GROWING SEASON 2015
LOCAL
FARMERS LOOK TO THE
FUTURE
SCHOOL
FOOD SPRINGTIME
MAZE FARMS, MARKETS
AND
STANDS
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WARM WEATHER WORKSHOPS AND EVENTS
THINKING LIKE A FOODSHED
LOCAL LOVING
CHEFS
FARM STAND
OPEN
MAY through
OCTOBER FRESH LOCAL PRODUCE
PICK-YOUR-OWN
STRAWBERRIES —OPEN AUGUST & SEPTEMBER—
gardensweet.com
719 West Willox Lane • Fort Collins, CO
Motherlove Herbal Company presents an educational summer series on edible & medicinal herbs with Kathryn Higgins, company founder and herbalist. Spend a day on our organic farm learning to identify and use the many plants that grow in our own back yard. Afterward Kathryn will teach you the basics of making your own salves, balms, tinctures and other herbal remedies.
Please contact
mother@motherlove.com for additional information.
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LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE
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TABLE OF CONTENTS STEADY AS SHE GROWS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 NoCo Food Cluster Chair Michael Baute shares the nonprofit’s progress and plans
GROWING THE CHOIR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Local farmers deliver the goods but need market expansion to make it work
LOVING CHEFS LOVING LOCAL. . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Meet some of our chefs who make it a priority to source locally for their cuisine
LISTING OF LOCAL PRODUCERS. . . . . . . . . . 12 Find a local farm near you
LISTING OF FARMERS MARKETS. . . . . . . . . 13 Local markets abound. Take advantage of our nearly year-round access
LISTING OF FARM STANDS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 A perfect way to get fresh, local goodness to your table
BOUNTY CALENDAR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Never a dull moment during a NoCo summer. Check here for farm dinners, festivals, and more
WHAT’S FOR LUNCH?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 PSD seeks collaboration with Food Cluster to get more local fare on the menu
SPRINGTIME MAZE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Kids, put your thinking caps on and find your way through this super-duper maze!
INVESTING FOR THE 21ST CENTURY. . . . . 20 Slow Money sets forth guiding principles for local groups lending to food producers
TOO IMPORTANT TO FAIL. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Food Shift publisher Michael Brownlee weighs in on the importance of thinking like a foodshed
Bounty Local Food and Farm Guide 2015 is a special publication of Fortified Collaborations and Rocky Mountain Publishing, Inc. Publisher: Kristina Cash; Editor: Helen Taylor; Contributing Editors: Kristina Cash; Malia Ruchti; Creative Director: Emily Zaynard; Contributing Photographers: Libby Newell, Cheri Schonfeld; Copyright 2015 Fortified Collaborations, Fort Collins, CO. All rights reserved. Reproduction without express written permission is prohibited.
FORTIFYING OUR FOODSHED WE ARE THRILLED to present the second edition of Bounty Local Food and Farm Guide! This resource and reference provides a complete listing of local farms, food producers, farmers markets, and farm stands, along with a calendar chock-full of agricultural events happening throughout this spring and summer in Weld and Larimer counties. We’ve also included some great articles about our local and regional food scene. At Fortified Collaborations, we are committed to raising awareness and promoting the efforts of the local farms, businesses, organizations and individuals that comprise an increasingly vibrant and resilient local food scene. We are grateful to be connected to a growing community of people committed to putting our money and energy where our mouths are, and where our hearts are—here, in Northern Colorado. We believe there is no greater connection than to the earth and the food it provides for our sustenance. It’s an exciting and fertile time for local food. Since our first edition last fall, we’ve seen a notable increase in the availability of locally grown food through an increase in the number of local farms (now more than 100 in Larimer and Weld counties), several new farmers markets starting this summer, and the continued growth of LoCo Food Distribution. Community involvement and support of local food is also growing. The NoCo Food Cluster continues to make steady progress and build community capacity to increase supply and demand for local food. Poudre School District is participating with the Food Cluster to bring more local fare into school cafeterias, and The Kitchen Community is making exciting progress with school gardens in Fort Collins, with a number of new Learning Gardens in the works. Meanwhile, several organizations are dedicated to increasing the reach of local food to families in need in our community. Community support for local food is growing and evident throughout all sectors, from individual households to local government. Local food entrepreneurs continue to spring up, and Slow Money inspired clubs such as Living Soil Investments are demonstrating their support of local supply by moving some of their financial resources into the local food economy through microloans to farmers and food-based entrepreneurs. These examples and efforts represent incredible passion and dedication and together, we will continue conversations and collaborations around supporting local production and capacity to build a resilient local economy and support the health of everyone in our community. This guide is one place to start, and we invite you to experience and enjoy the amazing local food available here!
Enjoy the Bounty,
Kristina and Malia Fortified Collaborations
ABOUT THE COVER: Laughing Buck Farm is a working and educational farm offering camps, workshops and classes for children and families. The farm features horses, chickens, goats, pigs and bees as well as a large garden. Learn more at laughingbuckfarm.com. Photography by Libby Newell.
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STEADY AS SHE GROWS
The Northern Colorado Food Cluster Brings Diverse Parties to the Table BY MICHAEL BAUTE THERE’S A WHISPER of innovation happening in the food sector in Northern Colorado, and while you may not have noticed it, a more robust, resilient and thriving local food system is emerging due to the commitment of keen entrepreneurs, grassroots organizations, and visionary planners and economic developers. Often overshadowed by innovation in high-tech and clean energy, the innovation within the local and regional food system is quietly building healthy communities, subtly retaining our region’s wealth, and deliberately preserving our agrarian heritage in our little part of America. Building on the work of hundreds of community members over the years, the Northern Colorado Food Cluster (NCFC) is steadily gaining momentum by bringing the voice of food and farming to high-level decision makers in Northern Colorado for a seat at the table. Now a full-fledged 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization with a working Board of Directors and dynamic Advisory Committee of Partners, the NCFC 4|
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is poised to address critical, and sometimes difficult, issues within the local and regional food system. Notably, there are diverse opinions and approaches to food system development, and many forms of food production exist that we, as eaters, depend on each and every day. Some focus on the responsibility of feeding the world, while others feel we should focus on feeding our neighbors. While there are more than 30 CSA (Community Supporting Agriculture) programs and market farms that do business in Northern Colorado, there are also hundreds of large family farms and ranches that produce foods and commodities for export and for inputs into other agricultural segments. Value judgments aside, these farmers and ranchers are part of the 2 percent of America that are actually engaged in farming in one form or another, and we all have some common ground. There’s a place in the conservation movement called the “radical center”; it’s a place in the middle where farmers, ranchers and environmentalists have
met to discuss critical conservation issues like species preservation, soil erosion, pollution and wildlife habitat conservation. Both sides of this heated debate have fought each other in court over the years, but have recently begun to find so much more value in open, democratic dialogue in order to address these critical issues. They’ve found that deep down they’re in it for the exact same reasons: healthy lands, animals and communities. With this new knowledge of each other’s shared goals, both ranchers and environmentalists have made huge strides toward our collective conservation goals. The Northern Colorado Food Cluster is interested in this concept of the “radical center” in which all forms of agriculture have a voice in the conversation. As an inclusive organization, we desire the many differing views about food production and community development at the table, as we strongly feel that by working together we will be more effective. It’s time for collaboration, and we invite you to pull up a chair and engage with other passionate people to create a healthy, resilient Northern Colorado. In Soil We Trust. Michael Baute is chairman of the Northern Colorado Food Cluster.
CREATING A HEALTHY COMMUNITY THROUGH A RESILIENT, LOCAL FOOD SYSTEM.
nocofoodcluster.com
The Food Cluster convenes businesses, organizations, and individuals to contribute directly to the scope and projects and initiate public/private partnerships. Collectively, these partners have significant capacity to coordinate a unified voice in efforts to influence public policy decisions, establish high impact projects, and create a strong network of food system leaders in our community.
