Go Local for Your Thanksgiving Meal Shopping

Three reasons why to become a locavore this holiday season

It’s a week before Thanksgiving, and I, like most people, am wrapping up our grocery list for our turkey day feast. It wasn’t until this weekend after talking to an old friend about a particular farmer’s market in the adjacent town that I realized I could further enhance my Thanksgiving green efforts by skipping Whole Foods altogether and head to the farmer’s market to make our meal as local as possible.

Need a little convincing or motivation to break the big box grocery store habit? Consider these points from various sources:

  1. According to Alabama Farmers Market Authority, “Today’s farmer receives less than 10 cents of the retail food dollar. When farmers sell directly to the consumer, the middleman is cut out, producing a higher profit for the farmer. The farmer then circulates his profits throughout the community with local merchants, creating a cycle that helps to build a strong local economy.”
  2. According to the University of Florida’s IFAS Extension, “Buying locally grown foods decreases dependence on petroleum. One-fifth of all petroleum used in the United States is used in agriculture. Some statistics show that the average distance food travels in distribution is 1,500 miles. By learning to eat foods that are locally available and in season, families can do their part to save energy.”
  3. According to Earth Talk, “Local food is often safer, too.  Even when it’s not organic, small farms tend to be less aggressive than large factory farms about dousing their produce with chemicals. Small farms are also more likely to grow more variety, protecting biodiversity and preserving a wider agricultural gene pool, an important factor in long-term food security.”
Athena Snow
Athena Snow

Senior Manager, Public Relations for Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Grew up in south Florida as an avid Seminole fan and attended college in the mountains of North Carolina. Athena wanted to wake up in that city that doesn’t sleep so headed to Madison Avenue to start her marketing career. Athena has worked for Coldwell Banker for 15 years where she can be found generating buzz about this awesome brand in every way possible. On any given day, she can be found crunching numbers to searching for amazing Coldwell Banker properties to serve up to the media for features. In her spare time, you can find her either digging up a new area in her yard for another flower bed or scouring Etsy for that next amazing handcrafted gem. She resides with the Bukowski of our generation (AKA her husband) and her cat (Jolene) in Atlanta, Ga.

8 comments

    1. Yes, the thermocline is in the majority of waters step out into the slough or river & you will feel the diderence in the water temp as you wade deeper. Not stepping on any toes but I just took a class at my university on the theeomclinrs effects on rivers & its inhabitants. It was an easy 3 credit hours just taled about fishing for a semester! Your article was spot on! This was the same information as well as similar examples to what is being taught to biologists in college!

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