12/21/11

Savor the Season 2012: New Crops Announced!

We are excited to announce that the new 2012 Savor the Season Crops have been selected!

The new crops to be featured in 2012 will be:
  • Spinach
  • Arugula
  • Snow Peas
  • Rhubarb
  • Basil
  • Bell Peppers
  • Garlic
  • Spaghetti Squash
  • Turnips
  • Pumpkins
These crops were selected by asking market farmers and managers, through a survey, which crops they felt should be prioritized. After analyzing the results of the survey, members of the Savor the Season Advisory Committee (a group made up of eight specialty crop professionals) made the final crop selections.

As previously reported here, the Kansas Rural Center was awarded a Specialty Crop Block Grant from the Kansas Department of Agriculturein October that will help expand and develop the 2012 Savor the Season program. Collaborators for the project include Our Local Food, K-State Research and Extension, Kansas Vegetable Growers Association, Kansas Master Food Volunteers, and KSRE’s Rapid Response Center to name a few. 

The goals of the 2012 Savor the Season Program are to 1.) Improve the diversity of specialty crops grown, and 2.) Increase sales of these crops in Kansas. To achieve these goals, the Savor the Season program will offer farmers educational programming and resources on the production and marketing of specific fruits and vegetables. Participating markets and farmers will receive attractive marketing tools such as colorful recipe cards that support consumer outreach. The program will also communicate with consumers the ease and benefits of eating from this diverse list of healthy, locally-grown specialty crops through materials (such as the colorful recipe cards) and events. 

The Savor the Season Program was developed in 2009 and continued in 2010 with support from a KDA Specialty Crop Block Grant. To date, sixteen specialty crops have been featured including acorn squash, green beans, beets, bok choy, cantaloupe, chard, cherry tomatoes, eggplant, heirloom tomatoes, lettuce, napa cabbages, okra, onions, salad mix, sugar snap peas, and sweet potatoes. For more information, click here for aprogram retrospective

More information on how your market or farm stand can participate in the 2012 Savor the Season program will be available in January. Check back on this blog or Facebook at facebook.com/SavorTheSeason. For questions, contact Natalie Fullerton or Mercedes Taylor-Puckett.
Happy growing & eating in 2012!

11/27/11

Southeastern Region Farmers Market Workshop Set for December 3 in Iola

With the current economic situation, producers and consumers alike are looking for local, sustainable food sources. Come catch a vision of how Farmers’ Markets can be an increasingly viable venue for fresh, locally grown food.

A free Farmers Market Workshop is scheduled for Saturday, December 3, 2011, at the Townhouse West Assembly Room, 217 N. Washington, Iola, KS, from 9:00 to 4:00 for all who are interested in vending, managing or anything in between. A soup lunch will be provided. Pre-registration is requested in order to provide all attendees with take-home materials and plenty of lunch.

Workshops include:
Workshop partners include Allen County Farm Bureau, the Kansas Rural Center and the Our Local Food program with funding assistance from Kansas Farm Bureau Foundation for Agriculture, Kansas Center for Sustainable Agriculture and Alternative Crops, and the USDA Specialty Crop Grant Program, through a sub-grant from the Kansas Department of Agriculture.

For more information and to register, click here.

KRC Receives Two New Regional Food Systems Grants

Whiting, Ks. -The Kansas Rural Center is pleased to announce that it was recently awarded two grants focused on regional food system development and producer education and outreach.

A $171,520 USDA Specialty Crop Block Grant (SCBG), through a sub-grant from the Kansas Department of Agriculture, will permit KRC to expand the Our Local Food (OLF) program in Kansas. This program seeks to spur the development of community-based food systems by creating regional networks of local farms, farmers markets, food businesses, agricultural professionals, supportive organizations, as well as consumers who are committed to increasing the production and sales of fresh, local foods in Kansas.

The SCBG will assist in further developing OLF program resources such as subsidized membership fees, educational opportunities and consultation services for producers and food businesses, an interactive website and online food hub development, as well as member tool kits. Two chapters–a South East and a State chapter–will be added to the existing three, enabling the program to cover the entire state.

Additionally, this grant will permit KRC to bring back Savor the Season, a program started in 2009 to increase the diversity and boost sales of specialty crops at farmers markets. In 2012, ten new crops will be added to the sixteen highlighted in previous years. To increase the diversity of crops grown in the state, K-State Research and Extension Horticulture Agents will partner with experienced growers and OLF program staff to develop crop guides focusing on production, post-harvest, and marketing best practices for at least five featured crops.