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©2014 SCHONFELD PHOTOGR APHY
GROWING THE CHOIR
Local Farmers Look to Food Cluster to Expand Market BY HELEN TAYLOR AFTER 32 SEASONS, Bailey and Dennis Stenson, owners of Happy Heart Farm in Fort Collins, are beginning to think about retirement. A day will come when it’s time to pass the torch to the next generation—younger farmers with more energy and more cartilage. During decades spent forging the local farming scene and refining their biodynamic farming practices, the Stenson’s have logged a number of firsts: Their farm was the first in the state to offer CSA shares. They’ve trained more than 60 new farmers through their unique apprenticeship program. They’ve created Friends of Happy Heart, a nonprofit that provides fresh, local produce to more than 30 low-income families each season. They’ve launched an urban food school—a week-long camp designed to get kids on the farm. And with others of their ilk, they’ve sustained a tireless effort to raise awareness of the importance of locally produced food—heralding the value inherent in knowing where your food comes from and helping support the brave souls who choose to live close to the soil and grow that food, despite the perilous economics of the business. The good news, says Stenson, is that there are more local farms than 6|
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ever before—120 in Northern Colorado at last count. And with literally dozens of CSAs in the region, their dream of having a CSA on every corner begins to feel like more of a reality. But it’s not enough. Until more consumers know about and invest in the local food system and more land is preserved for local farming, the viability of the business model remains in question. “On my cynical days I think more people know about the beer than about the farms,” says Stenson. “We’ve had to grow the food and also educate people on its importance.” Now, she hopes that the nascent Northern Colorado Food Cluster will take on more of the education piece and help produce a bumper crop of new local-food consumers, or as Stenson prefers to call them, “participants.” “The term ‘consumer’ puts too many burdens on the farmer,” she says. “People want non-GMO, organic, pesticide free, all these great things, but do we want to pay what it really costs? “‘What, I don’t get four avocadoes for a dollar?’ people say. Well, no, but [you’re paying for your] health through connecting with food and the community that grows that food.” Luke Hall, who describes Shire, his two-acre CSA in Fort Collins, as more
of a large garden than a farm, concurs. He says it’s not easy to find 100 people willing to plop down $500 up front for a CSA share, but what many don’t realize is that’s only a fraction of the actual cost to produce that food. “Prices aren’t based on reality; they’re based on the market,” he says. “We’re expected to offer grocery store prices, but without the migrant labor and subsidies that keep those prices low. It should be more like a $1,000 a share.” Wary of sounding bitter, Hall says he thinks things will improve as more people make buying local food a priority. It helps, he says, that there’s now a certain amount of glamour around local food and farming. “It’s cool now,” he says. “More restaurants are buying in because it’s good business, it’s a lifestyle more people are into, and this community really supports that.”
STANDING ON THEIR SHOULDERS
More than a decade ago local activist Gailmarie Kimmel started the nonprofit Be Local Northern Colorado to encourage the citizens of Fort Collins to spend their money at unique, locally owned businesses and keep that cash circulating through the community. People got
it, and others followed Be Local’s lead. Four years ago Elizabeth Mozer founded LoCo Food Distribution, a wholesale food distribution company that sells locally grown and produced food to restaurants, grocery stores and institutions from Fort Collins to Colorado Springs. “We’re standing on the shoulders of Be Local,” she says. “They established the importance of buying local—the impact it has economically and in terms of relationships and community development. Now we need that same conversation around food, because people can’t support what they don’t know about.” Like Stenson, Mozer is involved with the new Northern Colorado Food Cluster, working collaboratively to facilitate that education. Food Cluster Board Chairman Michael Baute says the group is still in development, but already they’ve seen some results from early efforts. “We got the farmers together and they asked for help promoting the Winter Market,” he says. A targeted social media campaign helped boost traffic, and this past season was the market’s best yet. Meetings with the city’s economic development arm have also proved fruitful. “We weren’t ready for BOB 2.0,” Baute says, “but we definitely want to be part of the city’s economic development strategy going forward.”
EVERY LITTLE BIT HELPS
It’s a good sign when Josh Birks, the city’s director of economic health, is mentioning local farms in his update to City Council, but for many local farmers, the margins are so narrow it’s a question of whether they’ll make it from one season to the next. For these folks, a few thousand dollars can make a big difference. Enter, Living Soil Investments. Gailmarie Kimmel, of Be Local fame, has worked with a handful of local-food devotees to build a small investment group that makes microloans to local vegetable farmers and food producers. “This is relationship-based lending,” says Kimmel. “We’re okay lending in the spring and not expecting payments until later in the season. We can be patient and offer friendly terms.” Loans in the $5,000 to $15,000 range can, for example, extend a farmer’s season. “If they know we can help [finance] a walk-in cooler, they can plan
better, plant more and improve their bottom line,” says Kimmel. The investment group is still small and has come together mostly through word of mouth, but Kimmel would like to see it continue to grow and says they’re actively recruiting members. Kimmel has also been active in the effort to promote secured land tenure for farmers. “These young people are doing a huge public service deciding to grow food. It’s high-risk and low-profile, because that’s how we’ve decided to value it,” she says. “We’re looking at how you mobilize community capital not on the microloan level but at higher levels to purchase land and hold it in perpetuity for the farmer.” Kimmel says the group working on this has identified a piece of land for a pilot project. “The county is tracking with us, and the conversation now is around what that capital structure could look like— something that would offer rent stability with a 20 to 30-year lease,” she says. “It takes that kind of time to build the soil, and soil fertility is a crucial piece of this.”
LOOKING TO THE FUTURE
This summer, bustling farmers markets and farm stands, sold-out CSAs, and restaurants jostling to promote locally-grown fare will suggest a thriving local food system and a growing choir of supporters. The Food Cluster plans to convene regional farmers market organizers to assess their needs, and Elizabeth Mozer will continue to expand her
distribution network and field calls from folks around the country wanting to replicate what she’s created. Luke Hall, like other farmers, will be putting in 15-hour days, and he’s happy to be part of it all, even with an uncertain future. He figures he’ll probably make $12,000 to $15,000 this season, but one hail storm could wipe him out, and longterm viability is far from assured. “It’s a hard business, but it’s also a choice,” he says. “Nothing says farmers need to suffer for the community. Just like a restaurant that closes. You know, if I liked that restaurant, I should have gone there more. There are lots of things like that.” For Bailey Stenson, each new season is an act of faith. As she and Dennis plan for the time they’ll wrap up their farming careers, she remains optimistic. “I see people from lots of different parts of the [local food system] coming together to solve challenges,” she says. “We’re reforming something we thought was working—the industrial farming model—but that doesn’t work because of the environmental impact and other issues. Convenience rules in our culture. People are stretched in terms of time and money, so we’ve trusted our health to corporations that don’t have our best interests at heart. The call to action,” she says, “is ‘get involved.’ Farming is a wonderful, community-centered activity. Know your farmer. Each one is different, and each is a hero, giving up the culture of security for a connection with the earth.”
HOW YOU CAN HELP SUPPORT OUR LOCAL FOOD SYSTEM There are lots of things you can do to help sustain and grow Northern Colorado’s local food system. Here are a few: • P urchase a CSA share. With dozens to choose from, you can sample what different farms have to offer and tailor your selection to the needs of your family. •P atronize your local farmers markets and the restaurants that buy food from local farmers • Take your kids to the farm. Many farms welcome visitors and The Food School offers agricultural experiences for kids and adults. Visit edibleshcoolyard.org • J oin Living Soil Investments. For a $5,100 investment, you can become part of this group of co-investors making critical microloans to local farmers and producers. Visit livingsoilinvestments.wordpress.com •S upport The Growing Project, a nonprofit that promotes the value of a strong, diverse and just local food system through a variety of initiatives and services. Visit thegrowingproject.org • Attend a farm dinner • Know your farmer and know the source of your food.
