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[lofo List] Hard row to hoe: Can local food movement save farmers?



http://www.readthehook.com/stories/2009/03/05/COVER-Farm-amal.aspx

Hard row to hoe: Can local food movement save farmers?
By COURTENEY STUART

Published March 5, 2009 in issue 0809 of the Hook

Forget Pop Tarts and Cocoa Krispies. These days, some children are  
more likely to beg for "Toaster Pastries" or "Koala Crisp," the  
organic versions of the popular Kellogg's treats. Locally grown food,  
too, has exploded out of its niche at the City Market and at stores  
like Rebecca's Natural Foods and is now popping up on shelves in  
places such as Reid's Super Save Market, where it once would have  
seemed as out of place as Donald Trump at a flea market.

The increase in supply and the ease with which shoppers can now fill  
their baskets with locally grown and raised veggies and meats is  
thanks to growing consumer awareness of the benefits such local food  
provides not only for health but also for the environment and for our  
now tanking economy.
According to the Piedmont Environmental Council, the average distance  
food travels before landing on dinner plates is a tortuous 1,500  
miles. And according to the Virginia Cooperative Extension, if every  
Virginia household spent just $10 a week on locally produced food, it  
would add a whopping billion dollars to the state's economy every year.
To help bring this about, several new organizations are working to  
connect farmers to consumers, and "beyond organic" farmer Joel  
Salatin, founder of Polyface Farms in Swoope, Virginia, will be  
speaking at two upcoming events aimed at increasing awareness among  
Central Virginia landowners and food consumers of the value of  
contributing to the local food chain.
"There are so many opportunities for farmers right now," Salatin  
insists.
But despite Salatin's optimism-- and the clear demand for local food  
in Charlottesville-- one local cattle farmer says her way of life has  
gone from hard to nearly impossible in Albemarle County, where  
pastureland is becoming scarce, thanks to development and to new  
landowners who seem more interested in manure-free country getaways  
than in living alongside the day-to-day operations of a working  
livestock farm.

The end of a way of life?
Her Ford 350 bouncing over ruts as she heads toward a herd of  
peacefully grazing black angus cattle, 42-year-old Connie Hicks throws  
her head back and laughs as a reporter clinging to the hay-rolling  
apparatus on the back of the lurching truck shrieks and is nearly  
thrown to the ground.

"You gotta be tough to be a farmer," Hicks shouts through the open  
rear window of the truck's cab. She should know: a fourth generation  
farmer, Hicks grew up tending cattle, mending fences, and rolling hay  
with her father and grandfather on more than a dozen farms in  
Albemarle County. She continued to work with her father, Conrad Hicks,  
as an adult, planning to take over the operation when he retired.
That day came sooner than anyone expected, when Conrad fell off a  
baler onto a concrete slab two years ago at age 75 sustaining a life- 
altering head injury that coincided with the onset of Alzheimer's.
Although her father still enjoys spending time in the fields with his  
daughter, the family farming operation fell to Hicks, who has worked  
alone since then to manage a herd of more than 200 cattle and had  
hoped to eventually pass the family farming tradition along to her 8- 
year-old son, Gage.
But life as she knows it may soon end: the lease on a 500-acre tract  
in Free Union-- the Hicks' last remaining farm-- is up at the end of  
April, and Hicks, despite her family's long farming history in this  
area, has been unable to secure a new lease despite an increasingly  
desperate search.
"I'm going to have to sell them all," says Hicks, all traces of  
laughter erased as she tosses hay to about two dozen cows and calves  
milling around her in the field. "I've raised them all since they were  
babies," she says softly. "It's devastating."
If life as a farmer has always been hard, these days, says Hicks, it's  
brutal. Land prices in Albemarle have skyrocketed since her childhood,  
making it impossible for most cattle farmers who haven't inherited a  
farm to purchase their own land. Development has steadily gobbled land  
once leased to raise livestock. On any drive along meandering county  
roads, there are clues hinting at the agricultural history of the land  
in the names of the new developments: Cory Farm, Bundoran Farm,  
Blandemar Farm Estates. Despite the F-words, there are no cows on  
these tracts.