Producer education on selected crops will also be offered in multiple formats including webinars, workshops and field days. Additional partners, including the KSU Research And Extension (KSRE) Nutrition, Food Safety and Healthy Program Leadership Team and KSRE Family and Consumer Science Agents, will focus on educating consumers about specific specialty crops and how to select, store, and prepare them. OLF member farmers markets will be eligible to apply for mini-grant and cost-shares to promote Savor the Season crops at their markets.

A second grant, the $99,673 USDA Risk Management Agency (RMA) award, will support numerous collaborations between KRC and other partners to increase opportunities around local food production. Using conferences, electronic communications tools, workshops and other venues, the project will enhance producers ability to locate risk management information and training, and to strengthen risk management education and training to a broadened agricultural audience.

RMA grant-supported programming includes the 2011 KRC sustainable agriculture conference, a full-day food safety workshop at the 2012 Great Plain Growers Conference, the Kansas Grazers Association’s winter conference, and a two-day grazing school to be held in fall 2012.

KRC will also partner with the Kansas Farmers Union (KFU), Kansas Center for Sustainable Agriculture and Alternative Crops (KCSAAC), and KSRE Douglas County to develop a Strategic Marketing for Livestock Producers educational series in winter of 2012. Composed of an introductory webinar and four workshops, the program will focus on the basics of marketing, including identifying a target market, selecting appropriate outlets, developing a marketing plan, and creating effective materials.

RMA funding will also allow the Our Local Food program to expand its resources for meat and animal product producers, and are not covered by the Specialty Crop grants.

The Kansas Small Farm and Direct Marketing Guide, a collaboration of KDA’s Food Safety Division, KCSAAC, the KFU, and KRC, is also funded through the RMA grant. This guide will provide base-line information that all direct marketing farms and beginning farmers need to be aware of to increase the likelihood of success and remain within regulatory compliance. Topics to be covered include licensing, taxes, insurance, and labor topics as well as rules and regulations for processing and direct marketing diverse agricultural products.

On the national level, direct-to-consumer sales, through outlets such as farmers markets, farm stands and U-pick operations, totaled $1.2 billion in 2007. This represents an annual growth rate of about 10% between 2002 and 2007– twice that of the rest of the food economy.
Activity in Kansas not only mirrors that national trend, but demonstrates even more potential. The number of farmers markets across the state has doubled over the past decade. Furthermore, between 2002 to 2007, Kansas rose from 45 to 33 in state ranking based on vegetable acres per 100 people. These statistics point to a burgeoning demand for local food that the USDA estimates will reach $7 billion by 2012.

“This rapid increase, not only in sales but also in the number of small farms entering the direct marketing arena, demonstrates that the need for resources, training and networking is great. With the award of these two grants, the Kansas Rural Center and its partners are in a position to address several of the opportunities and challenges of rebuilding regional food systems,” said Mercedes Taylor-Puckett, KRC’s Local Food and Farmers Market Project Coordinator.

You can contact Mercedes at mercedes.taylorpuckett@gmail.com.

10/5/11

Local Food Connections Workshop

Join Our Local Food - South Central With

Sedgwick County K-State Research & Extension


Tuesday, November 1, 2011

6:00 to 9:00 p.m.

Sedgwick County Extension Center

21st & Ridge Road, Wichita, KS

Do you have an interest in utilizing local food in your business or home? Come learn from farmers, chefs, grocers, and many more that can help you make local food connections easy.

Registration Information:
$10 for Our Local Food - South Central Members*
$20 for Non - Members*
*You MUST register by October 28, 2011 to attend. Please register online by Clicking Here!

Local Food Connections Workshop Schedule

5:30 Registration
6:00 Dinner by Lotus Leaf Café & Creperie: Lotus Leaf Café is a vibrant new restaurant in Wichita serving up decadent dishes with a healthy twist made with some of the area’s best local ingredients!
6:45 Local Food Connections Panel: this is your chance to ask a panel of professionals experienced in the local food industry. Norm Oeding farm manager of Janzen Family Farms, Chef Tanya of Tanya’s Soup Kitchen, Jennifer McVay with Food for Thought, Pat Randleas Old Town Farmers’ Market Manager, and Sarah Turner with Slow Food Wichita/ Flint Hills will share how they make local food connections!
7:15 Session 1: Exemplifying Online & Social Media Marketing for Local Food
Lance Chastain of Chautauqua Hills Farm
Get to know more about how online media such as websites and social networks can be used to expand your market. Get a growers perspective on creating a market for your product.
8:00 Session 2: Learn Local Food Lingo: Organic, Natural, which is it?
Rebecca McMahon, Sedgwick County Extension Horticulturist
Learn to effectively communicate terms such as organic, natural, or grass-fed. Understand what they mean and how they translate to consumers.
8:30 Keynote Speaker: Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food…What does this mean to Kansas? JJ Jones, Kansas Department of Agriculture Marketing and Trade Coordinator

To register for this event Click Here.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Want to help spread the word? Click here for a downloadable flier!

