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Community Supported Agriculture is great for farms, environment, and locavores

CSAs, or Community Supported Agriculture farms, are a good deal for farmers and the environment, providing great locally grown food.

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Photo courtesy of Karan Davis Cutler
Next to the wheat stalks are three of the types of winter squash grown at Golden Russet Farm: dark green acorn squash; tan, gourdlike butternut squash; and striped Delicata, or sweet potato, squash.
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Photo courtesy of Karan Davis Cutler
CSA farmer Judy Stevens prepares 'Cheddar' cauliflower, a yellow-orange hybrid, for the weekly distribution to members.

The Community Supported Agriculture, or , farm nearest my house has switched from its summer to its fall menu.

Instead of organically grown peppers, green beans, melons, and other warm-weather crops, members are filling their baskets with autumn vegetables 鈥 cauliflower, cabbage, carrots, leeks, potatoes, winter squash, pumpkins, onions, garlic, and a few 鈥渟urprises,鈥 according to Judy Stevens, co-owner with her husband, Will, of .

Despite Vermont鈥檚 rural character, there are more than 85 CSAs in the state, and well over 2,500 nationwide. While some also offer fruit, dairy products, and meats, most CSAs, like Golden Russet, are small, family-owned farms to which subscribers pay an upfront fee for a season鈥檚 share of fresh, organic, locally produced vegetables and herbs.

鈥淪hare鈥 is the right word, for members sign on for the same risks that CSA farmers face. If late blight hits the potatoes, as it did in Vermont this year, there may be no potatoes to distribute. Members receive what the farmers harvest.

Judy remembers 1997: 鈥淗erbicide spray drifted over from a neighboring farm and killed our crops, so we decided to refund everyone鈥檚 money.鈥 Major failures like that, however, are rare.

On Wednesdays, Golden Russet鈥檚 60-plus members gather at the 84-acre farm to collect their week鈥檚 share, which Ms. Stevens lists on a blackboard. Last weeks鈥 portion 鈥 each is large enough for a family of four 鈥 included cabbage, spinach, various root crops, Brussels sprouts, tomatoes, celeriac, green peppers, kale, hot peppers, winter squash, and broccoli.

Members also could take advantage of the pick-your-own option and add flowers, herbs, and cherry tomatoes to their baskets.

In addition to fresh produce, CSAs offer people an opportunity to become familiar with a working farm and to meet the people who plant, tend, and harvest our food.

Distribution day at Golden Russet is a social event, an opportunity for members to catch up with each other and the local news, and to share cooking tips and recipes, especially for less familiar vegetables, such as .

鈥淲e have members of all ages,鈥 Stevens says, 鈥渂ut young families are especially enthusiastic. Parents like showing their children how different vegetables grow. The kids like to help weigh and bag the produce. And,鈥 she added with a laugh, 鈥渨e have a huge sand pile that鈥檚 very popular.鈥

As Thanksgiving approaches, a holiday associated with food and friendship, it鈥檚 a fitting time to investigate joining a CSA. , a nonprofit organic food website, can identify a farm near you. If you grow your own vegetables, consider giving someone you know a membership.

CSAs are a , a good deal for the environment, and a good deal for anyone who wants to eat fresh, locally grown produce. Everyone wins.

Karan Davis Cutler, a former magazine editor and newspaper columnist, is the author of scores of garden articles and more than a dozen books, including 鈥淏urpee - The Complete Flower Gardener鈥 and 鈥淗erb Gardening for Dummies.鈥 She now struggles to garden in the unyieldingly dense clay of Addison County, Vt., on the shore of Lake Champlain, where she is working on a book about gardening to attract birds and other wildlife. She will be blogging regularly for Diggin鈥 It.

Editor鈥檚 note: To read more posts by Karan, see our . The Monitor鈥檚 main gardening page offers articles on many gardening topics. See also our . You may want to visit . Take part in and get answers to your gardening questions. If you join the group (it鈥檚 free), you can upload your garden photos and enter our next contest.

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