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Every Day is Kids' Day at the Bayou City Farmers' Market
by keefski
Sunday, Apr. 01, 2007 at 3:52 PM
It’s getting harder to see the food for the forest of non - food items at the big box food chains. Shoppers must weave their baskets around lawn furniture, seasonal displays, greeting cards, toys and DVDs.
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Grocery store shelves are lined with rows and rows of boxes and boxes of bleached out, dead, dyed, depleted substances, that have been “fortified” with "nutrients" defined by The Food and Drug Administration. The same entity that approved Vioxx® and Sacharin®. Packaging and branding are the food industries equivalent to spin and propaganda. The last thing the Agriculture Industrial Complex wants a consumer to question is, what’s really in that colorful box, where did it come from, how was it grown and should my children be putting it in their mouths?
So where does food come from? For starters, food comes from soil. Healthy soil is very complex. There are fungi that interact with minerals that interact with bacteria that interact with enzymes that interact with birds, beasts and bugs in a way that cannot be duplicated by the FDA’s selective fortification and Big Ag’s chemical fertilizers. The best food comes with the least amount of time between it being in the ground and it landing on your table. Take the quickest trip away from Monsanto’s mutants, Chiquita’s death squad hirelings, Wal-mart’s version of “organic”, and gigantic Dean’s Foods buying up every once independent dairy farmer. Visit your local farmers’ market. You can put food on your family and have fun doing it. Vendors will gladly give you the dirt on their produce while the overhead PA plays live music. There is fresh coffee, cake and cookies as well as the freshest produce in town. There may even be a baby goat or two frolicking among the bokchoy.
http://www.urbanharvest.org
www.urbanharvest.org
Little shopper
by keefski
Sunday, Apr. 01, 2007 at 3:52 PM
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A rainy March 31st was Kids Day at the Houston’s Bayou City Farmer’s Market. This little cutie beat the drops in her best rain duds.
The woman in orange is holding flowers grown without pesticides or herbicides. The commerical flower industry is a heavy user of both.
www.urbanharvest.org
Babes at the market
by keefski
Sunday, Apr. 01, 2007 at 3:52 PM
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A tuckered out chick gets a gentle tot tickle.
www.urbanharvest.org
rabbit
by keefski
Sunday, Apr. 01, 2007 at 3:52 PM
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There were ducks, chickens and a rabbit for the kids to visit at the Bayou City Farmers Market annual Kids Day on March 31. But every day is Kids Day where you don’t have Monsanto lurking about.
www.urbanharvest.org
cooperative neighbor kids
by keefski
Sunday, Apr. 01, 2007 at 3:52 PM
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Just a small sample of local produce you can put on your family, includes grapefruit from Pearland, tomatoes, fresh basil and eggs from Weimar, mushrooms from the Sealy area, a bar of handmade soap from Spring and oregano grown by students at Houston’s Kolter Elementary.-
The market is located at 3000 Richmond Ave. between Eastside and Kirby, in the back parking lot. Hours are, Saturday from 8:00 am - 12:00 pm, and Wednesdays from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm
www.urbanharvest.org
LATEST COMMENTS ABOUT THIS ARTICLE
Listed below are the 10 latest comments of 8 posted about this article.
These comments are anonymously submitted by the website visitors.
| TITLE |
AUTHOR |
DATE |
| Market Manager |
Michael Hofferber |
Thursday, Apr. 05, 2007 at 9:18 AM |
| thanks |
fan |
Tuesday, Apr. 03, 2007 at 9:03 PM |
| beware monsanto |
magreen |
Sunday, Apr. 01, 2007 at 8:28 PM |
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