Location: Farmland Preservation

  • LEAF (Leadership, Education and Farming) Project

    LEAF (Leadership, Education and Farming) Project

    asfleaflogoThe LEAF Project (Leadership Education And Farming) is a farm-based youth employment program. Launched by Heidi Witmer in 2013, the project envisions a community in which our youth, as well as all members of our region, are connected to the food that nourishes them, the land on which it grows, and to each other. To achieve this, LEAF provides paid internships to youth, ages 14-18, to work alongside farmers and chefs in the greater Carlisle region. These internships are meant to engage and inspire youth through the meaningful work of building a healthy local food system. Youth work, collaborate, and learn together, motivating personal and social change while increasing knowledge about and access to locally raised food in our community.

    Currently, LEAF provides paid internships to 12 youth for a seven week summer program. During the program, youth experience all aspects of the local food system.  They spend a good chunk of time planting and cultivating crops at their host farm, owned by fourth generation farmer Bert Myers. The youth then deliver some of their own produce to local restaurants, donate it to hunger relief programs, learn how to cook it from seasoned local chefs, and then engage the community in cooking demonstrations and workshops about the differences between locally grown and processed foods. During the program all youth keep writing journals, in which they document their experiences and growth during the program.

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    The LEAF program is a Carlisle area gem. At a time when hard manual work is not attributed to youth, the LEAF staff is proving both to the kids and to the community that not only are they capable, but that they can enjoy it. By combining a paid summer job with agriculture, education, and leadership training, the LEAF Project allows its participants to be productive during their summer breaks. Furthermore, the youth leave the program as environmental and healthy-eating ambassadors to their own families and their communities – improving the health of the region one child at a time.

  • Farmers on the Square

    Farmers on the Square

    logoIf you’re looking for delicious, local food and hope to lower your food miles or meet your local farmers personally then visiting the Farmer’s on the Square (FOTS) market is for you! The market is year round – weekly during the summer months and twice a month in the winter. During the summer you can find the vendor’s by following your nose to their setup at 2 N. Hanover Street, right at the intersection of High St. and Hanover. This location was used for open-air markets from 1751 to 1952 and FOTS is the first one to be hosted since! During the winter months you’ll find them arranged inside at Project SHARE on 5 N. Orange St. in Carlisle. All markets occur from 3-7pm on Wednesdays.

    FOTS strives to provide fresh, healthy, local food to those who need it most. Many of the vendors have attained third party certifications for their produce including USDA Certified Organic, Certified Naturally Grown, and Food Alliance Certified. With every product you buy you’ll have a farmer’s face to match with it. All their vendors live and work within 50 miles of Carlisle – each one grows, raises, or makes from scratch the food that they sell!

    Depending on the season and the available products you can find a amazing array of local produce and other products. Just a few examples include:

    • Read-to-eat food like fresh-cut fries, popcorn, smoothies, soups, burgers and bratwurst!
    • Hand-cut flowers and arrangements
    • Fresh-picked vegetables and crisp, sweet fruits like apples, pears, plums and all sorts of berries
    • Fresh seafood from Maine!
    • A variety of fruit products like apple sauce, apple juice, and apple & pear butters
    • Hearth-baked breads and home-baked crackers
    • Granola, teas, honey popcorn, and cookies!

    Furthermore, FOTS provides the Double Up Food Bucks program to extend the availability of their food to the community. Through the generosity of the Carlisle Area Health and Wellness Foundation, this program doubles the value of dollar benefits for eligible Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) and Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program (SFMNP) recipients – up to $20 per week per recipient.

  • Project SHARE

    Project SHARE

    psMISSION: In response to God’s call to love one another, Project SHARE (Survival Help And Recipient Education) provides food, clothing, nutritional education, and links to programs to empower people in need within the greater Carlisle Area.

    Project SHARE  is an interfaith cooperative effort, begun in 1985, involving over 66 local congregations, schools, and civic organizations. Contributions of food, money, and volunteerism provide essential basic assistance to more than 1000 families each month. Of those needing assistance, about 20% are seniors and nearly 30% are children.

    Project SHARE’s sustainability programming includes:

    • Growing vegetables in a high tunnel on the grounds of the Carlisle High School; mainly tomatoes, squash, herbs, and peppers. Recipients learn to nurture and harvest these and other annual crops.
    • Recycling cardboard using a baler that was donated around 2005. They receive cardboard from many different community locations and raise about $20K a year from this resource.
    • Teaching canning and other forms of food preservation to those who come for food or people in the local churches to encourage food preparation and the best use of resources.
    • Gleaning fresh fruit and vegetables at approximately 3 dozen local locations; harvesting whatever the farmer can’t use or sell. They also make use of the 2 local produce auctions in Shippensburg and extras from area CSAs.
  • South Mountain Partnership

    South Mountain Partnership

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    smp_LOGO_250PXThe South Mountain Partnership is a public-private partnership between the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) landscape conservation program and the Appalachian Trail Conservancy.

    southmountain partnership

    The Partnership works to serve as a facilitator, integrator, interpreter, and catalyst in the Greater Carlisle community to facilitate landscape conservation. As a facilitator, they bring people together. One example of this role is their support of large land acquisitions. As integrators, they work across political and sectoral boundaries to be the voice of conservation. They serve as an interpreter which means that they demonstrate and promote the resources that the landscapes provides to support the people. The South Mountain Partnership is a catalyst for conservation action.

    Organizations and individuals in the greater Carlisle area can apply for mini grants from the Partnership to support their own landscape conservation projects.

    The Partnership offers a variety of educational opportunities for the community including an annual speaker series and a South Mountain PA mobile phone app.