"When consumers don’t think about the values behind what they buy, they buy based solely on low price. And the lowest price leaves no room for care or land stewardship in the making of a product. It leaves no room for good practices or nutrition." - Todd Ulizio / Two Bear Farm

Field of broccolini - Two Bear Farm

A field of broccolini - Two Bear Farm, Montana

 

At BluSpas, we believe that true wellness extends beyond the walls of spa retreats and fitness centers. That’s why we are passionate about expanding the wellness conversation and forging stronger connections that encompass a holistic approach to health and sustainability. 

One of these conversations worth discussing is understanding the vital connection between wellness and local organic farmers. 

Kim and I recently attended our local farmer’s market here in Whitefish and chatted with farmers Todd and Rebecca Ulizio of Two Bear Farm.  They shared their thoughts regarding the importance of supporting local farms, the growing disconnect between urban and rural folks and building a good food system for the land, people, and communities. 

We’re sharing Todd’s recent article he writes for his CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) members about why people need to reconnect with their food sources and understand how it is grown and why it matters. It’s not just about buying local and organic veggies. It’s about nurturing our bodies with wholesome, nutrient-rich ingredients that enhance our well-being, promote local economies' growth, and land stewardship and foster an important relationship with the environment. 

Maybe we can all celebrate and better understand the synergy between spa and wellness experiences and the remarkable work of our local farming community. - Cary Collier

——————————————— TWO BEAR FARM CSA NEWSLETTER ———————————————

After six weeks of often-sweltering spring weather that felt more like summer, Ma Nature is here to remind us this week that it’s still spring with a good old-fashioned cold front. Last night the farm very briefly got down to the freezing mark, and I expect it will be the same tonight and Wednesday. And that folks, is why we don’t grow our tomatoes out in the field.

After a very busy planting season with little time off, I am super excited to be headed to Helmville, MT this weekend for the first Old Salt Festival. It’s a Montana celebration of land stewardship, replete with amazing food, workshops, good music, writing, and probably some booze….all outdoors on the beautiful Mannix Ranch. When I was a fledgling wildlife biologist, I worked on a Canada Lynx project in the mountains that surround the Mannix Ranch, and it is a remote and beautiful place that I think represents the essence of Montana. Helmville doesn’t even have a Chick-fil-A?!

And the reason I eventually transitioned from biologist to being a farmer, in addition to getting to explain to people what a Kohlrabi is, was the idea of using farming as a means to be a land steward and to impact how people interact with the land.

Rebecca Two Bear Farm

Rebecca….overdoing it again. No surprise there.

What I love about the concept of this festival is that it is a group of producers deciding to take things into their own hands, to use their creativity, and to reconnect with consumers directly to tell their story. For too long, farmers in this country have been separated from customers by a huge industry of processors, distributors, and retailers that take 92 cents of every food dollar, and leave farmers and ranchers with just 8 cents out of every food dollar to pay for all the hard work and risk they take on. And while this disconnect has been bad for farmers and ranchers, I believe it has been even worse for consumers.

I heard recently that the American population is now 85% urban or suburban. And it seems apparent that when people urbanize, they lose touch with what happens on the land, where things come from, and how they are produced. We become consumers, where everything is readily available to those with money, and we become completely dependent on the system for basically all of our needs. While cultivating and growing our own food has been part of humanity for over 10,000 years, in just the last two generations, the vast majority of Americans have lost the knowledge of how to grow food, or to even know where it comes from.

The less we know about how food is grown, and the less we are connected to the land , the less we understand how things are changing and how industrialization has completely altered our food supply. Few people realize that most (as in over 90%) of milk, beef, poultry and eggs in the grocery store comes from huge confined feeding operations as opposed to family farms. Few people realize how many ag chemicals are used on food or the fact that Glyphosate (the main ingredient in Roundup) is so prevalent that it can be found in over 90% of Americans' urine ( and breast milk).

I’ll stop there, but the list goes on and on.

As people move away from “working landscapes” and lose contact with how things are produced, we become consumers where everything is “out of sight, out of mind”. This is the opposite of being aware. This is a system that enables us not to have to see or pay attention to what is behind all of our consumption.

And I believe this type of disconnect is one of the biggest issues we face as humans. When we stop paying attention to the values behind what we consume and instead focus only on price, it becomes one big race to the bottom.

So, I guess my point is, for things to turn around regarding food quality, land management, ecosystem health, and human health statistics in this country (60% of adults with chronic illness?), people need to begin reconnecting with where their food comes from, how it is grown, and why that matters.

So much news about climate change, cows, farming, artificial meat, etc. all suffer from a lack of understanding that it’s not the cow, it’s the how.

How we grow food matters!

And people learning about where food comes from is super important to our collective future. Our CSA is one way to do that. Going to Old Salt Festival is another way to do that. Whatever it takes to get people to become more “informed” consumers while there are still choices to make.

Todd and Rebecca Ulizio - Two Bear Farm (https://twobearfarm.com/)

 

——————————————— RESOURCES FOR FURTHER READING ———————————————

JM Fortier at themarketgardener.com is pushing biological intensive growing on a small market farming scale.  At larger scales, you have Will Allen at White Oak Pastures and  Gabe Brown, author of Dirt to Soil and owner of Browns Ranch, who are both examples of on-the-ground land stewardship in a true regenerative fashion.

Many nonprofits like Regeneration International and Farmers Footprint are also working on this idea.

Groups like Blackfoot Challenge, which through private/public collaboration, have conserved 450,000 acres in the Blackfoot Valley of Montana.