Food Action Coalition is hiring a student!

The Creston Valley Food Action Coalition (CVFAC) and Farmers’ Market is looking for a dynamic, creative and versatile person to join our team as a Food Action Assistant. This opportunity is available for a high school or post-secondary student and made possible through funding provided by the Columbia Basin Trust. Job will include light physical duties, office, and organizational responsibilities. An interest in agriculture, business, community development, or education is an asset. The student will work out of the Food Action Coalition office and be supplied with a computer.

CVFAC is a network of local food producers, agricultural agencies and concerned citizens working to create awareness about how we can better feed ourselves using local resources in a sustainable, healthy, secure and environmentally sound way. The CVFAC operates a number of initiatives, including the Farmers’ Market, Harvest Share, and the Farm Fresh Guide.

This is a part-time temporary position; starting date is February 6th and ending June 1st, 2012. Wage is $10.25 an hour. Student will work 10-15 hours a week based on their availability, but Saturdays are required throughout month of May. There is a possibility of extended employment with the Farmers’ Market throughout the summer and fall on Saturdays and part-time throughout the week (approximately 15-20 hours a week) at same rate.

Deadline for application is Tuesday, January 31st, 4pm

Send email (attached cover letter and resume) to Len Parkin, President of the Creston Valley Food Action Coalition via email to lenparkin [at] telus.net

Roles & Responsibilities

Student will support ongoing operations of Creston Valley Food Action Coalition in a number of different ways:

  • Phoning, emailing, contacting organization members to update annual local Farm Fresh Guide
  • Assist Farmers’ Market manager with market duties such as distributing promotional materials, and registering market vendors
  • Assisting with Farmers’ Market set up and take down, and hosting the info booth at the market
  • Updating CVFAC and Farmers’ Market social media sites (blog, Facebook, Twitter)
  • Compiling electronic copies of Farmers’ Market radio interviews
  • Student will be supervised by Farmers’ Market manager for duration of contract

Skills required

  • Good communication skills
  • Speak and write English with a high level of proficiency
  • Comfortable using a computer, particularly email and social media, and Microsoft Office suite (specifically Word & Excel)
  • Able to assist with light physical duties, such as setting up tables, chairs and canopies at Farmers’ Market

Download the full posting here: FAC Student Job Posting

Fresh Gourmet Waffles at the Farmers’ Market

Blueberry Patch Gourmet Waffles At The Farmer’s Market – Starting This Saturday!

They’ll be serving new Gourmet Waffles at The Farmer’s Market Saturdays at Morris Flowers Greenhouse – Beginning this Saturday, November 5th at 10:00am to 2:00pm. and continuing until December 17th.

Some of the Waffles they’ll be serving:

  • All Canadian Maple Waffle
  • Strawberry Splendor Waffle
  • Apple Pie Waffle
  • The Ultimate Blueberry Waffle

Come & Enjoy!

Join the folks at The Blueberry Patch for the autumn and Christmas season!
They’ll be serving up delicious lunches and fresh baking.
Enjoy the seasonal decor and country setting! Browse the new giftware arrivals and buy that special gift for someone – or maybe yourself!

Open:
Tuesdays to Saturdays: 10:00am to 4:00pm
Closed Sundays and Mondays

Visit them online at http://www.blueberrypatch.ca

Farmers’ Market Summer Vendors Meeting

The Farmers’ Market committee hosts seasonal vendors meetings, and our next one is coming up Wednesday June 22nd. These are a great chance for new and existing vendors to see the behind the scenes work that happens, register for the upcoming market season, and learn something new!

The upcoming Summer Market season begins in July! The Summer Millennium Park Market runs July – September, every Saturday from 8am – Noon. Our new Mid-Week market is every Wednesday 3:30 – 6:30 at Spirit Square (11th Ave & Canyon Street), July through September. Vendor registration details can be found on our website here.

