Posts Tagged: Local Food
UC ANR hosts workshops for California's urban farmers
Building on the needs assessment, a team of UC ANR researchers created a resource website for California urban farmers. This year, team members and local partners are conducting a series of trainings for urban farmers around the state, designed to help city growers build their knowledge in key areas. The series just wrapped up in the Bay Area, and will roll out in Los Angeles starting on July 21. The Los Angeles series dates and topics are:
- July 21. Legal Basics of Urban Farming. Are you an urban farmer navigating the rules and regulations related to growing and selling food? A school or non-profit organization involved in farming? This workshop will help position you for success.
- July 28. Production Issues and Urban Farms. Are you an urban farmer learning the ins and outs of growing and harvesting crops? This workshop is designed to guide urban farmers through common production challenges related to soil, water use, and pest management.
- August 4. Marketing and Business Management for Urban Farmers. From business planning to labor laws, learn the basics to help you succeed.
- August 11. Food Safety Basics for Urban Farmers. Learn how to ensure a safe harvest, from the field to the fork.
Local partners are key to planning and hosting these events, including the Los Angeles Food Policy Council, the Collaborative for Urban Agroecology Los Angeles, Cal Poly Pomona College of Agriculture, Community Services Unlimited, GrowGood, the Growing Experience, and others.
The series will also be held in Sacramento and San Diego in early 2018. For updates and announcements, follow UC ANR's Urban Agriculture blog, Facebook, and Twitter. And be sure to bookmark our UC Urban Agriculture website which offers resources on production, policies, and more.
Urban Ag Workshop Series-SoCal 5-23-17A (3)
Farmers learn, connect, tour and taste in Sacramento
Running a small-scale farm or ranch isn't easy; it requires hard-learned skills, innovative marketing and a supportive community. Farmers and ranchers from all over California will join with farmers' market managers, educators, small farm advocates, and some of the most creative of Sacramento's Farm to Fork chefs at the California Small Farm Conference, held this year at the DoubleTree Hotel in Sacramento from March 5 to March 8, 2016.
For three days, about 400 attendees will join workshops, explore with field courses, network with colleagues and enjoy a few social events. The now-annual conference was started by the UC Agriculture and Natural Resources (UC ANR) Small Farm Program in 1982 as a unique opportunity for small-scale farmers to learn, network and grow their businesses. UC ANR specialists, advisors and staff continue to contribute to the conference as members of the board of directors and as educators presenting science-based information at workshops and field courses.
Sunday, March 6, features all-day field courses and short courses, giving participants a chance for deeper understanding and multiple perspectives as they explore their choice of four different topics. Two of the courses this year will be led by UC ANR educators or staff.
For the on-site short course, "Starting a SUCCESSFUL Specialty Food Business," Shermain Hardesty, a UCCE specialist in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at UC Davis (and leader of the UC Small Farm Program) teams up with Linda Harris, a UCCE specialist in Food Safety and Microbiology at UC Davis, Dan Sullivan, a specialty food business expert and specialty food producers, Jason Poole of Preservation & Co. and Courtney Smith of Bloomingcamp Ranch. UCCE Agritourism Coordinator Penny Leff will lead a field course named, "Direct Marketing: Farmers' Markets, Farm Stands, U-Pick and Wine Tasting," that will visit and learn from some of Sacramento region's expert practitioners of these various direct marketing venues.
Sacramento region food and beverage fans are invited to attend the "Taste of Sacramento" Tasting Reception on Monday, March 7, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. The Tasting Reception is the culinary and social highlight of the California
Online registration for the conference has now closed, but on-site registration is welcome! For more information, see the California Small Farm Conference website, or phone (888) 712-4188. See you there!
Photo of Guido Frosini, True Grass Farms, by Janae Lloyd, a winner of the farm conference 2015 photo contest.
Small Farm Evolution in Five Easy Steps
Like any small business, small farms undergo a series of transformations during the course of their lives - from youthful exuberance to middle-age crisis to confident maturity (hopefully). Looking at the history of my own farming endeavors, I see that we've traversed at least four evolutionary stages – and we're hopefully headed for a fifth!
