Local Foods College Series Provides Opportunity to Learn from Practitioners and Educators 01/09/2012
If you are interested in growing more of your own food or scaling up production to market garden scale, the upcoming Local Foods College is designed for you. The series, which begins on January 24, 2012, will offer an overview of the basics, from planning to soils, fruit and vegetable production and business planning. The series, available via interactive television (ITV) at several locations across northwestern Minnesota, continues on Tuesday evenings through mid-March. Registration is $10 per session or $50 for the entire series. Session topics will include: Whole farm planning, nutrient cycles and interactions; soils and composting; vegetable production and planning a market garden; starting and managing an apple orchard; small fruit production; backyard poultry; and farm business management. For more detailed information or questions, visit www.rsdp.umn.edu/Northwest or call 888-241-0781. The Local Foods College is one aspect of a movement to strengthen local and regional food systems. It encompasses healthy foods for healthy people, stronger demand for healthy local foods, available accessible and affordable healthy local foods, and marketing and policy support for farmers and food producers. To learn more, visit www.localfoods.umn.edu. Add Comment Get a Better Handle on Your Bottom Line – Financial Management During Transition and After We all know that the period of transition to organic can be a financially risky and/or scary time for farmers, and that there is very little “real world” information available about the financial performance and profitability of farms during transition. A project led by researchers at the University of Minnesota is aiming to generate useful information and insights about the transition period. The program offers farm business management education scholarships to transitioning and recently certified (three years or fewer) Minnesota organic farmers, who work 1:1 with a Farm Business Management (FBM) instructor to develop accurate business records, financial statements (e.g., cash flows, projected profitability statements, balance sheets, and risk analysis), and annual farm business analyses. Individual participant information is kept strictly confidential; only summary data averaged across participating farms is made public. Transitioning and recently certified Minnesota field crop and/or dairy farmers are eligible. The scholarships cover up to 90% of this FBM education program, and right now, 22 farmers are involved. In addition to the scholarships, they have a chance to attend workshops, meet other transitioning farmers, get help with business planning, and give other feedback about how the transition is going for them. The Minnesota Department of Agriculture’s Meg Moynihan conducts short intake interviews over the phone; call her direct at 651-201-6616. You can also get more details about the program in a brochure posted at www.mda.state.mn.us/fbm This project is funded by the USDA’s Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative. Meg Moynihan Organic and DIversification Specialist, Minnesota Department of Agriculture |625 Robert Street North | St. Paul, MN 55155 | 651-201-6616; (f) 201-6120 | www.mda.state.mn.us/amd | Alerts & NewsInformation for certified and transitional growers and businesses. ArchivesMarch 2012 CategoriesAll |
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