American Family Farmer

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Sinopsis

A weekly look at trends in Family Farming and Healthy Eating.

Episodios

  • Robin Way on Organic Farming at Rumbleway Farm

    29/01/2017 Duración: 45min

    ROBIN AND MARK WAY own and operate Rumbleway Farm, a 62 acre certified organic farm located in Cecil County, Maryland. Robin has a Bachelor of Science in Marine Biology, and formerly worked in the DuPont Pharaceutical-lab. Mark has a Bachelor of Science, in Biology, and formerly worked for DuPont Pharmaceutical’s - lab research on inflammatory diseases and safety.                                They have become active and enterprising in diverse agriculture to include aggressive marketing of pastured poultry and all natural practices for raising meat products and educational uses of conservation practices. Their all-natural products are marketed through community business contacts, on-farm sales and on the farm's websiteRUMBLEWAY FARM is a small 62-acre sustainable grass based family farm located in Cecil County Maryland. They raise chickens, turkeys, rabbits, cows and pigs. The chickens and turkeys are raised in portable greenhouse like shelters that are moved each day to fresh pasture grass. The cows are al

  • Audra Mulkern on the Female Farmer Project

    22/01/2017 Duración: 45min

    AUDRA MULKERN is a cook, writer, photographer and a podcaster, who lives in a farming community. She noticed the face of the farmers in her own community was starting to change as more and more women were applying to become interns.Today, she is putting good food in the spotlight and changing the way you look at farming and the food on your plate.THE FEMALE FARMER PROJECT documents the rise of women in agriculture. It is a chronicle of images and stories of female farmers who are tasked with family, farm, often an outside job, and are creating change in our food systems. The project has garnered international recognition, and has been featured in Huffington Post, Modern Farmer, grist and a number of magazines. It was recently in exhibition at United Nations in New York, IFAD building in Rome, FarmAid30, TEDxManhattan 2015 and won the Cascade Harvest Coalition Wendell Berry award for 2015.Find out more at www.femalefarmproject.org & www.audramulkern.com Audra can also be found on Facebook, Twitter, and Ins

  • Allen Lash talks AgriSolutions and the FamilyFarms Group

    15/01/2017 Duración: 45min

    ALLEN LASH is President and CEO of AgriSolutions, Inc. and CEO of FamilyFarms Group. He is a widely recognized leader in the area of future agriculture direction, business and management structures, and financial management for agriculture.Mr. Lash was an early leader in the Farm Financial Standards Council, with commodity associations such as the National Pork Producers Council and the Corn and Soybean Association.  He was also an early leader of the Northeast Dairy Standards Council group in Pennsylvania and New York, participating in the initial stages. The purpose of this group was to define financial standards for the dairy industry. FAMILY FARMS GROUP was established in 2006, and is headquarted near St. Louis, MO. It represents more than 1.5 million acres of row crop production throughout North America. It is a member-owned network of family farm operators, agricultural experts and suppliers, working to help preserve the legacy of family farms as consolidation hits the row crop industry.Find out more at

  • Roger Johnson on the National Farmers Union

    08/01/2017 Duración: 45min

    ROGER JOHNSON has been President of The National Farmers Union since 2009. Prior, he was a third-generation family farmer from Turtle Lake, ND, where he also served as North Dakota Agriculture Commissioner since 1996.SOME TALKING POINTS:1.   U.S. farm policy already favors Big Business. Will it get worse under Trump?2.   Ten food trends that will shape 2017Trend 1: Silicon Valley & FoodTrend 2: The Wild WestTrend 3: Enhanced Foods: Beyond BrowniesTrend 4: Generation ZTrend 5: Sustainability Trend 6: Digital Foodscape Trend 7: Microbrands to MegabrandsTrend 8: Augmented Transparency (AT)Trend 9: Cellular AgricultureTrend 10: The New AdministrationFind out more at www.nfu.org

  • Meghan Nichols talks High Hopes Farm

    18/12/2016 Duración: 45min

    Meghan and Ross Nichols are an energetic, hardworking couple who own and operate High Hopes Farm on a beautiful 120ish-acre piece of land in Bristol, Maine. The couple purchased the farm earlier this summer, and already have a small, thriving operation.They both grew up in the area, and didn’t even consider looking at other farms because they knew they wanted to stay in their community.When they bought the farm, Maine Farmland Trust purchased an easement on the property, lowering the cost for the young farmers, and ensuring that High Hopes will remain available for farming for future generations.Young farmers like these two aren’t just feeding their neighbors; they’re helping to build a strong foundation for the local economy, stewarding the environment, and creating greater food security in their community.Meaghan and Ross raise lambs, pigs, goats, turkeys, chickens and ducks for meat. Their animals are meticulously cared for and raised in natural settings, with lots of space to roam, fresh air, clean beddin

