Celebrate Earth Day At The Co-op Saturday

Earth Day 2012

Biodynamics in Relation to Carbon Farming

A Talk by Mac Mead
Monday, January 30, 7:00pm
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Pfeiffer Center Program Director Mac Mead will discuss the relationship of carbon farming, a method of regenerative agriculture, with biodynamics.

Brookside Building, 285 Hungry Hollow Rd., Chestnut Ridge, NY.

Donations will benefit the Farmer Travel Fund for Organic Seed Growers & Trade Association, et al. v. Monsanto.

Information: Call 945-352-5020 x18 or email events@threefold.org.

Sponsored by the
Pfeiffer Center

Seeds of Tomorrow:

Organic Seed Growers v. Monsanto
A Conversation With Beth Corymb Everett

Sunday, January 29, 7:30pm
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Beth Corymb Everett, one of the founders of Turtle Tree Seeds and a litigant in the Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association vs Monsanto lawsuit, will be speaking about the experience of managing an organic/biodynamic farm in a heavily industrial agricultural area (Scotts Bluff, NE). She and her husband Nathan Corymb Clark run a small CSA in addition to growing seed for Turtle Tree, High Mowing, Southern Exposure, and Family Farmers Seed Co-op. She urges us to be awake; the threat of transgenic agriculture has implications for the future of mankind.

Organic Seed Growers & Trade Association, et al. v. Monsanto was filed in federal district court on March 29, 2011, on behalf of 60 family farmers, seed businesses and organic agricultural organizations, challenging Monsanto’s patents on genetically modified seed. The case now represents 83 plaintiffs. Click here for current news about this important case.
Location: Brookside Bldg, 285 Hungry Hollow Rd, Chestnut Ridge, NY
Admission: Donations will benefit the Farmer Travel Fund for the Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association v. Monsanto Lawsuit.
Information: Call 945-352-5020 x18 or email events@threefold.org.

Co-sponsored by the
Hungry Hollow Co-op, Rockland Farm Alliance, Threefold Educational Center, and Gaia Northeast

Wes Jackson To Speak At Threefold

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National FOOD DAY

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Today is the first celebration of Food Day, a day to celebrate healthy, delicious eating and to solve local communities' food problems. Six Food Day Principles are:
Reduce diet-related disease by promoting safe, healthy foods.

Support sustainable farms and limit subsidies to Big Ag.

Expand access to food and alleviate hunger.

Protect the environment and animals by reforming factory farms (reforming? how about eliminating?-kp)

Promote health by curbing junk-food marketing to kids.

Support fair conditions for food and farm workers.

Hungry Hollow Co-op is always working for these important principles and more. Today we are collecting non-perishable food for Rockland People to People in recognition of Food Day. Please drop something in the cart if you're in the store today! -kp

National Bulk Foods Week

Apparently, in some states, it's National Bulk Week. Although NY State is not participating, we cannot let this opportunity pass to shine a light on our bulk department and the wonderful work Mary, the bulk manager, has done. We have local flours,grains,beans, and pasta; dried fruit, nuts, sweet treats, granola, coffee, nut butters, and herbs and spices. Featured today, Mary's newest addition--Fair Trade spices, just in time for the holidays. Come in and check out the wide selection (soon to be expanded) and don't forget to wish Mary "Happy Bulk Week"! -kp

The Right 2 Know March is Underway

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The Right 2 Know March is underway. (Here's a picture this morning, enroute to Scotch Plains, NJ) Join this historic mobilization if you can--tomorrow the marchers will arrive in Princeton, and the next day they will be in Philadelphia. See the route HERE...

The Right 2 Know March Begins Saturday
At the Flatbush Co-op in Brooklyn

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CLICK FOR FULL MARCH ITINERARY AND SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

Annual Members' Meeting Tues, Sept. 27

Annual Meeting 2011

Friday, Saturday, & Sunday, Sept. 23rd-25th

Farmers Festival 2011 Icon

Showing Here At The Co-op Fri, Sept. 23

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Americans’ right to access fresh, healthy foods of their choice is under attack. Farmageddon tells the story of small, family farms that were providing safe, healthy foods to their communities and were forced to stop, sometimes through violent action, by agents of misguided government bureaucracies, and seeks to figure out why.

Join us for what Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times calls “...an eye-popping wake-up call revealing how the USDA and FDA have increasingly waged war on America’s small farmers even when they can prove they are contributing healthful products to our food supply.”

