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Brief Fox News coverage of Southeast Area Farmers’ Market

FOX 17 News stopped by the market Saturday. They showed a brief clip on their nightly news and posted this article on their website.

Farmers Market Season Almost Over

FOX 17 News10:49 p.m. EDT, October 22, 2011

 
Grand Rapids—

It’s about bringing the farmers market to the neighborhoods.  The Southeast Area Farmers Market was held out in Garfield Park, Saturday.

The small group of gardeners and growers is out in the community every week to sell produce and educate people on eating and growing fruits and veggies.  On Fridays, they are at Gerald Ford Middle School in Grand Rapids.  Then on Saturdays, they move to Garfield Park.

The season is coming to an end soon though. the last day will be Novemeber 12th.

This entry was posted on October 24, 2011, in Press.

Southeast Area Farmers’ Market Vendor Spotlight

One of the challenged of getting the new  Southeast Area Farmer’s Market locations off the ground has been recruiting vendors to sell chemical free produce. Several vendors have stepped forward to make these markets a success this past summer.  Let’s shine the spotlight on two of them today.

Robert Tolbert Jr. perfects his display of fresh, family grown produce.

Robert Tolbert Sr. has come to both market locations all season long. Mr. Tolbert grows his produce in a plot in the Hillcrest Community Garden and at a garden on his own property. Last Saturday at Garfield Park, his wife, Jeannie, and son, Robert Jr. were on hand selling the bountiful turnips, collard greens, tomatoes, peppers, giant green beans, corn and peppers.

Jeannie stays out of the garden but helps out by washing, bundling and displaying the crop at market—and she does a beautiful job. “My husband, he loves to see things grow,” Mrs. Tolbert says.

“Fresh grown produce is hearty and yummy,” says Mrs. Kass.

The Kasses bring produce from their half-acre, chemical free garden in Kent City. Bob Kass grew up in the Garfield Park neighborhood so enjoys getting back to his roots, so to speak. “We got more than we can eat so we’ve been giving produce away to the food pantry. If we sell some, too, then we can replant next year,” Mr. Kass says.

Last week, the Kasses brought several varieties of Kale, tomatoes, sweet corn, apples and herbs to market. “Fresh grown produce is hearty and yummy,” says Mrs. Kass. “I can eat as much of it as I want and it doesn’t matter—I  lost 80 pounds by eating fruits and vegetables instead of other fattening foods!“

Just a reminder

You can use your Project Fresh, Senior Project Fresh, WIC or Kent County Health Department coupons for produce at either Southeast Area Farmers’ Market location. We also accept EBT/Bridge Cards and participate in the Double Up Food Bucks program. The market locations are:

  • Fridays 5 to 7 p.m.  At Gerald R. Ford Middle School.
  • Saturdays 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Garfield Park.

Both Southeast Area Farmers’ Market locations are open through Nov. 6.

Southeast Area Farmers’ Market: Big Changes, Big Plans

Southeast Area Farmers’ Market: Big Changes, Big Plans The Grand Rapids Times 7-15-2011 article source http://www.grtimes.com/archive2011/7_15_2011.asp

The Southeast Area Farmers’ Market has made some big changes this year, changes that we hope make shopping there more convenient for our neighbors.

For one, the market has moved ― and not to one new location but two.

Both locations do more than sell fresh local produce, with an emphasis on our neighborhood backyard growers.

Each provides food samples, kids’ activities and educational resources to help you and your family grow better health.

The Garfield Park market is open Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

The women of Our Kitchen Table (OKT) will stage healthy food cooking demos here so you can learn how to prepare fresh foods that are new to you and how to prepare favorite foods more nutritiously.

This market location accepts Bridge/EBT card, Project Fresh certificates and Double Up Food Bucks. For every $2 spent on fresh Michigan-grown fruits and vegetables purchased with a Bridge/EBT card, customers receive $2 worth of Double Up Food Bucks tokens to buy more food. Bridge/EBT card users can receive up to $20 in Double Up Food Bucks tokens per visit per farmer’s market daily.

The Gerald R. Ford Middle School market is open on Fridays from 5 to 7p.m. At the market OKT has installed raised bed garden plots where you can learn how to grow your own food in your own backyard, in containers on your deck or in community and communal gardens. Customers can purchase fresh food at Gerald R. Ford Middle School with cash and debit cards.

Why is OKT in the farmers’ market business? Well, not to make money. OKT believes that everyone, no matter their income level, has the right to healthy, whole foods. Access to good, healthy, local food is not only about consumers having choices and urban growers and farmers having places to sell. Access to healthy food is an environmental justice and food security issue. Come to the markets and chat with OKT and with our vendors. You’ll find that they are primarily neighborhood urban growers who share a consciousness about the environment their food is grown in as well as how it is grown.

OKT encourages and offers soil testing to our market vendors. Also, we supplied our vendors with a “grub box,” a variety of food plants organically grown by OKT, to add to their gardens. The Southeast Area Farmer’s Market is not the largest farmers’ market in town. But that’s no reason not to stop by, chat with the vendors and staff and help build a healthier community around fresh, whole foods

Southeast Area Farmers’ Market: Big Changes, Big Plans The Grand Rapids Times 7-15-2011 article source http://www.grtimes.com/archive2011/7_15_2011.asp

This entry was posted on July 15, 2011, in Press.

Empty Molesta Greenhouses Grow Food Plants for Grand Rapids Neighbors

Empty Molesta greenhouses grow food plants for Grand Rapids neighbors

 

June 13, 2011 Grand Rapids, MI–The women of Our Kitchen Table, a local grass roots environmental justice group, had a dream. They wanted to impact food security by providing resources to area residents who wanted to grow and share food. A grant from the W. K. Kellogg Foundation provided the seed money—but it was a local philanthropist “rolling up his sleeves and getting his hands dirty” that helped OKT’s Food Diversity Project sprout.

