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116: Dan Guenthner of Common Harvest Farm on Gumption, Community, CSA, and One Red Wheelbarrow

4/27/2017

1 Comment

 
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Dan Guenthner of Common Harvest Farm, along with his wife Margaret Pennings, has been a CSA farmer since before CSA was even really a thing – 1990, to be exact. With twelve acres of vegetables and a 200-member CSA in Osceola, Wisconsin, just outside of Minnesota’s Twin Cities, Dan and Margaret take a thoughtful approach to how they engage with their CSA membership, the farming community, and their farm’s land and production systems.

Dan reflects on the CSA movement, and how it has grown and changed since its inception, and the challenges that even CSA farms with a deep focus on community have faced as local and organic produce has become more widely available. We discuss some of the ways that Dan and Margaret have built their CSA on community organizing and shared values in an effort to break out of the marketing paradigm, and how they are working to get even deeper into this heart of the CSA movement now.

Dan also digs into how he has built the production system at Common Harvest Farm, including a foray into draft animal production, and the investment strategy that has supported the development of a highly efficient farm, in terms of both labor and energy use.

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Quotes from the Show

We stumbled our way into [the CSA] movement in a way by being in the right place at the right time and connecting with a group of people that had this deep desire to take ownership of their food and become more involved in how it was growing, where it was growing.

People really do want to be invited to be part of something. I think maybe in many ways, we're not asking enough of our members.

For us, this is about values and this is about relationships and it was about community.

If you're trying to fill up your CSA for this year, you're really thinking in the wrong term.

I find it interesting today how many CSA farmers use the word "customer" when they talk about their community rather than members. That may seem like an insignificant thing. People are like, "What's the difference?" It represents two entirely different orientations. One is more of a market orientation and one really comes out of a different approach to build on this community organizing and social justice and values, values orientation.

The one thing that we [as CSA farmers] can consistently do better than almost any other type of orientation to organic food is based upon relationship, that we can connect, we can be connected, we can be vulnerable, we can offer this authentic, this really authentic connection and experience.

When you think about all of the anonymity in the industrial food system, it's basically built on obfuscation and disconnection.

[Regarding farming with horses] In the end, I thought, "If maybe this romantic notion of being deeply connected
to nature is jeopardizing our livelihood here, then I really have to think twice about that."
​

Personally, I just think that's one of the most enjoyable parts about organic farming in general is that it's not prescriptive. We're not following this pre-determined set of rules or something, it really is about observation and experimentation and that takes a lot of different forms.

Show Links

Dan discussed the CSA Charter at length. 

Transcript

The transcript for this episode is brought to you by Earth Tools, offering the most complete selection of walk-behind farming equipment and high-quality garden tools in North America; and by Rock Dust Local, the first company in North America specializing in local sourcing and delivery of the BEST rock dusts and biochar for organic farming. Additional funding for transcripts provided by North Central SARE, providing grants and education to advance innovations in Sustainable Agriculture.

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1 Comment
Maressa VValliant link
4/27/2017 11:34:10 am

This is everything. I cannot thank you enough, Dan Guenthner & Chris Blanchard for sharing this perspective, passion, and commitment to community. I am looking for ways to be a voice in my own beautiful community to encourage this type of relationship with our farming community, and this is so very enriching and helpful!

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