  • Johnny Fonteyn on Rio Gozo Farm

    11/12/2016 Duración: 43min

    Johnny Fonteyn is a former chef, and his wife Elizabeth Del Negro, a former educator. They are in their 30’s, and now are full-fime farmers. They started with an 8-acre farm, just north of Los Angeles, in Ojai (PM: O-HI), California, which was formerly a minimum-security prison.Today, they grow vegetables, herbs, fruit and flowers on three different farms. The farm is known as Rio Gozo. "Gozo" is Spanish for Joy. The majority of the food they grow supplies Rio Gozo Farm's CSA program; any extra is sold to restaurants and markets in Ventura County. They have 60 CSA shareholders of their own. The farm’s boxes also now include bread, coffee and preserves from local artisan producersRio Gozo also garners a large group of volunteers who donate time to help the couple pick and pack the CSA boxes. In addition, Elizabeth gets to use her extensive classroom teaching experience at the farm.  In collaboration with Food for Thought: the Ojai Healthy Schools Program, local fourth graders come to the farm to learn about an

  • Tom Hanson talks Hansons Farm

    07/12/2016 Duración: 31min

    Hanson's Farm has been a working farm since 1715, farmed for almost 200 years. In 1908, Matthew Hanson got the opportunity to rent the fifty acre farm and loved it, finally purchasing it in 1913 after which it officially became Hanson 19s farm. His grandson Tom eventually took over, and began concentrating on the farm stand and adding things such as upick, hayrides and other things.To bring families to the farm, diversifying has helped to keep the farm going and such things as a horse boarding business, a haunted hayride, and starting in 2005, Tom with his son Matt started doing a cornmaze. The same year, Tom 19s wife Martha started doing farmers markets and that has grown to a big part of thir farming operations.In 2009 they started a CSA - or community supported agriculture where people buy a "share" of the harvest in advance of the season. Each year the CSA is expanding and they are learning new ways to make it run more smoothly.

  • Jana Linderman on the Iowa Farmer's Union

    07/11/2016 Duración: 36min

    Jana Linderman is President of The Iowa Farmers Union. She grew up on a family farm in North Dakota and is the 4th generation to work in her family 19s farming operation. As a beginning farmer, she works with her parents raising spring wheat, small grains and non-GMO food-grade soybeans that are direct marketed to processors in Japan. Her long-term goal for the farm is to transition to organic production and start a farm-to-table craft distillery using grains grown on the farm. Since 1915, THE IOWA FARMERS UNION have worked together to strengthen the independent family farm through education, legislation and cooperation and to provide Iowans with sustainable production, safe food, a clean environment and healthy communities.

  • Sharon Caswell on Pony Up Technologies

    07/11/2016 Duración: 37min

    Sharon Caswell is the founder and CEO of PonyUP Technologies, and has been a life-long horse owner. She currently has two horses and rides as often as possible. Pony Up Technologies was founded on the simple desire to make life better for horses and their handlers. Their products give equine professionals a better way to manage the health and conditioning of their horses. The objective is to bring products to market that are simple to use and yet have a profound and game-changing impact on health and conditioning.

  • Kriss Marion on Circle M Market Farm

    04/10/2016 Duración: 22min

    Kriss Marion is a former Easterner and Journalist from Chicago. Kriss and her husband Shannon, own the Circle M Market Farm and B&B, in Lafayette County. She is the founder of her local farmers 19 market in Blanchardville, Wisconsin. Even though Kriss is a first-generation 1cniche 1d farmers, she always vowed she 19d never do a farmers 19 market. She got into farming because she liked playing in the dirt. Her dream revolved around shepherding animals, growing plants, shaping the landscape and healing a piece of land 13 all projects with no end point, no closure, no down time.Circle M Market Farm is a small family homestead in rural Blanchardville, Wisconsin, 40 minutes southwest of Madison. The farm is nestled into a cozy valley, bordered by creeks on two sides, and old oak woods on another, and a restored prairie on the last. The 20-acres is shared with their sheep, goats, chickens, horses, beef cows, pigs, dogs, cats, ducks and a crazy goose. Everything has a purpose and function that feeds the land a

