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Candidate for the New York State Assembly

Candidate for the New York State Assembly

Dear Reader,

This week I was nominated by the Democratic and Working Families Parties to be their candidate in a special election for the 103rd Assembly District seat vacated when Marc Molinaro was elected Dutchess County Executive in November. The election, called by Gov. Andrew Cuomo,  is March 20, 2012 — less than two months away.  It is one of five special elections to be held that day in open seats around New York State.

I am honored by the nomination and touched by the outpouring of support for my candidacy from up and down the district. I have lived in the Hudson Valley for 25 years and my family roots in the region go back three generations. I work, play, eat out, shop, get my haircut, have coffee with colleagues in the towns of the NY 103rd AD. As an elected official I would expand my work with our communities to develop jobs, services and partnerships within the district.  I would be enormously proud to be a voice for my friends and neighbors in Dutchess and Columbia Counties in Albany.

I know these are challenging times for too many folks in the Hudson Valley.  I am committed to working hard to bring the resources to our towns that will create and keep local jobs.  I will work with our municipalities and schools to get relief from unfunded mandates. I will partner with Governor Cuomo to move our state economy forward, control spending and cut taxes.  I will continue to be a passionate advocate for this beautiful region and help us realize the untapped potential of our natural, cultural, historical and agricultural resources as economic engines and job generators.

Two months is a short campaign but this is an important election for this region. I will be working hard going door to door, stopping in every diner and talking to as many folks in the 103rd as wish to share their thoughts with me.

I’ll continue to keep you posted.  Here are stories from the Poughkeepsie Journal and Columbia County’s Register-Star.

Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged Columbia County, Democratic Party, Didi Barrett, Dutchess County, Hudson Valley, Marc Molinaro, New York State Assembly, NY 103rd AD, special election, Working Families Party | 2 Comments

Community Spirit

I am of the opinion that my life belongs to the community, and as long as I live it is my privilege to do for it whatever I can.
George Bernard Shaw

A proper community, we should remember also, is a commonwealth: a place, a resource, an economy. It answers the needs, practical as well as social and spiritual, of its members – among them the need to need one another.
Wendell Berry, The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays of Wendell Berry

Several events over the last weeks reminded me once again why I love living in the Hudson Valley.  Beyond the breathtaking natural beauty, beyond the glorious American history, beyond the rich legacy of creativity,  it is that sense of community that ultimately matters the most.

Community comes in many shapes and sizes but for many of us in the Hudson Valley, our identify is tied in with the town or village in which we live.  And we all know these towns have their own personalities, whether we feel we fit them or not. In fact, we identify even when our relationship to our town is a bit estranged.  Too many of us joke, somewhat sadly, that after 20 or 30 or 40 years as an engaged tax-paying resident in our towns we are still considered “newcomers” by those who find comfort in that sort of label. But we identify for the same reasons we choose to live here: we cherish the sense of community that our villages and towns can provide for us — and do at the best of times, including the need to need and to be needed.

A beautiful example of community was played out this New Year’s Eve in Millbrook where the local Rotary Club hosted the eighth of its annual family-friendly New Year’s evening  – 4 to 8:15 pm  –  festivities.  This year some 1500 smiling celebrants of all ages filled the village on a conveniently balmy winter’s night to enjoy terrific entertainment that ranged from the popular Bindlestiff Family Cirkus to the Handman String Quartet, which actually numbered six this year since two talented members of the younger generation performed with the gifted Handman siblings.

The Larry Ham Duo (of the local Ham family) entertained with classic jazz, the Evergreen Chorus of Sweet Adelines harmonized a cappella and the Sankofa African Drummers and Dancers had everyone bopping in the aisles of Grace Chapel.  I got a special kick out of the ever gracious Peter Muir’s piano medley of the most popular songs of 1912 — all of which, for some reason, I knew. (I somehow doubt I’ll be able to say that about the top songs of 2012.) In 1912, they were: Waiting for the Robert E. Lee, On Moonlight Bay, and Oh, You Beautiful Doll.  So, maybe you know them, too?

