The Weblog

This weblog contains LocallyGrown.net news and the weblog entries from all the markets currently using the system.

To visit the authoring market’s website, click on the market name located in the entry’s title.



 
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The Cumming Harvest - Closed:  Market Closes Soon


Just a friendly reminder that the market orders are due today by 8 pm.

Thank you for placing your order and supporting local farms and businesses!
See you on Saturday!

Click Here To Order

Independence,VA:  Market is OPEN for August 29th pickup!


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Good evening,

The Market is open and ready for your orders! I want to send a giant THANK YOU out there to all of you for so much continued support! The second Ice Cream Social of the year was a great success! Thanks to everyone who came out! We were able to raise $856!

To Shop: Independence Farmers Market.

FIBER DAY IS THIS FRIDAY!

This Friday, August 24th, is the last Fiber Day of the season. Don’t miss it! Fiber Day was rescheduled from August 3rd due to HEAVY rain.The Blue Ridge Fiber Guild will join the weekly Farmers Market from 9am to 1pm. This is a great opportunity to purchase yarns, roving, raw fiber, baskets, and an array of knit, woven, and felted goods. Come and meet the artisans who often raise the animals providing fiber for the handmade items in their booths. Feel free to ask questions about farming with sheep, goats, alpacas, and rabbits, and see demonstrations of how raw fiber is turned into usable products.

Thank you for supporting the Independence Farmers Market!,

Abby

Old99Farm Market:  Old 99 Farm, week of Aug 19 2018


Lots of tomatoes, cherry reds and yellows, Amish paste/beefsteak for eating and making sauce.

Cukes are beautiful, right sized for pickles or larger for juicing and stuffing. Cami has been finding all sorts of cuke recipes. Cold cuke soup from Joy of Cooking was one of hte best.

Beans (purple, yellow, green), yellow sweet peppers, hot peppers, NZ Spinach, kale, parsley, basil, beets, cabbage (red, green and savoy), potatoes, rounds out the list this week.

Eggs: lots

Roasting chickens Lots.

Time to order your beef quarter for the fall. $100 deposit.

My web site discovery this week for climate news is Climate and Economy News. Two or three headlines for weekdays.

Healthy eating,
Ian and Cami

Spa City Local Farm Market Co-op:  Bluebird hill will not be delivering this market


Due to the small number of orders, Bluebird Hill will not be delivering. If you ordered from them, your total will be adjusted at pickup. Please do not fill out a check with the original total of your order.

Julie
This week’s market manager

The Cumming Harvest - Closed:  This week on The Cumming Harvest


This Week

Market opens at 10AM

THE MARKET WIL BE CLOSED NEXT WEEK, AUGUST 26 – SEPTEMBER 3.

ON THE MARKET:

Late August can be a rough time of year for Southern farmers, transitioning between seasons with the heat, humidity and rain. The market reflects this in the variability in its vegetable offerings— sometimes there’s plenty, while other times there is not enough.

In the MEATS department, you will find:
Carrell Farms pastured alpaca, water buffalo and lamb
Back in Time Farm’s pastured chicken products (listing on Wednesday only)
Southern Grass Meat grass-fed beef

Ancient Awakenings is on the market this week with their kombucha,

In the Bath and Beauty section of the market, you can find products from Southern Essentials and Buffalo Gal Grassfed Beauty— everything from deodorants to soap and face wash.

BotaniPharm is back on the market with supplements such as Goldenseal Respiratory Support, which also contains Elderberry root extract.

There are very few eggs on the market again this week.

Other items this week:
Sauces, rubs and marinades from Nature’s Kitchen

5 Lights Farm Honey

My Daily Bread jams and bakery items

Simply Southard jellies and relishes

Cultured Traditions Jun, kvass and other cultured foods

Pick-Up

Market Location and Pick Up
Pick Up every Saturday from 10am-12pm.
Located in a small building directly behind The Episcopal Church of the Holy Spirit.
724 Pilgrim Mill Road, Cumming, GA 30040
Google Map

To view the harvest today and tomorrow till 8pm, visit “The Market” page on our website, The Cumming Harvest

We thank you for your interest and support of our efforts to bring you the healthiest, the freshest and the most delicious locally-produced foods possible!

Champaign, OH:  What’s The Story, Morning Glory?


Rise and shine, little local market of love customers!!

It’s been an emotional week for your market manager as I said goodbye to my daughter, who left on her next life adventure, this morning!

It also found me losing one of my original Cosmic customers, a sweet, sweet man, who lost his somewhat short battle with cancer…

It also found me reminiscing with my old college roommate over the exact date, yesterday, two years ago, when an auto accident changed their lives, forever, and the journey they have been on in those two years, never giving up, and pushing Elliot, in different cities, hospitals, experimental procedures.

All of this centers around time…the time we think we have, the time we are always trying to make more of.

This market, over all of these years, has been a work in progress, a labor of love, and the success of letting it’s own time take control, as it has unfolded, made customers, our families, and given us the love from community support.

Why not put a little of that love into your week, each week, and let us help you, along the way…

Time marches on, just like this market…

XOXO,
Cosmic Pam

Spa City Local Farm Market Co-op:  The market is closed for ordering.


The Spa City Co-op market is now closed for ordering. Please plan to pick up your order this Friday between 3 and 4:30 pm.
Should you be unable to pick up, please arrange for a friend to do so for you.

Thank you for ordering from Spa City Co-op
This weeks market manager
Julie Alexander
5016559411

The Cumming Harvest - Closed:  This week on The Cumming Harvest


This Week

Market opens at 10AM

THE MARKET WIL BE CLOSED NEXT WEEK, AUGUST 26 – SEPTEMBER 3.