Farmers' Festival Organic Pie Baking Contest

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RULES:
Sweet pies only (any sweetener may be used)
Pies must be made from scratch (including crust)
The main ingredients must be organic
You must provide a complete list of ingredients

1st Prize: $75 Co-op Gift Card
2nd Prize: $50 Co-op Gift Card
3rd Prize: $25 Co-op Gift Card

Entries must be dropped off at the Co-op between 11 am and 2 pm Sat, Sept. 14 with a filled out entry form. Winners will be announced at 3 pm at the Farmers’ Festival.

Farmageddon New York Premiere July 8, 2011

farmaggedonThe Unseen War on American Family Farms  
Farmageddon Opening Night Reception & Movie

5:30pm Friday, July 8 - New York City

Jimmy's No. 43 Restaurant at 43 East 7th Street

Join Filmmaker, Kristin Canty and other foodies this Friday to celebrate the New York Premiere of Farmageddon--the Unseen War Against American Family Farms, an important film about our rights to healthy food, followed by a brief Q&A!

Tickets and more details are available at
www.FarmageddonNYC.eventbrite.com

Farmageddon is playing July 8-14 at Cinema Village Theatre. If you are unable to make Friday's event, please take a group of friends to the movies! Group sales will be the secret to box office success, and getting the film into wider circulation.

Cinema Village Theatre
22 East 12th Street
New York, NY 10003
212-924-3363
www.cinemavillage.com

The Intrinsic Nature of Water

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"Steps Towards Discovering the Intrinsic Nature of Water,” a hands-on, experiential conference, will offer participants an opportunity to experience water and the language of its fluid nature. The modern view of water as a commodity is often detrimental to people and nature. This conference will explore how we see water, and how we can allow it to teach us. The conference runs from July 31-August 5, at the Water Research Institute of Blue Hill (Maine). For more info, call 415-254-9567, or visit their website.

Please join us this Saturday, June 4th to benefit Cropsey Community Farm!

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The First Ever Hungry Hollow Co-op /
Clockwork Construction Racing Group Bike Ride

0fb7e7c3The forecast for Thursday is mostly sunny and about 80, which sounds like ideal conditions for the first ever Hungry Hollow Co-op / CCI Racing group bike ride. Come on out and join Paula and Kathey for a ride along the Hudson. We'll start at Nyack Beach Park and head north to Haverstraw (unless the group opts to head south to Piermont). It's a beautiful trail, good for mountain bikes and hybrids as well (no road bikes) and it's a nice little ride. We won't kill you on this one. Hungry Hollow will provide some light snacks, but bring your water bottle, and your helmet. Ride is at 4 pm on Thursday/26th. (Rain-date is Saturday/28th at 10 am.) -kp

Ciclovida, American Style



Ciclovida: Lifecycle is a narrative documentary film that follows a group of subsistence farmers as they traverse the South American continent by bicycle (6,000 miles) on a mission to rescue natural seeds. The travelers document how crops for biodiesel production are taking over the countryside and displacing millions of small farmers and indigenous communities. Subsistence crops and forests are being replaced by green deserts of genetically modified monoculture where nothing else, plant or animal, can survive the toxic sprays.

Join us Monday, May 23rd at 8 pm for a special screening of Ciclovida, followed by Q & A with Ivania de Alencar, Inacio do Nacimento, and Matthew Feinstein. There will be music, conversation, and camaraderie. Don’t miss it! T-shirts and DVDs will be available for purchase. Come and show Ivania and Inacio fellowship, solidarity and support. They leave for home (Brazil) Tuesday morning and this is their last night in the US. Let's show them some love!

The screening is at Brookside Building, 285 Hungry Hollow Rd., Chestnut Ridge NY. $10 suggested donation to help cover expenses. Call or email Kathey for more info: 845-356-3319 or kp@hungryhollow.org.

World Fair Trade Day

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Make every day a Fair Trade Day. Look for Fair Trade certified products; consider the fact that by spending a few dollars more you can profoundly improve the lives of the women, children and men whose hard work has made available the goods you want to purchase; choose not to buy from companies that are known to engage in dubious labor and trade practices around the world and here in this country. It’s our world, not Walmart’s or Wall Street’s - let’s make it work in accordance with our values, not theirs. -pw

Today is Earth Day -
Perform a Random Act of Green

marquee-edn_0For over 40 years, Earth Day—April 22—has inspired and mobilized individuals and organizations worldwide to demonstrate their commitment to environmental protection and sustainability.

This Just in From Our Correspondent in Detroit

customLogoDinner was really good too; they said it took 5 different distributors to get all the local food in here that they needed for the meals!