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LOVING CHEFS Local Chefs Make Farm-To-Table A Priority IN NORTHERN COLORADO we’re fortunate to enjoy the creative efforts of some truly great chefs. Not only do these culinary artists bring us delicious fare designed to delight the senses, many of them also make a point of sourcing locally grown and produced food. Much more than a fad, this move toward local food has become a standard way of doing business for sustainably minded restaurants around the region. Here’s what some of our top chefs have to say about sourcing locally. TROY HELLER - ACE GILLETTS I use locally sourced ingredients for freshness and to contribute to growing our local economy. I buy from Jodar Farms, Spring Kite Farm, Ingrained Bakery, MouCo Cheese, Hazel Dell Mushrooms and Café Richesse, to name a few. Ace Gilletts’ menu changes in the fall and the spring, and we do our best to take advantage of what each season offers. One of my favorite dishes is Jodar Farms pork belly braised and served with butternut squash puree, bacon marmalade, apricot jam and pickled cherry. ERICH WHISENHUNT - EL MONTE GRILL I buy local in order to support the local economy and people we live, work and play with everyday. I want to provide the highest quality, freshest and most nutritious food to our guests and to connect with food on every level. It’s also important to me to minimize our impacts on the environment and to help build a stronger local and regional food system. We aim to work with several small local producers. We visit their operations and plan with them on how we can best work together. Most the time the relationship starts small and grows over time. Challenges for us are finding some of the ingredients we want and need, because we’re focused on Mexico and Latin America, and tropical fruits and veggies can be a bit hard to come by here. We
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LOVING LOCAL highlight local vegetables where we can, so we don’t have just one dish centered around local ingredients. This season we’ll be featuring some new, locally sourced side vegetables such as spring carrots, spring peas, Hazel Dell mushrooms, summer squash, and two spring-vegetable centered salads. MCKINZY CALAPP – CAFÉ VINO Café Vino is a local, employeeowned restaurant and because of that we take great pride in having good relationships with our farmers and helping support local agriculture. Also, the fresh produce is delicious, and has a longer shelf life than the produce from the large food-service companies. This winter I met with Eli from Revive Gardens, and Katie from Native Hill farm, and we talked about what they’re planning to grow this season and what I wanted to see as far as fresh produce goes. I coordinate with the farmers and change my menu according to the produce we talk about and the time until harvest. I match up harvest timelines with menu changes and adjust prep based on available delivery days. I love being able to use all of the fresh produce we get from the farms in our “farm fresh veggie plate.” We roast up beautiful, fresh farm veggies and serve them simply dressed in olive oil and herbs. I love letting the veggies speak for themselves. AMELIA MOUTON- RESTAURANT 415 For me it’s important to have a good understanding of where our food comes from, how it’s grown, and what it takes to get it from farm to table. Locally it’s far easier to make those connections, not to mention the pride the farmer takes in the food. That good energy gets passed to the people preparing the dishes and goes into the mouths we feed. So lo-
cal leads to a trail of happiness in my mind, and a happy community is a goal for me. We built the menu from the beginning with the idea of sourcing locally. At the same time 415 was opening, Elizabeth Mozer was starting Loco Food Distribution, which was a perfect resource for us as a new restaurant trying to figure out the farm to table connection. It was so great to have one place with the answers and produce we were seeking. Originally I wanted to create a menu that reflected seasonal change, but I learned that would be too difficult, once we opened and realized how busy we would be. Also we were finding that farms couldn’t consistently supply what we needed. My favorite local dish we serve is our summertime, spinach-stuffed shells featuring local spinach, ricotta and mozzarella cheeses, and tomato cream sauce. It comes with our 415 salad which features Quatrix Aquaponics romaine, house-made croutons, and shaved Parmesan in a house-made lemon, garlic dressing. It’s a classic dish and very satisfying. SCOTT OLIVIA - FORT COLLINS BREWERY’S MODERN TAVERN Buying local means supporting our community and providing our guests with delicious, high quality, responsibly sourced food. We try to get as many local ingredients as possible incorporated into the menu, however it can be limited, depending on the availability of certain produce items. To accommodate local crop production, we’ve created a menu with seasonal flexibility. Chicken and Waffles is my favorite! Our chicken breast comes from Boulder Natural Meats out of Boulder, and we use FCB’s spent grain fresh out of the brewery in our waffles. There’s FCB’s Red Banshee in our syrup and herbs from the greenhouse in the butter. Overall it’s fresh and delicious.
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JASON GLINSKI – FISH I’ve got a few reasons to go local: First, it helps empower the community and creates networking among everyone involved in the process. Second, it increases the producers’ visibility in the community through their food and locally grown attitude. Everyone benefits from the process. I usually use a process known as the “slap in the face effect.” I usually meet the grower through chance or word of mouth then slowly bond with them. Red Dirt Farms formerly known as Owl Canyon Organics, is a small, local farm specializing in micro greens and sprouts, and he’s also a close friend, so it seemed right to help get his voice heard. Working with duck farms and Amy’s greens is always a great way to spend the day as well. When I buy, I expect quality over quantity; that allows the farmer to grow what’s seasonal and profitable for them as well. A lot of people enjoy the fact that the farmer can’t always supply the same product, so there’s always something new and exciting to try.
A favorite dish? Well, I’d say we’re experimenting with Leopold Brothers and having a pairing dinner, which will be exciting. The dish that stands out is a local, smoked trout, savory cheesecake, with local quinoa crust and a roasted white balsamic onion jam, Red Dirt Farms micro chives and baby fennel greens. RICKY MYERS – JAX FISH HOUSE & OYSTER BAR Sourcing locally allows me to find the best possible ingredients while supporting local farms as well as the local economy. I work on new items months ahead. I talk to farmers about what they have growing, when it will be ready, and how much I can get a week in advance. Oftentimes, I have to juggle more farms into the mix in order to fulfill what I will need for the week. Right now, a favorite is our Aspen Ridge (out of Greeley) Braised Short Rib with Rustic Hazel Dell Mushroom Lasagna.
O
ur local food system helps protect our health and the health of our community and stimulates our local economy. Bounty Local Food and Farm Guide celebrates the local farms, producers and distributers that are part of an increasingly vibrant and resilient regional food hub.
