CSA & Food Boxes · Canada

Reading the seasons, one box at a time.

Cedar Lane Home collects plain-language notes on community-supported agriculture: how subscription models are structured, what a farm share actually delivers across a Canadian growing year, and what to do with the produce you did not expect.

A weekly vegetable box packed with mixed seasonal produce
A typical weekly vegetable box. Photo: Andy Roberts, Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0).
What this site covers

Three topics, written for first-season subscribers

Most questions about a farm share fall into three groups: how the arrangement works, whether a particular farm fits your household, and how to keep up with the box once it arrives. Each article below stays on one of those.

Stacked organic vegetable boxes ready for pickup
How it works

CSA Subscription Models

Full shares, half shares, market-style credit, and pay-what-you-can structures — and where the money goes before the season starts.

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Interior of an Ontario farmers' market with local produce
Choosing

Evaluating a Farm Share

Distance, pickup logistics, share size versus household, substitution policy, and the questions worth asking before a deposit.

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An assortment of fresh root vegetables
Using the box

Eating by Season

What tends to arrive across spring, summer, fall, and winter in Canada — and approachable ways to use less familiar vegetables.

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In short

What "community-supported agriculture" means

In a CSA arrangement, a household pays a farm near the start of the season and, in return, receives a recurring portion of the harvest — most often a weekly box. The payment helps cover seed, labour, and equipment during the months before anything is ready to sell.

Because the share reflects an actual harvest, contents change week to week and the subscriber carries some of the ordinary risk of farming: a cold spring or a wet stretch shows up in the box. That shared footing is the part that distinguishes a CSA from a standard grocery order.

A few terms you will see

Share: one household's recurring portion of the harvest.

Pickup / drop-off: a fixed location and window where boxes are collected.

Add-on: optional items such as eggs, bread, or honey, billed separately.

Substitution: the farm's policy for swapping an item you cannot use.

Contact

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