ON THE MARKET:

Late August can be a rough time of year for Southern farmers, transitioning between seasons with the heat, humidity and rain. The market reflects this in the variability in its vegetable offerings— sometimes there’s plenty, while other times there is not enough.

In the MEATS department, you will find:
Carrell Farms pastured alpaca, water buffalo and lamb
Back in Time Farm’s pastured chicken products (listing on Wednesday only)
Southern Grass Meat grass-fed beef

Ancient Awakenings is on the market this week with their kombucha,

In the Bath and Beauty section of the market, you can find products from Southern Essentials and Buffalo Gal Grassfed Beauty— everything from deodorants to soap and face wash.

BotaniPharm is back on the market with supplements such as Goldenseal Respiratory Support, which also contains Elderberry root extract.

There are very few eggs on the market again this week.

Other items this week:
Sauces, rubs and marinades from Nature’s Kitchen

5 Lights Farm Honey

My Daily Bread jams and bakery items

Simply Southard jellies and relishes

Cultured Traditions Jun, kvass and other cultured foods

Pick-Up

Market Location and Pick Up
Pick Up every Saturday from 10am-12pm.
Located in a small building directly behind The Episcopal Church of the Holy Spirit.
724 Pilgrim Mill Road, Cumming, GA 30040
Google Map

To view the harvest today and tomorrow till 8pm, visit “The Market” page on our website, The Cumming Harvest

We thank you for your interest and support of our efforts to bring you the healthiest, the freshest and the most delicious locally-produced foods possible!

Miami County Locally Grown:  Join us for our MCLG Community Potluck!


When Lynn Miller writes, I instantly and clearly visualize what we’re trying to build with our small contribution to the growing, necessary local food movement.

A good friend of ours, farmer, author, progressive extraordinaire, Lynn wrote a piece in his beloved quarterly Small Farmer’s Journal that envisions the need and potential of building the kind of community possible with this market…

He retells the Greek myth of Sisyphus who’s cursed with rolling a huge stone up a hill, only to have it roll back down – up and down, no resolution, no freedom. “That is what large scale debt-ridden farming is for far too many good folk… It is manifest desperation. How does one escape it? I humbly suggest that it begins with doubting. As humans and as farmers we need to doubt what society and the marketplace have been telling us and trust that gut instinct to go for our own version of a debt-free handmade life working with family and friends to produce, to be caretakers, to belong to a place, to have that place allow us to be a good part of what it may become.

“Some of us are small, debt-free or close to it, and challenged by our farming, but we’re happy because we are doing what we want to do and embraced by the ownership of it all… quite a few of us would do this work even if we didn’t make anything at it. We happily farm for free (at least it seems like we’re farming for free) because the intangible rewards are so grand and fine [and I know my husband and I aren’t the only ones who feel this way].

“Good farming is always about good farmers working carefully with what they have, what they know, what they may learn, and in concert with each other and nature.” Big governments around the world “are dead wrong on this subject… as they hold that the way forward… is leveraged industrial farming. They do not see that this model has failed and continues to destroy the food supply, the environment, the planet, human societies and dignity.

“The answer rests in the opposite direction. A move to allow and encourage people and peoples to return to the land and their agrarian heritage would transform the world’s economy with natural growth, all the while healing human society and the environment. Confusion about words like sustainable, organic, non-GMO, local, healthy… biodynamic, green, and small farming all will fall away as the waves of new small farmers answer every question with a positive action.

“You will know what is local because you will know first-hand the people who raised that meat, because you will have picked the crop yourself, because you will have watched that food grow as you drove by, because your brother and sister work at the creamery that buys Fred’s milk and makes your cottage cheese, because you stood patiently waiting at the farmer’s market as Sandra backed her husband’s produce-loaded pickup to the table. Every cog in the wheel of your community’s agrarian pursuits will have cause to know and protect every single piece of the puzzle, to avoid poisons, to encourage fertility, to guarantee freshness, to embrace what makes that region’s food unique.

“We need more people in farming, so that we might repair the earth and save humanity.

“But it has to start by talking it up”…

ENTER OUR MARKET COMMUNITY POTLUCK

Tonight available on the Market under our MCLG category is a Community Potluck open to any vendor or customer interested in attending… limited to 10 customers (who are encouraged to bring a guest/family) and 10 vendors (also bringing a guest/family), and again hosted by our ever-gracious Deb Spencer, 6635 StudeBaker, at her lovely farm in Tipp City (what would we do without her bake oven?) on Monday September 17th at 5pm.

A chance to get to know your fellow customers and local producers, this is sure to be another unforgettable MCLG event – last month we invited our long-term supporters and volunteers for our first crack at a dinner that would allow vendors and customers to enjoy a fantastic evening of good food and good company, nurturing the relationships we’ve been building thru this market for two years. And using them as willing (and hungry) guinea pigs, we quickly realized how vital and fun such an event could be – in fact, afterwards we had more vendors AND customers AND even strangers volunteer their own farms, yards, and homes for our next event, because they couldn’t wait to participate! Talk about community building! And there will be more.

We were the most eclectic, quirky, wonderful group of folks that may never have gotten along under any other circumstances – yet in this relaxed, intimate environment, the obvious was clear – we all shared one truly indispensable thing in common… we all eat, and want to eat good food. You could mingle from one conversation to the next and join the talk about the potential products available with access to a shared-use kitchen, hydroponics, backyard poultry, getting kids involved in the garden, ancient grains, heirloom tomatoes, bake ovens, all the necessary fabric to knit a sustainable, healthy society right around us.

We have barely begun to “talk it up”, and must continue… won’t you join us? :-)

www.miamicounty.locallygrown.net

Statesboro Market2Go:  Order Before Midnight!


Remember to place your order for this week before midnight tonight.

Click to order at Market2Go