The Romance Phase
In the mid-1990s, we raised a handful of cows and feeder lambs. I read many of the key books in the small farm movement (from authors like Joel Salatin, Elliot Coleman and Gene Logsdon). We sold calves when we weaned them in the springtime, and we raised enough feeder lambs for friends and family that we could put a lamb (or two) in our freezer each fall at no cost to us. I served on the board of a relatively new local food organization (PlacerGROWN), and we started raising laying hens and growing vegetables. With a growing family and a dream of creating our own small farm, we purchased 3 acres with 2 barns and a home in Auburn. In the autumn of 2002, I took our first crop (pumpkins and popcorn) to the Auburn Farmers' Market. We also purchased 10 meat goats and more feeder lambs to manage the blackberries and weeds in our pasture. We were on our way!
Looking back, I realize that I didn't know enough to realize that the books I was reading were long on production systems and short on business reality. In many ways, I drank the cool-aid, as my friend and fellow farmer Jim Muck says. Micro farms, like the one I'd just started, were going to save the world from industrial food production. I had no concept about the importance of scale to the future viability of my business.
Experimentation
I'm not sure there's a clear delineation for most small farms between the romance and experimentation phases. For Flying Mule Farm, part of the romance and excitement about starting our farm was the opportunity to experiment with new crops and new livestock. Part of our experimentation was driven by the mistaken belief that we needed to grow everything our customers wanted to buy (and everything we wanted to eat). Specialization and focus was the downfall of industrial agriculture, in my perspective. Diversity was the key – every successful small farm needed multiple crops and several species of livestock. During this phase, we grew spring, summer and fall vegetables (at the peak of our vegetable experiment, we grew on about a quarter acre at home and on another acre of rented land nearby). We started experimenting with greater numbers of sheep, buying 12 Barbados lambs to graze on brush on a friend's timberland. We added meat birds to our chicken flock (our oldest daughter, Lara, reminds us that we butchered chickens – with her help! – on her first day of kindergarten). We sold most of our own brush goats but eventually bought breeding ewes. We leased (and lost – and regained) pasture land in Grass Valley, Lincoln and Auburn during this stage. We tried cutting firewood and milling lumber commercially. And we experimented with the use of draft animals as an alternative to tractors.
In many ways, I loved the experimental phase of our business – especially the outdoor work and our time at the farmers' market. Since we were only at the market seasonally, I still had some Saturdays off. And since our oldest child wasn't yet playing sports on Saturdays, I wasn't conflicted about missing family activities - more on this later!
Wow – this is costing us a fortune! Maybe we need to treat it as a business!
As our knowledge and skill levels improved, we began to see that we needed to treat our farm as a business. We couldn't simply keep growing and raising things without understanding what each crop or type of livestock meant to our economic and financial well-being. The books I'd read didn't seem to emphasize this aspect of farming. And in the back of my head, I began to realize that there were biological limits to the amount of income an acre of vegetables or 100 acres of unirrigated pasture would produce. I started to suspect that we needed to get bigger.
During this stage in our evolution, I participated in the first Farm Business Planning Short Course offered by our local extension office (I've since helped teach this class – now in its eighth year). While I examined all of our enterprises (looking at my economic analysis spreadsheets from that time, I see that we had vegetable, sheep, custom grazing, goats, firewood and other forest products, laying hens and meat chickens). While I was still working part-time, I started thinking seriously about the hourly return to my labor from each of these enterprises. I realized I didn't care for raising meat chickens in large numbers (we raised 500 birds one summer). I also realized that a quarter acre of mixed vegetables (as many as 20 different “crops”) was a large garden rather than an economically viable farm. And I realized that I most enjoyed working with sheep. With this new sense of focus, I decided to quit my “day” job and try to raise sheep as a full time occupation. In addition to leasing pasture around Auburn, we expanded our targeted grazing service (where we'd provide vegetation management services for other landowners). At our peak, we attended 4-5 farmers markets each week – selling grassfed lamb, goat and beef, as well as wool products and firewood on occasion.
As my daughters grew older and wanted to play sports (as I had as a kid), I found it more and more difficult to be at the farmers market on Saturday mornings. On the other hand, we often worked together as a family, which brought tremendous nonfinancial rewards. And we ate well – we traded meat for fruits and vegetables at farmers markets, produced eggs from our own laying hens, raised our own meat birds. But the economics were challenging to say the least.
Why am I still farming? Can I continue?
