We call our CSA the Sanders Ridge Food Guild.  Our members pay for their membership share at the beginning of the growing season.  This enables us to plan what we will grow, and to purchase the seeds and other materials required, as well as research recipes and other useful information and activities which we hope will help to strengthen our member/grower relationship and enhance each member's farm experience...  2008 Sanders Ridge Food Guild/CSA

In return for their share investment, each member receives a box of fresh organic produce once a week for the number of weeks included in the Membership term.  As crops rotate throughout the season, contents of the weekly shares will vary by size and variety, reflecting our local growing season and conditions. 

Membership Agreement
All members accept in advance the same risks to the harvest and their investment as WE face for unforeseen circumstances beyond our control
- and understand that refund or adjustment of membership payment cannot be made. 

The primary risk is damaging weather and pests (like the flock of tomato tasting mocking birds we experienced last spring!) however we minimize risk of crop loss through many preventative measures and techniques - including  extensive drip and overhead irrigation systems, seedling protection in our 96 foot greenhouse and field row covers, and succession planting...

What is CSA (Community Supported Agriculture)

CSA is a partnership of mutual commitment between a farm and a community of supporters - which provides a direct link between the production and consumption of food. CSA member supporters cover a farm's yearly operating budget by purchasing a share of the season's harvest. Membership helps to pay for seeds, fertilizer, equipment maintenance, labor, etc., and members share a commitment to support the farm throughout the season and assume the costs, risks - and the bounty - of growing food along with the farmer.  In return, the farm provides, to the best of its ability, a healthy supply of seasonal fresh produce throughout the growing season. (click here for more on Community Supported Agriculture)

Equally important - and what motivates us most - here at Sanders Ridge Farm is that CSA reflects an innovative and resourceful strategy to connect local farmers with local consumers in order to;

CSA is a unique model of local agriculture whose roots reach back 30 years to Japan where a group of women concerned about the increase in food imports and the corresponding decrease in the farming population initiated a direct growing and purchasing relationship between their group and local farms. This arrangement, called "teikei" in Japanese, translates to "putting the farmers' face on food." This concept traveled to Europe and was adapted to the U.S. and given the name "Community Supported Agriculture" at Indian Line Farm, Massachusetts, in 1985.

Why Is Community Supported Agriculture Important?

Becoming a Food Guild/CSA member creates a responsible relationship between people and the food they eat, the land on which it is grown and those who grow it.  This mutually supportive relationship between local farmers, growers and community members helps create an economically stable farm operation in which members are assured the highest quality produce, often at below retail prices. In return, farmers and growers are guaranteed a reliable market for a diverse selection of crops.

The above was excerpted from the web site www.LocalHarvest.com and originally composed by the Community Supported Agriculture of North America at University of Massachusetts Extension.  Special thanks to the contributors to this description of CSA: Robyn Van En, CSA of North America (CSANA); Liz Manes, Colorado State University Cooperative Extension; and Cathy Roth, UMass Extension Agroecology Program.

Sanders Ridge Farm CSA/Food Guild

Other CSA's in North Carolina