Why I’m a Locavore

Codicts Team
  • June 1, 2015
  • Economics & Law

I’m a dedicated locavore. About 90 percent of the food I eat is grown by farmers I know. I can walk through my pantry and tell you the first name of the farmer who grew everything there. Dried peppers from farmer Charles, squash from farmer Ted, hazelnuts from farmer Linda, and on and on. I go to the grocery store about once a month for things like olive oil, peanut butter, and salt. I visit the farmers’ market every weekend, pick up my Community Supported Agriculture box on Tuesdays, and just before winter fill up at Fill Your Pantry, our bulk buying event for locally grown beans, grains, and storage crops. I don’t buy bananas and I don’t eat fresh tomatoes in the winter.

My diet changes with the seasons. In summer, I enjoy fresh fruits and vegetables. In fall, I preserve fruits and veggies like crazy and stock up on local beans, grains, and storage crops. In winter, I eat my dried, frozen, canned, and stored food. In the spring, I finish off the food I have stored from the winter and enjoy foods that are coming on in spring, eggs and greens. And then the cycle begins again.

My locavore diet is about building a strong and resilient local food system and a healthier community. (I use the word community broadly here to encompass everyone in my geographic area including people, plants, animals, and the land.)

I eat this way because it connects me with the source of my food and the people who grow it. I experience the connection with every meal. It’s a relationship and it’s an important one. Beyond the personal connection, there’s a financial connection, which contributes to community food security. When I support my local farmers I hope I’m helping to provide them with the resources they need to continue farming. When they have what they need, I hope they’ll be able to grow food for me and my community into the future.

The farmers who grow my food are supporting a healthy planet. The personal relationship I have with them allows me the opportunity to learn about their growing practices. I can intentionally choose to buy food from farmers who grow food using the most sustainable practices. By supporting them and those practices, we are promoting environmental health together. This is another part of the relationship.

I’m concerned about climate change and associated disruptions to our food system now and in the future. I want to help create a future where my local farms are able to feed our community when food system infrastructure like semi-trucks traveling up the interstate from California aren’t an option. So I support the people who I hope can feed my community if and when bigger systems fail. In addition to being close by, my local farmers are more likely to grow crops which are well adapted to our local climate and those that are more likely to survive climate extremes. I support farmers who are developing crops that can weather extremes. I want them and their crops to be around in the future.

All of these pieces together—the opportunity for me to support farmers financially, in turn being sustained by the food they provide, being connected to each other, and knowing about and supporting their sustainable growing practices—mean that I am helping to create a strong and resilient local food system and a healthier community.

Megan Kemple is a dedicated locavore living in Eugene, Oregon. She is the Farm to School Program Director for Willamette Farm and Food Coalition, a community-based nonprofit working to create a secure and sustainable food system in Lane County, Oregon.

Comments

Featured Blogs

Keep the conversation going with these pieces

Codicts Team
Wed Sep 2010
  • Living in community
  • Governance
A community member transcends a feeling of powerlessness when he inadvertently comes up with a brilliant idea about how to organize cooking groups, and others join him in implementing it.
Codicts Team
Sun Mar 2019
  • Living in community
  • Relationships
I’m obsessed with relevance. I consider myself a global citizen with a shared responsibility to help make the world a better place. For me, intentional communities are not just an end in themselves. They’re also pre-figurative. They’re responses to a critical analysis of the problems in the world sh…
Codicts Team
Fri Jun 2017
  • New to community
  • Economics & Law
Mobile home and RV parks present an unequaled opportunity to accelerate the transition to more widespread community living.
Codicts Team
Fri Dec 2012
  • Living in community
  • Relationships
Endings and beginnings grow from one another and make personal and group renewal possible.
Codicts Team
Mon Jul 2016
  • Living in community
  • Relationships
Many of the intentional communities that we hear about are recent ones: the back-to-the-land communes of the 1970s, the student co-ops and cohousing spaces being formed today. That’s why it’s especially fascinating to get a glimpse into a commune from a different era – as I did recently in a book ca…
Codicts Team
Tue Nov 2019
  • Living in community
  • Relationships
When the antisocial behavior of adopted boys at Takoma Village Cohousing begins to impact the larger community, their parents find open communication essential in identifying a path forward.
Codicts Team
Mon Oct 2016
  • Economics & Law
Nearly $500 billion worth of food gets thrown away in the U.S. each year – while nearly 50 million Americans go hungry. A new app hopes to use peer-to-peer technology to connect people throwing away food with those who need it. We’ve seen the sharing economy dabble in foodsharing before. Platform…
Codicts Team
Wed Mar 2012
  • Living in community
  • Relationships
In a world in which food choices and dietary preferences can become quasi-religions, lactic-acid fermentation wins a new convert.
Codicts Team
Thu Jul 2016
Some communities, like the Tonic Housing project in the U.K., were founded as a way to provide cohousing to LGBT elders in rapidly gentrifying cities. Others offer a refuge away from the city, a place where like-minded people can gather for retreats and other seasonal festivities. For decades, the …

Insights & Stories from the Communities Movement

Subscribe to our newsletter for fresh stories and community updates delivered to your inbox.

Join the Communiversity Community

Get unlimited access to courses, exclusive member events, and a supportive network of community builders

Unlimited Learning

Access all courses, books, and premium content

Community Network

Member-only workshops and community builders

Exclusive Events

Member-only workshops and gatherings

I am an official member of this community
Disclaimer
I affirm that my information is accurate and I am authorized to manage this listing

Free Plan

Free plan
Free

Advertise in our Directory

  • Subtotal

    {{ currencyFormat( pricing_summary.total_amount ) }}

Become a + Member

  • Send Direct Messages and see contact information
  • Find communities based on your profile tool
  • Post Needs & Offers Listings and Events
  • Access to resources in the Members Library /// like vetted documents uploaded by communites (e.g. bylaws )
  • Member badge on your profile
  • View communities detailed reviews
  • Create Private Groups