ADVERTISE IN BOUNTY LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE! The Guide includes:
• A comprehensive listing of local farms, ranches, food producers, farmers markets and farm stands • Coverage of current topics on our regional food system • A calendar of upcoming events around local food 20,000 Copies Distributed in Northern Colorado For information, contact Kristina Cash 970-217-8786 kristina@fortifiedcollaborations.com
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LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE
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2 R’s Farm 19361 Hwy. 61 Platteville (970) 737-2689
ColoState CSA CSA, Fort Collins, facebook.com ColoStateCSA
Amy & Ellen’s Grass Fed Beef 181 Lazy D Ranch Rd. Bellvue, barncatservices.com grassfed beef
Copia Community 1601 N. Shields Fort Collins
Anders Farm 8443 Hwy. 85, Fort Lupton Bartels Farm 3424 E. Douglas Rd. Fort Collins thebartelsfarm.com Bayberry Fresh CSA, bayberryherbs@gmail.com 719-580-3236 Bee Squared Apiaries Berthoud, bethsbees.com Big Willy’s Farm 300 42nd St SW Loveland, bigwillysfarm.com Blue Barrel Farm CSA, Fort Collins, bluebarrelfarm.blogspot.com Blue Bench Farms 33772 State Highway 257 Windsor, facebook.com/ bluebenchfarms Blue Sky Farm Windsor, blueskyfarmcolorado.com natural angus beef Bracewell Produce 30951 County Rd. 27, Greeley Bucking Horse Farm CSA, Fort Collins C&R Farms Palisade, candrfarms.com, peaches Carrie’s Clucks CSA, 37477 County Rd. 21 Windsor carriesclucks.com, pork, poultry, eggs Clarks Honey Farm Evans Colorado Honey Co. Fort Collins, beeyondthehive.com Colorado Wise Acres Farm 8695 County Rd. 29.5, Fort Lupton coloradowiseacresfarm.com
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LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE
Copoco’s Honey Fort Collins, fortcollinshoney.com Cozy Cow Dairy 28607 County Rd. 17, Windsor cozycows.com Craig Angus Ranch 6018 N. County Rd. 19, Fort Collins craigangusranch.com grassfed beef and natural pork Cresset Farm CSA, 5609 E. County Rd. 52/Richards Lake Rd., Fort Collins cressetfarm.com Croft Family Farm CSA, Kersey, croftfamilyfarm.com beef, pork, organic veggies D&H Farms CSA, Ault, dhfarms2000.com D-L Cattle Co Estes Park, (970) 690-0150 grassfed beef Donoma Farms CSA, 10018 Weld County Rd. 110 Carr donomafarms.com Ela Family Farms Hotchkiss, elafamilyfarms.com tree fruit Ewe Bet Ranch 1850 E. Hwy. 60 Loveland ewebetranch.com, lamb Fair Eliza’s Flowers CSA, Fort Collins, fairelizasflowers.com Foco F.R.E.S.H. Farm 2225 W. Vine Dr., Fort Collins Fossil Creek Farms CSA, 7100 Silver Mist Ln. Fort Collins fossilcreekfarmsllc.com Friendly Critters Farm 3915 N. County Rd. 19 Fort Collins friendlycrittersfarm.com pork, poultry, eggs
Front Range Apiaries 4130 Hayes Ave. Wellington Gaia’s Farm and Gardens CSA, LaPorte, gaiascsa.com Garden Sweet CSA, 719 W. Willox Ln. Fort Collins gardensweet.com Ginger’s Farm CSA, 12037 County Rd. 74, Eaton Gingersfarm15@yahoo.com 970-631-3631, pork Grant Farms CSA, Wellington, grantfarms.com Grassmere Farm CSA, Fort Collins, grassmerefarm.com poultry and eggs Green Dog Farm CSA, 1807 W. Vine Dr. Fort Collins, greendogfarmcsa.com Happy Heart Farm CSA, 2820 W. Elizabeth St. Fort Collins happyheartfarmcsa.com mushrooms and tofu shares, among other goodies Harvest Farm CSA, Wellington, harvestfarm.net beef and vegetables Hazel Dell Mushrooms 3925 Carpenter Rd. Fort Collins hazeldellmushrooms.com h-Beef Platteville, h-beef.com, beef Heritage Lavender 4809 Foothills Dr. Berthoud heritagelavender.com fresh and dried lavender High Altitude Organics CSA, 25572 Weld County Rd. 32 La Salle, highaltitudeorganics.com beef, pork, lamb, goat, poultry, eggs Highchair Farms 914 Cottonwood Dr. Fort Collins highchairfarms.com farm fresh baby food purees Hope Farms CSA, 1601 N. Shields Fort Collins hopefarmsfc.com
MULTIPLE ITEMS
HONEY
FLOWERS
DAIRY
PROTEIN (INCLUDING EGGS)
listing
FRUITS VEGGIES & HERBS
FARM
Jodar Farm CSA, 5100 E. County Rd. 48 Fort Collins jodarfarms.com beef, pork, poultry, eggs Kiowa Valley Organics Roggen, kiowavalleyorganics.com organic beef Lakeridge Farms CSA, Fort Collins, lakeridgefarms.org LaVida Greens CSA, Fort Collins, lavidagreens.com greens & herbs Lazy Bee Ranch 2503 County Rd. 47 Hudson lazybeeranch.com Leffler Family Farm & Local Motion CSA CSA, Eaton, lefflerfarms.com Lindenmeier Farm CSA, Fort Collins lindenmeierfarm.com Living Water Ranch Livermore livingwaterranch colorado.com grassfed & finished beef & lamb Long Shadow Farm CSA, 101 Bothun Rd. Berthoud longshadowfarm.com lamb, poultry, eggs Lukens Farm 9378 County Rd. 78, Fort Collins (303) 579-2668 Lyons Farmette CSA, 4121 Ute Highway, Lyons lyonsfarmette.com Masonville Orchards Masonville, masonvilleorchard.com apples & pears Mazzotti Farms 2628 Weld County Rd. 49, Hudson mazzottifarms.com Miller Farms CSA, 13912 County Rd. 19 Platteville millerfarms.net Monroe Organic Farm CSA, 25525 Weld County Rd. 48, Kersey monroefarm.com, beef, pork, lamb, eggs, honey, produce
Morning Fresh Dairy 5821 W. County Rd. 54E Bellvue morningfreshdairy.com milk, yogurt, cheese Morton’s Orchards Palisade, mortonsorchards.com tree fruit Motherlove Organic Farm 503 S. County Rd. 1 Johnstown motherlove.com, organic herbs
Raisin Roots Farm CSA, 901 S. County Rd. 31 Berthoud poultry, eggs, fish
Shire CSA CSA, 713 E. Prospect Rd. Fort Collins shirecsa.com
The Old Fence Farm Berthoud, theoldfencefarm.com lamb
Raspberry Hill Farm CSA, Wellington, raspberryhill.farm
Sixdog Farms Wellington, sixdogfarms.com organic eggs
Tigges Farm 12404 WCR 64 ½, Greeley tiggesfarm.com pumpkin patch, roasted chilis
Red Dog Expressions Fort Collins, reddogexpressions. wordpress.com, lavender
Spring Kite Farm CSA, 2917 S. Taft Hill Rd. Fort Collins springkitefarm.com
Revive Gardens CSA, 1413 W. 57th Ave. Loveland farmfortcollins.com, eggs & produce
Sunny Daze 901 S. County Rd. 5, Fort Collins SunnydazeGardens.com
Ole Dern Farm CSA, Fort Collins
Rock Ridge Ranch 8851 W. US Hwy 34 Loveland rockridgebeef.com, beef
Sunray Natural CSA, Fort Collins sunraynatural.farm
On the Vine at Richmond Farms CSA, 3611 Richmond Dr. Fort Collins onthevineatrichmondfarms.com
Rock Soup Ranch 2420 E. County Rd. 68 Wellington rocksoupranch.com
Quatrix Aquaponics LaPorte, quatrix.us aquaponics tilapia & greens
Sauer Family Beef 6681 County Road 50 Johnstown sauerfamilybeef.com, beef
Sunrise Ranch CSA, 100 Sunrise Ranch Rd. Loveland sunriseranch.org grassfed beef
Raindrop Retreat CSA, 6410 Placer Ct. Bellvue raindropretreat.com
Scarecrow Gardens 2235 N. 47th Ave. Greeley scarecrowgardens.com
Native Hill Farm CSA, 2100 CR 54G Ft. Collins nativehillfarm.com
FARMSTANDS Anders Farm -8443 Hwy 85, Fort Lupton Bartels Farm-3424 E. Douglas Rd, Fort Collins Big Willy’s Farm-300 42nd St SW Loveland Blue Bench Farm-33772 State Highway 257, Windsor
Top Notch All Natural Meats Pierce, topnotchmeats.com beef, pork, poultry Von Trotha-Firestien Farm at Bracewell 30951 County Road 27, Greeley bracewellfarm.com Westbridge Farms 1225 Blue Spruce Dr. Fort Collins westbridgefarms.com greens WiseAcres Greenhouse 3545 W. O St. Greeley
Sylvan Dale Ranch Loveland, sylvandale.com grass-fed and finished natural beef
On the Vine at Richmond Farms-3611 Richmond Dr., Fort Collins Revive Gardens-1413 W 57th St, Loveland, Tues. 4-7 Spring Kite Farm-2917 S. Taft Hill Rd, Fort Collins, MWRF 3-7 Sunny Daze-901 S County Rd 5 Fort Collins 80524, Tues. & Thurs. 4-8 Tigges Farm-12404 WCR 64 ½, Greeley, 80631, August-October
Carrie’s Clucks-37477 CR 21 Windsor, 7 days a week, 10-5, 970-213-4902
