Mailing list sign-up




What's New?
<< Back to main

It Takes a Farm...

Posted 7/22/2009 10:34pm by Lyndon Hartz.
It Takes a Farm to Raise a Family
Excerpts from A Farm Beginnings Story on the website of the Agroecology and Sustainable Agriculture Program at University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign

By Amy Brucker, Good Earth Food Alliance grower

Three summers ago we lived in the city, had a backyard garden, and sought exercise through our YMCA membership.  It was a healthful lifestyle, as far as we could tell.  However, an educational visit to a local organic farm changed everything for this family of five.

That same summer, my kids and I participated in a science treasure hunt in which we aimed to visit area museums and places of interest.  One of these places was The Land Connection’s demonstration farm near Carlock.  Terra Brockman, founding director of this non-profit organization, gave a group of us a tour of the farm and invited us to visit her brother Henry’s farm just down the road.  As we shared lunch together afterwards, Terra began to expose some truths about food that few of us had ever pondered before.

I had never been told that most of the potatoes used to make french fries, just like the ones the kids and I frequently ordered from drive thru’s, were genetically modified.  I had known little about the environmental hazards of pesticide use.  I hadn’t realized the nutritional benefits of eating foods picked just hours prior.  The clincher, however, came when Terra emphasized serious concern about so few Illinois farmers using sustainable methods to grow foods for their local populations.  It was a watershed moment.

.....

Appleton Hollow Family Garden Foods is now in its second year of production.  The foods grown at Appleton Hollow are the favorites chosen by each member of the family.  The work responsibilities are divided according to the strengths of each member.  And the bounty (especially when it comes to raspberries, strawberries, and blueberries!) is enjoyed by all.

Our farm isn’t a large farm.  It certainly isn’t attractive.  It doesn’t produce the best looking vegetables in the world.  And it doesn’t bring in enough income yet for my husband to quit his day job.  Nevertheless, this farm is raising this family – all five of us – through its life lessons, its battles with Mother Nature, its sometimes stubborn animals, its dependence upon the surrounding ecosystem, and its infinite supply of rewards offered to those who care for it.

 

Good Earth Food Alliance CSA Members
  • Petal Song Apiaries Honey will be available only for the next week or two.  Look for a great article about Linda and her bees coming up in the Peoria Journal Star in August.
  • During these vacation times, remember that you can pass along your CSA share to a friend or relative if you're not able to pick it up.  What a great way to say, "Here's to your health!"
  • All remaining produce at the end of the day on Tuesday is donated to the Peoria South Side Mission or to the Galesburg Senior Center.