P L E N T Y SUMMER 2019 Plenty Summer 2019-joomag copy | Page 20

O n a beautiful late spring afternoon in the Ag Reserve, cars turn into our farm and pull up to the little red house that serves as the distribu- tion site for our Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) shares. Kids pile out and run to visit the pigs or the tractors while adults prepare bags and coolers to carry their shares home. Inside, the little red house smells like freshly picked mint and scallions. Shareholders peruse the colorful crates of vegetables displayed along the walls, the freezer full of sustainably raised meat, and the refrigerator stocked with eggs. They laugh, chat and share recipes, thinking about the week ahead and the meals that they’ll make. Some have brought picnics, and some simply enjoy the chance to sit in the sunshine, away from the sounds of the city, and talk to their farmers. This is what it’s like on any given Thursday at our CSA pickup at Plow and Stars Farm in Montgomery County’s Agricultural Reserve. How CSAs took root Community Supported Agriculture Is a Win-Win for Everyone BY AMANDA CATHER 20 PLENTY I SUMMER GROWING 2019 The CSA model in the United States was created in the mid 1980s, based on a Japanese model known as teikei, by the staff and customers of two small farms in New England. They envisioned CSA as a partnership in which shareholders paid farmers up front at the begin- ning of the season for a portion of the season’s harvest. They intended the relationship between producer and buyer to be long-term and in-depth, with the key ele- ment of shared economic risk taking it beyond simply transactional to something deeper and more power- ful. Its core principles included the elimination of any middleman between farms and customers; ongoing two-way communication about growing practices and customer preferences; and the creation of a balance between a living wage for farmers and farmworkers and affordable and accessible food for members. Today, there are over 5,000 CSA farms in the United States. Somewhere around 20 of these are located in Montgomery County, including our own, Plow and Stars Farm, founded in 2014. My own relation- ship with the CSA model goes back more than 20 years, when I became a shareholder at Vanguarden CSA in Dover, Massachusetts. I loved the food, but I yearned