FARMERS MARKETS
Copia Community Farm Stand-Sundays, Noon-6 ,Odell Brewing Company, 800 E Lincoln, Fort Collins
CAMC Fort Collins Farmers Market Harmony & Lemay, Ace parking lot, May-Oct. Sun. & Weds. 11-3
Cozy Cow Dairy-28607 CR 17, Windsor
CAMC Loveland Farmers Market Garfield & 33rd St., Hobby Lobby/Arc parking lot, May-October Tues. 11-3
Bracewell Produce- 30951 County Road 27, Greeley
Cresset Farm-5609 E CR 52/Richards Lake Road Fort Collins www.cressetfarm.com/red-barn-farm-store.html Croft Family Farm -Centerplace of Greeley, June-October, Tues.-Fri. 1-6, Sat. 10-6
Downtown Mead Farmers’ Market- Mead Town Park, June 7-August 30, Sun. 12-4 Drake Road Farmers’ Market- 802 W. Drake Rd. April-October, Sat. 10-1
FoCo F.R.E.S.H. Farm-2225 W. Vine Drive, Fort Collins, dawn to dusk daily self serve
Estes Valley Farmers Market- 1209 Manford Avenue, Estes Park, summer, Thurs. mornings
Garden Sweet-719 W. Willox St, Fort Collins, May-October
Greeley Farmers Market- 902 7th Ave., May-October Sat.s 7:30-noon; July-Sept. Weds. 3-6
Ginger’s Farm-12037 County Road 74 Eaton, 7 days a week Happy Heart Farm-2820 W. Elizabeth St. Fort Collins Hazel Dell Mushrooms-3925 E County Rd 32, Fort Collins, Mon.-Fri. 8:30-4:30 Heritage Lavender-4809 Foothills Drive Berthoud High Altitude Organics-25572 Weld County Road 32 La Salle Hope Farms-601 N. Shields St, Fort Collins, Tues. & Fri. 3-5 Jodar Farms -5100 E County Road 48, Fort Collins, Sun. 11-1 Long Shadow Farm-101 Bothun Rd, Berthoud Native Hill Farm-2100 County Road 54G, Fort Collins, self serve
Jessup Artisan Village Farmers’ Market Blackbird Dr. & Timberline, Fort Collins, June 4-October 15, Thurs. 4-7 Larimer County Farmers’ Market Larimer County Building, Fort Collins, May 16-October 24 Sat. 8-12 Loveland Farmers Market at Fairgrounds Park Fairgrounds Park, 700 S. Railroad Ave., June 28-September 27 Sun. 9-1:30 Northern Colorado Farmers Market- 3522 West County Rd. 54G, LaPorte May-October. Sun. 10-2 Wellington Farmers Market- Centennial Park, Wellington, June-October 4-8 /dusk
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CALENDAR of EVENTS APRIL 15
APRIL 26
Foraging Roots & Shoots: Asparagus and Cattails 5:30- 7 p.m. at the TGP Educational Garden at Shire CSA, 713 E. Prospect. $10 reservation required www.thegrowingproject.org/tgpuniversity-workshops. Learn about edible, medicinal, and useful roots and shoots found in Fort Collins.
Fermentation with Ozuké 3- 5 p.m. at The Lyons Farmette 4121 Ute Highway, Lyons, CO 80540 www.lyonsfarmette. com. Learn how to simply and easily ferment vegetables to make gorgeous sauerkrauts, pickled veggies, and much more.
APRIL 18
Eating Bugs 101 5:30-7 p.m. at TGP Educational Garden at Shire CSA, 713 E. Prospect. $12 reservation required www.thegrowingproject.org/tgp-universityworkshops. Terri Randolph and Rachael Sitz will cover what insects are edible, how to prepare insects, and why you should incorporate insects as part of your diet. Samples provided!
Fort Collins Nursery Open House 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. at Fort Collins Nursery, free admission. 50% of all 2 ½ inch herb sales will benefit Friends of Happy Heart Farm’s Feeding the Families program. Hands-on activities for children about food and gardening.
APRIL 18
APRIL 29
6th Annual Earth Day Fort Collins 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. at Civic Center Park. Free admission; www.sustainablelivingassociation. org/event/earth-day-fort-collins. Earth Day is a combination of activities & events for the entire family, featuring informational booths and displays, arts & crafts, live music, speakers, local food and a beer garden.
MAY 1
APRIL 18 & 19
MAY 2
Spring Swing Square Dance and Hoedown 4:30-8 p.m. at Laughing Buck Farm 3724 N. County Road 13, Fort Collins 80524 $3 entry. www.laughingbuckfarm.com/family-squaredance. We will have a May Pole for the kids along with the usual promenading, allemande left and good times with friends.
Gardening Intensive Kick-Start April 18, 9a.m.- 4p.m. and April 19, 9 a.m.- 12 p.m. at The Lyons Farmette 4121 Ute Highway, Lyons, CO 80540 www.lyonsfarmette.com. We’ll build a compost pile, start seeds, build raised beds, put in drip irrigation and plan your season from start to finish. Bring: your work gloves, grubby clothes, a soil sample from your garden site, and your sense of adventure!
Fruit Tree Grafting 10- 12 p.m. at Fort Collins Nursery Wholesale Greenhouse. $25, 20 people max www. sustainablelivingassociation.org/workshops/ abundant-backyard. Come and learn the ancient skill of fruit tree grafting at our hands-on workshop. You will leave the workshop with your own grafted apple tree. Rootstocks and scion wood will be provided.
APRIL 19
MAY 8-10
Gardener’s Gallop Old-Fashioned Jog-A-Thon 5 p.m. start at Bath Garden Center and Nursery, $20 advance registration www.sproutinup.org.
APRIL 25
Soils & Three Methods of Composting 12- 4 p.m. at 3833 Starlight Drive, Fort Collins, CO 80524. $40, 12 people max www. sustainablelivingassociation.org/workshops/ abundant-backyard. Come learn what’s in your soil, how to care for and nurture it and ways to improve the structure and tilth of your soil for better growing.
APRIL 25-27
Northern Colorado Spring Home and Garden Show At Larimer County Ranch. www.visitftcollins. com/events/northern-colorado-spring-homegarden-show. Over 185 booths will have information on everything for your inside and outside home improvement. Check out the latest technology and get ideas for conserving energy and saving money.
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LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE
Gardens on Spring Creek Spring Plant Sale May 8: 3- 6 p.m. - Members Only Sale May 9: 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. May 10: Noon- 4 p.m. www.fcgov.com/gardens. Select from many standard and unique varieties of annual plants, vegetable starts, herbs, and perennials. Plants are grown by the Gardens on Spring Creek and the students of Colorado State University and Front Range Community College.
MAY 9
Basic Cheese Making 6- 8:30 p.m. at River Rock Commons Community House, 520 N. Sherwood #35, Fort Collins, CO 80524. $30, 12 people max www. sustainablelivingassociation.org/workshops/ wise-kitchen. The job of the cheesemaker is to convert milk into cheese. Learn the craft with us, and then make your favorite varieties at home.
MAY 13
Foraging Roots and Shoots: Cow Parsnip, Queen Annes Lace, Water Hemlock, and Wild Carrot 5:30- 7 p.m. at Lee Martinez Park; meet in the parking lot. $10 reservation required http:// www.thegrowingproject.org/tgp-universityworkshops.html. Learn the important difference between these locally foraged plants: Cow Parsnip, Queen Annes Lace, Water Hemlock, and Wild Carrot.
MAY 16
Self Healing and Natural 1st Aid 12- 4 p.m. at River Rock Commons Community House, 520 N. Sherwood #35, Fort Collins, CO 80524. $45, 15 people max www. sustainablelivingassociation.org/workshops/ wise-kitchen. Learn to use homeopathy and herbs as a first aid treatment for both minor and major accidents.
MAY 16
Small Acreage Workshop 8:30 a.m.- 4:30 p.m. at the Larimer County Ranch, hosted by CSU Larimer County Extension. Contact Karen Crumbaker, 498-6000.
MAY 17
8th Annual Tour de Coop 8:30 a.m.- 1:30 p.m. $25 includes lunch www. sustainablelivingassociation.org/event/tourde-coop/. A 6 to 8-mile bike ride from coop to coop in and around Fort Collins. Learn about chickens from beak to butt from experienced backyard chicken owners. Starting location to be announced.