Not alone
Hicks isn't the only cattle farmer who has struggled to find land in  
the county. Ramona Huff, owner of Gryffon's Aerie, says she feared  
she'd have to shut her grass-fed beef business down when she lost her  
lease in 2007.
"We looked for about eight months," says Huff, a former advertising  
exec who turned cattle farmer in 1999 with the goal of supplying   
"superior" grass-fed beef.
"We were out there saying, 'We don't want a free ride. We will pay top  
dollar,'" Huff recalls. "Even saying that, it was still really hard to  
find."
Fortunately, Huff and her husband, Collins, connected with the owners  
of Mount Air Farm, another grass-fed cattle business on Brown's Gap  
Turnpike past White Hall.
"They'd used our bull a couple of years," says Huff. "When they  
decided to close down their operation, they said, why don't you move  
the whole shooting match?"
An added benefit of the move was Mount Air's already established on- 
site market, which is open on Saturdays. Huff says beef business has  
been brisk.
"People are willing to come out here," she says. "People don't mind  
the inconvenience."
Huff believes her good fortune in finding a new lease-- and in having  
people willing to come to her-- stems from the care with which she  
approaches farming.
"Farmers have to take pride in what they do," she says. "I'm conscious  
of where I drive my tractor when it's muddy. I'm very conscious of  
where I feed cattle in winter because I'm renting someone else's land."
As for selling her meat on site, she says, "People expect things to be  
beautiful. They don't want to see a lot of crud laying around."
Huff's advice mirrors that of Joel Salatin, author of books on farming  
and owner of Polyface Farms, where he has an "open door" policy,  
welcoming visitors to see any facet of his farming operation during  
operating hours Monday through Saturday.
Salatin says the key to convincing landowners to allow farming is to  
show them the benefit.
"Right now," he says, "I can't imagine one of our landlords kicking us  
off because all of them are so pleased with the healing that they see  
on the land."
Among signs of healing, he says, are "thicker, greener grass, fewer  
weeds, no thistles," traits he attributes to "very intensive managed  
grazing" in which he moves cattle regularly and lets his chickens  
follow behind to aerate the manure to help fertilize.
Salatin's success would be hard, if not impossible, to rival. His  
meat-- beef, pork, chicken and rabbit-- is featured on a slew of area  
restaurant menus, and he scored a national first: getting local meat  
into a fast food restaurant, when Chipotle Grill in the Barracks Road  
Shopping Center began using his pork last year.
Like Huff, who will share the stage with him at a March 7 panel  
discussion on farming at PVCC, Salatin says land owners need to be  
taught "not to be fearful of farmers."
At the upcoming events, he says, "I'm going to be talking about things  
to look for in a farmer, both character and whatever his home base is,  
so that you as a landowner aren't getting a pig in a poke." (The  
second Salatin event will be held March 14 at the Montessori Community  
School on Pantops. See box for details.)
Among criteria landowners should use when seeking out a farming  
tenant, says Salatin: "look at their fields and see if that's the way  
you'd like your place to look, including looking at their fences. Look  
at their animals, look at what they're currently doing."
Beyond that, he says, landowners should educate themselves about  
"landhealing farming" so they can be more discerning about the farmers  
they rent to.

Farm to table
While Salatin and Huff are already succeeding in getting their product  
to market, two new organizations have sprung up specifically to  
address small farmers' need to reach consumers in a broader and more  
consistent way.
The Local Food Hub is the brainchild of local wine grape-grower Marisa  
Vrooman and Kate Collier, owner of the Feast! gourmet shop on West  
Main Street. The Food Hub will be a food distribution service that  
Collier hopes will solve one of the main difficulties faced by small  
farmers: providing a stable clientele that the farmer can count on. By  
carrying $3 million liability insurance-- and by providing food  
"traceability"-- the Local Food Hub will meet requirements of large  
food distributors and institutions like UVA, which recently announced  
an ambitious plan to increase its portion of locally grown food to 25  
percent in its food services division.
"The Food Hub will be a large customer to these farms," providing some  
financial stability, says Collier, who hopes that level of support  
will help younger people enter the farming industry.
"It's time to get a new generation going," says Collier, who cites a  
Piedmont Environmental Council datapoint that the average age of  
Albemarle County farmers is 59.
Collier recently lost a battle to win a portion of a $250,000 fund  
designated by Albemarle County for economic development. Although the  
County rejected the Hub's appeal, the publicity generated by the  
effort served a purpose.
"We've raised $165,000," exclaims Collier, who says that amount puts  
the nonprofit Hub within $65,000 of its stated $230,000 needed to  
launch in June.
Ted Corcoran and Neal Halvorson-Taylor are also getting in on the  
local food action with the web-based local food business Virginia's  
Bounty. Like the Food Hub, Virginia's Bounty asked the County for  
funding assistance, and was rejected. Their start-up costs, however,  
are significantly lower-- requiring mostly labor to get an interactive  
website up and running and to recruit farmers.
The site-- virginiabounty.com-- will allow consumers to order   
specific foods and quantities from local farmers, who will sell their  
wares through the site, and then Virginia's Bounty will arrange for  
pick-up spots around town.
Collier and Halvorson-Taylor both say there is plenty of room in the  
market, and that neither new business should interfere with Community  
Supported Agriculture outfits like Horse & Buggy and The Best of  
What's Around, just two of the half dozen or so CSAs which provide a  
weekly dose of produce for an up-front fee.
Virginia's Bounty, says Halvorson-Taylor, is "for those who don't want  
to make the upfront investment, who may not be around here every week."

