| IN THE 
			BACKYARD 
            Local produce chart; community garden tour; training for new growers By Deborah 
			Cavanaugh-Grant, University of Illinois Extension 
			 Send a link to a friend 
			
            
            [July 19, 2013] 
            New local foods infographic 
			with seasonal calendar -- I know you all are savvy seasonal 
			shoppers, but I imagine there are still some fuzzy areas about what 
			exactly is in season when -- especially as more growers extend the 
			season with hoophouses and root cellars. | 
		
            |  That's one of the reasons
			The Land Connection 
			put together a brand-new local food infographic, with a year-round 
			seasonal availability chart informed by local fruit and vegetable 
			growers. The chart starts with the earliest spring perennials such 
			as chives, sorrel and asparagus, moves through the high-summer 
			crops, into the autumn greens and roots, and finally the winter 
			storage crops, including roots, squashes and grains. It also shows 
			the "shoulder seasons" for crops commonly grown in hoophouses, which 
			can extend the season a month or more earlier and later than outdoor 
			field plantings. But this infographic is much more than a seasonal 
			produce calendar. It also presents facts and figures about nutrition 
			loss over time, where your food dollar goes and how our communities 
			would benefit if only 15 percent of consumer food purchases went to 
			local farmers. This is all illustrated in compelling ways. 
			
			 But enough words already! To see this hot-off-the-press 
			infographic,
			
			click here.  This infographic is part of the
			
			Farm Fresh Now! series funded by a USDA Specialty Crop Grant 
			received through the Illinois Department of Agriculture. Happy local shopping and eating! ___ Roots to Rooftop Tour The American 
			Community Gardening Association has a broad definition of what a 
			community garden entails. It can be urban, suburban or rural. It can 
			grow flowers, vegetables or community. It can be one community plot 
			or many individual plots. It can be at a school, hospital or in a 
			neighborhood. It can also be a series of plots dedicated to "urban 
			agriculture," where the produce is grown for a market. Interested in learning more about community gardening in 
			Springfield? If so, then join an upcoming urban agriculture and 
			garden tour throughout the Springfield area on July 28 from 1 to 4 
			p.m. to visit a school garden, a rooftop garden, and other 
			neighborhood and community gardens. For more information, go to
			
			http://web.extension.illinois.edu/units/event.cfm?UnitID=629&EventID=62221.
 
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			 The Springfield area sites on the 
			tour include: 
				
				genHkids gardens at 
				Douglas School 
				genHkids "Seeds of 
				Possibility" Community Garden
				Illinois Department 
				of Agriculture Community Garden 
				Jefferson Park 
				Community Garden 
				Maldaner's rooftop 
				garden 
				The Neighborhood 
				Gardens 
				Springfield Community 
				Garden 
				Suttill's Gardens  Along with U of I Extension, sponsors for this event are genHkids, 
			Illinois Department of Agriculture, Illinois Stewardship Alliance, 
			Illinois Times, Kumler Outreach, Maldaner's Restaurant and Slow Food 
			Springfield. ___ Preparing a new generation of Illinois fruit and vegetable 
			farmers Applications now open! Aspiring Illinois farmers, new growers 
			with less than five years' experience, commodity farmers interested 
			in diversifying to include fruit or vegetable production, and high 
			school and community college agriculture teachers are invited to 
			apply now for the next session of a free training program offered 
			through the University of Illinois crop sciences department. See 
			more at
			
			http://news.aces.illinois.edu/news/new-illinois-farmers-program-
 acceptingapplications-second-session. Also see this article 
			about the first year of the program:
 http://news.illinois.edu/ii/13/0620/newfarmers.html.
 
              
            
              
            [By DEBORAH CAVANAUGH-GRANT,
			University of 
			Illinois Extension] 
 
              
            
			 
              
            
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