MAY 18
Food For Thought Film Series 6- 8 p.m. Avogadro’s Number 605 S. Mason. Fort Collins. www.fcfood.coop 970-484-7448. Join us for a free screening of Power of Community with a panel discussion following the film. Presented by the Fort Collins Food Cooperative and The Growing Project.
MAY 21
Shire CSA Community Open House 4- 7 p.m. Enjoy farm fresh food, meet the farmer, and purchase your 2015 CSA membership. Follow Shire CSA on Facebook for current information, or email luke@shirecsa.com
MAY 22-24
Shamanic Boom Festival “Immersion” Presented by BE FREE Healing at Grant Farms in Wellington Tickets $75 www.befreehealing. com/#!shamanic-boom-immersion-festival/ c1n1v. IMMERSION will promise to be a weekend of transformation, expansion, love, ceremony, healing and celebration. You will leave healed, expanded and inspired.
MAY 24
Eat Your Weeds! 1- 3 p.m. at Golden Poppy Herbal Apothecary, 212 South Mason, Fort Collins, CO 80524. $20, 15 people max www. sustainablelivingassociation.org/workshops/ abundant-backyard. Learn more about common ‘weeds’ that grow all around you and how they can be useful to you. Bring samples of the weeds that grow in your backyard and learn which are edible, medicinal or poisonous.
JUNE 13
Canning 101 9:30 a.m.– 12 p.m. at the Food Bank for Larimer County, 1301 Blue Spruce. $15 reservation required www.thegrowingproject.org/tgpuniversity-workshops. Hands-on class about the basics of canning your garden bounty.
JUNE 13, 14 & 20
Vermiculture 101 by John Anderson 6- 8 p.m. at the TGP Educational Garden at Shire CSA, 713 E. Prospect. $12 reservation required www.thegrowingproject.org/tgpuniversity-workshops.html. Learn about the benefits of keeping worms and proper care and maintenance for worm bins.
Natural Building with Cob: Pizza Oven Workshop This workshop is three full days, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. (ish) on Saturday, June 13th, Sunday, June 14th and Saturday June 20th at 2817 Cherry Lane. Only 10 spaces available! $125 reservations required www.thegrowingproject.org/tgpuniversity-workshops. Scholarships may be available. Learn how to combine clay, straw, sand, water, and other materials to create a cob pizza oven and counter top. Lunch, snacks, and beverages will be provided.
MAY 30
JUNE 16
MAY 27
2nd Annual Poudre River Fest 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. at Legacy Park, Fort Collins, free entry. www.sustainablelivingassociation.org/ event/poudre-river-fest/ Poudre RiverFest is a free, family-friendly festival that restores, celebrates and educates people about the Cache la Poudre River and raises funds to support local conservation and education nonprofit groups in Fort Collins.
MAY 30
Farm Open House Von Trotha-Firestien Farm at 30951 County Road 27 www.BracewellFarm.com. Activities to include pony rides and barrel train rides for the kids. Educational displays, Ag in Motion displays, antique tractor display. Lunch will be served by Blazing Clovers 4-H Club. Day ends with a polka dance.
JUNE 2
Home Doctoring from the Kitchen 11a.m.- 1 p.m. www.sustainableliving association.org/workshops/wise-kitchen. Learn effective naturopathic medical knowledge for emergency or for optimal health that can be used at home, on the job site, in the back country, while traveling down the road or in the emergency room.
JUNE 6
Grant Farms Spring Farm Tour Come visit the farm for an Educational Farm Tour, attend workshops on Permaculture, gardening, eating healthier, sustainable agriculture, and social justice. Visit our Farmer’s Market or the Local Vendor Village, and enjoy some great LIVE Music! Check our website for updated and additional information. www. grantfarms.com
JUNE 9
Chocolate or Beer? Why Choose? 7- 9 p.m. Odell Brewery; advanced tickets $12; at the door $15 www.happyheartfriends.org Fundraiser to benefit Friends of Happy Heart Farm featuring four pairings of Radiantly Raw chocolate and Odell Brewery beers. Live music and a drawing for prizes.
Food Dehydration 6- 8 p.m. at Larimer County Extension Office, 1525 Blue Spruce Drive, Fort Collins. $25, 12 people max www.sustainablelivingassociation. org/workshops/wise-kitchen. Learn basic methods of drying fruits, vegetables, herbs, leathers and jerkies.
JUNE 17
Foraging Flowers: Asters and Lindens 6- 7:30 p.m. $10 reservations required www. thegrowingproject.org/tgp-universityworkshops
JUNE 20
LoCo Food Distribution Warehouse Day 1- 4 p.m. at LoCo warehouse 229 N US HWY 287 Fort Collins, CO 80524. www. locofooddistribution.com
JUNE 20
Solstice Dinner Ring in the summer with drummers and fire dancers!! Featuring guest chefs, seasonal cuisine and Sommelier Paul VanderTop to introduce and suggest wine pairings and bottle service. Tickets prices vary $75 to $120 ea, check our website for updated and additional information. www.grantfarms.com
JUNE 30
Sproutin’ Up Fundraiser 7- 9 p.m. at Odell Brewing Co. $10 includes two beer tickets www.sproutinup.org.
JULY 11
Herb Walk 10 a.m.- noon at Motherlove Farm, 503 South CR1 Johnstown. $25 includes a copy of the Pocket Guide to Wild Edible and Medicinal Plants by Kathryn Higgins mother@motherlove. com or 970-493-2892. Identify and use the many plants that grow in our own back yard. Learn the basics of making your own salves, balms, tinctures and other herbal remedies.
JULY 15
Foraging Flowers and Making Medicine: Clovers, Alfalfas, Calendula 6- 7:30 p.m. at the TGP Educational Garden at Shire CSA, 713 E. Prospect. $12 reservation required www.thegrowingproject.org/tgpuniversity-workshops. Learn about making medicines and tinctures with locally foraged flowers.
JULY 19
FOCO Cafe Bike-In Music Fest At Shire CSA. Call FOCO Cafe for information (309)368-1659, or visit FOCOCafe.org An afternoon of live music to support the FOCO Cafe. Bring your own picnic, or dine at one of the delicious food trucks. Local beer and free iced tea will be served!
JULY 19
Heart of Summer Farm Dinner At Happy Heart Farm. Details at www. fortifiedcollaborations.com
JULY 25
Farm Dinner Grant Farms CSA is hosting four amazing “themed” farm dinners this summer. Themes range from Boots & Spurs, to Colorado Black Tie, ticket prices vary $75 to 120 ea, check our website for updated and additional information. www.grantfarms.com
JULY 25
Summer Solstice Celebration 11 a.m.- 5 p.m. at the Fort Collins Food Co-op 250 E. Mountain Ave. www.fcfood.coop, 970484-7448. Presented by the Fort Collins Food Cooperative and Trees, Water and People. Live music, Kid zone, veggie races, vendors, food trucks, silent auction. Free & open to the public.
Garden a’Fare Wine Night, 5 p.m. www.fcgov.com/gardens Experience The Gardens through all your senses. Garden a’Fare is a series of two culinary pairing events highlighting produce grown in the Garden of Eatin’ along with Odell beers and selected wines. Wine night will include a seated dinner paired with wine while beer tour will include tastings from several local restaurants paired with Odell brews.
JUNE 27
JULY 25
JUNE 20
Fermenting 101 9:30 a.m.– 12 p.m. at the Food Bank for Larimer County, 1301 Blue Spruce. $15 reservation required www.thegrowingproject.org/tgpuniversity-workshops. Hands-on class about the basics of fermenting your garden bounty.
Four Season Gardening 12- 4 p.m. at 3833 Starlight Drive, Fort Collins, CO 80524. $60, 12 people max www. sustainablelivingassociation.org/workshops/ abundant-backyard. This course introduces everything you need to know to get started growing outside year round.
LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE
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JULY 27
AUGUST 4
AUGUST 23
JULY 31
AUGUST 9
AUGUST 23
Basics of Preserving Food Safely 6- 8 p.m. at the Larimer County Extension Office, 1525 Blue Spruce Dr, Fort Collins, CO 80524. $12 reservation required www. thegrowingproject.org/tgp-universityworkshops. Presented by The Growing Project and CSU Extension, an overview of the basic methods of food preservation: canning, freezing and dehydration. Blue Moon Dinner Grant Farms CSA is hosting three incredible “MOONLIGHT” farm dinners this summer featuring seasonal cuisine with produce and meats from our farm, wine from Vintages in Fort Collins, tours, live music and an elegant dinner. Check website for updated and additional information. www.grantfarms.com
JULY 31-AUGUST 4
Larimer County Fair At the Larimer County Ranch www. larimercountyfair.org
AUGUST 1
Herb Walk 10 a.m.- noon at Motherlove Farm, 503 South CR1 Johnstown. $25 includes a copy of the Pocket Guide to Wild Edible and Medicinal Plants by Kathryn Higgins mother@motherlove. com or 970-493-2892. Identify and use the many plants that grow in our own back yard. Learn the basics of making your own salves, balms, tinctures and other herbal remedies.
AUGUST 1
Make Your Own Herbal Remedies 2- 5 p.m. at Motherlove Herbal Company 1420 Riverside Avenue Suite 114 , Fort Collins. $35, limited to 15 people, mother@motherlove.com or 970-493-2892. Each attendee will leave with their own oil, salve, tincture and spray. Must attend morning session Herb Walk.
AUGUST 4
Basic Floral Design 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. at The Lyons Farmette 4121 Ute Highway, Lyons, CO 80540 www. lyonsfarmette.com Learn the basics of arranging flowers from the Farmette’s very own florist, Mary McHenry. Mary has had a hand in flowers since she was very young, and will be arranging all the Farmette’s wedding flowers in 2015. This will be a hands-on class and you’ll be able to choose and harvest your own flowers from our gardens!
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Canning Jams, Jellies and More 6- 8:30 p.m. at Larimer County Extension Office, 1525 Blue Spruce Drive, Fort Collins. $30, 12 people max www.sustainablelivingassociation. org/workshops/wise-kitchen. The workshop will cover the basics of water bath canning to ensure safe preservation. This hands-on workshop includes a jar of jam to take home. 3 Forks Progressive Farm Dinner At Hope/Copia/The Growing Project Farm, Native Hill Farm and Garden Sweet Farm. Diners are encouraged to ride their bikes on this 3 mile loop to enjoy fresh food and experiences at each farm. Tickets at www. fortifiedcollaborations.com
AUGUST 15
Herb Walk 10 a.m.- noon at Motherlove Farm, 503 South CR1 Johnstown. $25 includes a copy of the Pocket Guide to Wild Edible and Medicinal Plants by Kathryn Higgins mother@motherlove. com or 970-493-2892. Identify and use the many plants that grow in our own back yard. Learn the basics of making your own salves, balms, tinctures and other herbal remedies.
AUGUST 17
Food For Thought Film Series 6- 8 p.m. at Avogadro’s Number 605 S. Mason. Fort Collins. www.fcfood.coop 970484-7448. Join us for a free screening of a documentary with a panel discussion following the film. Presented by the Fort Collins Food Cooperative and The Growing Project.
Fermentation 6- 8 p.m. at River Rock Commons Community House, 520 N. Sherwood #35, Fort Collins, CO 80524. $30 per person www. sustainablelivingassociation.org/workshops/ wise-kitchen. We’ll ferment a batch of vegetables together and get you comfortable transforming the seasonal bounty into naturally preserved goodness. Foraging Fruits of the Fungal Kingdom 12- 4 p.m. meet at Ted’s Place on 287. $20 reservation required www.thegrowingproject. org/tgp-university-workshops.html. Learn about foraging mushrooms in the foothills.
AUGUST 29
Herb Walk 10 a.m.- noon at Motherlove Farm, 503 South CR1 Johnstown. $25 includes a copy of the Pocket Guide to Wild Edible and Medicinal Plants by Kathryn Higgins mother@motherlove. com or 970-493-2892. Identify and use the many plants that grow in our own back yard. Learn the basics of making your own salves, balms, tinctures and other herbal remedies.
AUGUST 29
Make Your Own Herbal Remedies 2- 5 p.m. at Motherlove Herbal Company 1420 Riverside Avenue Suite 114 , Fort Collins. $35, limited to 15 people, mother@motherlove.com or 970-493-2892. Each attendee will leave with their own oil, salve, tincture and spray. Must attend morning session Herb Walk.
AUGUST 29
10th Annual Tour de Farms 8:30 a.m.- 1:30 p.m. $25 includes lunch http:// sustainablelivingassociation.org/event/tourde-farms-2/ Fort Collins Riders will be able to join on a leisurely 8 mile tour to various farms and gardens. Support area efforts to strengthen our local food system and eat delicious local food.
Sturgeon Moon Dinner Elegance in C… for CSA! The Sturgeon Moon Dinner will be our “Colorado Black Tie” themed moonlight dinner, featuring chamber music, exquisite cuisine, wine from Vintages in Fort Collins, and tours, in a picturesque garden setting. Sommelier Paul VanderTop will be available to introduce and suggest wine pairings and bottle service for dinner. www. grantfarms.com
AUGUST 22
AUGUST 29
AUGUST 22
Farm Dinner Grant Farms CSA is hosting four amazing “themed” farm dinners this summer. Themes range from Boots &S purs, to Colorado Black Tie, ticket prices vary $75 to 120 ea, check our website for updated and additional information. www.grantfarms.com
Garden a’Fare Beer Tour 5 p.m. www.fcgov.com/gardens Experience The Gardens through all your senses. Garden a’Fare is a series of two culinary pairing events highlighting produce grown in the Garden of Eatin’ along with Odell beers and selected wines.
FORT COLLINS · SPRNG CREEK BIKE TRAIL
713 east prospect road · 970.222.2077 · shirecsa.com In the center of town and easy to find. Even on your bike.
COMMUNITY THROUGH COFFEE
Fair Trade - Local - Organic Become a Regular! 261 South College Avenue 306 West Laurel Street MugsCoffeeLounge.com
Growing locally fresh flowers and plants for over 40 years. We’re bigger than we look!
WWW.JORDANSFG.COM
LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE
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WHAT’S FOR LUNCH? PSD Primed to Serve More Local Food BY HELEN TAYLOR IT SEEMS THE STARS are aligned to make significant strides in the effort to get more locally produced food into our school cafeterias. Nicole Turner-Ravana, nutrition coordinator for Poudre School District, says that updated nutrition requirements; a move in the district to ditch fast food and put in healthy fare; greater public awareness of local-food sourcing; and the potential for better collaboration with support from the new Northern Colorado Food Cluster have put the district in a better position than ever to get more local food into our kids. “We’re poised for broad scale community collaboration on this,” says Turner-Ravana. “We just need to bring all the players together and figure out the logistics. The Food Cluster has already been involved and can really help us with that.” Already the district sources locally produced milk, bread, tortillas, spices, seasonal produce and other items, but locally produced items account for only about 20 percent of all the food served daily in PSD cafeterias. Salad bars have become ubiquitous, and events such as Colorado Proud Day call out the increased presence of local food, so awareness is up. But the challenge, says Shannon Schriener, who manages the district’s food budget and handles the logistics of procurement, is to boost volume without busting the budget and to streamline delivery. “We basically have 45 restaurants to supply,” 20 18 |
LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE
she says. “What we need is one-truck delivery, so everything hits the dock at the same time. It’s really difficult to have multiple farmers showing up with small deliveries.” It’s not particularly feasible for the small farmers either; most sell their bounty through their CSAs, on-site farm stands, and farmers markets or to local restaurants that don’t require a particularly large or reliable source of produce. Elizabeth Mozer, who owns LoCo Food Distribution, says she’s working with PSD to make delivery of local products more convenient, and Schriener and her colleagues also hope to benefit from the Food Cluster’s aim to develop unique food strategies, increase collective capacity and reduce redundancy. “With the Food Cluster up and going and all the community interest, I’m really optimistic that we’ll make great headway on this effort,” says Turner-Ravana.
