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Appalachian Sustainable
Agriculture
Project
306 West Haywood Street
Asheville, NC 28801
Voice: 828-236-1282
Fax: 828-236-1280
Email Us

Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.


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Kid’s Editions of Popular Local Food Guide and Bumper Sticker

ASAP has released new kid’s versions of its popular materials: the Local Food Guide and Local Food -Thousands of Miles Fresher bumper sticker. The sticker will be scaled down for a bike, and the kid-sized guide will feature special contents and activities.  “We want to give kids positive experiences with local food so they’ll form healthy eating habits,” says Emily Jackson of ASAP. “These fun materials—designed just for kids—make good choices appealing.”

Publication of the local food bumper sticker and Local Food Guide for kids is made possible by funding from the Community Benefits Program of Mission Hospital.

The new, ninth annual edition of ASAP’s Local Food Guide, listing hundreds of family farms and businesses that use local ingredients, is also available. Both guides are free. The kid’s Local Food Guide is unique in its focus on Buncombe County—and kids.

The kid’s guide highlights ways children can access local food: in school cafeterias—including the Asheville City and Buncombe County public schools’— as well as at school gardens, farmers markets, and farms offering tours and other kid friendly experiences. The guide profiles regional farmers and their children, so kids can see who grows their food—and that kids like them play a role in the local food system. The kid’s Local Food Guide also includes activities, such as farmers market scavenger hunts and recipes kids can make themselves, to encourage them to become the next generation of local farm supporters.


To help teachers use information about local food and farms in the classroom, ASAP offers free lesson plans to complement the guide. ASAP also provides many other curriculum materials; guidance on how to serve local food in cafeterias and establish school gardens; and cooking kits, seeds, and other resources.  “If you are interested in Farm to School programming, go to our website  www.growing-minds.org . Winter is a great time to plan,” Jackson urges.


To receive a print version of the guide, please contact Program Coordinator Molly Nicholie, or to download a pdf version of the guide, click here.

 

 
Kids Comments on Farm to School

From Nikolay
The garden lets me learn outside of school. It let me be able to smell different smells. I like to taste things in our garden.
 
From Ashley
The school garden helps me make good food choices when I'm shopping with my folks.
 
From Sam D.
Thank you for teaching us about growing and planting plants. It was graet seeing Swiss chard and kale plants. And zinnias lettuce and onin seeds. We will all water and wamth.
 
From Breanna
I platid some onions. I appreciate you lating us have a garden. It was fun pulling the weeds. And fun plating the seeds. When some of them need pold we will pull them up.
 


 
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