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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for CISA - Community Involved In Sustaining Agriculture
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220301T100000
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DTSTAMP:20260522T132833
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UID:39038-1646128800-1646134200@www.buylocalfood.org
SUMMARY:Best Practices: SNAP and welcoming low-income customers at your farm
DESCRIPTION:Making Local Food More Accessible: Welcoming SNAP & WIC/Senior Coupons\, and All Who Use Them\nPart 2: Best Practices – SNAP and welcoming low-income customers at your farm\nYour farm accepts SNAP (or you’re working on setting up SNAP)\, but how to make the most of this tool and have it be a success?  Join us to hear a panel of farmers on how they incorporate accepting SNAP at their business in a way that makes clients feel welcome and keeps customers coming back. \nAttendees will come away with context for how other farms effectively incorporate SNAP at their business and ideas for best practices they can use themselves. The panel will cover how accepting SNAP affected their business\, how they effectively promote that they accept SNAP\, how they do outreach to low-income customers\, and how they tailor their offerings in ways that meet their customers demands and expectations. There will also be time for questions. \nCISA and Berkshire Grown will also be sharing other resources attendees can use to make the most of the SNAP program at their business. This workshop is co-hosted by CISA and Berkshire Grown. \nRegister here!\n\nPanelists: \nEmily Chiara of Just Roots\nJust Roots is a nonprofit farm that has been accepting SNAP since 2015. Just Roots runs one of the the largest SNAP CSAs in the state and serves hundreds of SNAP customers each year. Emily is the Community Engagement Coordinator at Just Roots and has ample experience in doing outreach to customers and partners around SNAP and HIP. \nHarrison Bardwell of Bardwell Farm\nHarrison had Bardwell Farm became authorized to accept SNAP in the spring of 2021. They now accept SNAP at their farmstand and at the multiple farmers’ markets they attend throughout the year. Bardwell Farm is a twenty five acre diversified vegetable farm in Hatfield\, MA. \nMeg Bantle and Laura Tupper-Palches of Full Well Farm\nMeg Bantle (they/she) is a sixth generation farmer in the Berkshires with eight years of organic vegetable growing and gardening experience under their belt\, including three seasons of co-owning and managing Full Well Farm. They grew up on the farm property in Adams and are excited to be growing food for the community that they grew up in. Laura Tupper-Palches (she/her) is a co-owner and manager of Full Well Farm in Adams\, MA. After briefly living in a food desert in New York city she became interested in food security which\, combined with her passion for nature\, led her to agriculture. She had several years of organic farming experience before starting Full Well Farm with Meg Bantle in 2019. Going into the fourth season at Full Well\, she is focusing on soil health and furthering community connections. \nSharon Wyrrick of Many Forks Farm\nMany Forks Farm is in Clarksburg\, Massachusetts. With 2 acres in cultivation of vegetables\, berries\, flowers and herbs\, the farm has an 85-member household CSA and sells produce through other direct-to-consumer markets and on-farm sales. The farm has taken SNAP for its CSA shares and other eligible farm products since 2013\, is a HIP certified vendor\, and participates in other programs and community collaborations supporting food access such as WIC/Senior Coupons\, Berkshire Grown/Share the Bounty\, and Hoosac Harvest.
URL:https://www.buylocalfood.org/event/best-practices-snap-and-welcoming-low-income-customers-at-your-farm/
LOCATION:MA
CATEGORIES:CISA Events,Farmer Events,CISA Workshops for Businesses
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220322T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220322T193000
DTSTAMP:20260522T132833
CREATED:20220309T204626Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220310T134349Z
UID:39588-1647972000-1647977400@www.buylocalfood.org
SUMMARY:Water water everywhere and not a drop to drink - Adapting your farm to New England's changing precipitation patterns
DESCRIPTION:Join Christine Hatch\, UMass water resources and climate change extension specialist\, and Joshua Faulkner\, who coordinates UVM’s Farming and Climate Change Program\, for this webinar to kick off CISA’s first annual Adapting Your Farm to Climate Change workshop series. This year’s series focuses on water management in times of too much or too little water\, both scenarios that are increasingly part of our regional farming system. Learn how local weather patterns\, waterways\, and groundwater sources are changing\, and glean best practices and opportunities for adapting your farm to a changing climate.\n\nThis webinar will be followed by four on-farm workshops and a final wrap-up discussion. Stay tuned for more information about the full series soon.\n\nRegister here!\n\nQuestions? Call Stephen Taranto\, CISA Climate Program Coordinator\, 413-665-7400 ext.17 or email stephen@buylocalfood.org
URL:https://www.buylocalfood.org/event/water-water-everywhere-and-not-a-drop-to-drink-adapting-your-farm-to-new-englands-changing-precipitation-patterns/
LOCATION:Zoom!
CATEGORIES:CISA Events,CISA Workshops for Businesses
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