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Accepted!

News Release

Contact: Allison Goin

612-558-6183

allison@organicfieldschool.org

Organic Field School

5680 290th Street West

Northfield, MN 55057

http://www.organicfieldschool.org

                                                                                                     

ORGANIC FIELD SCHOOL ANNOUNCES 2013 INCUBATOR FARMS:
BOSSY ACRES AND HUMBLE PIE

 

NORTHFIELD, Minn. – October 23, 2012 – As part of the 2013 growing season, Organic Field School (OFS) at Gardens of Eagan will be home to two new incubator farms, Bossy Acres and Humble Pie, both focusing on organic growing practices and community involvement.

The organic farm incubator program was established by OFS in 2008 as a way to bolster the efforts of beginning farmers near the Twin Cities — who often face challenges in securing land for small-scale farming — while providing an educational connection point for the wider farming community and general public about the benefits of sustainable growing practices. OFS is the only farming incubator program in the state to offer up to three acres for new organic farmers to launch their businesses, and one of just a handful of such programs in the country.

Bossy Acres, which had its first growing season as a certified organic farm in 2012, will continue to provide vegetables and herbs for its community supported agriculture (CSA) members and farmers’ market customers, while benefitting from the guidance and resources of OFS.

“We’re very excited to be part of the OFS incubator program,” says Bossy Acres co-founder Karla Pankow. “This is such an amazing opportunity to get a solid foundation for our farm and to work with such a broad range of leaders in sustainable agriculture.”

Humble Pie Farm was started in 2012 by Jennifer Nelson and Mike Leck, both of whom have organic farming experience as employees of Gardens of Eagan. In 2013, they will grow cut flowers and herbs as a specialty add-on to CSA shares of Fazenda Boa Terra.

Both farms will help to advance OFS’ mission of transforming our food and farming systems through education and support, believes Allison Goin, OFS Program Director. “We’re proud to welcome two such distinctive farms into our incubator program,” she says. “As OFS broadens its reach in the community, we know that farms like Bossy Acres and Humble Pie represent the future of our growing, robust organic farming community, and we’re looking forward to fostering these viable, independent farm businesses.”

Incubator farms receive access to land, training, equipment usage, affordable supplies, and expertise through the Organic Field School’s partnership with Gardens of Eagan, an organic vegetable farm operated by the Wedge Community Co-op. The program meets a crucial need in our community for linking dedicated new organic farmers, who have some training and expertise, with access to affordable land and equipment. Past incubators include Loon Organics in Hutchinson and Fazenda Boa Terra in Northfield.

On November 17, OFS will host a fundraiser at Kitchen in the Market to support the expansion of the incubator program this year. For more details and to RSVP, please visit the OFS Facebook page.

For more information about OFS, visit http://www.organicfieldschool.org.

Organic Field School at Gardens of Eagan

A 501(c)(3) project of the Wedge Community Co-op, OFS provides on-farm, organic and ecologically based practical education and research for farmers, educators, policy makers, and the public, articulating the benefits and values of regional, organic farming systems.

Bossy Acres

Started in 2011 by farmers Karla Pankow and Elizabeth Millard, Bossy Acres focuses on sustainable farming practices, strong land stewardship, and community-based programs. With its first full production season in 2012, Bossy Acres employed the community supported agriculture (CSA) model and will be expanding its reach in 2013 through inclusion in the OFS incubator program. More information is available at http://www.bossyacres.com.

Humble Pie Farm

Humble Pie Farm was started in 2012 by Jennifer Nelson and Mike Leck, both of whom have organic farming experience as employees of Gardens of Eagan.  In 2013, they will grow cut flowers and herbs as a specialty add-on to CSA shares of Fazenda Boa Terra.

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getting certified…

last week, we got a piece of paper that didn’t contain many words, but seemed monumental to us: our organic certification.

all it took was weeks of tracking down seed receipts, doing soil and water testing, getting a prior land use declaration signed by our landlord and a statement from the horse ranch owner who gave us manure. then there were the crop rotation plans, land use strategies, and inspections of our rented land and greenhouse space, as well as a few dozen emails with our certifier and other experts. just when we felt like we couldn’t look at one more form, we earned the certification, and could breathe easy. at least until the next round, that is.

one of the most interesting aspects of becoming certified is that it wasn’t a path we’d intended to go down initially. for the first six months of the farm’s existence — which is half its life, really, since we’ve only been in operation for a year — we were steadfast in believing that we wouldn’t go for certification because we’d be forging direct relationships with our customers instead. in a csa program, our shareholders would get to know us and how we farm; we use organic and sustainable methods, and we felt that explaining these strategies was sufficient.

if we’d become a csa-only farm, most likely we would have been satisfied with having those conversations and being non-certified instead. but when we began selling a few items at our local co-op, we encountered what we called the orange tag syndrome.