After the keynote speech by Kathleen Merrigan [Deputy Secretary of the US Dept. of Agriculture], I got to ask her, or actually tell her, that while I applaud the work she's doing, as well as Michelle Obama's, many of us are disappointed with the administration's approvals of GM crops, especially the alfalfa, and that while there is good concrete work being done (re: sustainable & organic farming), it doesn’t seem that the administration is really behind those efforts. It got applause! And I didn't really want an answer, I just wanted to put it out there. So, mission accomplished. -kp

Signs of New Life in The Motor City

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Kathey Piedl, our Member Services / Outreach Manager, is attending this conference. She’ll be sending blog posts when she has a chance. All we know so far is that the lunch served today was one of the best ever at a hotel/conference venue. (The food service, surprisingly, is often a weak spot at conferences of this sort.) How did they do it? By working with Real Time Farms. Click here to see the menu.

MOVIE NIGHT

The Farmer and the Horse
A Special Screening to Benefit The Pfeiffer Center
Plus a Q&A With the Director

Sponsored by
Hungry Hollow Co-op

Friday, April 8, 8:00pm

Membership Drive for the Northeast Organic Farming Association of New York

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Tuesday, April 5, Hungry Hollow Co-op is hosting a NOFA-NY Membership Drive. NOFA-NY(Northeast Organic Farming Association of New York) is New York State’s preeminent organization devoted to organic and sustainable food production. NOFA-NY members receive many tangible benefits, but being a member is so much more. NOFA-NY provides a mechanism for members to come together for networking, education, information sharing and advocacy. It links you to the larger organic movement.

Please consider joining NOFA-NY. Annual membership is normally $40.00. During Hungry Hollow Co-op’s NOFA Membership Drive, first-time members will receive 75% off their membership fee--that’s just $10.00! Laura O’Donohue (owner of Snow Hill Farm in North Salem NY and NOFA board member) will be here from 11 to 3 on Tuesday. Stop by for a chat and pick up a great membership deal while you’re picking up your groceries.

An Evening With Joan Gussow

Friday, March 18, 7:30 - 9:00 pm
JDG Joan Dye Gussow, EdD, is Mary Swartz Rose Professor emerita and former chair of the Nutrition Education Program at Teachers College, Columbia University, where she has been a long-time analyst and critic of the U.S. food system. In her classic 1978 book The Feeding Web: Issues in Nutritional Ecology, which tracked the environmental hazards of an increasingly globalizing food system, she foreshadowed by several decades the current interest in relocalizing the food supply. The New York Times calls her a "matriarch of the eat-locally-think-globally food movement".

Her subsequent books include The Nutrition Debate (1986), Chicken Little, Tomato Sauce and Agriculture (1991), and This Organic Life: Confessions of a Suburban Homesteader (2001), the latter based on the lessons learned from decades of working toward growing her own food. Her 2010 book, Growing, Older, is as it’s subtitle suggests, a garden-based collection of “reflections on death, life and vegetables”.

Tonight, Joan will read from her most recent book Growing, Older. A discussion and book signing will follow - the book will be available for purchase if you don't already have a copy. Light refreshments will be served. Plan to arrive early - seating is limited.

Sustainable Biodynamic Beekeeping -
An Evident Need in Our Time

Four workshops in the heart of the Blue Ridge mountains; presented by Gunther Hauk, teacher, lecturer, biodynamic gardener and beekeeper for over 35 years. CLICK HERE to view and download the brochure and application form.

N E Organic Farming Assoc Annual Conference

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This week-end, NOFA-NJ's Annual Conference is taking place in Princeton on Saturday and Sunday. It's a little closer than Saratoga Springs, if that kept anyone from attending NOFA-NY's conference last week-end (or could the temperature have had anything to do with it?) and there are even more great places to eat in Princeton. Check out this link for the schedule and registration. -KP

Annual Winter Conference

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This week-end is NOFA-NY's annual winter conference, taking place in Saratoga Springs January 21st-23rd. There are great workshops, socializing and networking. Saratoga Springs also has some great places to eat. Definitely worthwhile. Register on-line, by phone, or on-site. Check out the link for all the offerings. -KP

Tuesday, Dec. 21st is Rochdale Pioneer Day

Join us on Tues, Dec. 21st to celebrate the opening (in 1844) of the co-op store that became the inspiration for the modern co-operative business movement.

