New Mexico Organic Farming Conference
announces 2019 award recipients
(Albuquerque,
New Mexico) – Eight individuals and one organization were recognized at the
2019 New Mexico Organic Farming Conference (NMOFC) last month. The Southwest’s
largest organic agricultural gathering, the conference provided the opportunity
for 550 attendees to gain valuable knowledge on topics including water
conservation, seed saving and variety development, wholesale markets, organic
farming, soil health and more. The conference was Feb. 15-16 in Albuquerque.
Following
is a list of award recipients:
The
Organic Young Farmer Award, Lisa Anderson and Jim Benson
Lisa
Anderson and Jim Benson began growing a mixed garden of seasonal fruits,
vegetables and fruit trees on their small farm in Abiquiu in 2013. Selling
under the name Malandro Farm, their primary sales
outlet is the Santa Fe Farmers’ Market, though they recently expanded their
operation to include the Taos Farmers Market. Anderson and Benson focus on
providing their customers with the freshest food possible while striving to
ensure that the land is continually improving its soil health and biological
diversity through the use of cover crops, green manure, compost and crop
rotation. This award is sponsored by the New Mexico Farm & Livestock
Bureau–Chad Smith and Farm Bureau Financial Services–Fred Porter.
Educator
of the Year Award, Mary Lucero and Jasmine and Zach Cecelic
Mary Lucero is a New Mexico native who received her doctorate in
molecular biology and toxicology from New Mexico State University in
1997. As a scientist, she conducted research in chile, native range and
medicinal plants, and the discovery and characterization of plant
microbiomes. She recognizes that science in the absence of public input
has contributed to a failing food system that is impacting public health and
disabling the rural economies that produce our food. In 2013, she left her
career with USDA and opened End-O-Fite Enterprises LLC in order to rebuild food
systems by changing the way we think about microbes, dirt, food, health and the
economics that drive our communities. Through End-O-Fite, Lucero educates
growers, consumers and health care providers through on-site workshops and
online classes that tackle soil health and human nutrition.
Jasmine
and Zach Cecelic are the owners of Wildhood Farm located in Truchas, a small
community in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. They host workshops and events
aimed to help people understand their role as farmers and land stewards. They
concentrate on rediscovering ancient farming methods and use native
plants and seeds on their high elevation arid farm. Holistic beekeeping,
wildlife habitat creation, water conservation and sustainable self-sufficiency
are all in the scope of what they hope to share with others.
Friend of Organic Agriculture Award, New Mexico Farm &
Livestock Bureau and Stacy Gerk
For over 100 years, the New Mexico Farm & Livestock Bureau has
been a voice of agriculture in New Mexico, advocating for farm and ranch
families, rural communities, and those interested in protecting private
property rights. Crop and livestock improvement, taxation and legislation,
and irrigation and grazing rights issues have remained its focus. Food
producers recognize the value in an organization working on their behalf and
acting as an influential voice, both on the state and national level. As
they surpass 19,000-member families, the New Mexico Farm & Livestock Bureau
strives to support and advocate for agriculture as it provides for families now
and in the future.
Current
New Mexico Department of Agriculture Organic Program supervisor Stacy Gerk has
been a longtime member of the NMOFC Planning Committee and is dedicated to the
success of organic farmers in New Mexico. He initially began working for NMDA
as a part-time survey field aide and later a fruit and vegetable inspector. He
began working as a full-time fruit and vegetable inspector in 1994 and became
the supervisor for the fruit and vegetable inspection program in 2004. He
became the organic program supervisor in 2011.
Good
Earth Steward Award, Heather Harrell
This
award is presented to an organic farmer who exemplifies caring stewardship of
the land and has a deep understanding of the principles of organic agriculture.
Heather Harrell has been farming organically since she was a teenager. She
began by growing cut flowers, moved on to mixed vegetables and eventually
focused her business on growing medicinal herbs and
raising honeybees. Throughout her career, Harrell has raised a wide variety of
animals for meat and dairy and has maintained beehives for pollination. She has
worked with Partners for the Americas Farmer to Farmer program to share
knowledge with farmers in Jamaica, worked with Western SARE to develop her farm
into a pollinator forage demonstration site and has written a book on Topbar
beekeeping with Les Crowder. Harrell has also designed and built a straw bale
solar thermal home with the help of permaculture teachers and
students. She spent years marketing her products at the Santa Fe Farmers’
Market, and served as the president of the Santa Fe Farmers’ Market board for a
year and a half.
Organic Farmer of the Year Award, Greg Nussbaum
Greg Nussbaum is the business and farm director of Camino
de Paz School & Farm, located in Santa Cruz. The private Montessori middle
school serves grades 7-12, and delivers a hands-on approach to education.
Students are given the opportunity to aid in operating a goat dairy and produce
farm, supplying products to grocery stores and farmers markets in Albuquerque.
Students also act as the farm’s bookkeepers, accountants, salespeople,
marketers and purchasers. The pre-collegiate Montessori program is based on an
Erdkinder, or ‘Earth school’ approach, which encourages the idea that children
thrive on land-based learning. The school is one of the first of its kind to
open and serve as a model of this basis of learning.
Alongside
conference facilitator Sage Faulkner, the conference was organized through a
collaboration between the NMDA’s Organic Program, the New Mexico State
University Cooperative Extension Service, the New Mexico Farm & Livestock
Bureau and Walking Trout Farm.
The
keynote speaker for the conference was Ron Rosmann of Rosmann Family Farms. The
Rosmann family has been dedicated to organic farming for 30 years and received
the 2018 Midwest Organic & Sustainable Education Services Organic Farmer of
the Year Award.
For
more information about the New Mexico Organic Farming Conference, email sagefaulkner@yahoo.com,
call 505-490-2822 or visit www.nmofc.org.
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