  • Marc Santucci on Saving the Cherry Crop

    04/10/2016 Duración: 36min

    Marc Santucci is the owner of Santucci Farm, in Travers City, MI. He says a Federal Regulation has forced him to let 40-thousand perfectly-good tart cherries go to waste. There is nothing wrong with the cherries, but the regulation requires him to dump them, to allow the import of 200-million pounds of cherries from overseas. Santucci said that tart cherries imported from Turkey and Eastern Europe have made up increasingly larger portions of the market, and limiting the amount of domestic cherries makes it worse. He posted a photo of the rotting cherries on Facebook, and so far it has been shared over 60-thousand times. In the U.S., up to 40 percent of the food that 19s produced never gets eaten. Each year, about 7 percent of what 19s planted on farms isn 19t harvested, according to a 2012 Natural Resources Defense Council report.

  • Ethan Farrell talks Sunset Farm

    04/10/2016 Duración: 36min

    The Farrell Family has transformed Sunset Farm into a local icon in Narragansett. It is the last of its kind in the south-end of Narragansett, being the last working farm in the area. The Farrell Family works pasturing a herd of 100 head of Black Angus beef cattle, born and raised right on the farm. Sunset Farm prides itself on the fact that their beef cattle never leave the state of Rhode Island. Sunset Farm also grows a wide variety of produce in their fields located behind the Historic Kinney Bungalow where weddings and events are frequently held. Sunset Farm 19s famous pies have become synonymous with chowder and clam cakes in the area. Some of their most popular pies include the Classic Apple, the summer favorite Strawberry Rhubarb, and the Very Berry that is chock full of berries.

  • Mark Schneider on Living Water Farms

    17/08/2016 Duración: 37min

    Mark Schneider is a former firefighter who turned full-time grower after he helped his in-laws, Kevin and Denise Kilgus, convert their truck farming operation into Living Water Farms. He is now President and CEO of the farm. LIVING WATER FARMS is owned and operated by the Kilgus/Schneider families. It is a small sustainable family farm, focused on growing the highest quality specialty greens and micro greens year round for top chefs, select distributors, and local retail throughout the Midwest.Their current goal is to develop markets and raise capital to enable a major expansion of it 19s greenhouse growing space, from 10,000 square feet to 170,000 square feet. They grow chemical/pesticide free, utilizing sustainable practices for fresh, healthy food you can feel good about.

  • Vernon Seipt on Freddy Hill Farms

    17/08/2016 Duración: 36min

    Freddy Hill Farms began as a dairy store in 1972. The milk is processed and packaged right on the farm, and then sold in the dairy store. To complement the dairy sales, dipped ice cream is also offered to customers.After learning how to make their own ice cream at Penn State University's creamery, the Seipts expanded their ice cream offerings and began making ice cream cakes. The ice cream sales soon outgrew the small space and a full, sit down ice cream parlor was built in 1988. The partners' wives, Nancy and Lesa Seipt became involved in the business at that time giving farm field trips to school age children every spring. The Seipts wanted the public to know that they sold quality milk and give them some education about the farm and its workings. This field trip program soon expanded to include Pumpkin Patch Field Trips in October, where children and parents can take a hayride, pick a pumpkin, go thru a cornstalk maze, and eat some homemade ice cream. Thousands of people enjoy these field trips every Oct

  • Stacy and Tenzin Botsford on the 5-State Family Farm Leadership Program

    29/07/2016 Duración: 36min

    Stacy and Tenzin Botsford are first generation farmers who are dedicated to the idea that caring for the land and growing high quality organic food can be mutually beneficial for the farm, the farmer, and the community. Their goal was to regain their relationship to the land and to the food that we eat, while helping to revitalize small farms in Central Wisconsin.This summer, they are embarking on a new adventure as they represent Wisconsin Farmers Union in the Farmers Union Enterprises (FUE) in a special Leadership Program. Organized by the five FUE states of Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin, the program offers participants a chance to hone leadership skills and network with farmers from the five-state region. Activities enhance knowledge of cooperatives and the role of Farmers Union.

