Transportation and logistics for Driftless food

Watching farm trucks pull into the Capital Square farmers market can make one wonder how to get regional food to regional markets more efficiently. Driftless farm and food businesses like Driftless Organics, Morningside Orchard, 5th Season and Organic Valley work hard to figure out how to engage with green transportation options to get their products to Minneapolis, Madison, Milwaukee, even Chicago. Logistics, labor regulations, congestion, docking arrangements make this all very complex.

In April, 2010 CIAS convened a Driftless Food and Farm meeting where some of the participants broke out to discuss transportation and logistics. Compared to some of the other topic groups, this group was at relatively early stages of thinking, planning and doing. People in the region were working independently, but were increasingly ready to organize. This part of the food supply chain offers opportunity to grow and diversify the local economy much like other parts of the chain, but the way forward is less clear than it is with bricks-and-mortar projects. There is a strong interest in maintaining a vision of sustainability in the development of new systems.

The topic group identified these next steps:

  • Who in the region can provide leadership for this work? What is necessary for them to build capacity to take on that leadership? Where do we find that support?
  • What is the most appropriate scale to work with? Local, county, multi-county, state, etc.?
  • Where could the region find industry expertise, if only to understand what questions yet need to be answered in thinking about distribution and logistics?
  • How do we build awareness with farmers about the role that this part of the food supply chain plays and the associated costs / savings of working in moving beyond direct marketing into a wholesale model?

CIAS is pleased to report on progress made to address some of these questions.In 2011 and 2012, CIAS made important connections to freight engineering research center on campus – CFIRE – and supported a group of students to understand what issues we face in moving high-value local food to regional markets. Rosa Kozub, Lindsey Day-Farnsworth, David Nelson, Ben Zeitlow, Peter Allen, and Rachel Murray, along with Teresa Adams, Alfonso Morales, and Ernie Perry all worked with CIAS to crack this nut.

In February 2013, CIAS teamed up with USDA-Agricultural Marketing Service’s transportation division to offer the meeting “Networking Across the Supply Chain: Transportation Innovations for Local and Regional Food Systems“. More than 100 participants – the majority of whom had business interests in this topic – participated and shared their expertise.

June 2014 USDA-AMS and UW-CIAS released a report that describes what happened at this meeting and our best thinking to date on some of the fundamental questions facing the local food movement. To view a summary of the meeting, go to: http://www.scribd.com/doc/231458906  Emergent strategies that we’ve documented include:

  • strengthen regional supply chains by helping like-minded businesses find one another, and provide a venue for business communication and supply chain governance;
  • improve logistics at the region level, recognizing that LTL freight requires terminal markets that can de-aggregate products and TL freight, especially around metro regions, may benefit from innovative infrastructure investments; and
  • investigate multi-modal and dual purpose approaches to increase efficiencies

We now have a nimble team of researchers, staff and students on campus with growing expertise on supply chain development for regional food. Thanks to all who participated in the six Driftless Food and Farm meetings who helped shape subsequent investigations and whose input resulted in research with real-world usefulness.

Next Steps

CIAS, CFIRE, the Center for Coops and the State Smart Transportation Innitiative (a project of another UW campus research center – COWS)  are working together with Organic Logistics, the Wisconsin Local Foods Hub, Fresh Taste, and other partners to take this work to the next level. We are writing proposals to vet some of the emergent ideas with stakeholders and further engage the region in creating the world we envision.

Watch for further updates as we make progress. And please let us know what you think of our work in this topic area, at any time.

Barn dance Friday June 27th

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CIAS is celebrating 25 years of connecting farmers and faculty at UW-Madison!

Please join us to celebrate at a barn dance with live music and contra dancing, a silent auction, food, drink and with friends old and new. We are gathering on a Friday night at the Schuster Farm in Deerfield (between Madison and Cambridge).

For more information, go to: http://www.cias.wisc.edu/barn-dance/

a workshop you won’t want to miss: Native By Design – Gardening for a Sustainable Future

Sunday, September 21, 2014

What a way to spend the Autumn Equinox.

A star-studded cast of restoration ecologists and gardeners are teaching this one-day course at the UW Arboretum this fall, including Doug Tallamy, Evelyn Howell, Susan Carpenter, Brian Hudelson, Judy Kingsbury, Susan Kilmer, Michael Hansen, Christy Steward, and Molly Fifield Murray.