Tuesday Is Rockland Farm Alliance Day

Rockland Farm Alliance was started in 2007 with the mission of facilitating sustainable agriculture in Rockland County. Hungry Hollow Co-op has supported RFA from its inception, and on this day we will donate a portion of every dollar you spend to their Harvest Fund Drive. Members of RFA will be on hand to discuss the future of sustainable farming in Rockland County. The event runs throughout the day and light refreshments will be served.

What Goes On You Goes In You

Thursday, December 9th, we are presenting "What Goes On You Goes In You" with Robert Genco of Welda North America. Robert is warm and engaging, and has lots of information and samples to share with everyone in attendance. The event is free, but registration is required. Space is limited. Please join us from 7:30 to 8:30 pm on December 9.

Halloween Festival, Friday, Oct. 29th

Join us on Friday October 29th for a little old fashioned Halloween fun. We'll fire up the grill one more time this year, and offer grass-fed burgers, organic hot dogs and more. Live music, hot cider, sweet treats for kids in costume, children's activities, and probably the last of Threshhold Farm's amazing apple crop. Come in costume, have a bite to eat, and pick up a pumpkin to carve. 11am-4 pm.

Find Out What Eating Locally Really Means

This Friday night, Oct. 1, as part of their First Friday Film series, the Piermont library is hosting a free screening of the movie Fresh, followed by a short panel discussion featuring local author, educator, and organic gardener Joan Gussow; and Alexandra Spadea and Andy Sahn of Camp Hill Farm. 7:30 pm. Piermont Public Library, 25 Flywheel Park West, Piermont NY. (845)359-4595 Find out what eating locally really means.

Food Minus The Mileage

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Throughout the month of September, NOFA-NY is hosting their first Locavore Challenge, with the goal of having 4,000 participants. If you missed Hungry Hollow Co-op's Eat Local, America! event last month, here's a chance to dive into the locavore movement for a day, a week, or the rest of the month. Check out NOFA-NY's website, and sign up today!

Benefit Concert For Rockland Farm Alliance

Rockland County, NY-based composer, pianist and percussionist John McDowell teams up with Canadian violinist Emmanuel Vukovich, cellist Julia MacLaine, and string bass player Evan Premo to create the musical ensemble Music For Farms which will perform a concert entitled “A Musical Harvest” at the Threefold Auditorium at 260 Hungry Hollow Road, Chestnut Ridge, NY on Friday, September 10, 2010 at 8pm. Tickets may be purchased at the door and are $20 ($15 for seniors/students, $10 for children). For more information, call 845-362-0207 or email events@rocklandfarm.org.

La Tomatina

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On the last Wednesday in August, in Bunol in Valencia, Spain, 20-50,000 revelers participate in the world's largest food fight. It is a tradition that began in the mid 1940s; no one is really sure how it all began, but it was greatly enjoyed and has lived on, despite having been banned for a period during the 1950s-1970s. Within exactly one hour, about 90,000 pounds of over-ripe tomatoes are flung among the participants. The event is followed by dancing in the street and drinking sangria. Whew! Sounds like a party, but we at the co-op have other ideas for tomatoes. Check out the recipe section for some delicious ways with tomatoes. We even threw in a recipe for sangria! -kp

Eat Local, America - Day 7

I spent most of the day in the car yesterday, but was well stocked with local ingredient left-overs and snacks for my drive. Here in Asheville, they are big into the local food/local business scene, and that's a good thing. But at the end of the day, what I was really craving was the local kombucha, and at Rosetta's, they have it on tap. Along with that, for dinner we had gumbo made with local heirloom okra, and cornbread (local cornmeal) and greens. I picked up a six-pack of local beer to take home, and a couple bottle of kombucha for the ride. Today being Sunday, I'm going to call it a wild card. (When we were kids, during Lent, on Sundays we were allowed to break our fast and have a little candy, which was always what I gave up). I'm on my way to my brother's, and he's a good cook, so if he feeds me, I will eat whatever he makes happily, local or not. -kp

Eat Local, America - Day 5

After a couple days of eating locally in an un-planned, not well-prepared fashion (cheese curds for lunch, bread with jam for dinner, etc) my stomach has brought me back to my senses. Last night was (yes, again) grilled cheese with tomato. But I made a little extra effort and made pancakes this morning (Wild Hive flour, Evan's Creamery butter and buttermilk, local egg) with raspberry sauce (NJ raspberries--there are still some here in the store, you should grab them!) and there is chili in the crockpot for dinner tonight (VT turkey sausage, almost local, Threshold Farm Onion, Cauyuga Pure Organics chili beans, NJ pepper & tomato) as well as local beer (PorkSlap from Butternut Brewing in Garrattsville NY, slightly beyond the 100 mile range). Last night I also made syrup from local grapes, and tonight's project is peach jam and peach butter from NJ peaches (yes, the sugar and lemon are not local, but they are indispensable). Don't forget to submit your "Eat Local" recipes to get in the drawing for the "Eat Local" cookbook! -kp