Dave Molesta, who operated Molesta Floral until it closed in 2010, invited Grand Valley State University’s Sustainable Agriculture Project to use Molesta’s empty greenhouses. The GVSU project extended the invitation to OKT.

Though flowers had been the wholesale grower’s focus for the past several decades, it originally provided Grand Rapids area residents with produce year ‘round. That all changed after World War II, when large-scale growers from across the country could ship larger varieties of produce at lower prices.

In a sense, Dave Molesta has gotten back to his roots. The greenhouses began growing 15,000 food plants in March. In addition to granting open access to the greenhouse space, Molesta provided planting containers, heat and water. He also allowed soil to be tested at the greenhouse site to support the effort to grow fresh and safe produce.

Community residents joined in events hosted at the Molesta greenhouse and another greenhouse site where they learned how to plant seeds, maintain seedlings and prepare for planting. In addition, two small urban farmers began growing produce to be sold at the Southeast Area Farmers Market.

 

Dave Molesta really helped us get our project off the ground this spring,” says Lisa Oliver King of OKT. “All the food plants have been donated out to various community gardeners providing food to families in need, low-income backyard growers and GRPS schools with food gardens. Now that people have these heirloom, organic plants in their gardens, they will be able to save the seeds and propagate their own food plants for years to come.”

OKT also provided plants to others with limited resources, for example, Well House, housing alternative for the homeless, and Clancy Street Church community garden space, where 18-low-income families grow and share food.

It was great to connect with Our Kitchen Table, with the work they do, to get healthy food to Well House community as well as the broader community,” said Judi Buchman, director of Well House. “The plants got us going when we were busy with lots of other tasks … It helped remind us:  it’s time!”

 

 

0ur Kitchen Table is a non-profit, grassroots community activist organization working for environmental justice and food security in Grand Rapids area urban communities.

Established in 1930, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation supports children, families and communities as they strengthen and create conditions that propel vulnerable children to achieve success as individuals and as contributors to the larger community and society. Grants are concentrated in the United States, Latin America and the Caribbean, and southern Africa. For further information, please visit the Foundation’s website at http://www.wkkf.org.

The South East Area Farmers’ Market is open for the 2011 season!

The South East Area Farmers’ Market is open for the 2011 season!
On Wednesday, the South East Area Farmers’ Market began at the Gerald R Ford Middle School from 5pm to 7pm.  Vendors sold herbs, greens, homemade crafts, and vegetable plants!  Community folks danced line dances and it was a festive atmosphere!

Come join us this Wednesday, May 25th, for more transplants for your garden, more spring greens to eat, and more dancing with your neighbors!

Saturday opened the market at Garfield Park from 9am to 1pm.  It was a beautiful day to stroll the park and shop with neighborhood vendors.  There were mustard greens, kale, herbs, lettuce, spinach, and homemade salves, and soaps for sale!  Many plants were donated to neighborhood families!  Join us on June 4th for the second Garfield Park market!

Please check out the “Farmers Market” tap under “Food Diversity” for a full list of farmers market days. or follow this link Farmers Markets

For more pictures please follow this link https://oktjustice.org/2011/05/21/the-southeast-farmers-market-opening-day-pictures/

[The 2011 Southeast Farmers Market is sponsored by a partnership between Greater Grand Rapids Food Systems Council, Kent County Health Department and Our Kitchen Table]

Our Kitchen Table receives grant to expand local food security projects

article pulled from: http://griid.org/2011/01/19/our-kitchen-table-receives-grant-to-expand-local-food-security-projects/

JANUARY 19, 2011

by stelleslootmaker

A local grass roots nonprofit working for environmental justice and urban food security, Our Kitchen Table (OKT) has received a $360,000 grant “to strengthen the capacity of southeast urban neighborhood residents in Grand Rapids, Michigan, to address food and environmental health disparities impacting vulnerable children, families, and individuals by creating resident owned gardens and managed Healthy Food Demonstration Sites.” The grant will extend over a three-year period with the goal of neighborhood residents taking over the work for themselves. 

OKT has been addressing environmental justice and food security issues in the Grand Rapids area for the past several years. The grant will expand their

Urban gardeners learn about compost at one of OKT’s “Steps to Growing Healthy Urban Food Gardens” workshops last summer. 

programs to many more area residents with the hope of making a real and lasting impact on people’s health in Grand Rapids’ urban neighborhoods.

OKT’s objectives for the grant funded project include planting and maintaining 100 neighborhood-based food gardens. OKT focuses on helping individuals and families plant those gardens in their own spaces. Education and training components will teach adults and children how healthy foods help manage both diet related illnesses (diabetes, heart disease and obesity) and environmental health issues (asthma and lead poisoning).

Twenty trained community Urban Fellows/Peer Educators will teach even more community members about food self-reliance, food security and having access to a nutritional neighborhood-based food system. Other objectives include establishing resident owned and managed Healthy Food demonstration sites and training both adults and children how to safely address environmental hazards associated with food gardening.

The project will focus on four Grand Rapids neighborhoods: Eastown, Baxter, SECA and Garfield Park. These neighborhoods have been identified as being at highest risk for food insecurity as well as environmental health issues, including lead poisoning.

In 2010, OKT offered the Grand Rapids community many educational and gardening opportunities including a food summit, food garden walking and bicycle tours and a series on healthy urban food gardening.

Anyone interested in starting a food garden or engaging with the program can contact Lisa Oliver King for more information at lisak1@aol.com.

article pulled from: http://griid.org/2011/01/19/our-kitchen-table-receives-grant-to-expand-local-food-security-projects/