL 60083. We also have another pick-up location on Sundays from 10am-2pm at Logan Square Farmers Market.
For more information on Tempel Farms Organics you can call 847-244-5330 ext 125, email them, or you can visit their website.
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Dairy industry sees less-gassy future
for cows
by Associated Press
April 14, 2009
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The
U.S. dairy industry wants to engineer the "cow of the future" to pass
less gas, a project aimed at cutting the industry's greenhouse gas
emissions by 25 percent by 2020. The cow project aims to reduce intestinal methane, the single
largest component of the dairy industry's carbon footprint, said Thomas
P. Gallagher, chief executive officer of the U.S. Dairy and Dairy
Management Inc.'s Innovation Center in Rosemont, Ill. One area to be explored is modifying the dairy cows' feed so they
produce less methane, said Rick Naczi, the leader of the initiative. "Right now there is some work being done on fish-oil additives and
some other things," he said. "The cow is responsible for the majority
of the greenhouse gas on the farm itself. We know there are ways that
we can find to cut or reduce that production." Another possible solution is targeting the microbes in the cow's
gut, Naczi said. "You can change the mix of the bacteria in the cow's
rumen and change the methane production that way." He expects the research to develop some solutions within a year. The initiative could have a huge effect in Wisconsin. The state has
about 1.25 million dairy cows, or about 14 percent of the national
total. Dairy Management Inc. manages the national dairy checkoff program,
which collects 15 cents per hundredweight of raw milk produced by
farmers to fund research and promotion of dairy products. Greenhouse gas emissions are blamed for global warming. Cutting the
dairy industry's emissions by 25 percent would be equivalent to
removing about 1.25 million passenger cars from the nation's roads
every year, Gallagher said. The University of Arkansas' Applied Sustainability Center estimates
the dairy industry contributes less than 2 percent of total U.S.
greenhouse gas emissions. But consumers increasingly demand products that are produced,
packaged and distributed in a sustainable way, Gallagher said. The industry said it has dramatically reduced the carbon footprint
of its products by 63 percent over the past 60 years through production
efficiencies, nutrition management and technological improvements. Other greenhouse gas emission projects to be explored include
turning digester-generated methane into energy that can be sold. A
pilot program in California identifies the best energy-efficiency
practices in milk processing plants and assesses current and new
packaging formats. Managing agricultural operations in a sustainable way can improve
efficiencies and cut costs, said Bryan Weech, livestock agriculture
program director with World Wildlife Fund. Those efforts can also
protect watersheds and improve soil health and water quality. Copyright � 2009 The Associated Press
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SAVE THE DATE and visit FamilyFarmed.org's pavilion at the Chicago Green Festival!
May 16-17
 Navy Pier Chicago
Interested in volunteering with FamilyFarmed.org at Green Festival? Email us!

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May 18-20 Chicago Sustainable and Local Food On the Radar for CleanMed 2009
Learn More here!

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Economic Stimulus Starts in Your Kitchen
By JIM SLAMA
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From Chicago Life, a supplement to the Sunday New York Times There is a lot of hope these days about revitalizing the economy by
creating green jobs. The recently passed Obama stimulus package
includes tens of billions of dollars for worthy industries such as
renewable energy and high-speed rail. Over the next decade it's likely
that both of these sectors will bloom through significant levels of
public and private investment.
Closer to home, we have an opportunity to be part of our very own
green economic development package. It starts in your kitchen.
The Illinois Local and Organic Food and Farm Task Force recently
released the report Local Food, Farms, and Jobs: Growing the Illinois
Economy. It documents that more than $48 billion of food is consumed in
the state annually, and that more than 95 percent of it comes from
California, Mexico, China and other faraway places. The task force set
a goal to grow 20 percent of this food in Illinois by 2030. Doing so
will create $10 billion in new sales for Illinois food producers and
tens of thousands of new jobs. It will also create tremendous economic
revitalization in all corners of the state.
So how is this going to work? First, we encourage people to actively
seek out local food from family farmers and food producers. Fortunately
this is getting easier. Farmers markets are popping up all over
Illinois. It's estimated there will be more than 250 farmers markets
for the 2009 market season. That's up from 97 markets in 1999.
"Consumers benefit from the availability of nutritious, locally-grown
food," says Tom Jennings, director of the Illinois Department of
Agriculture. "The communities that sponsor farmers markets benefit from
increased tourism, and the state benefits from the jobs that are
supported as demand grows for our food products."
Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) is another way for families to
access local food. In these programs, farmers pre-sell a portion of
their crop. Customers purchase a share of the farm and in exchange
receive a box of just-picked produce each week during the growing
season. The farm drops the CSA box off at a designated drop-off spot
and may also provide a newsletter featuring info on the veggies,
recipes and news of the farm. Many CSA's even give members the
opportunity to tour the farm or work on it if arranged in advance. More
diverse options for CSA's are also available as some farms now offer
fruit, flowers and meat (For a list of CSA's serving Chicago go to www.FamilyFarmed.org).
One of the goals of the task force is also to develop systems to
give people access to local food wherever they buy it-including
supermarkets, restaurants and institutions. Building that capacity will
be a long-term process.
"There are many impediments for restaurants to actively purchase
Illinois grown products," says Sheila O'Grady, president of the
Illinois Restaurant Association. "The biggest issue is that most
locally grown products are not carried by large distributors that serve
restaurants. Without ease of purchasing, it is difficult for many of
our members to purchase local food. Cost is another issue. In some
cases the prices charged by local growers is beyond the budget of some
restaurants. When you consider the fact that people will spend $18.3
billion in Illinois restaurants this year-this is a huge market to
supply food and drink for. We would be very supportive of efforts by
the state of Illinois to make local food and drink more available to
our members."
The task force report creates a blueprint for Illinois farmers,
policymakers and entrepreneurs to build local food systems. First and
foremost on the list of things to do is to grow more farmers.
"The demand for local food is tremendous, and we hope that Illinois
producers will step up to meet it," says Wes Jarrell, chair of the
Illinois Local and Organic Food and Farm Task Force. He also produces
fruit and goat cheese on his farm near Champaign. "We have set a goal
to have 5,000 new local food farmers in Illinois by 2020."
State Representative Julie Hamos has recently introduced legislation
to support the recommendations of the task force, House Bill 3990.

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