Tag Archives: CSA

We’re Not a CSA


Been doing a bunch of soul searching since my last post and I wanted to catch you up on a huge breakthrough I had Saturday...

First, let me back up a bit.  After Wednesday's post where I admitted I was worn out and wondered what the heck was wrong, several things happened.  My friend Amy offered to help me wash alpaca fiber, which was so humbling, but such a welcome gift.  Amy's good at it and fast, and turned this huge roadblock in my life into a teensy tiny little speed bump.  Huge problem nearly conquered.  Wow.  I'm still amazed.  That helped me lurch forward here on my end, skirting and prepping even more fiber.  Funny how when the log jam begins to shift, everything starts to flow...  Can't thank you enough, Amy.  You started to help me open my eyes...


Then, I got a call from a new friend, Roni, who just recently bought American Livestock Magazine.  She wants to enlarge the focus of the magazine to include more fiber stuff, and wants to write about our farm, and rare breed sheep, and fiber CSA's.  Wow again.  Roni and her husband stopped by the farm on Saturday and we had a really great visit - we decided we're peas in a pod, as she's a spinner, knitter, alpaca breeder and all around fiber fanatic.  She and her husband were pure delight to spend time with.  Does it get much better?

Anyway, back to my Big Revelation.  I was thinking and thinking before Roni came over, about how to tell her the story of the farm, and how to explain just who we are.  And then it hit me like a bolt:  We're not a CSA, as in "community supported agriculture."  We're an ASC - Agriculturally Supported Community.  I just made up that title and acronym, so don't try to Google it.  Here's what I mean...

We started out being about the fiber - the animals, the processes, the crafts, and the people who are into all that.  But we've grown into primarily a community, held together by the fiber.  It's People Before Product at the LRB.  The fiber is like the engine that drives the life of the community, but the community is the vehicle itself, that takes us where we want to go.


Think about why you love the farm.  Is it because you can't get alpaca fiber or wool fiber or knitting classes anywhere else?  Nope.  Thanks to the internet, and living near a big city, you can get that stuff almost anywhere, with a snap of your fingers.  What makes the farm different?  The people.  Your sisters.  The gifts and passions that each friend brings to the group.  Old friends and new friends, and always another chair for a newcomer.  We have so many different talents and skills and personalities represented that the mosaic or tapestry of our community is breathtaking.  Our community isn't only local - we have friends in the virtual worlds of Ravelry and Facebook and Local Harvest and Meet Up, who depend on this sense of community just as much as the regulars who gather at the LRB on a third or fourth Saturday.  We're here for each other.  And we're here for our wider community, through the generosity and gift-giving of our members.

I pushed the analogy nearly to the limit as I thought about felt and how it's made: wool fibers agitated by hot water or dry needles to interlock together into a seamless fabric.  Kind of like us.  Locked together in friendship through lots of interaction of ideas, fun, trials, victories, and creativity.  And this is so much greater than any dream I have ever dared to dream for the farm.


Now don't panic - not much about the farm will change because of this new vision of who we are - nobody in the pasture will change, the shares will still be there, as will all the fun in the LRB.  The critters you love and the life we document will all still be here.  But this special focus will help me prioritize and make decisions about how to plan for the future with our resources.  Maybe I can stop trying to be all things to all people - a guaranteed meltdown waiting to happen.  No, this new lens will help me see much better where we need to go.

It may be a while before the acronym ASC catches on, but I think we're on the cusp of a very important social construct.  And I'm so happy you're along for the ride with me.  Maybe, everybody else figured this out ages ago and I'm just now finally able to articulate it.  That wouldn't surprise me.  I'm great at missing the forest for the trees.


What do you think?  Is this a better way to describe who we are as the JRF family?

CSA Shares: Mid-June

“This,” as I wrote in an email to our vegetable CSA shareholders, “is the calm before the tomato storm.” I am pretty confident that, by next Monday, we’ll be bringing in the season’s vanguard– baskets of cherry tomatoes.

For now, though, we’re harvesting swiss chard:

French Breakfast Radishes (almost at the end of these):

Red Spring Onions:

and bunches of Lavender,

Mint (which we have in ridiculous quantity),

and Flat-Leaf Parsley.

It’s a gentle mix of colors and flavors– soft reds and purples and greens– that’s still more like spring than full-on summer. But as soon as those tomatoes start rolling in– that’s when we’ll know it’s really summertime.

Vegetable CSA: Week One

After champing at the bit all last week, nearly crazed with eagerness, I went out in the rain on Monday afternoon and pulled

  • 7 lbs of lettuce (15 heads, 5 different varieties),
  • 2 lbs of arugula,
  • 30 beets, and
  • 20 green onions

out of the garden, to make the first delivery for our super-small, super-experimental CSA (photo above is not the half of it!). It was immensely gratifying, after having waited so long. And to be honest, going out there today, you can hardly tell any’s missing.

I was, however, completely surprised by how different it feels to go into the garden to pick food for oneself (“In the mood for beet chips? Let’s go pull a few beets!”) or a friend (“Hey, do you want me to cut you a few heads of lettuce to take home?”), versus how it feels to pick food for other people– I was suddenly terrified that the lettuce would be dirty or wilty and I hadn’t noticed, or that a few holes in the arugula would be deal-breakers. Here’s hoping that I’ll grow out of this odd sort of vanity as the weeks of the season wear on.

JMF Yarn and Fiber CSA Shares are available now!

Spring is in the air, lambs are on the way and my inbox is filling up with emails asking when we will be putting our 2013 Yarn and Fiber CSA Shares go on sale. Well, the wait is over!

This year, we have added a little twist to our Cormo Yarn Shares. For the first time ever, shareholders will be able to chose between worsted weight and dk weight yarn. Shareholders in our Colored Flock will receive a light worsted weight yarn.

As always, shares in our wool harvest are in very limited supply, and most of our previous shareholders re-up their shares every year, and once they’re gone they’re gone. Please don’t wait if you’d like a share.

CSA in Need

If you take a vist to the backyard, you probably figured out that I am a big fan of CSA’s.  On January 12 Pete’s Greens, an organic farm in Vermont suffered a massive barn fire.  The farm has an active CSA program including not only fresh organic vegetables, but also free-range beef and pork and pastured chicken.  As most farms are, it was under insured.  Susan Gibbs at Juniper Moon Fiber farm with her wealth of readers, is hosting a massive  fund-raising event to help cover part of the re-building costs.  In basically a huge giveaway, many artisans large and small have donated items ranging from a set of hand-made soaps, to autographed books, hand-spun yarn even a full share in Susie’s farm.  To donate, or to read more about the project head on over to her blog at Juniper Moon Fiber Farm.

I have donated a hand-knit sweater which I SWEAR will be done by the time the prizes are announced!  The top is my hand-spun yarn, a correidale wool, the body is cormo/mohair blend from Juniper Moon Fiber Farm.  The chest measures about 40 inches around, and it is almost sort of done!

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