Here’s the agenda for our vendors meeting:

Farmers’ Market in Full Swing

Welcome to the 2011 Creston Valley Farmers’ Market. As you can see from the photo, the entrance to the market looks different this year:

The market has been open two Saturdays now, from 8 am to 12 noon. On the 14th 28 vendor stalls were in place, with everything from bedding plants, lettuce, mushrooms, herbs, rhubarb — to baking, crafts, furniture, puppies — and Conspiracy Cafe and the Mini Doughnut van!

Remember that THIS SATURDAY is Blossom Festival, and the market will be open different hours: 12 noon to 4 pm. Plenty of other activities will be taking place at Millennium Park as well, so be sure to stop in.

See you there!

Market Safe

The MarketSafe course is going to be offered again at the College of the Rockies, and just in time for the start of the Spring Market Season!

This course is designed for farmers and other food producers who make, bake or grow products to sell at local farmers’ markets, farm gates or other types of temporary food markets. I took the course a few weeks ago, and found it VERY VALUABLE for learning how to properly offer samples, label food products, and display food to customers. It is STRONGLY recommended for anyone who sells food products, including produce, baking, preserves, any anything else food related.

BC Association of Farmers’ Markets says this course will be mandatory in the future, so you may as well take it now!

Dates: Tuesday May 3rd 6:00 – 9:30 and Thursday May 5th 6:00 – 9:30 (course offered over two nights)
Cost: $75 (includes textbook and certification)
Location: College of the Rockies, Room 104

Bonnie McCaull will be teaching the course, and needs to know the numbers by Monday, April 18th in order to have the books on time for everyone. Please contact COTR to register, 250-428-5332 or email creston@cotr.bc.ca.

Fall Farmers’ Market at Morris Greenhouse

The Fall Farmers’ Market at Morris Greenhouse is going swell!

You’ll find:

Beautiful Squashes!

Live Music!

Yummy Baking!

And Gifts!

Come on down and join us 10am – 2pm at Morris Greenhouse, just across from the Kokanee Brewery. There’s still plenty of produce and lots of Christmas gift ideas!

Farmers’ Market Workshops

BC Association of Farmers’ Markets

Workshops to help you grow your business

Investment Agriculture Foundation is pleased to present the next round of workshops in the Canadian Value Chain Network series.

Partnering and Collaboration: How to Approach Retailers
Understanding the strategic challenges faced by food retailers will help participants understand how to establish partnerships with the retail and food service market.
November 25, 2010
8:30 am – 4:30 pm
Abbotsford, Kamloops and Prince George

Cost: $50 (includes lunch)

For more information visit: http://www.iafbc.ca/what_s_new_or_media/workshops.htm

Product Development: Are You Market-Ready?
This module is designed to ensure that those who have new ideas or are in the process of developing or repositioning products or services know the steps to market readiness.

November 26, 2010
8:30 am – 4:30 pm
Abbotsford, Kamloops and Prince George

Cost: $50 (includes lunch)

For more information visit: http://www.iafbc.ca/what_s_new_or_media/workshops.htm

Elizabeth Quinn
BCAFM Manager

Phone: 604-734-9797
Email: manager@bcfarmersmarket.org
www.bcfarmersmarket.org/

Local Lunch – Goat River Mushrooms

Local Lunch, part 17: Couple adds mushrooms to local food palette

 - David, Sylvia and Isabella White in one of the rooms used for growing mushrooms. - Lorne Eckersley

Sylvia and David White find themselves explaining what is going on behind those locked doors before visitors ask. It doesn’t help that fans continually vent air from the sealed rooms. Yes, they have a little grow-operation, but it is mushrooms, the legal kind, that they are growing.

The young couple purchased a seven-acre bed and breakfast property in Erickson in 2006 and moved here from Vancouver the following year.

“We didn’t find Creston so much as it found us,” Sylvia said.

She and her husband had visited the Yukon with the idea of “doing something with accommodations.” Originally, they thought they might open a hostel with another couple of friends.

“It’s by accident, really, that we found this place,” she said.

David’s mom’s best friend lives here and Sylvia learned that the Goat River Bed and Breakfast was for sale. The rest, as she said, is history.

”We love it here,” she said.

