While some of you have started your own organic gardens (yay, you!), there is another option for those of us who want cheap, fresh, organic veggies but who have black thumbs and/or live in a concrete jungle.

Here’s how Community Supported Agriculture generally works:
Instead of paying a farmer after the harvesting of his/her veggies, you pay one lump sum before the planting season even begins to help cover the costs of planting, growing, and harvesting. You essentially buy a share of the farm and then partake of its bounty, which generally lasts about 24-25 weeks of the year. Depending on how the CSA is set up, you can either pick up the produce every week in a central location near you, or it gets delivered to your door.
Just a few advantages of joining a CSA:
So….
1.) New Yorkers can search for CSAs near them on Just Food’s map.
2.) Everyone else can conduct a search on LocalHarvest’s CSA locator.
Better do it now if you can, since demand is skyrocketing, and programs fill up fast!

Our wonderful Guest Blogger Marisa
Guest blogged by beautiful Marisa Miller Wolfson, who is the Outreach Director for Kind Green Planet, a nonprofit dedicated to teaching people about healthy, humane, eco-friendly living. When she’s not working on her documentary about veganism, she’s busy coaching people on plant-based living through Vegan at Heart, a free email mentoring program for treehuggers, animal lovers and health nuts who consider themselves vegans at heart but not necessarily in practice.
Tags: Cheap Veggies, Community Supported Agriculture, CSA, Eating healthy on the cheap, Fresh Fruit, kind green planet, Marisa Miller Wolfson, Veggies
I’ve asked the farmers @ Borough Hall in BK if their stuff is organic and many say NO! WTF?
I’ve heard that for many small farms (ie. the ones at farmers markets) getting the organic certification is too expensive. They may grow organically, but just not ‘officially’.
we just joined the traditional nutrition guild. they’re a non-profit delivery service where you pay them $50 a year (or $20 if you volunteer 5 hours) to deliver the foods you order from one of their farms. you order directly from the farms and they bring it to one of the drop off points each week.
“Organic foods, milk products from pasture-fed livestock, pasture-raised poultry eggs, meats, and properly produced (according to Weston Price principles) whole foods”
much cheaper than the super market, and you can order as much or as little as you want.
[...] same price as conventional, but til then, prioritize your groceries. Buy in bulk (when possible), join a CSA, and relish in the joy of a Whole Foods. Make a choice to cut out some things that you [...]