Be inspired, informed and intrigued by sessions on native pollinators, designing a native garden, woody perennials, managing invasives, recognizing and responding to diseases, and restoring your landscape with edible native plants. Tallamy’s keynote is “Networks for Life – Your Role in Building Biological Corridors”.

$60 general admission. $30 students.

Please register by September 15th. (If you do it now and you can check it off your list.)

Questions: 608-263-7888 or info@uwarboretum.org

Call for papers: International Organic Agriculture Research Symposium

February 25-26, 2015, La Crosse, WI

The Organic Agriculture Research Symposium invites submissions for proposed research papers to be presented. The Symposium will take place immediately before the Organic Farming Conference organized by the Midwest Organic and Sustainable Education Service (MOSES). Co-sponsored by the University of Wisconsin’s Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems (CIAS), the Symposium organizers invite researchers from all disciplines related to organic farming and food systems, and other systems of sustainable agriculture that employ techniques compatible with organic standards.

This is an excellent forum for researchers engaged in projects funded by USDA-Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative (OREI). Conference organizers are especially interested in farmer/ researcher team presentations.

Researchers are encouraged to respond to the National Organic Standards Board research priorities or other similar priority lists based on public process. Topic tracks of interest include:

  • Functional biodiversity and ecosystem services provided by organic farming systems;
  • Soil health, quality and nutrient cycling;
  • Biological and cultural practices to manage insects, diseases and weeds;
  • Holistic animal health and nutrition, grazing and pasture management systems;
  • Breeding, selection of crops and animals, and seed systems suitable for organic production;
  • Climate change mitigation and adaptation, including renewable energy systems;
  • Integration of perennials in organic farming systems and permaculture system design;
  • Value added production and processing without synthetic food additives and processing aids;
  • Nutritional quality, health benefits and integrity of organic food;
  • Organic agriculture’s impact on rural communities;
  • Organic farm economics, marketing and consumer behavior;
  • Appropriate methods and practices for systems and on-farm research; and
  • Public policies to facilitate the transition to organic farming.

Researchers are asked to submit an abstract not to exceed 500 words that includes names of the co-authors, contact information, a working title, the topic area, an introduction that explains the context and purpose of the research, the methods used, and a brief summary of the results and conclusions. Cross-disciplinary papers are encouraged. Works in progress may be considered, but the paper for the proceedings will need to be completed by December 31, 2014.

The symposium will be held in La Crosse, WI on February 25 and 26, with plans to broadcast by live streaming. The intent of the symposium is to provide current information to farmers, ranchers, extensionists, educators, agricultural professionals and others interested in organic agriculture, held in conjunction with a meeting that is regularly attended by organic producers and processors. Presentations will be selected based on their innovative excellence, relevance to the research needs and priorities of organic farmers and ranchers, soundness of the methodology used, and the overall scientific quality. Proceedings will be open access and electronically available via eOrganic.info.

The deadline for submissions is May 31, 2014. Abstracts should be sent to Brian Baker at bpb33@cornell.edu. Researchers with questions about the conference can call 541-228-0876.

If you are interested in helping to organize the symposium, we are interested in co-sponsorship from aligned organizations. If you are interested in serving as a reviewer, we are developing a list so that reviewers with appropriate expertise will consider submissions.  Please contact Brian Baker (information above) if you or your organization is interested in participating. The organizing committee currently includes representatives from:

  • MOSES
  • University of Wisconsin CIAS
  • California Certified Organic Farmers
  • Cornell University Department of Horticulture
  • eOrganics
  • IPM Institute
  • The Ohio State University
  • Oregon State University
  • The Organic Center
  • Organic Materials Review Institute
  • Organic Seed Alliance
  • Washington State University Center for Sustaining Agriculture and Natural Resources

More information on the Symposium will be posted at http://www.cias.wisc.edu/oars shortly. Please share this announcement widely.

 

Time to register: Apple IPM conference calls

Starting April 29th, the UW-Madison Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems Eco-Fruit Project, in collaboration with the Wisconsin Apple Growers Association and the IPM Institute of North America will offer another season of weekly conference calls with Integrated Pest Management (IPM) consultant John Aue and other IPM experts. 