our rented farmland

at our co-op, like many others, organic produce is separated from conventionally grown produce through color-coded tags. organic gets green, and the conventional stuff gets orange. although we’ve always grown on non-sprayed land and used organic methods (we prefer to skip even the organic pest controls, although the potato bugs are testing us), the co-op’s policy is that if you’re not certified, then you get the orange tag. they did list our produce as “naturally grown without pesticides,” but still, we were an orange dot in a field of green.

the situation made us think. it would have been far too much work to get certification simply to earn a green tag, but we began to consider how the farm would be perceived in other situations, too. what about farmers markets? already, we had customers there who asked us about certification and were happy to listen to our explanations about our farming practices, but i wondered about the people who didn’t step up to ask in the first place. also, some local chefs were touting the inclusion of organic produce on their menus, and I noticed that they leaned heavily toward those farms with organic certifications.

the last consideration was the upcoming changeover of the farm bill. in its current iteration, there’s significant reimbursement for certification expenses, and we knew that if that feature got yanked, there would be a chance we’d have to pay out of our own pockets instead.

so, we gave it a shot. the whole process was made much easier by our certification agency, midwest organic services association, and the willingness of the staff to patiently answer our kajillion questions.

my partner, karla, filled out the paperwork and although the forms note that it should take about eight hours, it ended up taking her three days to fill in all the necessary fields. we’d really gone for a diverse crop for our first year, and every single seed had to be tracked and noted. as i dug around in the files to find receipts and notes, she worked to articulate our farm’s layout, philosophies, and crop arrangement.

some transplants waiting for their chance to be bossy

when the certifier visited the farm, karla got a chance to show off her farm ninja skills during the interview process, which was intensive in terms of material. the certifier wanted to make certain that we knew what we were doing, and not just looking for a label we could slap onto our website.

in the end, the certification was just like anything else that requires an array of paperwork and the time to fill it out (think of it as a shorter grad school thesis, or maybe getting an estate settled through probate). true, we now earned the green tag, but we feel that the certification is broader than meeting that smaller goal. It gives an assurance to the customers we can’t meet, and lets them know that we value organic and sustainable practices — it starts conversations about how we manage the land, and how we see our farm in the agricultural landscape.

still, it’s also pretty nice to finally be green.


organic vs local

much debate goes on ….. organic vs local ….. which is best….which makes ya feel better about your food…..and so on.

 

well….with the bossy, ya get a two-fer! 

 
16.8 food miles if ya buy our goods at the Fulton Farmers Market.

15.3 food miles if ya buy our goods at the Linden Hills Farmers Market

9.8 food miles if ya buy our goods at the Mill City Farmers Market

 

and now, as of june 18th….usda certified organic!

 

 

 


always enough…

a note to our csa members ….

 
 

i’ll never forget that saturday in november — elizabeth and i were sitting in the front row, as we always did, in our farm beginnings class.
 

a woman, activist, farmer who we both admired….the mother of local organics, atina diffley stood in front of us, taking a moment to guide us through one of our exercises on holistic management goals, needs, and dreams.
 
i’ll admit ….. we were having a moment of feeling like we’ll never get our hands on a farm and land that we could call our own.  many in the class around us had inherited land, had equipment and the infrastructure to really make things happen.  we, on the other hand, had a 1.25 acre piece of rented land that had never been tilled, 30 miles outside of the cities.  no equipment.  no infrastructure.  no real farm transportation.  all we had was each other, a vw beetle, one hoe, a couple of rakes, and a burning desire to get bossy.

(photo credit: lavender magazine)


 

so it was in that moment…..of feeling down and a million miles away from our dream, that atina kneeled down in front of us, lowered her voice, and started sharing with us some of her struggles, pains, and heartache of just starting out and feeling like they didn’t have enough.  not having everything, be it money, land, all the right equipment…turned out to be a blessing.  while others around her were just throwing money and bigger tractors at their problems, she got intimate with the farm, the land, weeds, bugs…..she gained a knowledge and an understanding that the others would never obtain. 

i remember listening to her so intently.  in many ways, she seemed like a mother, a super-hero, a mentor, and a friend….all in one.

and in a stern, determined voice she told us …..  

never let money, land access, lack of equipment, or even bigger farms get in the way of your dream.  your passion.

there will always be enough to make it happen.

if you truly want it, then there will always be enough.

—–

i couldn’t help but think of that over and over again this morning as i was out in the fields harvesting for this week’s csa.
 

we still don’t have that dream farm.  no equipment.  no infrastructure.  it’s just e and i …. with a pair of hands, old crunchy knees, and a passion to make this work.

we can’t give you tomatoes and cucumbers out of season.  

we can’t offer you farm fresh eggs or fruits and berries that come from being able to have animals and long-standing perennial trees and plants.

but we can give you an honest day’s work of doing everything we can to grow healthy, chemical-free food for you and your family.

 

we know that there will be some deliveries where you wonder why there isn’t more.

we also know that there will be days when you think we gave you way too much.

but in the end … and overall ….. we hope that you will enjoy being a part of this adventure with us and that you, too, will have faith that there will always be enough.


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