CSA - Community Supported Agriculture

FLEX CSA 2024 is CLOSED.


Thank you!

FLEX CSA FARM CARD - 2024

Registration is CLOSED. Thank you.

Treat yourself or a friend to a customizable CSA by choosing whatever produce you want, the quantity, and which weeks you want it. Purchase a digital Farm Card and use it as you would a CSA share subscription.  

CSA stands for Community Supported Agriculture. Being a CSA member allows you to enjoy fresh, locally-grown fruits, vegetables, herbs, and other local foods during late spring through early fall. Through our CSA you can order cheese and cheese curds from Eden Valley Creamery.

You get to know your local farmer, the food’s origin, and how it’s grown, all reasons to invest in your local community and in local agriculture. CSA programs help provide farmers early season capital to cover such expenses as seeds and equipment repair.

Hickory Hurst Farm’s CSA Farm Card gives you the flexibility to indulge in the kind and quantity of produce in your weekly CSA basket. We want you to be healthy and to enjoy fresh, tasty, locally-grown food that is certified organic, too. 

Going on holiday? No more skipping weeks or sending someone to retrieve your CSA basket. Enjoy your time away. Remember, the CSA Farm Card never expires; your balance will await your return. You’ll have the added convenience of selecting which weeks during the CSA season you wish to pick up your CSA basket.

There is no minimum to reserve a CSA share. You can purchase a CSA basket on a weekly a weekly basis, either by cash, check, or credit card. You place your CSA order by midnight, Tuesdays of the week in which you want your CSA basket, then pick up your CSA curbside at the farm—on Thursdays.

2024 season starts 23 May and ends 17 October 2024, lasting 22 weeks. Delivery will be available in 2024 for a fee.

In event of a crop failure or if our supply is insufficient, we may supplement our CSA with foods (grown using organic methods) from other farms.

WHAT DO WE DO WITH OUR EXCESS CSA PRODUCE?

We give excess produce to local individuals and families whom we hear about through friends and neighbors.