  

This series of 16 weekly calls requires a subscription of $125 and allows you to stay informed on pest conditions, answer pressing questions and learn about other growers’ approaches to IPM.  Call moderator John Aue shares his wealth of knowledge and experience as an IPM consultant for the tree fruit industry in the upper Midwest for over 20 years.  Guest experts from universities around the region participate and discuss a wide range of IPM and fruit production issues including: insect, weed and disease management, thinning and tree nutrition.

Since 2000, the Wisconsin Eco-Fruit Project has been working with growers to reduce pesticide risk through use of IPM.  The project provides resources growers need to learn the scouting, monitoring and decision making techniques necessary for a successful IPM program.

Visit the AppleTalk blog to read transcripts from previous conference calls, www.ecofruit.wisc.edu/appletalk

Resilient Wisconsin Day

On Tuesday, May 6, the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters is hosting Resilient Wisconsin Day at Union South in Madison. This forum focuses on the state’s climate, energy and water future. CIAS Associate Director Michelle Miller is taking part in a workshop session about resilience and water, energy and food. CIAS Faculty Associate Curt Meine and dairy grazier Joe Tomandl III are also presenters at this conference. This event runs from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm at Union South on the UW-Madison campus. See more information about the program and registration at https://www.wisconsinacademy.org/events/resilient-wisconsin-day.

Loving of the Land concert this Saturday

Date: April 26, 2014, 8:00pm

Location: UW-Madison Music Hall

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Join us for a benefit concert on April 26th to fund student research in sustainable agriculture and food systems.

The third annual “Loving of the Land” concert will feature the Madison class-grass quintet Graminy. Class-grass is a musical style that blends bluegrass and classical traditions.

Graminy will be joined by men’s and women’s vocal groups from Madison’s West High School—Chromatic and Ten—directed by Anthony Cao.

The concert will be held in Music Hall at UW-Madison, starting at 8:00pm. Stephanie Elkins, Wisconsin Public Radio, will serve as master of ceremonies.

Tickets cost $10 in advance and $15 at the door. Student tickets are available for $5 in advance and $10 at the door. Tickets are available at Brown Paper Tickets, through CIAS (262-8018, cecarusi@wisc.edu), and from Agroecology students.

The Loving of the Land concert is one of a series of events in 2014 celebrating the 25th anniversary of CIAS.

Proceeds from this concert will fund student scholarships for research in sustainable agriculture and food systems. To learn more about the students and research CIAS has supported through this concert, visit www.cias.wisc.edu.

The Loving of the Land concert is co-sponsored by the Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems, the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies, Program in Agroecology, Wisconsin Public Radio and F.H. King Students for Sustainable Agriculture.

Midwest School for Beginning Grape Growers

March 16-18, 2014 Wisconsin Dells.

This intensive three-day school demonstrates what it takes to set up and run a successful vineyard business.

Topics include:

  •    business planning
  •    current markets
  •    site selection
  •    variety selection (table and wine grapes)
  •    site preparation
  •    vineyard management
  •    IPM for insect pests and diseases

To learn more about the school, contact Regina Hirsch at the Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems, UW-Madison, 608-335-7755 or rmhirsch@wisc.edu

 

Celebrating Driftless Apple Growers

Enjoy your favorite apple products, this year of plenty!

UW-Madison is recognizing the work of our Eco-apple project. See the story at: http://www.news.wisc.edu/22267

Growers are meeting here in Madison on December 9th to talk about their efforts this growing season and their concerns for the next. If you are a commercial apple grower and want to join us, contact us!

If you want to hear the farmers tell their own story, go to this short video:

At the Core: Apple growers of the Upper Mississippi River

Apple growers from Wisconsin and Minnesota share their thoughts on running a farm-based business, the pleasures of apple growing, opportunities for learning and assistance, and what the future holds.

This video features the following growers:
Steve Louis, Oakwood Fruit Farm, Richland Center, WI
Doug Shefelbine, Shefelbine’s Orchard, Hollman, WI
Tom Ferguson, Morningside Orchards, Galesville, WI
Craig Schultz, Bushel and a Peck, Chippewa Falls, WI
Dave Pagoria, Helene’s Hilltop Orchard, Merrill, WI
James and Barbara Lindemann, Gardens of Goodness, McFarland, WI
Charlie Johnson, Whistling Well Farm, Hastings, MN

Produced by Laurie Greenberg for the UW-Madison Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems