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WVU Extension’s Small Farm Conference offers education and community to agricultural producers

Group of people stand in a circle talking at the Small Farm Conference.

For more than 20 years, the West Virginia University Extension Small Farm Center has supported our state’s agricultural producers through its annual West Virginia Small Farm Conference. This year, the conference will be hosted on Feb. 26 – March 1, at the Charleston Coliseum and Convention Center in Charleston, West Virginia.

“Our small farms face trials and triumphs every year, but with effects of the pandemic and rising costs, the last few years have posed a lot of additional challenges as farmers tried to keep up with demands,” Lisa Jones, WVU Extension Small Farm Center program coordinator, said. “For 21 years, we’ve been providing opportunities for learning and building connections, and we are so excited to keep the tradition going and bring our state’s farming community back together this year.”

With a variety of classes available, attendees will learn how to adapt their enterprises to meet the rising demand for local foods. There also will be more traditional offerings to help small farmers increase the profitability of their operations, from vegetable production to value-added products.

“Farmers from West Virginia and beyond are invited to take advantage of this opportunity to participate in the conference and learn more about how they can run their operations more efficiently and profitably,” Jones added.

For adults, the cost of attendance is $75 per day on Thursday and Friday and $25 on Saturday. For students, the cost is $35 per day on Thursday and Friday and $10 on Saturday.

Youths are welcome to attend the conference with their family for a flat rate of $15 per child ($10 on Saturday). Interactive learning activities will be available to youths of all ages, giving them a chance to have fun with agriculture, too.

At the start of the conference, a variety of specialized add-ons are available. On Wednesday, the Food Safety Modernization Act produce safety alliance grower training will be available at a cost of $35. On Thursday, attendees can opt to participate in the USDA Certified Organic track for no additional cost.

Registration information and other conference details be found at extension.wvu.edu/sfc.

The cost of attendance includes all conference meals, which are prepared with locally sourced ingredients from West Virginia farmers, further demonstrating the values at the heart of the conference.

The popular Winter Blues Farmers Market, a collaboration with the West Virginia Department of Agriculture, also takes place during the conference and is scheduled for Saturday, March 1 from 12-5 p.m. The public is invited and encouraged to attend the Winter Blues Farmers Market.

The conference focuses on partnerships, not only from farmer to farmer, but also farmer to supplier and agriculture service provider. Many sponsors have helped make the conference possible, including the U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resource Conservation Service, West Virginia Department of Education, West Virginia Department of Agriculture, and the USDA Transition to Organic Partnership Program.

-WVU-

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CONTACT: Hannah Booth
Assistant Director of Marketing & Communications
WVU Division for Land-Grant Engagement
304-293-8701; hannah.booth@mail.wvu.edu