On September 1st, the first day of the Eat Local Challenge, I did all my shopping at Shaw’s grocery store. After, visiting the farmer’s markets all summer and working very hard on our new lifestyle, my tired body, from all the responsibilities of a family, broke down and did an all in one shopping trip. My guilty conscious was eased when I discovered that their are many options at the grocery store though, ones I missed, since I have been shopping so much elsewhere.
This past month, raising three children developmentally all under the age of three and trying to continue eating locally has posed many difficulties. After juggling schedules around routine appontments for Lexi ranging from Boston to Dartmouth, therapy appointments, birthday parties, and a summer vacation to visit the grandparents in PA (which was great because we stocked up on pretzals and Yeungling beer), I think of ourselves as a fairly typical busy family. On top of that, we experienced numerous car repairs, which left me without a car every Thursday, the day of the Exeter farmers market - very annoying. It causes me to wonder, how did mothers in the past grow their food, and preserve it all, and watch after the little ones? Some hypothesis’s are: lots of family members around, get togethers for canning, maybe more community support. I’d love to hear what others think.
In the meantime, check out some of my favorite things:
September 4, 2007 at 7:57 pm
Keep up the good work, Audrey. It’s been no small feat just to feed myself…I can imagine it’s much more complicated as a mom.
September 5, 2007 at 10:27 am
I’ve been having a lot of conversations of late with folks about addressing some of these issues - like more than one person who would like to open up a local foods small store, and a couple folks looking for space to do canning and even one person who is actively looking for space for a community kitchen, and another person who would like to go into business making things out of only local foods.
I want to encourage all of these people to go for it! There is demand for easier, more efficient access to local foods!