Eat Local, America - Day 2

It's getting a little more challenging already. Breakfast was eggs (roadside, NJ) with kale (Pfeiffer garden). Lunch was leftovers from dinner, sliced cucumber(sister's garden), and local honeydew melon. No idea what dinner will be, but I'll be hungry after my evening ride....Last night I blanched and froze a bunch of corn that was given to me (South Jersey) and today I picked a bunch of grapes at a co-worker's home (can't tell you where!) to make syrup. So much good stuff around, go out and get yourself some! -kp

Eat Local, America - Day 1

Breakfast was easy enough; after my non-local coffee with local milk, I was awake enough to remember that it is Eat Local Week. I made a smoothie of Duryea Farm yogurt and frozen NJ peaches (I threw in half of a frozen banana to thicken it, that's my cheat) and local honey. Lunch will be a tomato sandwich. The bread is locally produced, but not made from local grains. Wild Hive is the only source I know for that. And truth be told, it will have mayo, not local. And dinner, which I'm very much looking forward to, will be a Hungarian dish of peppers (from my garden) and onions (Threshold Farm) and Hungarian sausage (I bought it while I was in Cleveland, and it was local to where I bought it--that counts, right?) and paprika (not local but vital to the dish)sauteed to perfection in lard (home-made, from Fleisher's pig). I'm not sure how I'm going to handle hunger pangs in between. I do snack alot. -kp

Eat Local, America Week August 9th-15th

At Hungry Hollow Co-op we invite you to experience the joys and satisfactions of eating local foods every day. But for one week this summer we're going a step further and asking you to challenge yourselves to see just how much of your hunger can be satisfied with local food: 100%, 4 out of 5 items on your plate at every meal, 2 out of 3 meals a day? You decide and then see if you can reach the goal you've set. To help you out, and to make it more fun, we've created a booklet containing tips and resources and journal pages so you can record your experiences. The Eat Local, America booklet is available in the store, or you can download and print your own copy by clicking HERE. We’ll be posting recipes that can be made with local ingredients here on The Daily Holler. And if you have a favorite local recipe send it to info@hungryhollow.org so we can share it with other Eat Local, America participants. Every recipe you submit will enter you in a raffle to win a beautiful hardcover copy of Eating Local: The Cookbook Inspired by America's Farmers, written by Janet Fletcher with a Foreword by Alice Waters. Every day is Eat Local, Chestnut Ridge day at the Co-op, but Eat Local, America week is August 9th-15th only. Pick up your booklet in the store and start making plans today!

TODAY, Sat, July 3rd, is International Co-op Day

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88th ICA International Co-operative Day
16th UN International Day of Cooperatives
(3 July 2010)
"Co-operative enterprise empowers women"
"La empresa cooperativa empodera a la mujeres"
"L'entreprise coopérative autonomise les femmes"

This year's theme highlights how the cooperative model of enterprise can successfully empower women. It links to the celebration of the 15th anniversary of the Beijing Platform for Action (Beijing+15) which sets out the internationally agreed agenda for women's empowerment.

Co-operatives have a key role to play as they are able to respond to both women's practical and strategic needs. Whether it be through women only co-operatives or co-operatives made up of women and men, they offer an effective organizational means for women members and employees to raise their living standards by accessing decent work opportunities, savings and credit facilities, health, housing and social services, and education and training. Co-operatives also offer women opportunities for participation in and influence over economic activities. Women gain self-reliance and self-esteem through this participation. Co-operatives also contribute to the improvement of the economic, social and cultural situation of women in other ways including promoting equality and changing institutional biases.

Press Conference Announced

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This Tuesday, June 29, at 11:00 am, Rockland Farm Alliance is having a press conference at the Cropsey Farm in New City. They are signing an agreement with the county to lease the farm for use as a community farm. Details will be announced at the press conference. A large turnout would show that the community supports this idea, so anyone who can make it is invited out to the farm.

The address is 230 Little Tor Rd. New City, NY. (Exit 10 off the Palisades, make a left, go about 2 miles and the farm will be on your right.)

