Please take a look at the information on this exciting seminar. I'm including the basic announcement and then the press release below that. Please consider sharing with your friends, family, and associates, particularly those still deciding whether to register for this seminar.
Thanks!
Ben Grosscup
NOFA/Mass Extension Events Coordinator
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Seminar on Soil Mineral Nutrition with Arden Andersen (Feb. 5-7, 2009)
On February 5-7, 2009, the Northeast Organic Farming Association, Massachusetts Chapter, will host our first Advanced Growers’ Winter Seminar on nutrient density -- a biological approach to farming that has helped many vastly improve yields, significantly decrease disease and insect pressure, and noticeably improve the taste and nutritional content of crops. This approach involves managing the soil so that it contains sufficient biologically available minerals in ratios appropriate for feeding the fungal, bacterial and other soil life communities that are in symbiotic relationships with crop plants.
Come learn a range of diagnostic techniques for discerning which components of the biological system are scarce or excessive and how to shift management choices accordingly to optimize conditions for crop growth. The presenter, Arden Andersen – an agronomist, osteopathic physician, and international leader in the field of biological farming – says that with this approach, big changes are coming in agriculture: Quality standards like nutrient density will gain in importance alongside process standards, such as organic.
Registration
for the seminar is $195. With the NOFA member discount
(applicable for all chapters) and the early-bird discount (must
sign-up before January 17), it is $165. Pre-registration is required and
seminar enrollment is capped at 150 people -- first come, first
served. The seminar will be held in
Barre, MA.
Get
full information, including registration, about this event here:
http://www.nofamass.org/seminars/winterseminar.php
Read
an article recently published in the Northeast's preeminent quarterly
journal on organic growing, The Natural Farmer, that outlines
the approach of biological farming and how the information in
this seminar can help deliver results:
http://www.nofamass.org/seminars/tnfnutrientdensity.php
Direct
questions to:
Ben Grosscup, Event Coordinator,
<ben.grosscup@...>,
413-658-5374.
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PRESS RELEASE FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Ben Grosscup, Extension Events Coordinator
JANUARY 21, 2009 413-658-5374, ben.grosscup@...
ORGANIC FARMERS HOST SEMINAR ON
MAXIMUM NUTRITION IN CROPS
Barre, MA – When more than 100 farmers converge this February in Barre for a 3 day seminar, they'll be focusing on a topic of serious concern to a growing number of consumers: the nutrition and taste of our food. The Northeast Organic Farming Association, Massachusetts Chapter has arranged for the worldwide farmer consultant, Dr. Arden Andersen, to give this intensive seminar to farmers on how they can increase the nutrient density, taste, and yield of their crops.
The approach Andersen teaches is widely known as biological farming. It involves applications to the soil of mineral nutrients such as calcium and phosphorous and a host of trace minerals, including selenium, iodine, and cobalt. Along with the minerals, farmers add inoculations of fungi and bacteria that can be brewed with a simple tank bubbler. The purpose of adding the amendments is to create a robust and healthy biological system in the soil that feeds crops for maximum growth and quality.
Julie Rawson, executive director of NOFA/Mass and co-owner of Many Hands Organic farm says that the nutrition people need really starts in the soil. “The best way we can get the minerals and nutrients we need is through the food we eat. To get those nutrients into the food, though, we've got to tend to the soil.”
In the last 2 years, Rawson has begun implementing biological farming principles on her own Baystate Organic Certified farm. “We've been on a steep learning curve. Implementing new approaches is challenging, but we persist, because we've already started seeing results in our crops. For us, the biological approach expands the meaning of organic to involve both growing food in a way that honors the environment and the farmers as well as measurably enhancing nutrition, appearance, and taste.
“For
us, proper mineralization along with appropriately devised and timely
sprays to our crops of fish and kelp fertilizers, along with inoculants
and micro-nutrients, has brought dramatic results in higher yields and
produce quality. We had not had a decent sweet corn crop, for example,
for a few years. But on distribution day this summer, three CSA members
called that night to tell us it was the best sweet corn they had ever
eaten. We harvested hundreds more pounds of beans off our pole vines
than ever before. One woman told me that she took her three heads of
lettuce and arranged them on a tray and took pictures because they were
so beautiful. At the Garlic and Arts Festival in
Ari Kurtz of Linden Tree Farm and his
wife, Moira Donnell farm 11 acres of leased land in
Derek Christianson of Brix Bounty Farm
in
Ben Grosscup, who is organizing the seminar for NOFA/Mass said that the process of bringing together the farmers from all over the Northeast has been an exercise in community building and self-reliance. “We felt that it was really important that we keep the costs down for this event while also feeding participants well, so instead of catering the event, we're inviting people who can do it to bring the bounty from their winter stores. We're also inviting our members in the vicinity of Barre to open their homes for a few nights to growers coming from out-of-town. Plans are shaping up well, because of the generosity of our members and because they value better nutrition and land stewardship, though we could still use a bit more help with the large number of registrants we’re expecting.”
The
seminar is being sponsored by The Northeast Organic Farming
Association, Massachusetts Chapter, Real Food Campaign, International
Ag Labs, Lancaster Agricultural Products, Pike Agri-Lab Supplies, Inc,
and Lookfar Agricultural Services. The
following have made donations to the seminar: North Country Organics,
Information
on registration and on Arden Andersen is available at
http://www.nofamass.org/seminars/winterseminar.php.
For information on the conference, contact, Ben
Grosscup, 413-658-5374, ben.grosscup@....
Ben Grosscup
Northeast Organic
Farming Association, Massachusetts Chapter
22 High St #1,
Amherst, MA 01002
Home Office: 413-230-3092
Cell: 413-658-5374
ben.grosscup@...
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