BBMIC Tour, Tractor Workshop, Small Grains Info Session

Join for an afternoon of learning at the Tuskegee University Black Belt Marketing and Innovation Center (BBMIC). First, we'll get a tour by Terri Lewis of the center and the shared processing equipment and cold storage available for farmer use. Then we'll hear from Sarah Bell about small-scale grain and rice cultivation in the Southeast. After, we'll wrap the day with a tractor maintenance workshop and roller/crimper demo by Justin Tate and David Miller on the BBMIC's community tractor (which is available for no-cost farmer rental). To boot, we'll share in delicious purple-hull peas grown by Mr. Williams and prepared by Kayla King! Tuskegee University is an Equal Opportunity employer and provider.

About the Black Belt Marketing and Innovation Center:

The Tuskegee University Black Belt Marketing and Innovation Center (BBMIC) began as an endeavor to address the overarching need for both economic opportunities for agricultural producers and greater availability of fresh produce by developing a produce research facility, aggregation center, and processing incubator located in Selma, AL. The 18,000-square-foot BBMIC serves underserved farmers in the surrounding area by operating as a transformational research center, providing access to equipment for value-added processing, meeting space for training, and office space for Extension professionals. The facility is fully equipped with an inline washing conveyor, sorting tables, grading tables, vacuum packaging equipment, pea shellers, greens spinner, and cold storage. A refrigerated truck is dedicated to the movement of products to and from the facility. The BBMIC facility sits on 30 acres of land where high tunnels have recently been constructed for research and demonstration use. There are plans to expand the growing area to serve as an educational hub for the demonstration of organic practices, conservation practices, and climate-smart technologies for underserved producer communities. There is a tremendous opportunity to expand the BBMIC to become a major research, education, and Extension center in the Black Belt.

In 2023, 12,240 pounds of produce were stored in the cooler from 8 different farms. Cooling produce improves farm economic sustainability by extending the shelf-life of saleable products and reducing waste. About 24,480 servings of collard greens, kale, peas, peppers, turnip greens, okra, and mustard greens fed Black Belt community members through eight market streams including one wholesale distributor, two food banks, three farmers markets, one church, and direct home delivery to the elderly. The refrigerated truck was an essential piece of equipment to distribute pallet quantities of produce. This BBMIC coupled with our other Black Belt Food Corridor initiatives increases farm economic opportunities, improves community access to fresh vegetables, and reduces food waste.

 Tuskegee University is an Equal Opportunity employer and provider.

What is CRAFT?

CRAFT stands for Collaborative Regional Alliance for Farmer Training and is a model for on-farm peer-to-peer training and network-building for farmers. The original CRAFT network formed in upstate New York and has been replicated many times since, adapted to meet the needs of each particular place.

Alabama CRAFT includes farm owners/operators as well as farm interns, apprentices, and employees, and aspiring farmers. It builds on past efforts to build community and share knowledge – including but not limited to the Regional Alabama Farmer Socials, and ASAN’s kindling workdays and crop mobs and Skillshare Trainings. Full 2024 Schedule can be found at asanonline.org/CRAFT

 

Alabama CRAFT is supported through the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Transition to Organic Partnership Program (TOPP). TOPP is a program of the USDA Organic Transition Initiative and is administered by the USDA Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) National Organic Program (NOP)

When
October 17, 2024 from  2:00 PM to  5:00 PM
Location
4100 HWY 80 W
Selma, AL 36701