farm sustainability

Everoak Farm and O-Town Compost: Growing, Eating, and Wasting Local

By Kristin Anderson & Shem Jenkins

In a society where food travels an average of 1,500 miles before reaching your plate, local farms like Everoak Farm are special. Everoak Farm is located only 5 miles east from downtown Orlando. Owners Mike and Nikki Garcia are taking on the challenges of curating their Certified Natural Grown farm, utilizing bio-intensive gardening techniques, implementing regenerative farming practices, and turning organic and biological inputs like compost into the earth. Working with nature, they build healthy and biologically active soil that is regenerative, and in turn, they produce abundant, clean, chemical-free, and nutritionally dense fruits and vegetables for the Orlando community all year long.

Charlie Pioli and Mike Garcia have known each other for years, connecting initially at the Audubon Park Community Market. Mike doesn’t use fertilizers; instead, he works to rotate beds with new crops, plants multiple crops together, and uses compost made from the food scraps that O-Town Compost collects to nourish the farm’s soil. Compost is an important part of the farm’s strategy to maintain and increase fertility and build the foundation for a healthy and thriving ecosystem that supports abundant plant growth and supports nutrient dense produce. According to the United Nations, close to 1 billion tons of food goes into trash bins every year, and food waste accounts for more than 8 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. Partnerships like the one between O-Town Compost and Everoak Farm are established by forward-thinking farmers and composters, like Mike and Charlie, who find real world solutions to modern day problems both sustainably and abundantly.

O-Town Compost delivers food scraps from its collections, which Everoak farm combines with wood chips from local arborists, to create compost that becomes the soil amendment that is the building block that forms the foundation of Everoak Farm’s regenerative agriculture practices. This partnership is a mutualistic relationship, creating a hyper-local system for food distribution, waste management, and food production. Some O-Town Compost subscribers also receive their fresh produce, eggs, and meat from Everoak’s CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) or buy what they need directly from Everoak’s booth at the Audubon Park Community Market. By doing this, customers close the loop by participating in a zero-waste food system. This transition to a circular food economy presents a compelling opportunity for farmers, waste collectors, community composters and consumers. By closing the loop, we reduce our reliance on external inputs and minimize waste and pollution throughout the food production and consumption cycle.

When you buy your produce and meats directly from local producers like Everoak Farm, eat at local restaurants that do the same, and divert your home’s food waste from the landfill by subscribing to your local community composter, you actively participate in a circular food economy. The circular approach shortens food’s distribution distance, significantly reduces the carbon footprint associated with food transportation, and allows for the extraction of maximum value from food products throughout their life cycle. When paired with the regenerative farming practices Mike and his wife Nikki use on their farm, we begin to see a shift back to a more balanced, stable, and reciprocal relationship between production and consumption. 

Central Floridians are constantly looking for ways to be kinder and more mindful of their impact on this earth as we move through our precious time on it. We can all see and feel the immediate benefits in ourselves, our families, and in our neighborhoods when we support these regenerative approaches to farming, agriculture, consumption, and waste management. By supporting these systems, we provide a very clear and sustainable path that nurtures the abundance of our planet, while at the same time creating a healthy and thriving, mutually beneficial relationship between all populations of humans, plants, and animals. 

So Grow, Eat, and Compost locally. We are the stewards of our Earth.

Learn more about Everoak Farm by visiting their website.

https://www.everoakfarm.com/

Learn more about O-Town Compost by visiting our website.

https://o-towncompost.com/

O-Town Compost now offers Bulk Compost Delivery!

O-Town Compost family with Mike at his Everoak Farm.

From left to right, standing: Nicole, Stephen, Charlie (Owner of O-Town Compost), Mike (Owner of Everoak Farm) , Delwin, Jamie, Ciana, Chrissy, Shem, John, Patrick, Sara.

From left to right, kneeling: Cristina, Angelika, Mary, Meredith, Erin

Photographer: Kristin Anderson

O-Town Compost's vision for the future

It’s been seven months since O-Town Compost entered the Orlando compost scene and we’re happy to say that we’ve been busy! Four tons of food scraps have been diverted from the landfill and turned into O-Town Black Gold thanks, in large part, to our dedicated subscribers!