The New Year flurry of swearings-in, particularly those of recently elected Mayors, Town Supervisors, Trustees,  Council members and so on – most of which are practically volunteer positions, and often thankless — was another moment to reflect on community.  Despite the acrimony of election season and the incredibly close races in places like Stanford and Rhinebeck in Dutchess County (three votes each; every vote truly does count), these events felt like small town public service at its best. Family members beamed with pride; grandchildren held the Bible or sang. Friends and neighbors brought home baked goodies. Hopefully that spirit of collegiality will carry on throughout the term because when communities work together good things actually happen.

Case in point is the just announced Dial-A-Ride program launched by the Millerton-based North East Community Center (NECC) – there’s that word, again — to serve six towns that have largely been without any public transportation for years. The process took several years of research and negotiation. Buses and drivers are provided through an agreement with the Dutchess County Division of Mass Transit. The bus service requires free pre-registration (fares range from $1 for seniors and veterans to $3.50 for the general public) and will serve residents of the towns of Northeast, Pine Plains, Stanford, Washington, Amenia and Dover, taking them directly to doctors appointments, shopping, school or work. Available six days a week, service is provided on a first come, first served basis.  To register or to make reservations, people should call Justin Svingen at (518) 789-4259 or email justin@neccmillerton.org.

Community matters in the here and now, but most of us harbor the hope that future generations, our children and their children, will also know the embrace of community spirit.  That’s one of the reasons we do the things we do to make our communities viable.  As is often the case, it is a Chinese Proverb that says it best: “One generation plants the trees. Another gets the shade.”  Happy New Year!

Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged Bindlestiff Family Cirkus, community, Dial-A-Ride, Handman String Quartet, Hudson Valley, Larry Ham Duet, Millbrook Rotary Club, NECC, New Year's Eve Millbrook, Northeast Community Center, Peter Muir | 1 Comment

What Do Young Farmers Want?

In this season of gift-giving, why not think about what the young farmers in our country would want.  After all, they are the next-gen cohort who are choosing as their career path NOT to occupy a Wall Street — or a consulting or law firm — office. Rather, they are opting, against great challenges, to nurture the soils that coddle the roots that grow the vegetables that feed all of us everyday.

“Serve Your Country Food,” exhorts The Greenhorns, the activist young farmers group that has produced an engaging film and an upcoming book with their same name. “Young farmers are poised to redefine the American landscape along with our food scene,” said Severine vT Fleming, The Greenhorns’ Director. ” We are strong of will and determined to make farming sustainable in this country.”

So who are these intrepid young agrarians?

“The ‘good food’ movement—the interest and enthusiasm for organic, local and sustainably grown food now spreading across the country—is one of many factors bringing young people back to farming in the United States,” according to the National Young Farmers Coalition, a grassroots advocacy and support organization of young and sustainable farmers headquartered here in the Hudson Valley. ”The young men and women pursuing agriculture today have a different profile than generations past: they come from diverse backgrounds and experiences, they embrace sustainable growing practices, and many did not grow up on a family farm. Their families may have abandoned rural areas for the city many generations ago. Pursuing a farming career is a return to these roots. Young people increasingly view farming as a physically engaging and fulfilling career that guarantees independence and leadership.”

Indeed, earlier this month, a capacity crowd filled the Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture‘s 4th annual Young Farmers Conference which covered a range of subjects from Basic Soil Science and Handling Skills with Sheep to Helping Farmers and Landowners find Common Ground.

This fall,  the NYFC released a report, which may well be the first of its kind.  It zeroes in on the barriers beginners face launching a farming career in America today. Based on surveys done with more than 1,000 farmers from 34 states across the country, the report found that access to capital, access to land and health insurance were the greatest obstacles for starting farmers; on the other hand, apprenticeships, local partnerships and Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) were the most helpful programs.

More than three quarters of those who self identified  as farmers described themselves as first generation farmers. To highlight the youth of this population, sixty-eight percent of the farmer respondents in the survey were under age 35, with the majority between 25 and 29 years old, and most already had between one and five years of experience in the field.

This crop of youthful farmers is actually very good news for the country. Over the last hundred years the number of American farmers has dropped from 6 million to 2 million, and we all know what direction the American population has gone in during that same period.  Furthermore, the average age for American farmers is now 57 and the USDA reports they expect 500,000 — one quarter of them — will retire in the next 20 years.

So, it behooves us to pay attention to what beginning farmers need to make a go of it. After all, we really need them.  Unfortunately federal and most state agriculture policies at the moment don’t sufficiently acknowledge this need or provide the support to keep America farming through this century and beyond.

