Videos to feature behind-the-scenes views of local food producers

SANTA BARBARA NEWS PRESS

AUTHOR: MARILYN MCMAHON 

AUGUST 31, 2020

Santa Barbara County Farm Day is going virtual this year. As part of the online experience, Students for Eco-Education and Agriculture (SEEAG), the organizer, is creating “Farm Day Features” — short, 10-minute videos featuring farmers in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties. The films will begin premiering the week of Sept. 14 on the Farm Day websites: www.santabarbaracountyfarmday.com and www.venturacountyfarmday.com.

In-person Farm Days tours, which were to take place in September in Santa Barbara County and in November in Ventura County, have been canceled due to the continuing pandemic. 

” ‘Farm Day Features’ will take viewers to some of the Central Coast’s largest and most interesting food producers,” said Mary Maranville, SEEAG founder and CEO. “Most of us drive by their fields and orchards but never think about what goes into growing the food we eat.” 

The first video will feature farmers from Main Street ProduceInnovative Produce and Plantel Nurseries and will discuss food and employee safety. The second video will include growers from Western OnionDuda Farm Fresh Foods and Innovative Produce talking about how Central Coast agriculture is marketed and shipped throughout the world. 

“People are hyper-sensitive about food safety because of COVID-19. As growers, ensuring that the food we harvest is safe is something we do 365 days a year,” said Alexandra Allen, co-owner with her husband Paul Allen and compliance counsel of Freshway Farms, which grows strawberries, raspberries and vegetables on more than 1,000 acres in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties.

“When the new COVID-19 safety procedures came out, we at Freshway Farms only had to make a few adjustments. Many of our workers were wearing face coverings before the pandemic hit, and because the rows of produce are about six feet apart, we were already practicing social distancing. Our workers understand that when they go out into the fields each day, they have a tremendous responsibility to the public and to their families,” she added.

Lacy Litten is director of food safety and field operations manager for Innovative Produce in Santa Maria. A member of the United Fresh Food Safety and Technology Council, Ms. Litten oversees the food safety and leadership programs at the farm. 

“It is important for the public to learn about farming and food safety so that when presented with limited information through media reports, people can make an educated analysis. Whether it be about regulation, outbreak, recall or pandemic, it is easy to jump to conclusions on what could have or should have happened,” she said.

Also participating in the food safety video will be Tony Ramirez, safety and compliance manager for Plantel Nurseries, an industry leader in vegetable transplants in Santa Maria.

This year, Mr. Ramirez received the AllWays Safe Award honoring individuals who have committed themselves to ensure the health and safety of employees in the agriculture industry.

“Central Coast Agriculture on a Global Stage” is the title of the second video, which will feature Greg Lewis, senior director of western operations for Duda Farm Fresh Foods in Oxnard, producers of 33% of the nation’s celery.

Greg Lewis walks through the celery field at Duda’s Oxnard farm.

Greg Lewis walks through the celery field at Duda’s Oxnard farm.

Greg Lewis walks through the celery field at Duda’s Oxnard farm.

“One of the foremost opportunities we have in the production of agriculture is to bridge the gap between what people think they know about where their food comes from and where it actually comes from. This is important because food is our lifeline, and we are a product of what we consume,” said Mr. Lewis. 

“There are more people on this planet today than there have ever been. People are eating healthier today than they ever have. The produce we farm is shipped to consumers around the world, and we take pride in our responsibility to deliver the highest quality fruits and vegetables.”

Gerry Valois, founder and owner for Western Onion in Camarillo, will also participate in the video along with Ms. Litten. 

Creating the features is videographer Anthony Plascencia. The farm bureaus from Ventura and Santa Barbara County will provide video narration. 

“We also plan to host day-of virtual tours on Facebook Live with lots of Farm Day giveaways,” said Ms. Maranville. “These will take place Sept. 19 (Santa Barbara County Farm Day) and Nov. 7 (Ventura County Farm Day).” 

Sponsors for “Farm Day Features” include the Edwin and Jeanne Woods Foundation, Plantel Nurseries, Santa Maria Community Bank, Coastal Ag Services, TriCal and Driscoll’s in Santa Barbara County; and Farm Credit West, Good Farms and Red Blossom in Ventura County.

Founded in 2008, Students for Eco-Education and Agriculture (SEEAG) is a nonprofit organization that helps young students understand the origins of their food by bridging the gap between agriculture and consumption through its agricultural education programming.

SEEAG’s “The Farm Lab” program, based in Ventura County, teaches school children about the origins of their food and the importance of local farmland by providing schools with classroom agricultural education and free field trips to farms.

“Through this and other SEEAG programs, including Farm Day in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, over 65,000 elementary school students and community members in Southern California have increased their understanding of the food journey,” said Ms. Maranville.

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SEEAG Launches "Duda Farm Fresh Foods’ Double Your Impact Challenge"

Ventura, Calif. (05/01/20)-- Duda Farm Fresh Foods will match all donations up $10,000 for every dollar donated to Students for Eco-Education and Agriculture (SEEAG) in the month of May during SEEAG's "Duda Farm's Double Your Impact Challenge." 

Duda Farm Fresh Foods is a big supporter of SEEAG's agricultural education programming that has reached over 40,000 elementary school students in Southern California. "Our continued support of SEEAG acknowledges the confidence and appreciation that we have for the educational seeds SEEAG sows every day," says Dean Diefenthaler, Duda Farm Fresh Foods vice president. "SEEAG's outreach teaches our youth about agriculture's important sustainable and health benefits to our community, our country and the world we live."