Local author and lecturer Karen Ranzi

Local author and lecturer Karen Ranzi will be at Hungry Hollow Co-op on Tuesday, June 8th, to guide you on the path to creating happy and healthy children--and getting them to eat their veggies. Her new book is Creating Healthy Children: Through Attachment Parenting and Raw Foods. Karen advocates a holistic approach to many of the health problems children face today; she will share the value of understanding your children’s needs, and the importance of obtaining the best possible nourishment for your family. The talk is from 8-9 pm, with a book-signing, as well as kid-tested recipes for you to take home. No charge. Please call Kathey at 845-356-3319 or email kp@hungryhollow.org to register.

Earth Day Raffle Winners Announced

Thanks to everyone who participated in our Earth Day Raffle. All the proceeds will go to support the biodynamic farming training and research work of the Pfeiffer Center. Congratulations to the winners: Gloria Binkowski - Honeybee Gardens Gift Bag; Kaori Fuller - Honeybee Gardens Gift Bag; Susanne Margono - Badger Balm Basket; Gwendolin Herder - Gardener’s Dream (Pfeiffer Center Class Gift Certificate & Spikenard Farm Honey); Lynn Bello - Gardener’s Delight (red trug filled with gardening goodies). And thanks, again, to all who contributed.

Earth Day Raffle Extended Until Noon Monday

If you haven’t entered (or you want to enter again) there’s still time. Three different gift baskets are being given away: Gardener’s Delight, Gardener’s Dream, and Best of Badger Balms. They’re on display in the store. All proceeds go to benefit the Pfeiffer Center. You need not be present to win.

Earth Day Celebration 2010

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Earth Day Celebration Today 11am - 4 pm

We’re having a party in our parking lot to celebrate the Earth and to shine a little light on Honeybees. As usual, we will be grilling grass-fed beef burgers, organic hot-dogs, and Sunshine vegetarian burgers, and for the first time bison burgers. And we’ll be offering tastings and samplings of some of the products we carry. There will be live music (including a special, brief, guest appearance by Tom Chapin at 12:30 pm) and children’s activities. Also, we’re raffling off some great stuff, with the proceeds going to support the work of the Pfeiffer Center. (You need not be present at the time of the drawing to win). Come join us in expressing gratitude for the the gifts of the earth, and share in the fun, food, music, and conversation.

Tom Chapin Will Be Celebrating The 40th Anniversary Of Earth Day With Us

Last Friday, Tom Chapin stopped by the Co-op to ask Skip, our produce manager, to put up some flyers for an appearance by Tom’s daughters at the Turning Point in Piermont this evening. Tom and Skip have been friends since the early ‘90s when they both had kids in the Green Meadow Waldorf School and they played pick-up basketball games in the school gym. Out of their friendship was born the Green Meadow Music Festival, which was for many years one of the most popular community cultural events in our area (and one of the most successful fundraisers for the school). As Tom was heading out the door, on his way to distribute more flyers, Skip said, “Hey, what are you doing April 22nd? We’re having this big Earth Day celebration and it would be great if you wanted to drop by and play a few tunes.” Tom replied, “Ya know, I’m pretty sure I don’t have anything scheduled that day - I’d love to come do a few songs. I’ll get back to you next week after I’ve checked my calendar.” So yesterday Skip got confirmation that Tom was indeed free and would be coming to our Earth Day party. Now, we’re not talking about Tom Chapin, famous Grammy Award winning musician, doing a concert here, but rather our friend and neighbor, Tom Chapin, offering his special talent as a gift to our community, enlivening our celebration with his locally grown music. (He and his wife Bonnie, a frequent Co-op shopper, live in Piermont.) The Plan is for Tom to arrive around 12:30 pm, and after an extensive soundcheck of our state-of-the-art equipment, to sing a few songs, and then ride off into the sunset (metaphorically speaking, of course) leaving all the children smiling, all the women sighing, and all the menfolk muttering to themselves, “Well, I bet I’m a more conscientious recycler than he is, anyway.” And, no, we’re not expecting him to show up if it’s raining cats and endangered species, even though we will be soldiering on - it is a Day for honoring the Earth, after all, come rain or come shine. But we’re thinking positive, expecting sunshine, looking forward to hearing Tom Chapin, and hoping you’ll be here.

Please support local agriculture!

Join us for our pancake breakfast benefit.
The Rockland Farm Alliance will be having a pancake breakfast featuring locally made maple syrup, organic pancakes, free range eggs, potatoes, sausage, juice, and coffee.

The dates is Sunday, March 28th from 9 AM-Noon. All proceeds benefit the RFA