Here are some of the things on the young farmers wish list:  Better credit and micro credit programs — or grants like Massachusetts has — for beginning farmers,  as well as individual development accounts (IDAs) geared to start-up farmer needs;  tax credit programs like Nebraska and Iowa have that encourage landowners to lease long term or sell land to beginning farmers; land protection policies that make farmland affordable, keep it as working land, and facilitate transitioning land within a family or to new farmers. Young farmers also want states to do a better job legalizing safe and fair apprenticeships and they want health care programs for small businesses that would make it affordable for small farms to provide health insurance for themselves and their employees. Way too many farmers go without health insurance. Young farmers would like to see more programs like Pennsylvania’s Agriculture Education Loan Forgiveness which works with folks who return to the state to work in designated agriculture jobs.

On a local level, young farmers welcome zoning that protects farmland from development and inclusion of farmers at the table where planning conversations are held. Local farmers markets, CSAs and farm-to-school programs are win-wins for the community and the farmers.

Now that the super committee no longer controls the 2012 Farm Bill,  there are opportunities for Congress to do right by sustainable agriculture and the country and pass policies that support the next generation of American farmers. For their part, these young farmers are not afraid to speak up and speak out.  ”We know who our senators and representatives are, we vote and our friends and families vote,” said Tierney Creed of the Washington State Young Farmers Coalition.  ”We need USDA and government support to succeed and we’re going to let the nation know that.”

Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged Agriculture Education Loan Forgiveness, Farm Bill 2012, Hudson Valley, Lindsey Lusher Shute, National Young Farmers Coalition, Severine vT Fleming, The Greenhorns, Tierney Creed | Leave a comment

Where in the World is the 2012 Farm Bill?

You may already know a lot, or a little, about the U.S. Farm Bill, dear Reader, but this has been my year to try to understand this smorgasbord bill,  passed every five to seven years (most recently in 2008) and what it really means for farms of all sizes, for sustainability, for the food we eat and for the American people.  Turns out I picked a doozy of a year to try to observe the process as the 2012 Farm Bill, like so much else, has been held hostage by the deficit-reduction frenzy. There has been widespread concern that this far reaching legislation was being fast-tracked and negotiated in secret as part of the now-failed supercommittee process.

Even under normal circumstances the picture isn’t a whole lot prettier. ”Typically, passage of the Farm Bill… involves a lengthy process of hearings, constituent meetings, and (sad but true) many a high-priced meal on the tab of some lobbyist or other—followed by detailed negotiations between the House and Senate Agriculture Committees,”  Tom Laskaway, food and ag policy writer wrote in Grist last month.

As our nation prepares to commemorate that first Thanksgiving feast it’s not exactly clear where the 2012 Farm Bill is; it needs to be renewed by September 30, 2012. I am intent on continuing to follow the process as this is the legislation that, among other things,  has the potential to set the tone and the funding for federal commitment to sustainable agriculture, for support and encouragement of young and future farmers, for land and resource conservation programs, and for redirecting subsidies away from the big ag commodities  that seem to be producing more feed and fuel than actual nourishing food.

Just an example on that last point: Fruits, vegetables and nuts, those staples of healthy eating, are labeled “specialty crops” under the last farm bill while commodity crops, supported on the basis of how much is produced of corn, soybeans, wheat, rice and cotton, now get something like $25 billion a year in subsidies.

By way of background, writer Michael Pollan of Omnivore’s Dilemna fame has described the Farm Bill as a “resolutely unglamorous and head-hurtingly complicated piece of legislation, which… sets the rules for the American food system — indeed, to a considerable extent, for the world’s food system.” Says Pollan, it  “isn’t a bill just for farmers. It really should be called a ‘food bill’ because it is the rules for the food system we all eat by, and those rules are really lousy right now. They need to be changed.” As Pollan has long pointed out there is much more incentive to produce corn syrup and soybean oil, “those building blocks of fast food,” than to grow and produce the balanced nutritious diet that would nourish and feed families and communities.

