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.
Yalaha, FL: Happy New Year!
I’m Back, The Holiday Trip for our Son to see/play in Snow was successful. Now lets ring in the New Year (or sleep our way into it as is more common for us now as farmers with a young Child.)
Order now through 5 pm Thursday January 2nd for Sat January 4th Pickup, or tell me when you want to pick up, we usually have some flexibility.
Remember to tell me when you want to pick up! (and if I don’t reply to confirm within a day, bump my e-mail or text me 407-342-8515. Though I have cleaned up my e-mail so hopefully I won’t have a problem again.)
Sign in to order. https://yalaha.locallygrown.net/market
You have to sign in to see the add to cart button. Then set the number and click the add to cart button on the items you want to buy (it is the little picture right next to the quantity box.) Remember you need to check out before your order will be placed.
Remember to let me know when you want to pick up on Sat or maybe even Friday late afternoon or on Sunday. (If I don’t send you an e-mail confirmation of your order and pick up time, please make sure you checked out and completed your order.)
Statesboro Market2Go: Order Before Midnight!
While you are ringing in the New Year, remember to place your Market2Go order for this week before midnight tonight.
Doug’s Wild Caught Alaska Salmon is here – stock up while it lasts!
Dawson Local Harvest: TIME IS RUNNING OUT for the DAWSON MARKET!
The Dawson Market Closes Tonight at 9 pm!
BUT YOU STILL HAVE TIME TO ORDER fresh-baked Sourdough, crisp Romaine Lettuce, pastured Chicken Breasts, Caramel Apple Bread, Dino Kale, grass-fed Ground Beef, and ‘Everything’ Bagels with Veggie Cream Cheese. Fresh, Locally Farmed or Baked, and All-natural.
PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW!
Middle Tennessee Locally Grown: Reminder: Ordering Closes at 10 pm
Middle Tennessee Locally Grown market
Good morning, and Happy New Year!
The market will close at 10 pm this evening (Tuesday). Please place your order soon, if you haven’t done so as yet.
If you have ordered this week, thank you very much. See you at one of our two pickup locations – either Manchester on Thursday or Tullahoma on Friday!
Blessings,
Linda & Michael
Click here for the complete list of available fresh local farm products for this week.
To Contact Us
Our Website:
Middle Tennessee Locally Grown
On Facebook:
Manchester Locally Grown Online Farmers’ Market
By e-mail:
tnmomof10@gmail.com
By phone:
(931) 273-9708
Our Manchester pickup location is across the street from the Manchester City Schools administration building, at
216 East Fort Street, Manchester, TN
Our Tullahoma pickup location is inside “Nature’s Elite”, in the Cherokee Square Shopping Center next to Dunham’s Sports, at
1802 N Jackson St, Ste 800, Tullahoma TN
If you don’t see a map, click on the address link.
CLG: Eggs! Tuesday Reminder - Market Closes Tonight after 10pm.
Hello friends!
More eggs have been listed!
Just a reminder: There’s still time to place your order for pickup this Friday, January 3rd.
The market closes TONIGHT after 10pm, maybe even midnight! Come early on Friday for the best selection from the Extras table. See you Friday!
The market is now OPEN for orders. Click here to start shopping:*
https://conway.locallygrown.net/market
How to contact us:
DO NOT REPLY TO THIS EMAIL. Instead…
Phone or text: Steve – 501-339-1039
Email: Steve – kirp1968@sbcglobal.net
Siloam Springs, AR: Online Market is Open!
www.siloamsprings.locallygrown.net
The New Year is almost here! I am still enjoying time off through Saturday. Many thanks to Tom and Cheryl for filling in for me last Saturday!
There are lots of good pork cuts, eggs, honey, produce, baked goods and more. Looking forward to seeing everyone Saturday.
Stacy
Heritage Farm : Store is open!! Help us empty the freezers!!!
