When new safety protocols forced , professor and chair of the Soil and Crop Sciences Section in the School of Integrative Plant Science, to downsize his field trials this spring, he was left with 1,800 surplus cabbage seedlings.
Instead of sending them to the compost heap, DiTommaso connected with the , in Freeville, New York, managed by the (Cornell AES). Thompson Farm planted the seedlings and cared for the cabbage plants until they could be harvested and donated.
This season, Cornell faculty, staff and students facilitated the donation of more than 37 tons of food from farms run by Cornell AES to feed families in need.
Much of the produce was grown at Thompson Farm, which has worked with the for 16 years to help combat local food insecurity. This year the farm donated more than 22 tons of farm-fresh food to the organization, including peppers, beets, pumpkins, onions, tomatoes, squash, cabbage and potatoes.
Since the onset of the pandemic, the food bank has seen a 37% increase in food requests.
“Donations from our partners allow us to continue to offer healthy and nutritious options to those who are experiencing food insecurity across the region during a time when they need it most,” said Natasha R. Thompson, president and CEO of the organization. “The Food Bank of the Southern Tier is grateful for the support we receive from Thompson Research Farm.”
Thompson Farm manager Steve McKay said they made additional contributions to the Friendship Donations Network of Ithaca, local school districts and the .
In the spring, , professor of entomology in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS), also provided McKay’s crew with 1,500 pounds of seed potatoes. Members of her insect biology class and the crew worked with McKay to organize two physically distanced gleaning events this fall, where 20 students harvested eight tons of potatoes.
Dilmun Hill Student Farm also had a productive season, despite remaining closed until mid-July and then operating with a skeleton crew of just three student-farmers. They started by harvesting crops like garlic, that had been planted last season, and they received seedling transplants from Blue Heron Farm, certified organic growers near Lodi, New York.
Dilmun Hill donated its entire harvest to the Cornell Food Pantry.
“As the university’s student farm, we felt an obligation to serve the Cornell community and found an ideal partnership with the Cornell Food Pantry,” said Lily Cowen ’21, student farm co-manager.
The season yielded staples like basil, beans, beets, chard, cucumbers, leeks, lettuce, radishes and strawberries, as well as less common crops like eggplant, Romanesco broccoli and tatsoi, a leafy green related to the more familiar bok choy.
“This season proved to us just how much you can do in a short period of time, and the impact we can have as a small student farm, cementing our desire to make donations a larger part of our mission,” said co-manager Brian Caine ’20, who’s set to graduate this fall.
At , the farm crew has been donating apples to the Friendship Donations Network for more than 10 years. In 2020, the orchards have been contributing 200 to 400 pounds a week, in addition to monthly donations to the nearby Newfield Kitchen Cupboard. When the pandemic closed schools in the spring, the to help local school districts continue serving meals to families in need.
“It hasn’t been an easy year for any of our faculty, staff and students, or for others in our broader community,” said ’78, Ph.D. ’82, director of Cornell AES and associate dean of CALS. “But going the extra mile to help others – who these students and farm employees haven’t even met – demonstrates their true Cornell spirit.”
Anja Timm is the communications coordinator and assistant to the director of operations at the Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station.