Now is the time to stay informed and reach out to your legislators here in the Hudson Valley. Both New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand and Congressman Chris Gibson (NY 20) serve on their respective Agriculture Committees.  The combined interest in regional farming,  locavore eating and growing concerns about Big Ag (including efforts by the Occupy Wall Street folks) has launched more grassroots interest in the 2012 Farm Bill than in past cycles, reports the online news source Grist, which is been following the 2012 bill with an excellent series. American Farmland Trust, too, has put out a very helpful primer.

So, while you gather with family and friends and prepare your holiday feast take a moment to remember where all that wonderful food is coming from and how truly essential sustainable agriculture is for our future. Happy Thanksgiving to all!

Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged American Farmland Trust, Buy Local, Chris Gibson, Farm Bill, Farm Bill 2012, Farms, Grist, Hudson Valley, Kirsten Gillibrand, Michael Pollan | 1 Comment

Getting the Frack Out of Here

It was good news last week when NY State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Joe Martens reported that the hydrofracking advisory panel is behind schedule and that it’s unlikely any permits will be granted any time soon. The panel was meant to deliver its recommendations today, November 1, but it is still waiting for budget and resource estimates from several state agencies which are apparently struggling to come up with that information. The panel’s recommendations aren’t expected now until sometime next year, well after the Governor’s budget proposal.

This news doesn’t mean it is time to be complacent.  More than ever it’s important to make all our voices heard on this profound issue that impacts quite simply everything that matters: Our water, our food and farmland, our communities, our environment, our health and our economy. Unless it’s changed, December 12, 2011 is still the deadline for public comment on where, when, how, and if horizontal hydraulic fracturing — or fracking — will be allowed in NY State. It’s not too late. As the first state to introduce a moratorium to consider health and safety issues before allowing permits, New York can go on and do the right thing with strict statewide regulations. The clock is ticking.

I think most of us agree that jobs are the number one issue in the state right now, but creating jobs doesn’t have to mean putting our water and our communities at risk. When drinking water is poisoned by fracking’s secret chemical cocktail it cannot be reversed. When a bucolic landscape morphs into an industrial site, that green field instantly becomes a brownfield. What’s more, this is not even a level field.  Few rural communities where fracking has been introduced have strong enough zoning and enforcement protections to counter the sophisticated negotiations or mitigate against the violations of big mining companies.

It’s also heartbreaking to realize how much of the targeted land is farmland: Way too many sites are former dairy farms that struggled and then failed under a strange system that kept the price of milk fixed while energy and other costs soared.  Where was the state support for those hard working farmers who were feeding and nourishing our families while contributing to the upstate economy? How will we continue to feed our families in New York State with diminished farmland which we are putting at serious risk?

This fracking issue has brought misery and bitterness at seemingly every turn.  Beautiful, historic villages like Cooperstown,  a great tourist destination with the Baseball Hall of Fame, Fenimore and Farmer’s Museums and Glimmerglass Opera Festival, has seen neighbor pitted against neighbor in the debate over gas drilling. And what happens to that tourist economy, not to mention real estate values, when the surrounding landscape is pocked with drill pads? The same questions apply to anywhere along the Marcellus Shale, including here in the Hudson Valley.

It’s up to all of us to be informed and vocal about this issue. Here are several ways; feel free to comment at the end of this post with more suggestions.

  • See Gasland, the Josh Fox film that won an Emmy award earlier this year.
  • Check out the Natural Gas Subcommittee of the Secretary of Energy Advisory Board’s complete and thorough report on the Safety of Shale Gas Development.
  • Environmental Advocates is offering a webinar Is New York’s Policy Don’t Ask, Just Frack? on Tuesday, November 8,  2011 from 12 noon to 1 pm.  Water & Natural Resources Program Director, Katherine Nadeau, and Citizens Campaign for the Environment’s Legislative & Policy Director, Sarah Eckel, will talk about what is (and what isn’t) in the state’s plans, and what’s best for our communities and our water. Click here to register!
  • Several environmental groups have zeroed in on  10 major flaws  in the State’s published guidelines and how to fix them.

And when you are ready to speak out, Environmental Advocates has just set up a nifty Facebook page that will send real postcards to the DEC or you can comment directly at the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation website.


Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged Environmental Advocates, Farms, fracking, Gasland, Hudson Valley, Joe Martens, Marcellus Shale, NY State fracking guidelines, NYDEC | Leave a comment

A Fresh Look at Farm Fresh

The following column appeared in the October 5-11, 2o11 edition of the Hudson Valley News .