For me, these questions define the evolutionary stage in which I find Flying Mule Farm today. Several years ago, we came to the conclusion that the farm was taking full-time work on my part, but was paying less than a part-time wage. We exhausted our ability to expand (which had mostly to do with lack of capital and lack of land). I went back to work, and we downsized our sheep operation to fit the time I had available. We started selling whole and half lambs rather than individual cuts – and eventually phased out of the farmers market altogether. I gradually noticed that my motivation for farming was derived not from a desire to feed my community but from my love for working outdoors with livestock. My skills and knowledge base improved to the point where I was confident I could manage the 600-800 ewes necessary to make the ranch a full-time job at full-time pay – but my bank account didn't keep pace. And so today I find myself at a critical juncture – can (and should) I continue farming? I'm struggling with how to answer this question.
Economic Viability = Sustainability
A sustainable farm must be environmentally, socially and economically sustainable. As Flying Mule Farm has evolved, I've begun to think that economic sustainability is the key to the other two elements – a farm that can't stay in business can't provide environmental or social benefits. Based on my experience over the last 20 years, I think that economic viability depends on focused production, appropriate scale, and efficient marketing. I'm still working to get there – on a part-time basis at the moment.
Our farm has been in the midst of its mid-life crisis for several years. I still appreciate the numerous non-monetary rewards of farming – from the gift of new life during lambing season to the opportunity to work side-by-side with my wife and girls. I love the work like nothing else I've ever done. As we enter this new phase in the evolution of Flying Mule Farm, I'll be aiming towards greater profitability. While profit is not the purpose of our farm, it is, after all, necessary for its continued existence. Stay tuned….
Note: Paul Mueller one of the founders and owners of Full Belly Farm, will be joining us for our Farmer-to-Farmer Breakfast on December 3! He'll be talking about how Full Belly Farm has evolved - I can't wait to hear what he has to say! Click here for more information!
Thoughts on Convenience and Middlemen
As part of our Specialty Crop Block Grant here at the Placer-Nevada office of UC Cooperative Extension, we've been surveying local consumers about purchasing locally grown fruits and vegetables. One of the most important questions we've been asking (at least in my opinion) is, “What keeps you from buying more locally-grown fruits and veggies?” A plurality of the responses - more than 38 percent of the people we've asked (over 1,600 people so far) indicate that lack of convenience is the most significant barrier. By my interpretation, this response means that people would purchase more from local farmers and ranchers if locally grown products were available 7 days a week (like in a grocery store). Indeed, some survey respondents have indicated in conversation that they would buy more locally grown produce if there were a farmers market each day of the week! While many shoppers enjoy going to the farmers market, modern shopping habits have evolved to the point where most people don't buy all of their groceries one day per week. Furthermore, shoppers can't make ALL of their food purchases at the farmers' market – our local markets don't have things like milk, flour, and other staples. In other words, there are many factors wrapped up in the idea of convenience from a consumer perspective.
As a rancher, marketing convenience has a very different meaning for me. A convenient market, for me, means a place where I can sell a high volume of product, at retail prices (or close to it), with minimal time commitment on my part. Convenience, by my definition, has a great deal to do with efficiency. As a rancher, I can't afford to go to more than one or two farmers markets per week – let alone seven!
In many parts of the country, communities have turned to the concept of a food hub as a way to increase marketing efficiency for producers and convenience for consumers. In the food hub model, producers can sell higher volumes and close-to-retail prices to the food hub. The hub then distributes the produce to chefs, retailers, and even directly to consumers. The Community Alliance with Family Farmers (CAFF) says,
“Many stakeholders in local food systems work have looked to the emergence of food hubs as the missing infrastructural link that will enable greater access to markets for small farmers and greater access to fresh, local food for communities. The USDA definition of a food hub is a “business or organization that actively manages the aggregation, distribution, and marketing of source-identified food products primarily from local and regional producers to strengthen their ability to satisfy wholesale, retail, and institutional demand.”[1]
From my perspective, a food hub operates like a locally-focused produce distributor – like a middleman that facilitates the sale of locally grown fruits, vegetables, meats, etc. within a community or region.