  • Roger Allison on the Missouri Rural Crisis Center

    18/07/2016 Duración: 37min

    Roger Allison and Rhonda Perry raise cattle and grain on his farm in rural Missouri. He is also the founder and Executive Director of the Missouri Rural Crisis Center and Patchwork Family Farms.The Missouri Rural Crisis Center (MRCC) is a statewide farm and rural membership organization founded in 1985 with over 5600 member families. Their mission is to preserve family farms, promote stewardship of the land and environmental integrity and strive for economic and social justice by building unity and mutual understanding among diverse groups, both rural and urban. Their innovative approach to family farm organizing includes challenging corporate control of the food supply, creating sustainable alternatives to the current farm and food system, and generating community participation to create a just, democratic society based on equity and fairness for all people.

  • Jesus Cuezzi on Mentoring Young Farmers

    18/07/2016 Duración: 16min

    Jesus Cuezzi grew up in Waukegan, IL and was introduced to farming after his junior year in high school. He applied for a summer job with the Green Youth Farm, in Lake County, and worked with 25 other teenagers, planting, maintaining and harvesting the produce in this 1.5 acre plot. He returned to the farm for a second season, but this time as a crew leader. This is when his aptitude for farming skills and teaching others really took off. Through his work at the farm he was able to come out of his shell and truly shine as a leader. So far, Jesus has mentored over a hundred peers and teens, connected with thousands of farm stand customers, sharing recipes and vegetable growing knowledge, and grown over 30-thousand pounds of sustainable produce for his community.Windy City Harvest Youth Farm educates and employs 80 to 90 teens each year, from low-income communities at three farm sites in Chicago and one in Lake County. As they advance through this program, they learn to grow food responsibly, work as a team, ad

  • Andrea Hazzard and the Hazzard Free Farm

    18/07/2016 Duración: 36min

    Andrea Hazzard grew up on the family farm. She remembered as a child, the wooden bins of grain in the barn and in the loft of the corn crib, the heavy, silken feeling of them as you thrust your arm in, the dust in the air as the sun streamed through the window. She would go to the corn crib with her grandfather Earl Hazzard and choose a few ears of corn, shell them in the sunshine then trundle across the yard and down to the basement. Grandpa would get the hand crank grinder out and they would make cornmeal for Grandma 19s cornbread.HAZZARD FREE FARM came to be in 2007 to counter Andrea 19s frustration towards the role she was playing in the demise of the environment. It also was a way for her to bring her spiritual and philosophical beliefs in line with the way she lives. One of the tenets of the farm is education. Andrea has worked with many entities to introduce, inspire and teach farming to people in the community.They offer a wide variety of high quality heirloom grains, grown in the organic tradition an

  • Timothy Gertson on growing Organic Corn

    18/07/2016 Duración: 34min

    Timothy Gertson is a farmer, on the Gulf Coast of Texas,with five generations of rice farming in his family. His 2,000 acres at G5 Farms are dictated by dollars, and in 2016, he 19s found a profit window in organic corn. Agriculture is in his blood. Yet even for a man with years of experience under his belt, the shift from conventional to organic agriculture was a veritable obstacle course. And he 19s only growing one crop.G5 Farms has gained full organic certification, but Gertson says the application process was lengthy and he was consistently frustrated with open-ended questions. He turned in 80 pages of paperwork to the Texas Department of Agriculture, including forms, maps, and FSA records. He says 1cIt was a headache. I had to fill it out by hand and it sure seems like an antiquated system. You can certify through private entities, but I want to know every detail I 19m signing up for. I don 19t want to be on the hook for something I didn 19t read. 1d

  • Linley Dixon talks organics and Adobe House Farm

    22/06/2016 Duración: 36min

    In August of 2010, Peter and Linley Dixon moved to Durango with their daughter Raina to start an organic farm, Adobe House Farm, with the mission of providing year-round, pesticide free fruits and vegetables. With help from friends and family, they built a four-season greenhouse, installed fencing, irrigation, and two hoop houses. They sold produce at the Durango Farmers Market, wholesale, and offered a 13-member CSA. Throughout the 2011-2012 winter they grew greens in the greenhouse and tunnels and sold produce to 3 local restaurants, Durango Natural Food Co-op, and to families who scheduled weekly orders.In 2015, they had expanded to the point that they hired two more employees, and were able to offer a CSA to 110 families in Durango as well as greatly expanding offerings at the Durango Farmers 19 Market and to local restaurants.THE CORNUCOPIA INSTITUTE, through research and investigations on agricultural and food issues, provides needed information to family farmers, consumers and other stakeholders in t

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