Many of us who are blessed to live in the Hudson Valley especially enjoy living here because of the proximity to working farms.  We love watching the progress of a field of corn through the summer; we love driving past a picture perfect horse farm on our way to work or marveling at a herd of belted black and white Galloway cows looking like so many contented Oreos in the pasture. We know the taste of a fresh apple right off the tree; we know the distinctive smell of passing a dairy farm; and we know the patience required when you get behind a tractor on a country road.

For those who aren’t so fortunate, there are always day trips to pick apples or pumpkins, visits to family-friendly fall festivals– plentiful in the Hudson Valley over the next month — and, in Dutchess County, Farm Fresh Tours, a very successful partnership of Dutchess County Tourism and Metro North that has brought more than 3,600 people to the county over the four years since the August to October program began.

Tourism in Dutchess County alone brings in nearly $500 million a year and the tourism industry is responsible for 6% of all employment in the Hudson Valley region. These Farm Fresh tours, which continue through the fourth weekend of October (http://www.dutchesstourism.com/agri-metronorth.asp), introduce a whole new population to an essential segment of the county’s economy and generate well needed tourism and agriculture dollars that don’t stop when those folks get back on Metro North and return to the big city.

These visitors now know the region. Ninety five percent of this year’s Farm Fresh tourists reported they learned something new and would either take another tour or recommend it to a friend or family member. These folks have wandered through the villages of Millerton and Millbrook and shopped their weekly Farmers Markets.  They have browsed galleries in Beacon, visited Fishkill Farms, Sprout Creek Farm and Terhune Orchards, and tasted wines at Cascade and Millbrook Vineyards. They report having spent an average of $75 a person during their outing — some as much as $300. Equally important, though, they will visit the region again and will patronage these same farmers and food producers at the Greenmarket or their local specialty store in NYC.

For some reason, Dutchess County isn’t generally identified as a rural county, perhaps because of the population density in southern Dutchess and the Route 9 corridor, but, it fact, it is and should more clearly be thought of as an important farm and food producing county for New York State. While it has seen a sad and sharp decline in the number of dairy farms over the last several decades, Dutchess County still has more than 650 farms encompassing about one-fifth of the county’s total acreage, and the vast majority of these are small and family farms. Anecdotally, from driving around the county, I would venture to say that there is probably at least one, if not more, working farm in every town in Dutchess County. Parts of Dutchess feel as rural as any county in the state.

Add to that the county’s other food production: Outstanding wines, artisanal cheeses, small batch honeys and preserves, free range chicken and grass fed meat producers, and exciting, sustainable new ventures like Wild Hive’s grains in Clinton and Crown Maple Syrup Dover Plains and you have the makings of a true foodie fueled economic engine.  It’s a bonus, of course, to have the Culinary Institute of America, training the future chefs and hospitality professionals, right here in the county, too.

While the Mid-Hudson Regional Economic Development Council continues to meet around the region it’s a great opportunity to speak up for the importance of viable and sustainable small farms and support of local food production. These kinds of businesses mean jobs that stay local and that last — in some cases for generations.

To make your voice heard check the Mid-Hudson Regional Economic Development Council website for meetings that are open to the public and take their public survey. (http://nyworks.ny.gov/content/mid-hudson/mid-hudson-regional-council-public-survey)

Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged Crown Maple Syrup, Culinary Institute of America, Dutchess County, Dutchess County Tourism, Farm Fresh Tours, farmers markets, Hudson Valley Tourism, Metro North, Mid-Hudson Regional Economic Development Council, Wild Hive Farm | Leave a comment

More Farm Work — Educating the Consumer

Back in the day, farmers farmed and shoppers shopped and, there were many middle men and little interaction between the two.  Fortunately for those of us who care about what we feed our families and like knowing where our food comes from that has started to change for many Americans.

Farmers increasingly see that part of their farm work is, in fact, to educate the public about who they are, what they do, and why it matters.  And from a business standpoint they are right about this.  As the late off-price retailer Sy Syms, so famously put it, “An educated consumer is our best customer.”  The explosion of farmers markets around the country is testament to the desire for more connection by both farmer and consumer. So are the many new locavore restaurants and the number of farmers now selling right off their farms.

