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Good Groceries, Farm-to-School, and Supporting Small Farmers with Kristy Athens

32 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Good Groceries, Farm-to-School, and Supporting Small Farmers with Kristy Athens

Descripción

Kristy Athens of Good Groceries in Wallowa County, Eastern Oregon, joins Kim Allchurch Flick. Athens recounts her path from generalist writer to food-systems specialist, including moving to rural White Salmon, writing “Get Your Pitchfork On,” earning an MS in Food Systems and Society, and launching a local gift-box business that evolved into Good Groceries, rebranded in 2024. She describes Eastern Oregon’s short growing season and dominance of large-scale commodity agriculture, and how most residents rely on low-priced corporate groceries. Good Groceries has grown yearly since 2020, prioritizing paying small farmers while acknowledging higher prices by donating $1 per sale to food pantries and accepting SNAP with Double Up Food Bucks. Athens also supports local procurement as a liaison for the Oregon Farm to School Network, discusses pragmatic views on organic and soil care, notes logistical challenges of rural delivery, and urges listeners to buy from local food hubs, CSAs, farm stands, and farmers markets first—“Buy local is not a drill.”

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33 episodios

episode Good Groceries, Farm-to-School, and Supporting Small Farmers with Kristy Athens artwork

Good Groceries, Farm-to-School, and Supporting Small Farmers with Kristy Athens

Kristy Athens of Good Groceries in Wallowa County, Eastern Oregon, joins Kim Allchurch Flick. Athens recounts her path from generalist writer to food-systems specialist, including moving to rural White Salmon, writing “Get Your Pitchfork On,” earning an MS in Food Systems and Society, and launching a local gift-box business that evolved into Good Groceries, rebranded in 2024. She describes Eastern Oregon’s short growing season and dominance of large-scale commodity agriculture, and how most residents rely on low-priced corporate groceries. Good Groceries has grown yearly since 2020, prioritizing paying small farmers while acknowledging higher prices by donating $1 per sale to food pantries and accepting SNAP with Double Up Food Bucks. Athens also supports local procurement as a liaison for the Oregon Farm to School Network, discusses pragmatic views on organic and soil care, notes logistical challenges of rural delivery, and urges listeners to buy from local food hubs, CSAs, farm stands, and farmers markets first—“Buy local is not a drill.”

Ayer32 min
episode Solar in 2026: What Changed, What Didn't, and What's Next with Garrett Hartwell of Power Northwest artwork

Solar in 2026: What Changed, What Didn't, and What's Next with Garrett Hartwell of Power Northwest

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episode In A Landscape: Outdoor Piano Concerts, Headphones, and Conservation with Hunter Noack artwork

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episode Clarity and Resilience with Hussein Al-Baiaty of Rising Authors artwork

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2 de jul de 202647 min
episode Sustainable Marketing, AI Disruption, and Trust with Jen McFarland artwork

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Jen McFarland, founder of Women Conquer Business, joins Kim Allchurch Flick. Women Conquer Business is a mission-driven consultancy helping women solopreneurs build sustainable, scalable marketing using digital strategy, SEO, and AI with a values-based focus on accessibility and clarity. McFarland shares her path from early marketing work to Peace Corps service in Kazakhstan, which shaped her perspective on equity and being “in the know,” then to earning an MPA and leading policy and digital transformation projects for the City of Portland, including IRS data tax matching. Burned out and disconnected from community impact, she started helping women with technology and later rebranded from Foster Growth to Women Conquer Business. She discusses challenges of entrepreneurship, community-based marketing amid economic stress, capacity-aware marketing, mixed feelings about AI’s environmental and privacy costs, the need to reduce doomscrolling, and optimism centered on younger generations and a marketing future focused on trust.

30 de jun de 202639 min