Moral Conundrum -- The "Bartering Eggs For Coffee" WILL HAPPEN!

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Not to be rude, but buying local has everything to do with conservation, dixygirl. To ship things thousands of miles uses excessive amounts of non-renewable resources.

If I can buy something locally, even if at a slightly higher price, I will... because I know that in the long run it costs me, my community, my country, and the entire environment a lot less. In fact, of all the things we do in this vein (strive for organic, try to buy fair trade, use the car as little as possible, political activism, energy-conserving appliances, yada yada yada..... I think that the "locavore" aspect is probably the most important: raising as much of what we consume ourselves as possible and buying locally as much of the rest as is feasible.
 
This list has always resonated with me. I highlighted seven because it's why I farm about 1,000 hours per week for little or no monetary gain.

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Ten Good Reasons to Shop at the Farmers Market

1. Taste Real Flavors: The fruits and vegetables you buy at the farmers market are the freshest and tastiest available. Fruits are allowed to ripen in the field and brought directly to you - no long-distance shipping, no gassing to simulate the ripening process, no sitting for weeks in storage. This food is as real as it gets -food fresh from the farm.

2. Enjoy the Season: The food you buy at the farmers market is seasonal. It is fresh and delicious and reflects the truest flavors. Shopping and cooking from the farmers market helps you to reconnect with the cycles of nature in our region. As you look forward to asparagus in spring, savor sweet corn in summer, or bake pumpkins in autumn, you reconnect with the earth, the weather, and the turning of the year.

3. Support Family Farmers: Family farmers are becoming increasingly rare as large agribusiness farms and ranches steadily take over food production in the U.S. Small family farms have a hard time competing in the food marketplace. Buying directly from farmers gives them a better return for their produce and gives them a fighting chance in today's globalized economy.

4. Protect the Environment: Food in the U.S. travels an average of 1500 miles to get to your plate. All this shipping uses large amounts of natural resources (especially fossil fuels), contributes greatly to pollution and creates excess trash with extra packaging. Conventional agriculture also uses many more resources than sustainable agriculture and pollutes water, land and air with toxic agricultural by-products. Food at the farmers market is transported shorter distances and grown using methods that minimize the impact on the earth.

5. Nourish Yourself: Much food found in grocery stores is highly processed. The fresh produce you do find is often grown using pesticides, hormones, antibiotics, and genetic modification. In many cases it has been irradiated, waxed, or gassed in transit. All of these practices have potentially damaging effects on the health of those who eat these foods. In contrast, most food found at the farmers market is minimally processed, and many of our farmers go to great lengths to grow the most nutritious produce possible by building their soil's fertility and giving their crops the nutrients they need to flourish in the ground and nourish those who eat them.

6. Discover the Spice of Life ~ Variety: At the Farmers Market you find an amazing array of produce that you don't see in your supermarket: red carrots, a rainbow of heirloom tomatoes, white peaches, stinging nettles, green garlic, watermelon radishes, quail eggs, maitake mushrooms, gigande beans, whole pheasants, and much, much more. It is a wonderful opportunity to experience first hand the diversity (and biodiversity) of our planet, both cultivated and wild!

7. Promote Humane Treatment of Animals: At the farmers market, you can find meats, cheeses, and eggs from animals that have been raised without hormones or antibiotics, who have grazed on green grass and been fed natural diets, and who have been spared the cramped and unnatural living conditions of so many of their brethren on feedlots.

8. Know Where Your Food Comes From: A regular trip to a farmers market is one of the best ways to reconnect with where your food comes from. Farmers themselves sell their produce at the farm stands. Meeting and talking to farmers is a great opportunity to learn more about how food is grown, where it is grown, when it is grown, and why! CUESA's "Meet the Producer" program and our Farmer Profiles that hang at the booths give you even more opportunities to learn about the people who work so hard to bring you the most delicious and nutritious food around.

9. Learn Cooking Tips, Recipes, and Meal Ideas: Few grocery store cashiers or produce stockers will give you tips on how to cook the ingredients you buy, but farmers, ranchers, and vendors at the farmers market are often passionate cooks with plenty of free advice about how to cook the foods they are selling. They'll give you ideas for what to have for supper, hand out recipes, and troubleshoot your culinary conundrums. At the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market, you can attend cooking workshops such as Shop with the Chef - a weekly program featuring seasonal ingredients prepared by leading Bay Area chefs - with free recipes and samples!

10. Connect with Your Community: Wouldn't you rather stroll amidst outdoor stalls of fresh produce on a sunny day than roll your cart around a grocery store with artificial lights and piped in music? Coming to the Farmers Market makes shopping a pleasure rather than a chore. The Farmers Market is a community gathering place - a place to meet up with your friends, bring your children, or just get a taste of small-town life in the midst of our wonderful big city.

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The list came from http://www.cuesa.org/sustainable_ag/issues/10reasons.php. It's something I stumbled upon back when I was a City dweller, sitting at a desk in front of a computer daydreaming as per usual. We started shopping a lot at farmer's markets expanding our circle outward from Seattle, to Mt Vernon, then Ellensburg then Walla Walla. We couldn't get enough of the cool produce, meats, crafts and arts people were doing that we had not yet discovered. Eventually, we wanted a slice of the good life, too, and here we rae.
 
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I love shopping at our local Farmer's Market, but the last few years, the prices have been going up to the point it's almost not worth all the good. It's sad.
 
gretfields, that is an awesome list!!

Have you seen Alice Waters new cookbook The Art of Simple Food?? It's like a "Joy of Cooking" for the sort of mindset we're talking about. HER list is (edited because I don't want to type the whole thing, so I am just typing the headers. She elaborates on each point quite beautifully):

Eat locally and sustainably
Eat Seasonally
Shop at Farmers Markets
Plant a Garden
Conserve, Compost and Recycle
Cook simply, engagind all your senses
Cook together
Eat together
Remember food is precious

Plus, her recipes -though extraordinarily simple- really are great!!!
 
I see the point of the fuel involved in being part of an international community. I never considered that. My way of life and thinking is very internationally focused not regionally focused.


Although I already do ALL those things in that list, I also enjoy cheap international goodies. To me that is what makes life sparkle.


We need different means of transport then. Something other than fuel. Time for scientist to earn their pay.
 
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Just wanted to say that i think this thread is extremely enlightening, and I like the direction it has headed.

Greyfields, your list was great! I don't have anything to contribute, --just wanted to let you know that I have enjoyed reading this!
 
DangerousChicken

Are you moving towards a decision or did I forget it because of the rest of the thread.
 
Oh she just wants the attention so she'll leave us hanging as long as possible!

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