On the macro scale there is the recent debut of the US  Farmers and Ranchers Alliance, obviously well funded given the full page NY Times ad and multiple snazzy websites.  This alliance of “agricultural groups at the national, regional and state levels,” founded it seems in reaction to the public response to films like Food, Inc  and books like The Omnivore’s Dilemna, is offering  to “lead the dialogue and answer Americans’ questions about how we raise our food,” according to their Food Dialogues site. One hopes they are willing to listen to the dialogue that is already in full swing at local farmers markets, farm stands and in communities around the country.

Here in the Hudson Valley there are a number of farms for whom education has always been part of their mission. In Poughkeepsie alone, both the  Poughkeepsie Farm Project, with its community focus, and the 200 acre Sprout Creek Farm highlight education as part of their mission. Since 1982, Sprout Creek Farm, through summer camps and year-round programming, has been welcoming children and families — including my own — to “provide educational experiences for children and adults that will foster appreciation for, and understanding of, our place within the natural world…” And they do it well.

Don Lewis of Wild Hive Farms in Clinton is ever the educator.  The man knows more about grains than anyone. In addition to his cafe (which is also home to the world’s smallest, and most adorable, library), he recently acquired a mill down the road with the goal of creating an interactive learning center with classes and milling demonstrations.

Perhaps the Hudson Valley’s most impressive example of “farm ed” has been happening for 40 years — often below the mainstream radar screen — at the 400 acre biodynamic Hawthorne Valley Farms in Ghent.  The farm is part of the Hawthorne Valley Association which spells out its commitment to Education, Agriculture and the Arts as part of its full name. In addition to a K-12 Waldorf School with 200 children right on the grounds, Hawthorne Valley offers extensive training programs and apprenticeships in farming — and soon in the bakery and creamery; workshops, classes and teacher training on subjects from biodynamics to forging musical instruments, from cheese-making to a weekend conference on Rudolf Steiner’s World Economy.

In addition, Hawthorne Valley Farms regularly welcomes school visits from students who come from as near as Hudson and as far as New York City.  They take their expertise on the road and provide in-school talks on any farm related subject for kids from kindergarden through high school.  And they offer after-school classes — working with local agencies to provide limited transportation to the farm –  in cooking, farm work, and land-based crafts.

All these farms are committed to connecting local communities to the farmers that feed them and the food that nourishes them. At Hawthorne Valley Farms they count on both the farmers and the food products, as they say, “to open an educational dialogue about our environment, our economy, and ourselves.”  To get a first hand look at Hawthorne Valley Farm’s pioneering work you can visit their 17th Annual Fall Festival on Sunday, October 9 from 10 am to 4 pm, rain or shine.

Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged Hawthorne Valley Farms, Poughkeepsie Farm Project, Sprout Creek Farm, US Farmers and Ranchers Alliance, Wild Hives Farm and Cafe | Leave a comment

Dine Out Irene and other Post-Flood Farm Relief Efforts

New York State farmers suffered a devastating double whammy over the last month when uninvited guests Irene and then Lee tore through the upstate and Hudson Valley regions leaving heartbreaking wreckage in their wake. It is clear we haven’t begun to truly understand the extent of the damage from either the economic or ecological perspective.  According to the American Farmland Trust, “New York state has lost an estimated $45 million in crops and livestock and suffered damage to approximately 145,000 acres of farmland.”

If there is a silver lining to this disaster it is that a spotlight is now shining on our New York State farms and perhaps this will lead to greater recognition of agriculture as the important economic engine it is, and to farmers getting the support they need to run viable and sustainable businesses.

It was good news that Gov. Andrew Cuomo quickly announced a $15 million Agricultural and Community Recovery Fund intended to help farmers and rural communities rebuild, but it’s hard to believe that will be more than a drop in the proverbial bucket. Darrel Aubertine, Commissioner of the Department of Agriculture and Markets, has released $5 million to begin the rehabilitation of farmland damaged by the flooding. “The land is the farmer’s greatest resource,” said Aubertine, himself a farmer and former state senator.

The outpouring of public support for farmers has been heartwarming.  The following are some links to upcoming events like Dine Out Irene where NYC and other restaurants will donate 10% of sales to farmers badly hit by the hurricanes. Please feel free to tell us about others.