DIGGING IN THE DIRT
The goal of getting more local food into schools is of course to provide more nutritional meals to children, but PSD School Wellness Specialist Amanda Brantley says it’s also to raise awareness of where their food comes from and what it took to produce it. To that end, school-garden installations and opportunities for students to interact with local farmers are also on the rise.
“Fourteen of our schools have gardens now, and we hope to have 20 by the end of the year,” says Brantley. Funding for these projects can come from grant programs and fundraisers, and an active partner in the effort has been the Kitchen Community, the nonprofit arm of The Kitchen Restaurant. Gardens can range in cost from $2,000 to $20,000, says Brantley, so it’s really up to the parents, the kids and the administration of a particular school to decide what design best suits their environment. Increasingly, kids are also getting out to meet the farmers who grow their food. The Food School, Future Friday, programs hosted by The Growing Project, and others give kids more opportunity than ever to learn about farming life. The greatest value of school gardens and farm tours, says Brantley, is education. “We’re teaching kids to eat healthy, familiarizing them with different types of vegetables, and showing them where food comes from,” she says. “It’s taking a wholechild approach to promote holistic health.”
DOING OUR PART
If you’re a parent of a PSD student or simply a citizen who believes this all makes good sense, there are plenty of things you can do to support the push for more local food in schools. You can: • Volunteer with a school Wellness Program • Buy your child school lunches to help fund the purchase of more local food • V isit the PSD website and phone app for new menu information and follow “Poudre School District Child Nutrition” on Facebook • Learn more about school gardens through the School Garden Resource Packet • Support the Northern Colorado Food Cluster This is a unique community with an impressive number of local farms, an established creed of buying local, and a predilection for healthy living. Still it will take some creative thinking and sustained collaboration to get more local food in schools and more kids aware of why it matters. “Being in this community makes a big difference,” says Turner-Ravana. We live in a place where these ideals are important and they come to life.”
Step 1: Using a pencil, start with the chick at the entrance to the maze. Step 2: Work your way through the maze. Step 3: At dead-ends, turn around. Step 4: Find your way to the exit of the maze and reunite the baby chick with the hen. Good luck!
To learn more about HIGHCHAIR FARMS BABY FOOD, go to www.highchairfarms.com to check out their locally-sourced and chock-full-of-nutrition purees for your kiddos. LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE
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INVESTING FOR THE 21ST CENTURY Slow Money Invests in Food, Farms and Fertility BY SLOW MONEY AND BOUNTY STAFF AS IT IS with the soil, so it is with business: We must nourish and replenish the place from which we harvest. Slow Money is a national nonprofit dedicated to creating sources of capital for small food enterprises. Since 2009, the organization has invested $39 million in nearly 370 small businesses. The group is bringing people together around a new kind of investing that nurtures local food systems by providing financial support to the entrepreneurs that create it.
SLOW MONEY PRINCIPLES
In order to enhance food security, food safety and food access; improve nutrition and health; promote cultural, ecological and economic diversity; and accelerate the transition from an economy based on extraction and consumption to an economy based on preservation and restoration, we do hereby affirm the 20 |
LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE
following Slow Money Principles: I. We must bring money back down to earth. II. There is such a thing as money that is too fast, companies that are too big, finance that is too complex. Therefore, we must slow our money down—not all of it, of course, but enough to matter. III. The 20th Century was the era of Buy Low/Sell High and Wealth Now/Philanthropy Later—what one venture capitalist called “the largest legal accumulation of wealth in history.” The 21st Century will be the era of nurture capital, built around principles of carrying capacity, care of the commons, sense of place and non-violence. IV. We must learn to invest as if food, farms and fertility mattered. We must connect investors to the places where they live, creating vital relation-
ships and new sources of capital for small food enterprises. V. Let us celebrate the new generation of entrepreneurs, consumers and investors who are showing the way from Making a Killing to Making a Living. VI. Paul Newman said, “I just happen to think that in life we need to be a little like the farmer who puts back into the soil what he takes out.” Recognizing the wisdom of these words, let us begin rebuilding our economy from the ground up, asking: • W hat would the world be like if we invested 50% of our assets within 50 miles of where we live? • W hat if there were a new generation of companies that gave away 50% of their profits? • W hat if there were 50% more organic matter in our soil 50 years from now. To learn more about Slow Money and affirm a vision of healthy, local food systems and a healthy economy, please visit slowmoney.org and join the more than 30,000 people who have signed these principles.
Living Soil INVESTME NT S
Our small community group meets monthly to review applications and host conversations with potential borrowers. If you are interested in becoming a co-investor, discussing a loan, or curious to learn more, visit LivingSoilInvestments.wordpress.com or contact us at LivingSoilInvestments@gmail.com
Strengthening our local food economy and enhancing soil fertility by making
microloans - with patient terms -
to farms, ranches and the food businesses that help them thrive.
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TOO IMPORTANT TO FAIL
Meeting Demand for Local Food Requires Thinking Like a Foodshed BY MICHAEL BROWNLEE LOCAL FOOD IS not some hip lifestyle movement. It’s become a broad effort to localize our food supply to the greatest extent possible—a revolutionary movement that seeks to build a resilient alternative to the failing global industrialized food system. This is perhaps the most important and most urgent social cause of our time. Currently, demand for local food far outstrips supply. The only way many of our food-producing farmers can grow their operations significantly is to reach new markets—retailers, schools, and institutions. But they can’t get to these larger commercial markets without an infrastructure, along with moving up to a certain level of increased scale and efficiency. This helps to explain why so many food hubs are under development in Colorado today. Over the last few decades we’ve seen the steady growth of the organic foods industry. In 2014, total organic food sales in the U.S. reached a record $35 billion in the U.S., representing about four percent of the total U.S. food industry. 22 |
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Meanwhile, organic farming accounts for only one percent of total farmland in the U.S. There is growing concern that because of the slow rate of conversion of conventional farms to organic, the rapid growth of the organic foods industry simply cannot continue. In early 2012, for the first time we began seeing industry data pointing to the stunning news that more people preferred local food than those who preferred organic. This was a milestone, a marker of a significant shift in our society. The local food industry—which hit $12 billion last year—will likely grow to actually eclipse the organic food industry in the next few years. This is happening not because of powerful and well-financed marketing campaigns, but because eaters have decided that we want our food to be produced as locally as possible, that we want to know who grew our food and how they grew it, that we want to make sure our food is as fresh and as healthy and as nutritious as possible, and that we will do whatever it takes and pay whatever we must to have such food,
because we know that it is essential to the health and well-being of our bodies, our families, our communities, our environment, and our local economies. So the big news is that the market for locally-produced, sustainably and compassionately-raised food is rapidly growing. Those food purveyors and entrepreneurs and farmers who don’t proactively organize to serve this market will quickly find themselves left behind. It’s heartening to see a new crop of food entrepreneurs sprouting up to begin to meet the demand for local food, and they are hungry for capital. With the arrival of Slow Money thinking and awareness, some of our citizens are beginning to discover the satisfaction of moving a portion of their financial resources into the local food economy. Inevitably, our emerging local food system must grapple with this critical challenge: How can local production capacity be increased, and how can this be done in a manner that is economically viable for buyers and producers and eaters? Responding to this challenge will require a collaborative, cooperative approach—thinking like a foodshed. Michael Brownlee is co-publisher of Local Food Shift magazine, to begin publication in July 2015.
Larimer County Farmer’s Market Since 1975! FORT COLLINS EXCLUSIVE GROWER’S-ONLY MARKET — we grow what we sell —
May 16, to October 24, 2015 8:00am to Noon 200 W. Oak Street LARIMER COUNTY COURTHOUSE PARKING LOT
www.larimercountyfarmersmarket.com www.facebook.com/larimercountyfarmersmarket
WE ACCEPT
BENEFITS!
Get Fresh in Old Town on Saturdays
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F L :™ For tickets and more information visit:
www.fortifiedcollaborations.com info@fortifiedcollaborations.com
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LOCAL FOOD AND FARM GUIDE