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Local Table
A Guide To Food And Farming In Middle Tennessee
Spring 2013

News

Archive for November, 2011

Tennessee Local Food Summit Announces Speakers

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Institute of Sustainability Executive Director Dodd Galbreath will be the keynote speaker for the Saturday, Dec. 3 agenda at the upcoming Tennessee Local Food Summit at Nashville’s Lipscomb University. Galbreath will speak on the “Role of Education” pulling together the elements of sustainability and how this relates to food.

Two area sustainable farmers Eric Smith of Bug Tussle Farms, Bug Tussle, KY and Susanna Lein of Salamander Spring Farms, Berea, KY have also been added to the agenda. Smith will speak about how Easy It is to Grow Your Own Food and will offer advice for beginners and seasoned gardeners alike. Lein will speak on Permaculture in the Garden and will take a look at no-till methods and other permaculture methods for home food production.

The summit will be geared to home gardeners, farmers, students, consumers, and anyone interested in learning about local food. Other speakers already confirmed include: Hugh Lovel, regular contributor to Acres USA, Shabari Bird, whose late husband Christopher Bird co-authored The Secret Life of Plants and The Secret Life of Soil, and Jeff Poppen, aka The Barefoot Farmer.

The Summit will open Friday evening with a free keynote from Lovel, Why Care About Local Food, exploring agriculture’s role on our health, our environment, our economy and our consciousness. Workshops on Saturday and Sunday will include tracks on The Science of Organics, Backyard Gardening and Food The Best Medicine. Plenty of time will be available for one on one discussions with the speakers and each other in an effort to learn how Tennessee can grow it’s own food. The conference fee will include three locally grown and homemade organic meals and a Saturday night Square Dance.

The conference fee is $100 for the weekend. Students get in for $50.00, low income for $25.00. There is a day rate of $50.00 per day. Registrants are invited to set up a booth at no additional fee. No one will be turned away, but can do volunteer work.

For registration information, contact Anne Nicholson, tnlocalfood@gmail.com, 615-426-3395.

The Summit is being organized by local sustainable farmers and The Institute for Sustainable Practices. For more information, please go to http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=181259291958014 or to www.barefootfarmer.com

For sponsorship information, please contact: David Daily, 615-604-3886, david@realfoodfarms.com

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Moveable High Tunnel Workshop for Growers

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

The UT Organic Crop Production Series is finishing the year up with, “Keep Your Production Season Moving – Moveable High Tunnels”, on Monday, November 14, 2011 (beginning at 1:00 pm CST). If you aren’t one of the many folks who have already done so, register now to join us for this workshop at Bountiful Blessings Farm near Nashville TN!

****NEW**** Did you miss the Pruning, Asparagus, Mushroom, Insect-Control, Disease-Control, Seed Saving and Water Catchment workshops? Well now you can view archived videos of them online at http://organics.tennessee.edu/workshops.htm !

The workshop series targets commercial producers and agriculture professionals interested in learning organic crop production practices.

session consists of farm tours, presentations by growers and extension specialists accompanied by discussions and hands-on activities. ALL workshops will take place at active working farms this year, and, therefore, will not be broadcast via ITV to remote locations. We are attempting, however, to film workshops so that they can be later posted for viewing on the website by those who cannot make it in person. All workshops will take place from 1:00 to 4:00 PM, regardless of timezone (ie., a workshop in Nashville will take place at 1:00 PM CST, while a workshop located in Knoxville will take place at 1:00 PM EST).

For more information on the November workshop, please visit: http://organics.tennessee.edu/workshops.htm . Please contact Heather Toler (htoler@utk.edu, 974-7429) to register for the workshop(s) to ensure that we have enough materials to distribute to participants.

4th Annual Growing Green Awards Honor Contributions in Sustainable Food

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Nominations are due by December 9, 2011
$10,000 cash prize in the Food Producer category
$2,500 cash prize in the Food Justice Leader category
$2,500 cash prize in the Young Food Leader category

The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) announces its fourth annual Growing Green Awards to recognize individuals who have demonstrated original leadership in the field of sustainable food. Through this national award, NRDC will recognize extraordinary contributions that advance ecologically integrated farming practices, climate stewardship, water stewardship, farmland preservation, and social responsibility from farm to fork.

A Growing Green Award will be given to an outstanding individual in each of four categories, including Food Producer, Business Leader, Food Justice Leader, and Young Food Leader. Cash prizes of $10,000, $2,500 and $2,500 will be awarded in the Food Producer, Food Justice Leader and Young Food Leader categories, respectively. All winners will be widely celebrated through outreach to media and NRDC’s networks. Winners will also be celebrated in May of 2012 at an event to benefit NRDC in San Francisco. Award selections will be made by an independent panel of sustainable food experts. Information about award eligibility, selection criteria and process, and the award selection panel are provided below.

Recipients may represent a variety of fields including food production, food service, retail or restaurants, academia, journalists, policy advocacy, and government. The panel will consider candidates from across the country (candidates operating outside of the United States will not be considered). Individuals in the following four categories are eligible:

Food Producer: Farmers or other food producers, including aquaculture, who employ innovative techniques to sustain agriculture, the natural environment, workers and community;

Business Leader: Entrepreneurs who effectively use the marketplace to promote sustainable food systems, develop infrastructure that enables producers to be more sustainable, or advance sustainable innovations anywhere along the supply chain from farm to fork;

Food Justice Leader: Advocates and entrepreneurs who are creating equitable food systems, including provision of safe and fair working conditions for food system workers and improving access to nutritious food to families and communities in need.

Young Food Leader: Sustainable food advocates, entrepreneurs, thought leaders and innovators who are 30 years old or younger.

Growing Green Awards Criteria
In selecting from nominees, the awards selection panel will consider the following criteria:

Innovation in promoting ecologically-integrated food systems. This may include minimizing inputs of energy, water and chemicals; reducing pollution and global warming gas emissions; use of on-farm polyculture; increasing natural resilience; and stewardship of biodiversity, pollinators, open space and land resources.

Potential to achieve wide scale adoption, implementation or behavioral change.

· Advancement of health, safety and economic viability for farmers, food system workers and communities.

How to Apply
Applications will be accepted until close of business on December 9, 2011. The application must be submitted electronically using the website application process at http://www.nrdc.org/growinggreen. Application materials may include up to 10 pages of text (12 point font please), photographs, articles or other supporting materials. Please combine multiple files into a single attachment.

In the last three Growing Green Award competitions we received many excellent nominations that came close to winning. We will consider previously submitted nominations again this year upon request.

Please contact Amrita Batra with questions at gga@nrdc.org or by phone at (415) 875-6107.

Rutherford County Farmers’ Market Extends Season

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

Life on the farm doesn’t stop when it gets cold! Many vegetables can be harvested well past frost, such as salad and cooking greens, kale, and winter squash. Also available late in the year from farms are fresh eggs, honey, beef, pork, preserves, and baked goods. From November 6 to December 18, the Rutherford County Farmers’ Market (RCFM) will be open every Sunday afternoon from 2 to 5pm at the Lane Agri-Park Community Center, in Murfreesboro.

During the Extended Season, market vendors will have holiday gifts, fall greens, winter squash, sweet potatoes, local honey, grass-fed beef, fresh eggs, herbs, firewood, chestnuts, poinsettias, Christmas trees, fresh greenery, kettle corn, jams & jellies, breads & sweets, and a variety of other local products. All RCFM producers are from Middle Tennessee and grow, harvest, or make what they sell.

Murfreesboro’s Five Senses Restaurant, known for offering a southern gourmet menu, will be at the RCFM on opening day this Sunday and again on December 4 to demonstrate cooking techniques using seasonal vegetables and to pass out samples. There will be a drawing on both days for a Dinner for Two at Five Senses worth $75.

This Extended Season of the RCFM will have a festive flair with different musical performers each market day. Rutherford County natives, Daniel Rothwell and Thomas Maupin, will be performing at the RCFM on Sunday, November 27. The award-winning banjo/buckdancing duo was a regular at the RCFM when the market was located at Cannonsburgh Village in downtown Murfreesboro.

The RCFM is located at the Lane Agri-Park Community Center on John R. Rice Blvd. in Murfreesboro. Contact Janie Becker, Market Manager at jbecker8@utk.edu or 615-898-7710 for more information.