The Valley Table has updated information on the diverse array of flood benefits being held throughout the region this fall, as well as a listing of the Hudson Valley restaurants participating in Dine Out Irene on Sunday, September 25, 2011.

Hudson Valley Food Network has started a forum for requests of help from farmers, for those in need of food, and for those who wish to help local farmers. They also list regional fundraisers to support local farms.

Taste of the Catksills Festival – to be held in Delhi in the Catskills on October 8 and 9 — hopes to raise awareness and money for flood relief. The Delhi Fire Department will be collecting donations for local distribution.

Watershed Post continues to be a terrific news source for and about the Catskill region with updated information about storm resources and relief sites and a detailed list of ways to support the Catskill area farmers.

Hudson Valley Seed Library  will be donating 25% of all sales the month of September to farm aid for small farmers who lost their crops to Irene and Lee.  The Seed Library is particularly worried about the challenges for sustainable and organic farms that have lost significant topsoil or are downstream of larger farms that might use chemicals.

Pure Catskill has teamed up with other groups to launch the Catskill Farmers Flood Relief Fund.  To find an upcoming event check their website.

Food Systems Network NYC continues to update relief information for farmers throughout New York State.

GrowNYC says that 80% of Greenmarket farmers have been impacted by the recent storms.  Its site has lists of affected farms and resources for impacted farmers, as well as information about the Greenmarket’s Hurricane Relief Fund and other ways to help.

The Dyson Foundation is offering emergency funding to Hudson Valley not for profit organizations — including farm-focused groups — with storm-related damages and losses.

Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged American Farmland Trust, Dine Out Irene, Dyson Foundation, Farms, Hudson Valley, Hudson Valley Food Network, Hudson Valley Seed Library, Watershed Post | Leave a comment

The Hudson Valley’s own Eleanor Roosevelt

Embraced by many as “First Lady of the World,” Eleanor Roosevelt — in fact First Lady of both the United States and the State of New York; Chairman of  UN Commission of Human Rights; United States Representative to the UN General Assembly; and first Chairman of the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women — was, in large part, a daughter of the Hudson Valley.

In addition to her well documented life in Hyde Park after her 1905 marriage to Franklin Delano Roosevelt, her father’s fifth cousin, Eleanor also spent great parts of her childhood in the Hudson Valley at the Tivoli estate of her maternal grandparents, riding her beloved pony at the picturesque stables that are now part of the Kaatsbaan dance center.

After the death of both of her parents, the young Eleanor came to live with her grandmother Mary Ludlow Hall at Oak Terrace, the Hall family’s Hudson River estate in Tivoli.  Understandably this was not the happiest time in Eleanor’s life.  However, as Blanche Wiesen Cook wrote in her seminal biography Eleanor Roosevelt, Volume 1: 1884-1933, “The countryside around Tivoli, which ER loved in all seasons, was a constant joy to her, providing wide-ranging spaces in which she was free to hide, to read, and to be alone inside her own world.” It’s not surprising, then, that after the death of FDR, when Eleanor could have lived anywhere in the world, she chose the Hudson Valley and the serene Val-Kill with it’s lovely stream to be her home and refuge.

It is this legacy of Eleanor Roosevelt that Jane Watson of Green Peas TV — another spirited woman who is passionate about the Hudson Valley and its farmers — is celebrating with her upcoming Dinner at Eleanor’s: A Moveable Feast, a one-of-a-kind farm-to-table foodie experience to be held at Oak Terrace, now a decaying manse on the original Livingston family estate with a spectacular Hudson River view on Sunday, September 18th from 3:30 to 7 pm.

Watson’s Green Peas TV, along with the talent-rich and sustainably-minded Chef’s Consortium, have been making a habit of pulling off glorious locavore Hudson Valley dining experiences in unique settings —  the Mid-Hudson Bridge and Bannerman Island, for example –  with the proceeds going to local not-for-profit organizations.  Dinner at Eleanor’s will benefit The Eleanor Roosevelt Center at Val-Kill and ARCS, AIDS-Related Community Services. And it will be filmed as the next episode of greenpeastv.com.