Food hubs differ from conventional distribution middlemen, in my opinion, primarily by lack of a profit motive. Food hubs – at least those with which I'm familiar – are motivated by a desire to serve community needs (e.g., access to healthy, local food and increased viability of local small farms), rather than by a desire to generate profit. Like many farmers, however, food hubs often discover that profit is vital to their survival – without profit, a food hub can't pay overhead expenses, let alone the farmers and ranchers it supposed to serve. At the other end of the supply chain, food hubs can't serve community customers if they aren't economically sustainable.
CAFF puts it like this:
“As a result of our efforts over the last decade, CAFF concludes that new, stand-alone facilities and aggregation hubs, unless farmer owned and operated, are not viable enterprises in California. These third party food hubs add on an extra layer of costs to the supply chain, duplicate existing efforts/infrastructure, and struggle financially without subsidy. In our view, a more effective strategy for local food system development is achieved not by establishing a stand-alone food hub as described above, but rather by working collaboratively to modify existing infrastructure and fostering supply chain values among a broad set of food system stakeholders while also educating the community about local food and engaging them in the movement. Ultimately, CAFF hopes that our findings and experience will help advance the theory and practice of local food system development and inform future decision-making processes around the need for new food hubs in California.”[2]
Food hubs can be subsidized in various ways. Growers can donate time and facilities to these hubs, or they can take lower prices or deferred payments. Similarly customers can pay higher prices, or likewise donate time and facilities. In the long run, however, such subsidies are not sustainable.
What's the answer, then, to this conundrum? How do we match the needs of local consumers (for markets that are time- and location-convenient) with the needs of farmers and ranchers (for markets that are efficient and fair in terms of price and volume)? As CAFF suggests, perhaps we need to work within the existing aggregation and distribution infrastructure. In this scenario, consumer demand for locally grown food would carry back through the supply chain, from the retailer to the distributor to the producer. At the same time, a small family farm's need for higher prices could carry through this same set of middlemen to the retailer (and ultimately to the consumer). For me, the key to these issues is that we need to discuss our local food system as a community. Too often, farmers talk amongst themselves without including the rest of the food system. Sometimes (believe it or not!), we even complain that profiteering in the processing, distribution or retail sectors comes at our expense as farmers! Similarly, local food advocates often leave the idea of profit (within any segment of the system) out of their discussions. It's time we all talked together!
[1] “Making the Invisible Visible: Looking Back at Fifteen Years of Local Food Distribution Solutions (October 2014), p. 5.
[2] Ibid., p. 3.
UC Davis tomatoes provide year-round healthful eating for college students
At the same time, chefs and food buyers at universities, particularly the University of California, are selecting for high-quality fruits and vegetables, produced locally and sustainably. Universities with strong food sustainability programs are rightfully proud of what they're doing to educate students about food production, health, and nutrition. UC Davis Dining Services prioritizes the purchase of locally grown food (ideally within a 50-mile radius of campus). Most University of California campuses have similar programs.
At UC Davis, fresh roma tomatoes are picked each August from the 300-acre Russell Ranch, part of the campus's Agricultural Sustainability Institute, then processed within hours by campus Dining Services to provide year-round tomato sauce for pizza, pasta, and ratatouille. All told, 10,000 pounds of tomatoes are processed during a two-week period in August. About 29 percent of the total food served in the campus's residential dining halls is from local, organic or sustainable sources.
Emma Torbert, an academic coordinator at the UC Davis Agricultural Sustainability Institute, noted, “Connecting the food system to the research is really interesting. A lot of times there is confusion about where our food is coming from. The more people are educated, the more educated decisions they can make.”
Many UC Davis faculty and staff are so impressed with the food choices at the dorms that they purchase individual meal tickets and enjoy lunches made with the campus-grown tomatoes, herbs, and other vegetables, all of which are part of the daily food array. Public dinners are also offered periodically at the dorms so that community members can sit amongst students to taste and learn about the sustainability programs in the dorms.
Additional Information:
- Video: Farm to Table, UC Davis Tomatoes; 2010
- Slide show of this year's UC Davis tomato harvesting and processing system; 2014
- Sustainable Foodservice Progress Report 2014, UC Davis Dining Services
- Two videos of UC Davis students who work at the Student Farm to produce food, including one on tomato sauce production
- “Tomatoes: Safe methods to store, preserve, and enjoy.” UC Agriculture and Natural Resources, free publication