Yesterday I took the girls to meet the farmers, the farm, and of course the animals. Sadly Hubby was stuck with the necessary landscaping work at home. (One day we will have something other than mud.) We drove in the first real day of heat and sunshine. While the girls slept I ruminated on the luxury and necessity of supporting local agriculture through a CSA.
Yes, I said luxury. Hubby and I have been talking about this a lot lately. While feeding our family with the best possible ingredients, sourced as locally as possible is of prime importance to us (well, me, mostly) we have to admit that it is a middle class luxury. It shouldn't be, but it is. And for now, it is one that we also see as a necessity - as long as we can afford it. Maybe that's why I'm returning to work tomorrow? It is a necessity - not just for the health of our family, but for the health of a diverse agricultural economy and a diverse farming community.
In speaking to Jonathan yesterday he said something that just ran through my brain. "In order to have a sustainable world, a truly sustainable culture, we have to work." It echoes comments made by Wade Sirois at the Local 101 event back in March. He reminded the audience that no matter how you look at supporting local agriculture it means you have to cook. It all comes back to effort, to work. I better get The Monster trained up as a sous chef soon because we're going to have a lot of cooking to do this summer, thanks to Jonathan and Andrea's efforts.
This is the second year for the Thompson Wright Small Farm CSA. In speaking to Andrea yesterday she is excited about the coming months and the supporters they have this year. The commitment from their members is strong, with most at the farm to support the ideals and work, not just get some good groceries.
The farm is run by animal and people power. When you drive onto the property you are struck by the lack of a powered tractor and the simplicity of the old metal plow. I remember my dad showing me the one he used as a boy on the farm, long since rusted and now serving as a jungle gym to city kids visiting the farm. Not at Thompson Wright. The metal plow sits clean, almost proud, after recent use readying the fields for this year's crop of broccoli, cauliflower, carrots, peas, parsnips, kohlrabi, kale, peppers, onions, tomatoes, and garlic (and more).