She and David wanted to raise their family in a small town, something they both were familiar with. Sylvia was raised in a rural Polish community and David grew up in Port Hardy. Their decision to come to Creston met with their families` approval. Both sets of parents have followed them to the valley, influenced by the birth of their granddaughter, Isabella, 19 months ago.

The decision to try growing mushrooms commercially came out of the fact that their property is in the Agricultural Land Reserve.

”A huge part of it is that we`d like to stay in the valley and we need something else to pay the bills,” Sylvia said.

Their previous vocations — David is a video game artist and Sylvia sold real estate — didn’t prepare them for an agricultural endeavour. But they have friends who grow mushrooms in the Lower Mainland. Sylvia`s dad tried growing mushrooms in his home and it worked, so they decided to give it a try.

The Whites did plenty of Internet research and their supplier has been very supportive, even coming out to Creston to tell them what they needed to do to get going.

The mushrooms are grown in a substrate of alder sawdust, organic bran and limestone flour. The mix is packed into plastic “logs” and inoculated with mushroom spores. The logs are placed on steel shelves in a room that has a tightly-controlled environment. Growers must provide the correct humidity and temperature, and ensure that unwanted competition, like moulds and bacteria, don’t enter the growing medium.

“Our first batch of oyster mushrooms didn’t do so well,” David said. “The information we read said they need 90 to 95 per cent humidity and I was vacuuming a half-inch of water off the floor every couple of days. Eventually mould started to grow, so we tossed out the batch and started again. Now we are using less humidity and trying to find a level that suits the oyster mushrooms best.”

The mushrooms, oyster and shitake varieties at this point, grow out of slits in the plastic bags in a matter of weeks.

Since harvesting their first crop last month, Sylvia and David have had a very positive response. They have sold the mushrooms at the Creston Valley Farmers’ Market, and friends who produce other products will help them sell in Nelson and Cranbrook markets, too.

An application has been made through the Kootenay Local Agricultural Society to have their operation certified through the Kootenay Mountain Grown program. Inspections have been conducted and David and Sylvia are awaiting word that they have been accredited. The inoculated substrate used by Goat River Mushroom Co. is produced by a certified organic grower.

The Whites are currently only at 25 per cent of their production capacity but new shipments of the mushroom logs are on order and will arrive regularly over the coming weeks so that the two rooms (each type of mushroom needs its own environment) will be full and a regular harvest can be assured. If their initial foray into mushroom growing is successful, a new building will be constructed so that production can be increased to meet market demands.

Members of the Creston Valley Food Action Coalition, Sylvia and David said the organization has been very supportive and that it is exciting to be part of an agricultural community that encourages innovation and competition.

“We are really pleasantly surprised with what is going on here,” Syliva said. “With the food action coalition and the College of the Rockies there is so much support — it’s great to be a part of it.”

The Whites are hoping to have a sufficient supply of mushrooms ready for this weekend’s Creston Valley Farmers’ Market at Millennium Park. They have a pamphlet explaining how to store the fungi. It also provides information about the nutritional values of each variety. Oyster mushrooms, surprisingly, contain protein levels nearly equal to that in animal meat.

Sylvia said there is another reason that growing mushrooms appeals to the couple.

“It’s completely waste-free,” she said. “If there are mushrooms left over they can be dried, or cooked and frozen. The substrate makes great compost.”

For more information about the Goat River Mushroom Co., email Sylvia and David at grmushco @ telus.net (remove spaces to email).

Article from Creston Valley Advance.

July 3 Farmers’ Market

Have you tried a kohlrabi?

They’re part of the cabbage family. The Farmers’ Market had four different vendors selling these unique beauties. I just tried my first one last week, and I must say it’s one of the most delicious, refreshing vegetables out there!

To eat them raw, you can peel and slice the bulb, or grate the flesh over a salad. The leaves can be cooked similar to kale or collard greens (saute or steam them). This link has a dozen different ways to try kohlrabi!

Come visit us next week at the Farmers’ Market, 8am – Noon at Millennium Park in Creston!