As part of the mix, Watson looks for great pairings when she curates her events, pairings of people, foods and wines. Dinner at Eleanor’s: A Moveable Feast celebrates the long relationship between the Roosevelt and Morgenthau families. Henry Morgenthau, Jr., the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury and governor of the Federal Farm Board during the FDR administration, and his wife Elinor, were dear friends of the Roosevelts and the Morgenthau family which still owns Fishkill Farms in East Fishkill, will be both sourcing the meal and dining at Dinner at Eleanor’s.

The meal will begin with “historic cocktails,” says Watson, and an exclusive tour of the 22 room Second Empire style mansion which remains virtually unaltered since the 19th century. The five-course dinner — from soup to chocolates — will be served with a Hudson view and prepared in-person and at the peak of harvest time by some of the Hudson Valley’s most brilliant chefs, including Paul Yeaple of Poppy’s in Beacon  (a champion of the 2010 Food Network’s “Chopped” cooking competition show); Michel Jean of The Stissing House in Pine Plains; and Noah Sheetz and Rebecca Joyner of Chefs Consortium. Cooking along side the pros will be third generation farmer Ken Migliorelli of nearby Migliorelli Farm.

Tickets for Dinner at Eleanor’s must be purchased in advance.  For more information go to  www.arcs.org/dinnerateleanors.php or call 914.785.8283.

Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged ARCs, Chef's Consortium, Dutchess County Tourism, Eleanor Roosevelt, ERVK, Fishkill Farms, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Green Peas TV, Hudson Valley, Kaatsbaan, Migliorelli Farms, Morgenthau, Oak Terrace, Poppy's, Stissing House | 3 Comments

In the Wake of Irene: How to Help

The devastating wake left by Irene has the mid-Hudson Valley and neighboring counties reeling from the unexpected destruction. Hundreds, maybe thousands, of folks are homeless; whole towns and villages are unrecognizable; and basic infrastructure like bridges, roads and dams suffered crippling damage, some even totally wiped out.

Neither upstate New York, nor Vermont for that matter, were supposed to be targets of Irene.  No amount of planning could have prepared these communities for what happened. After the loss of lives, livestock and homes, some of the most heartbreaking images have been the destroyed covered bridges, century-old country stores and multi-generational family businesses. Those structures are some of the very images these regions are best known for; even with rebuilding those historic icons can really never be replaced. They have passed into the realm of memories.

I find it ironic that the most effective communications through the storm and even after in these rural communities, so 19th century in their appearance,  turned out to be the very 21st century social media, particularly Twitter, which became a lifeline for many stranded by floodwaters. The women of Watershed Post, an online news source for the Catskills which blogged and tweeted live all day Sunday, describe Twitter as ” the Internet’s version of ham radio.”  They turn out to be among the heroes of this catastrophe linking anxious friends and neighbors, along with FEMA and the local Red Cross — like old time telephone operators. Days later Watershed Post relentlessly continues this work and they offer these guidelines to officials and others trying to get real time information out to folks in the area.

As the region assesses the damage and figures out how to move forward, several other regional websites have become very helpful resources for those in need of relief as well as those who wish to help.  Here are links to some sites that I have come across. Please feel free to add others:

The Valley Table has updated lists of flood benefits, restaurants participating in Dine Out Irene on September 25th, and other farm disaster updates.

Watershed Post continues to update information about road closing, general storm resources and a detailed list of ways to support the Catskill area hard hit farmers

Hudson Valley Food Network has started a forum for requests of help from farmers, for those in need of food, and for those who wish to help local farmers. They’ve also added a list of farmers, through Crop Mob NYC, that you can contact directly.

American Red Cross — Northeastern New York needs immediate volunteers for storm relief and has training sessions in Poughkeepsie on Thursday, September 1 and Tuesday, September 6.

Ivan Lajara of The Daily Freeman is compiling a database of Catskill flooding donation and relief centers.

Adirondack Almanac has information about conditions — some quite dangerous —  in the back country over the Labor Day weekend.

The Dyson Foundation is offering emergency funding to Hudson Valley not for profit organizations with Irene-related damages and losses.

Preservation League of NY State has compiled a resource list for those with historic structures, for before and after a disaster like Irene.

Pure Catskill  has resources to help farmers in the Catskills, including drop off efforts in NYC and Brooklyn.

Posted in Didi's dish | Tagged American Red Cross, Daily Freeman, Hudson Valley, Hudson Valley Food Network, Irene, Watershed Post | 3 Comments
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