About
About CSA-Central New York
Since 1998, Community Supported Agriculture of Central New York (CSA-CNY) has been bringing people together to safeguard, promote, make available, and enjoy locally grown organic foods.
Our commitment to local organic agriculture is centered on four key objectives:
- to eat seasonally
- to provide farmers with a living wage
- to reject industrialized food
- to advocate for local organic agriculture
In doing this, CSA-CNY contributes to the creation of a sustainable, healthy food supply in Central New York.
Generally, people who subscribe to Community Supported Agriculture programs pay upfront for a portion of the season’s harvest, providing farmers with “seed” money when income is low.
Most CSAs are organized internally by the farm. CSA-CNY is different. CSA-CNY was started as a project of the New Environment Association in an effort to provide a consumer-driven, self-organizing system for obtaining local, organic, food. Because the farmer ought to be focusing on farming, a planning group — consisting of CSA members and farmers — meets monthly to plan and organize the CSA and related community events.
Since CSA-CNY is volunteer-driven, subscribing includes a commitment to this community effort! Whether volunteering at your pod, in the planning group, or at an event, your energy keeps CSA-CNY going.
Click here for what to expect in your weekly shares, where to pick up your veggies, and how to get started today!
About Our Farmer
CSA-CNY contracts with Dick de Graff of Grindstone Farm for weekly produce deliveries. Dick is a well-known leader in organic farming in Central New York, with nearly 30 years of experience in growing a wide range of high quality produce. Grindstone Farm has been Northeast Organic Farming Association (NOFA) certified since 1988.
The farm offers tours and hosts events throughout the growing season. Visitors and volunteers are encouraged and always welcome! Take exit 35 from I -81, proceed east for approximately half a mile.
780 County Route 28/Tinker Tavern Rd.
Pulaski, NY 13142
(315) 298-4139
www.grindstonefarm.com
customerservice @ grindstonefarm.com
About Community Supported Agriculture
Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) is a relatively new socio-economic model of food production, sales, and distribution with the goal of increasing both the quality of food as well as the health of the land on which the food is grown while simultaneously reducing some of the potential financial risks for farmers.
CSAs consist of a community of individuals who pledge support to a farm: growers and eaters providing mutual support and sharing the risks and benefits of food production. The CSA shareholders pay for produce in advance of the growing season, providing the farm with the necessary capital to help cover the anticipated costs of farm operation and the farmer’s salary. In shareholders return, they receive weekly shares in the farm’s bounty – fresh, local, organic produce.
Two important components of CSA programs include providing shareholders with the opportunity to reconnect to the land by participating directly in local food production as well as to understand and share in the inherent risks of farming, including poor harvests due to unfavorable weather or pests.
The concept of Community Supported Agriculture began independently in both Europe and Japan in the 1960s. At a time when Japan was starting to import more foods, lose farmland, and experience urban migration of farmers, a group of Japanese women developed a partnership with local farmers whereby the farmers provided fresh produce to the multiple families who committed to support the farm. This concept was named “teikei,” which translated literally means partnership, but philosophically means “food with the farmer’s face on it.”
The first CSAs appeared in the US in 1985. As of 2005, the USDA reported the existence of 1,144 CSAs in operation in the United States. Each year, the number of CSA farms and participating members increases dramatically. It is also estimated that nearly 270,000 households are served by CSAs during each growing season.


