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» Go to news mainMedia Highlight: Crops to campus
From Thursday's edition of The Coast, Halifax's weekly.
When it comes to student life, food choices can be limiting. Questions of cost, health and even ethics can affect what you choose to put onto your plate. But a group of people at ±«Óãtv are looking to change all that.
"Food is important. It's that simple," says Krista Holman, a member of The Loaded Ladle, a group that started in 2008 as Campus Action on Food, a project of the Nova Scotia Public Interest Research Group. In 2010, the non-profit co-op of students and community members was reborn as The Loaded Ladle. Its mandate is to provide non-corporate, affordable and fresh food to as many people as possible. Part of that includes providing information and education around food and food policies.
Enter Camelia Frieberg.
Frieberg runs Watershed Farms on the south shore. She had heard about the student organization and was impressed by its ideals...Frieberg approached the Ladle about starting up a Community Supported Agriculture program. "I had this idea that I wanted to reach more students on the campus and make it easy for them and the right choice," says Frieberg. For Holman and the rest of the Ladle's members, it was a great fit. "Students seem to be interested in both the model of CSA, as well as having in-season vegetables delivered on site," she says. "It's kind of like breakfast in bed."
...
Frieberg is not alone in her farming endeavours. Kevin Moran is a fourth-year plant science student at ±«Óãtv's agricultural campus in Truro. He runs The Chef's Garden, which provides food to the school's cafeteria. Although Moran loves providing for the students at his own campus, the reach of the Chef's Garden---as well as its financial possibilities ---was limited.
"I pitched the idea of a CSA to help make money for the Garden in a direct marketing way," he explains. "It makes the project sustainable."
For Frieberg, working with Moran is a great match. "I like the idea of a multi-farm CSA, so everyone contributes what they do best." And with the recent merger of the Nova Scotia Agricultural College and ±«Óãtv, Moran saw this as an opportunity for both campuses to get involved
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