6/30/11

Internship Opportunities Available with the Our Local Food Program

Our Local Food – Kaw River Valley, a program of the Kansas Rural Center and supported in part by the USDA Specialty Crop Grant Program, through a sub-grant from the Kansas Department of Agriculture, is pleased to announce a call for interns.

THREE part-time interns based in the Kaw River Valley region are needed from late June through early September, 2011. Additionally, one part-time food assessment intern needed from July through December, 2011. Please see below for details on the different opportunities.

Our Local Food – Kaw River Valley Interns
Interns will assist our program primarily in communications and relationship-building work that is vital to promoting and building the program.
Interns should be residing at the time of the internship in one of the Kaw River Valley chapter counties: Johnson, Wyandotte, Atchison, Jackson, Jefferson, Leavenworth, Douglas, Wabaunsee, Shawnee, Pottowatomie, Riley or Geary.
Candidates should have completed four semesters of college studies with evidence of strong academic performance.
To apply, please submit the following to KawRiverValley.olf@gmail.com:
  1. Resume
  2. Up to three samples of work, preferably including multimedia/social media samples. At least one sample must be a written piece.
  3. Please provide a letter detailing how your experience is a good fit for this position (download job description)
Top candidates will be selected for interviews with program staff and volunteers.Our goal is to have all three intern positions filled no later than July 15; please submit applications by July 5, 2011.
This an unpaid position, but interns will receive a $700 stipend payment at the end of a successful internship, for any travel, expenses or other costs incurred.

Our Local Food Program Food Assessment Intern 
This intern will assist our program primarily in research, analysis and development of a comprehensive report on our regional foodsheds.
Intern should be residing at the time of the internship in one of the Our Local Food chapter counties: in the Kaw River Valley, Twin Rivers, or South Central regions (for a complete listing of counties, please see chapter links at left).
Candidates should have completed four semesters of college studies with evidence of strong academic performance. A background in economics is preferred.
To apply, please submit the following to KawRiverValley.olf@gmail.com:
  1. Resume
  2. Up to three samples of work. At least one sample must be a written piece.
  3. Please provide a letter detailing how your experience is a good fit for this position (download job description)
Top candidates will be selected for interviews with program staff and volunteers.
Please submit applications no later than July 5, 2011.
This an unpaid position, but intern will receive a $700 stipend payment at the end of a successful internship, for any travel, expenses or other costs incurred.

For more information, please contact Julie Mettenburg, coordinator
Our Local Food – Kaw River Valley
785-749-1031
Kawrivervalley.olf@gmail.com

4/29/11

Grant Award Funds Our Local Food Program Expansion

The Kansas Rural Center was recently awarded a $70,000 grant from the Kansas Department of Agriculture to expand the Our Local Food (OLF) Program. This program seeks to spur the development of community-based food systems by creating regional networks of local farms, farmers markets, food businesses, agricultural professionals, supportive organizations and businesses, as well as consumers who are committed to increasing the production and sales of fresh, local foods in Kansas.

KRC’s Our Local Food Program was launched in the Kaw River Valley region in 2010. Counties comprising the Kaw River Valley Chapter include Atchison, Douglas, Geary, Jackson, Jefferson, Johnson, Leavenworth, Pottawatomie, Riley, Shawnee, Wabaunsee, and Wyandotte. The program enrolled 54 charter members in its first year– 37 farms, 7 farmers markets and 10 food businesses.

With funding from the 2011 Specialty Crop Block Grant, two additional chapters are launching in 2011.

The South Central Chapter (OLF-SC) encompasses Butler, Cowley, Harper, Harvey, Kingman, Reno, Sedgwick, and Sumner counties. Natalie Fullerton has been named OLF-SC Chapter Coordinator. Kansas State Research and Extension (KSRE) Sedgwick County has joined as a collaborator and will sponsor a summer intern dedicated to local food system work.

The Twin Rivers Chapter (OLF-TR), under the coordination of Tracey Graham, covers Chase, Coffey, Greenwood, Lyon, Morris, and Osage counties. Building on the significant groundwork laid by the Emporia Area Local Food Network, such as the development of a community kitchen, the OLF-Twin River Chapter will expand to include broad representation from all aspects of its regional food system.