"We are grateful for Duda Farm Fresh Foods’ support of our mission," says Mary Maranville, SEEAG founder/CEO. "This $10,000 donation could not have come at a better time. When they challenged us to raise $20,000 we could not resist because we can't wait to get back into the classroom and to lead farm field trips once school resumes. Until then, we are conducting online learning with our series of Sprouting Minds Webinars and Let's Grow a Garden 2020! at-home garden program."

All "Duda Farm Fresh Foods’ Double Your Impact Challenge" matching donations go toward student learning.

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Double Giving Levels:

--$25 donation doubles to $50 - impacts 50 students who will participate in SEEAG's online "Sprouting Minds" education webinar during May

--$50 donation doubles to $100  - impacts 120 students who will receive a Ventura County Child Wellness Initiative AG resource and produce swag bag in May

--$100 donation doubles to $200 - provides 200 students with a healthy snack during a Farm Lab field trip during the 20/21 school year. 

--$250 donation doubles to $500 - provides two school buses to Petty Ranch during the 20/21 school year 

--$500 donation doubles to $1,000 -  Provides all 3rd grade classes at two school with SEEAG classroom and field trips during the 2020 - 2021 school year 

--$1,000 donation doubles to $2,000 - Provides shade structure, tables and hands-on educational materials at a Farm Lab station; donor sign displaying family name or company logo

Donors at the $100 and above levels will receive a jar of Bennett's Honey. Donations can be made by going to http://seeag.org/duda-challenge.

"During the COVID-19 crisis, we're seeing how much we rely on a continuous supply of fresh vegetables and fruits," says Maranville. "Understanding and appreciating the food production process and the nutritional value of our local crops creates lifelong, healthy eating habits for kids and families." 

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With a state-of-the-art celery processing facility in Oxnard, Duda Farm Fresh Foods primarily sells its celery under the Dandy product name. Duda Farm Fresh Foods participates in SEEAG's annual Ventura County Farm Day (scheduled for November 7), where farms, ranches, and agricultural organizations open their doors to the community for an inside look at how food is grown in the county.

To learn more about SEEAG, go to www.SEEAG.org, Facebook www.facebook.com/SEEAG.org or contact Maranville at mary@seeag.org, 805-901-0213.

Eco-tip: Nonprofit provides eco-education during orders to stay at home

Ventura, California (April 11, 2020) - Thousands of local parents struggling to provide educational material for their stir-crazy students are appreciating the help of a local nonprofit.

Founded in 2008, Students for Eco-Education and Agriculture normally helps students understand the origins of their food and focuses on agricultural education programming. SEEAG provides schools with classroom agricultural education and free field trips to farms.

During this time, the organization has instead focused on providing online learning and assistance with education through home gardening.

“We’re still trying to help kids understand where their food comes from and use that knowledge to make healthy food choices,” said Mary Maranville, the nonprofit's founder and CEO. “We just had to focus on new opportunities.”

Last week, in partnership with The Plant Good Seed Company in Ojai, SEEAG mailed seed packets to people in over 300 households who responded to an article in its newsletter.

The week before, coordinated through a similar newsletter promotion, SEEAG worked in partnership with Oxnard-based Agromin to distribute nearly 500 bags of potting soil.

Additional sponsored giveaways are possible soon, as are prizes for competitions. For example, SEEAG will soon launch an essay contest, with entries due later this month. At least one student writing on the topic “What Earth Day means to me” will win a lemon tree.

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At 2 p.m. Thursday, SEEAG will present a webinar, featuring Dr. Rose Hayden-Smith, a gardening expert who helped the Obama presidential administration establish a White House-based home gardening program. She will provide a lively lesson on the history of Victory Gardens.

“Let’s Grow a Garden 2020” initiative provides online resources and new lessons will be posted every Monday through summer. Topics include how to plant an outdoor vegetable garden or indoor container garden and how to select the right plants and soil. The site also provides information about local agriculture and links to where families can order seeds and gardening materials online.

Based on local sales of plants, seeds, and soil, gardening seems to be a popular activity while people are being asked to stay at home and as parents must design “at-home student learning” programs.

Quin Shakra, who owns and manages The Plant Good Seed Company, reports, “I am working hard to catch up and meet this demand. I have delisted over half the catalog for active sale because I have needed to emphasize swiftly moving orders for staple garden varieties.”

Shakra has heard his colleagues in the gardening supply business are also struggling to keep up and says other “stores in the region – Green Thumb Nursery, Meiners Oaks Nursery, Flora Gardens and (others) are due for restocks this week.”

Go to the SEEAG website to subscribe to their weekly newsletter. The newsletter’s popularity attests to its relevance in this time of crisis.

Maranville’s electronic tracking tools tell her out of 5,000 newsletters she emailed to people who have asked to be on her list, the newsletter had 2,400 “opens” – instances where people receiving a transmitting email clicked on and opened the attached newsletter.

Additionally, Maranville’s postings of the newsletter on social media platforms have garnered dozens of “shares,” sending it to hundreds of others via users’ social media newsfeeds.

Expansion of SEEAG’s influence is growing, as 240 new email addresses signed on this week for free subscriptions. The newsletter “features fun and engaging lessons designed to connect students to agriculture, food and the importance of nutritional well-being.”

For more information, visit www.seeag.org/signup.

Author: David Goldstein

Source: VC Star

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