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44 results in Guide for "CSA"
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A beginner's guide to spring CSA and farm orders
Spring is when most CSA programs open enrollment and local farms start taking direct orders. Here is what you need to know before signing up.
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CSA vs Buying à la Carte: Which Is Better for You?
CSA shares offer commitment and value. Buying à la carte gives you control. Which works better depends on how your household actually eats — not on which model sounds more appealing in theory.
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CSA vs Meal Kit Subscription — Which Is Worth It?
CSA farm shares and meal kit subscriptions both deliver food to your door on a schedule — but they're built around very different priorities. Here's a direct comparison on cost, convenience, freshness, and waste.
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Is a CSA Worth It?
A CSA subscription can save money, introduce you to better produce, and support a local farm — but it's not the right fit for everyone. Here's an honest breakdown.
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Market-Style CSA vs Traditional CSA — Which Is Right for You?
Traditional CSAs give you a pre-packed box of whatever the farm harvested. Market-style CSAs let you choose your own items from the farm's weekly inventory. Both support local farms directly — but they suit different…
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Which local food buying option makes the most sense for your life?
CSA subscriptions, farmers markets, online farm stores, and buying clubs are all ways to buy local food — and they suit different households differently. This guide helps you think through which option actually fits…
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Top Products to Sell Locally — High Margin and High Demand
Not all farm products sell equally well through direct channels. Some categories consistently command strong prices and high buyer interest at farmers markets and through CSAs.
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Is Local Food Actually Cheaper Than Grocery Stores?
Local food has a reputation for being expensive, but the real comparison is more complicated. When you factor in waste, nutrition, and what you're actually buying, the math often shifts.
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Delivery vs On-Farm Pickup — Which Is Better for Buying Local?
Both delivery and on-farm pickup get local food to your table, but they involve different trade-offs in cost, freshness, relationship-building, and convenience. Here's how to choose.
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Email Marketing Strategies for Farm Businesses
Email is one of the highest-return marketing channels for small farms — but only if you build the list and use it well. Here's a practical guide to email for direct-market farmers.
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First Time Buying From a Farm? Start Here
Buying directly from a farm for the first time can feel uncertain. This guide walks you through what to expect, what questions to ask, and how to get the most out of your first farm purchase.
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How to Get Repeat Customers as a Small Farm
Repeat customers are the financial backbone of a direct-market farm. Here's what actually builds loyalty — beyond just growing good food.
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Buying Local Food for One Person vs a Family of Four
The economics and logistics of buying local food look very different depending on household size. Here's how to approach local food buying whether you're shopping for yourself or feeding a family.
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Buying Local Produce vs Growing Your Own — Cost, Time, and Yield
Growing your own food is rewarding and can be cost-effective for specific crops. But for most households, a combination of home growing and buying local delivers the best outcomes on cost, variety, and effort.
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Direct from farm vs big food distribution
Buying food directly from the people who grew it and buying through a large food distribution system are fundamentally different models. Here is what those differences mean for you.
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Farm box vs traditional grocery delivery
Farm boxes and grocery delivery services both bring food to your door, but they work very differently. Here is a clear comparison to help you decide which fits your life.
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Grant and Funding Opportunities for Small Farmers
Federal programs, loans, and grants exist specifically to help small and beginning farmers build their operations. Here's a practical guide to the real programs available, what they fund, and how to apply.
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How Buying Local Preserves Farmland and Rural Economies
When farmland is sold for development, it rarely comes back. Buying directly from local farms creates the economic conditions that make it possible for farmers to stay in farming.
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How Collective Crop makes buying local easier
Buying local food is something most people want to do, but the experience of actually doing it is often more scattered and time-consuming than it needs to be. This post explains how a dedicated marketplace changes that.
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How direct commerce can strengthen regional food systems
When producers and buyers trade directly, without long intermediary chains, regional food systems become more connected, more economically sound, and more resilient. This article explores why direct commerce is a…
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How Local Food Increases Resilience Against Supply Chain Disruptions
The COVID-19 pandemic exposed how fragile centralized food supply chains can be. Local and regional food systems offer real resilience benefits — here's what the data shows.
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How Local Food Systems Help Combat Food Deserts and Improve Community Health
Food deserts affect tens of millions of Americans — limiting access to fresh, nutritious food and contributing to diet-related chronic disease. Local food systems, when designed with access in mind, are one of the most…
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How Much Can You Make Selling Eggs Locally?