Store is now open and we will run our next delivery on Saturday January 4th to all the drop off locations as well as any home delivery orders. For the winter of 2020 we will be making all deliveries on Saturdays only but we will deliver to All drop site locations and any home delivery orders within our area of service. Home delivery will be free on orders 100.00 and up and will be 10.00 on orders under 100.00.
Hope to see you often in 2020!!
Thanks,
The Hutchins Family
Heritage Farm
770-377-5380
www.heritage-farm.net
theheritagefarm.info@gmail.com
Athens Locally Grown: ALG Market Open for January 2
Athens Locally Grown
How to contact us:
Our Website: athens.locallygrown.net
On Twitter: @athlocallygrown
On Facebook: www.facebook.com/athenslocallygrown
On Thursdays: Here’s a map.
Market News
Welcome to 2020, and another year of Athens Locally Grown! This will be our nineteenth year in operation (I can’t believe I’ve been doing this this long!) and we are looking forward to many more. Many of our growers are have slowed down for the winter, delivering every other week or otherwise reducing their availability. Many others, however, are still going strong thanks to greenhouses and other season-extending methods. Now that the holiday season is behind us, we’ll be going every single week from now until our next week off — Thanksgiving.
I ran across an article today that wonderfully illustrated why I run ALG, and why I started my own little vegetable farm back in 2002. It uses the simple dish that’s traditionally served today, Hoppin’ John, to show how much our food supply has changed in the last several decades, and how much flavor, nutrition, and diversity we nearly lost forever along the way. Small farms like those who sell through ALG, with the support of people like you who are wanting locally grown, fresh, flavorful foods, have started to turn the tide and have just barely managed to keep some of the old foods around. Many people eat Hoppin’ John and wonder why the bland mix of mushy beans and rice because a tradition and the truth is that’s not what became a tradition, it’s just what we were stuck with when the food system changed around us. Have a read of the full article — I think you’ll enjoy it: http://www.seriouseats.com/2014/12/southern-hoppin-john-new-years-tradition.html.
Each January, I devote the first few mailings of the year to the behind the scenes operation of ALG. This week, I’m going to talk about the many legal issues surrounding our market. Even though many people call us “the co-op”, ALG is legally a market owned and operated by me, so I can have a place to sell items I occasionally offer from my own gardens. There’s no board of directors, no shield corporation, no pot of grant money. It’s just me, and while that keeps things very simple, it also exposes me and my family to a ton of potential liability. It’s never really been an issue (except when the whole raw milk thing erupted several years ago) and there are several things I do specifically to minimize that risk:
- The growers list their own items and set their own prices. When you buy from them, it is from them, not from me, and not from Athens Locally Grown.
- Athens Locally Grown never takes ownership or possession of the food. The growers drop it off, and you pick it up.
- Everything at the market has a customer’s name attached to it when it arrives. ALG does not repackage any items, or buy in bulk for redistribution.
- When you pay, you’re paying into a shared cash box for all of the growers. This lets you write a single check or swipe your card once for convenience, but you are really paying all of the growers directly and individually. Your money goes in, and the software I wrote to keep everything going spits out checks for each of the growers you buy from.
- The growers give a small percentage of their sales, generally 10%, back to the market to cover the many expenses of keeping the market going. I’ll cover the details of finances another week.
- ALG never buys from a grower and resells the items to you. Never.
- When a grower sells items that need licenses from either the state or the federal government, ALG verifies that the proper licenses have been obtained.
The ownership issue is key. It’s one of the reasons why we don’t offer delivery, and why we usually can’t hold items for you if you aren’t able to pick up your orders. Farmers market delivery might be a good business for someone (if they could figure out all the legal requirements), but it’s not at all what I personally want to be into. I think it would be a valuable service for you, and maybe that’ll be something we see in Athens some day. Many food co-ops and even some farmers markets aren’t as careful with keeping ownership as straight as I try to be, and that has gotten other groups similar to us into serious legal trouble (deserved or not) over the years. There are so many grey areas in all this, and the written regulations still don’t even consider that something like Athens Locally Grown might exist. We’re so firmly in the grey areas with most everything we do that it’s just too risky for me to bring us into the areas that are clearly black.
So, these are the sorts of things that guide my thinking as Athens Locally Grown has grown over the years. Everything we do has legal ramifications, and the state of Georgia has a reputation for being no nonsense when it comes to enforcement — with the little guy, anyway. That has became extra obvious in recent years, and the FDA is also putting pressure on groups like us too. I’m not a lawyer, but every time we enter those grey areas, I make sure we follow the intent of the laws, don’t flaunt anything, and have a good defense and a paper trail should we need it. And when that doesn’t work, the good folks at the Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund are behind us. They have consumer memberships, too, and I do encourage everyone who is able to become a member of the FtCLDF.
The FtCLDF was my legal counsel in the federal lawsuit against the FDA I (and one of our members) was a plaintiff on. The lawsuit was in response to the seizure and destruction of 110 gallons of South Carolina milk purchased by ALG members in October 2009. During the pre-trial phase, the FDA moved to dismiss the suit, and went so far as to claim that the milk dumping, filmed and placed on YouTube, with an FDA agent clearly identified, never happened. The judge refused to dismiss, and gave the FDA six months to give a yes or no answer to whether what we did is really considered illegal. Exactly six months later, they responded that it was illegal, but also claimed that even though an FDA agent was at my house giving direction, they had no hand in the dumping. They also went on record stating that individuals were legally free to cross state lines and buy raw milk to take home with them (something that the FDA agent at my house said, on camera, was completely illegal under all circumstances). After that, the judge dismissed the suit without fully ruling whether ALG was also free to facilitate our members collectively ordering and picking up milk across state lines. In any case, the state of Georgia still says what we were doing was illegal and even tightened the rules right afterward, so raw milk is still rather hard to come by.
And there in a nutshell is the legalities behind ALG. In the following weeks, I’ll get more into the nuts and bolts of finances and other aspects of how we work.
Thank you so much for your support of Athens Locally Grown, all of our growers, local food, and our rights to eat it. You all are part of what makes Athens such a great area in which to live. We’ll see you on Thursday at Ben’s Bikes at the corner of Pope and Broad Streets from 4:30 to 8pm!
Other Area Farmers Markets
The Athens Farmers Market has closed for the season. They’ll return in the Spring, and you can catch the news on their website. The Comer Farmers’ Market is open on Saturday mornings from 9am to noon. Check www.facebook.com/comerfm for more information. Washington, GA also has a lovely little Saturday market, running on winter hours from 1-4. You can learn all about them here: www.washingtonfarmersmkt.com. If you know of any other area markets operating, please let me know.
All of these other markets are separate from ALG (including the Athens Farmers Market) but many growers sell at multiple markets. Please support your local farmers and food producers, where ever you’re able to do so!
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!
Foothills Market: The Market is Open!
We hope you are having a wonderful holiday season, with the new year starting on Wednesday. Foothills Market is here to help you with your menu, especially if you are making a resolution to eat healthier in 2020.
Here’s a sample of what we have on the market this week:
- Locally-grown meats processed at a near-by facility with USDA inspection. We have plenty of beef and some cuts of lamb and pork;
- Lots of lettuce from the aquaponics greenhouse at Happy Horseshoe Farm, whether you are looking for heads of lettuce or salad mix;
- Spaghetti squash, perfect to pair with ground beef or sausage (see the Recipes section of the site for some ideas);
- A good variety of local honey, sweet spreads and some baked goods featuring homegrown pumpkin.
Shop the market between now and Wednesday at 5:00 p.m., fill your cart, and click the “Place Your Order” button. We’ll have your order ready for pickup between 5:00-5:30 on Thursday, January 2.
Eat something fresh this week!
Green Acres Atkins: Happy new year!
Good morning!
Hope you all had a great Christmas holiday!
We are working on a happy new year for 2020
Please let us know if there is anything special we can grow for you !!
Please place those order by noon on Wednesday
Thanks
Tom and kami