Land-locked
These connecting services will be a boon to farms that have a ready-to- 
eat product to sell. But for Hicks and other cattle farmers who don't  
have their own beef label like Polyface or Gryffon's Aerie, the  
efforts won't help-- at least not immediately.
Hicks-- like most Virginia cattle farmers-- makes her money by selling  
calves at auction. Those calves are sent to feedlots or to larger  
farms, where most are grain-fed and then slaughtered for meat.
"I really want to start my own label," says Hicks. But without a farm  
on which to raise the cattle, there's little hope of that dream being  
realized.
Finding land is not the only problem Hicks is facing. After her  
father's injury, Hicks' mother wanted to sell her the remaining farm  
property including tractors, hayloading trucks, and balers. Hicks says  
that the value of the property is approximately $500,000, and her  
mother needed only $100,000 to pay off the remaining loans.
"Farm Credit turned me down," says Hicks, who says the rejection was  
based on her tax return showing meager earnings and that they ignored  
the collateral she offered, including the equipment and the equity in  
her own house. "They don't help farmers," Hicks insists.
Representatives from Farm Credit did not immediately return the Hook's  
call.
Dan Maupin is another Albemarle County cattle farmer feeling the  
pinch. At 83, Maupin is still working his farm full time, but he says  
it gets harder to make a living year by year.
"Fertilizer is way up," he says, while the price of calves has  
declined over the last year from a high of about $1.65 a pound to the  
current rate of about $1.
He's also afraid that Albemarle County might do away with some of the  
Land Use Taxation, which grants a reprieve to landowners who use their  
property for some type of agricultural business.
"That would be really hard to take," he says, of the potential soaring  
cost in land taxes.
According to County Assessor Bob Willingham, the county has 5,000  
properties in Land Use, which translates into a loss of millions of  
dollars in potential tax revenues. But despite regular discussions at  
budget time, Albemarle County Supervisor Ann Mallek says the Board has  
no intention of getting rid of land use taxation. It did, however,  
recently pass an ordinance requiring "revalidation" of land use every  
two years. Property owners who are enrolled in the Land Use program  
will be required to provide proof of how the farm has been used.
Hicks points out that Land Use-- while a boon to farmers-- also  
provides the perfect justification for wealthy estate owners to reject  
livestock operations. By rolling hay that is sold to feed livestock,  
the owners of plush estates can qualify for the same tax break as if  
they had cattle on their land.
That, says Hicks, is what happened at Jumping Branch Farm on Garth  
Road across from Foxfield where Hicks and her father kept cattle for  
years.
"I cannot speak too highly of them," says former Jumping Branch owner  
Elizabeth Hamilton of Connie and Conrad Hicks, who ran cattle on her  
land until she sold the farm following the death of her husband,  
Howard Hamilton.
The new owner of Jumping Branch, Ted Weschler, (a part-owner of this  
newspaper) says the decision to shun cattle was family preference.  
Ironically for someone who benefits from Land Use, he questions the  
wisdom of the County offering him such a tax break, even as he takes  
advantage of it.
"I don't consider myself a farmer," he says, "and to get the benefit  
as though I'm a farmer doesn't strike me as right."
Right or not, Weschler's far from the only estate owner getting the  
tax break for rolling hay. Hicks says CNET founder Halsey Minor and  
author John Grisham are two others. (Neither returned the Hook's calls  
by presstime.)
Hicks, for one, wishes some of them would reconsider their position  
and invite her and her cows onto their land.
"Farming's in my blood," she says. "It's all I've ever wanted to do."
If she doesn't find land soon, she says, she'll be facing a very  
different future than the one she had planned for herself and her son,  
following the seasons and living close to the land.
"I guess I could work at Target?" she ponders, before the reality of  
that thought seems to sink in, and she exhales: "Oh, God, I don't know  
what I'll do."