Selling eggs locally is one of the most accessible ways to start selling farm products — but the economics depend heavily on flock size, feed costs, and where you sell. Here's an honest breakdown.
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How Much Should You Budget for Local Food Each Month?
There's no fixed premium for buying local — it depends entirely on what you buy and how you buy it. Here's a practical framework for building a local food budget that works for your household.
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How offices, schools, and community groups can buy local food
Local food purchasing is not just for restaurants. Offices, schools, and community organizations have real options for sourcing directly from nearby farms — even without a professional kitchen team.
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How online ordering can help local farms grow revenue
Online ordering gives small farms a way to sell more without being in more places at once. This post looks at how accepting orders online translates into real revenue growth for local growers.
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How to Buy Meat From Local Farms With Confidence
Buying meat directly from a local farm is one of the best food decisions you can make — but it works differently than picking up a package at the grocery store. Here's how to navigate it without second-guessing yourself.
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How to keep supporting local producers year-round
Many buyers are active in summer and fall but drift away in winter. Here is how to maintain that connection to local farms through every season, not just the abundant ones.
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Is Local Food More Expensive? The Honest Answer
Local food has a reputation for costing more. Sometimes it does. But the real picture is more complicated — and for many everyday purchases, local food is competitive or outright cheaper than the grocery store.
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Local food is not a trend — it is a better system
The case for local food isn't built on lifestyle preferences or nostalgia. It rests on real advantages in freshness, economics, community resilience, and accountability that the conventional food system structurally…
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Mythbusting — Local Food Is Not Just for the Wealthy
Local food has a reputation as something for people with high incomes and lots of free time. Some of that reputation is deserved — but a lot of it is outdated, incomplete, or simply wrong.
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Summer Grilling With Local Meats — A Practical Guide
Sourcing locally raised beef, pork, lamb, and chicken for the grill changes the experience. Here's what to look for, how farm-raised meats differ, and how to get the best results on the grill.
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The Hidden Cost of Long Food Supply Chains
The price on the grocery store shelf doesn't tell the whole story. Long food supply chains carry real costs — to nutrition, the environment, local economies, and resilience — that simply don't show up at checkout.
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The problem Collective Crop is trying to solve
The local food system has real strengths, but it also has a structural problem — the tools connecting producers and buyers have not kept pace with what both groups actually need. This is our honest assessment of what is…
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The Real Difference Between Local Food and Grocery Store Food
Beyond the marketing, there are genuine and measurable differences between food bought locally and food from a chain grocery store. Here's what they actually are.
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What "Farm to Table" Actually Means
"Farm to table" has become one of the most overused phrases in food marketing. Here's what it originally meant, what it's come to mean, and how to tell the difference between the real thing and the label.
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What collective buying can mean for buyers and producers
Collective buying — when a group of buyers coordinates their orders from local producers — creates leverage that neither side could achieve alone. Understanding how it works helps both buyers and producers make the most…
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What Happens When More Food Dollars Stay in the Community
When you spend money on local food, more of it stays close to home — cycling through your community in ways that create jobs, support services, and build long-term economic resilience.
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Why a membership model can make local buying better
Membership models in local food aren't just about discounts — they create a more predictable, reliable relationship between buyers and producers that benefits everyone involved. Here is why that structure matters.
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Why Buying Local Food Matters More Than Ever
Local food isn't just a trend — it's a practical choice with real benefits for your health, your community, and the farmers who grow your food.
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Why direct sales matter for small farms
Direct sales let small farms keep a larger share of what buyers pay and build lasting relationships with customers. This post explains why selling direct is worth building around and what the real tradeoffs look like.
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Why direct-from-farm shopping is growing
More people are buying food directly from farms than at any point in recent decades. Here's what's driving that shift and what it means for how we eat.
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Why Small Farms Should Sell Online
Selling online isn't just for big operations. For small farms and backyard growers, an online presence can mean more reliable income, less waste, and direct relationships with the people who value what you grow.
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Why winter is a smart time to build new farm buying habits
Counter to what most people assume, winter is actually a good time to start buying from local farms — lower competition, willing producers, and a quieter pace that supports building a real habit.