Title: Linking Farmers and Consumers: Lessons and Opportunities
1Linking Farmers and Consumers Lessons and
Opportunities
- Mary Hendrickson, Ph.D.
- Food Circles Networking Project
2Community food systems are in the news.
3Food System Trends
From Saveur Magazine, August 2004
4These alternative food systems are really about .
- Tasty, healthy food
- Consumers are looking for differentiated foods
e.g. natural, organic, humanely raised, no
antibiotics, family farm raised, fair labor
practices - Relationships
- Food that you buy from your friends and neighbors
to support their businesses and your communitys
development - Fun!
5Farmer opportunities?
6For farmers, food entrepreneurs and communities
- Dont create a capital-intensive,
profit-above-all-else, impersonal system that
produces for the masses - Lots of temptations to do just that!
- Markets will demand more and more product LABELED
as organic, humane, natural, free-range, no
antibiotics, cage-free . - Supply them or else.Wal-Mart Organic?
- Potential to get squashed like a bug
- Quality can suffer
- 3 Ms (money, management and marketing) will be in
short supply
7But plenty of opportunities to
- Develop new visions of what the food and farming
system can be - What are the principles that we want to
incorporate? - There are many models ranging from micro to
international trade - Celebrate uniqueness and diversity in the food
system - This is an asset not a liability!
- The taste of place is becoming more and more
important - Put people first on the farm, in the plant and
in the community - Make food systems local/regional not global
- Community Self-Reliance
8Farmers
Chefs
Grocery Stores
Processors
Educators
Nutritionists
Eaters
Food Circle
9This kind of food system is based on
relationships between people, within their
community, and within their ecosystem.
10Community food systems take
- Knowledge
- how to grow, process, market, distribute and cook
food that is connected to people in a particular
place and time - Infrastructure
- Rebuild and create
- This includes everything from land, equipment,
trucks, storage, and retail spaces to
regulations, policies and education
11Components of community food systems
- Getting food from farm gate to the eaters plate
- Production
- Processing
- Distribution
- Market outlets
12New Production Methods
- Hoop houses or high tunnels
- Allow farmers to get early or late crops, winter
greens
13Alternative Production Methods
- Intensive Rotational Grazing for dairy and beef
- Increases CLA content
- Lower fat and cholesterol
- Used for lots of animals
- Sheep
- Goats
- Pastured Poultry complements
14Farmers Markets
- Sweeping across the Midwest
Websites for finding farmers markets www.localhar
vest.org www.sustainabletable.org www.foodroutes.o
rg
15Linking Chefs Farmers
Main Squeeze Vegetarian Restaurant
16New value chains
- Create values-based value chains
- Share the risks and benefits of producing and
consuming food throughout the supply chain - Focus on partnerships
- Examples
- Oregon Country Beef/Burger Chain New Seasons
- Red Tomato and Federation of Southern
Cooperatives - Good Natured Family Farms and Hen House
17New Business Models
- Hen House
- a grocery store in Kansas City, uses fresh local
products to differentiate themselves from other
stores sales of locally grown increasing 35 a
year - Almost 7 million in locally grown sales in 2006
18Farm to Cafeteria
- What if the food served in our schools came from
a sustainable food system? - www.farmtoschool.org
- What if food in our hospitals and nursing homes
came from our local food systems? - www.grownlocally.com
- Kaiser Permanente system
19Community Gardening
20Eater knowledge
How do you purchase, store, cook these kind of
things for maxim taste and nutritional value?
How do you find the time?
Images from Fair Share Farm, and Google Image
21Our Responsibilities
- Good, clean and fair food is going to take
cooperation - Farmers see other farmers as cooperators and not
competitors TOGA, Niman, Organic Valley/Organic
Prairie - Eaters see themselves as more than consumers as
community members, as citizens, as workers, as
participants - Concern ourselves with structure (what kind of
relationships are we creating?) rather than scale
(how big is too big?)
22What do we get?
- Better Nutrition Increased consumption of
nutrient dense foods coupled with a decrease in
nutrition-related diseases like diabetes and
obesity - Improved Local Economy Increased number of
viable farms, processors and stores contributing
to the local economy - Self-reliant, Food-Secure Community Decreased
number of people needing emergency food
provisions and increased consumption of local
foods in all parts of the community.