The chapter model was selected over a single statewide program because it is better able to address the opportunities and challenges of individual regions while fostering important community relationships.

Regional chapters are semi-autonomous but operate under OLF organizational structure which calls for each chapter to establish its own coordinator, steering and partner committees, and summer interns. Chapters will collaborate on overall Our Local Food Program efforts through the leadership of OLF Program Director Mercedes Taylor-Puckett.

The Our Local Food Program label will be modified to reflect the name of each region. The label can be used by members to identify and promote food grown in that region. For example, a farmer can print out cards with the chapter label that can be used as product price cards at farmers markets on those items that have been raised in that region. Program stickers could also be placed on products like pies or jelly, if the primary ingredient was grown in the region. A restaurant could use the label for a menu item when it designates the farm from which the primary ingredient was sourced. Regional OLF label shelf tags will enable retailers to highlight products from the area. This eye-catching label will assist consumers by providing a definition of local–within that region, making it easy to select choices that support local ag producers and the their regional economy.

The OLF website, launching in mid-May, will have information targeted to consumers, producers, food businesses and other groups such as economic development professionals. There will also be sections devoted to each chapter that offer a directory of farms, CSAs and farmers markets as well as food businesses that use or sell foods raised in each region. Chapter coordinators will also reach out to members and consumers through bi-weekly enewsletters to keep them up to date on events and opportunities, highlight seasonal products and profile members.

With assistance from KSU’s Dr. Rhonda Janke, chapters will develop preliminary food system reports this spring. (Visit KRC’s website to download Dr. Janke’s presentation from the November sustainable ag conference that covers the preliminary work on the food report she is creating for the Douglas County Food Policy Council: http://www.kansasruralcenter.org/publications.html#CCC ) Coordinators will collect information on current agricultural production, processing and distribution capacity and gather statistics on what might be required to meet a portion of a region’s current consumption of various foods. The reports will also attempt to present a snapshot of the various channels local food currently moves through in each regional food system.

The annual farm membership fee is $25. If specialty crops (defined by USDA as fruits, vegetables, tree nuts, dried fruits and horticulture and nursery crops, including floriculture) are produced, farms are eligible for complementary 2011 OLF membership through the KDA grant. Farms that only produce non-specialty crops, such as meat, dairy, and grains are not eligible for support from the grant and must submit the $25 annual membership fee. Each chapter is seeking additional program support which may reduce membership fees.

Farm members of the OLF program will receive a range of services and individualized support from their Chapter Coordinator and Interns:
  • Placement of farm name and profile on the OLF website
  • Identify sales opportunities with OLF markets, restaurants, and institutions who are committed to buying local
  • Highlight farm events and activities in a bimonthly OLF chapter enewsletter that will be sent to interested consumers
  • Write feature stories about specific farms for the bimonthly OLF enewsletter
  • Develop and identify opportunities for farms to directly interact with consumers
  • Generate TV, radio, internet, and print media about OLF and its members
The business membership fee, normally $100, is discounted 50% for OLF Charter Members. Charter Membership is $50. Business members are eligible to receive the following support from chapter staff:
  • Placement of business name and profile on the OLF website
  • Identify OLF farmers who are interested in providing your business with local food and specialty crops
  • Determine ways to highlight the presence of local foods and specialty crops on your shelves or in your menus
  • Write feature stories about specific businessess for the bimonthly OLF Chapter enewsletter
  • Include updates on business events and activities in the bimonthly OLF Chapter newsletter
  • Design opportunities for businesses to directly interact with both farms and consumers
Program participation also entitles members to a OLF banner or window cling and access to a tool kit with the electronic version of the OLF chapter logo, point of sale and other materials.

Those interested in joining in the Our Local Food Program are encouraged to contact the Chapter Coordinator for their region. Membership information and applications will be available by the end of March.

Kaw River Valley Chapter
www.kawrivervalley.org
Coordinator: Julie Mettenburg
kawrivervalley.olf@gmail.com
785-749-1031

South Central Chapter
ourlocalfoodsouthcentral.blogspot.com
Coordinator: Natalie Fullerton
southcentral.olf@gmail.com
402-310-0177

Twin Rivers Chapter
ourlocalfoodtwinrivers.blogspot.com
Coordinator: Tracey Graham
twinrivers.olf@gmail.com
620-343-4397

Our Local Food Program
ourlocalfoodks.org
Director: Mercedes Taylor-Puckett
ourlocalfood@gmail.com
785-840-6202