The composting network has grown to a brigade of residential and a handful of commercial composters, such as offices, cosmetic retailers, and a coffee shop. We have our first Zero Waste Wedding under our belts, and were set to do more until the great COVID monster stomped through town, making social gatherings a thing of the past. Instead of immediately going into panic mode, we decided to diversify our offerings, and the On-Farm Composting Service was born to address the manure management headache that some stables and ranches constantly face. With our first stable on board, we are able to divert roughly 1,100 pounds of manure weekly, and create a beautiful soil amendment with a waste byproduct. A byproduct that some stable owners unfortunately pay to be hauled to the landfill.

Still, with all our small stories of success, we’re not quite comfortable yet. We have a long road ahead to fully address the waste problem and a lack of regenerative agriculture in Central Florida. Small isn’t necessarily bad for a community-focused business, but we’re going to need to grow in order to make serious strides in Orange County’s environmental landscape.

Right now we offer food waste collection in 16 zip codes in the county, or roughly a third of the land area. The public should look for an expansion in the next 6 months to West Orlando (West of I-4). When you request service on our contact page, we take note, and tally the number of requests from each zip code with the aim to get out there soon.

Another opportunity for growth is building our partner network. For example, stables, ranches, landscapers, etc. Any environmental operation that produces an organic byproduct that can be composted. We offer our partners a sharing of ownership on the finished compost product, and a solution to their waste byproduct. Imagine, a decentralized network of local composting facilities around Orange County, rather than the traditional approach in the waste industry, where there exists a giant, centralized facility. The benefits of small are that a smaller facility requires lower transportation costs, smaller operational costs when you are dealing with less waste, and, most importantly, the finished compost stays in the community! This, my friends, is how we break the hold of industrial agriculture and Big Waste.

NEW SERVICE! - On-farm Composting

The equine industry has a significant presence here in Central Florida, and with a great number of horses comes a great deal of manure to be managed. At O-Town Compost we specialize in the collection and processing of people’s food scraps, but since the COVID19 pandemic started, we’ve decided to venture into a new areas and diversify our business offerings. Introducing our “On-Farm Composting Service,” where a wasteful byproduct is transformed into a valuable resource.

The average horse generates 45 pounds a day of manure, and closer to 55 pounds if you include the bedding! When I first read this statistic, I was shocked! Where does all this organic material go? Does it just remain on the farm or get hauled to the landfill?

Different stable owners do different things, but typically smaller stables spread their raw manure onto the pastures in hopes that it’ll fertilize and grow more grass for their horses to graze on. Whereas, larger stables, lacking the proper time or heavy machinery to spread manure, will opt for renting a dumpster to fill and send to the local landfill for disposal. One dumpster load can cost a couple hundred of dollars to haul, and contributes to the ever growing mountain of organic waste that notoriously comprises 40 percent of all landfill waste.

It just so happens that horse and cow manure are the perfect consistency to make a crumbly and earthy compost. Manure alone has around a 25:1 Carbon to Nitrogen ratio being perfect for the active composting process. No outside feedstock is necessary to achieve a quality final product, but something, such as food waste, can be added without negatively affecting the result. The longer you let the manure dry out, the higher its carbon content becomes and it becomes better to add a nitrogen-heavy food waste.

IMG_2743.JPG

Excitingly, O-Town Compost has begun construction on our first Aerated Static Pile (ASP) compost bin at Scala Stables located in East Orlando near University of Central Florida. Additionally, our services include regular weekly monitoring and upkeep, screening and transport of the finish compost, and technical assistance. Stable owners are left with a comprehensive instructional packet, and the ability to call anytime they’re experiencing a problem or have a question.

Advantages of choosing our composting method:

  • Eliminate the time and expense of off-site disposal

  • Produce finished compost in 60 days or less without turning the pile

  • Destroy parasites, pathogens and weed seeds in the finished product

  • Stop offensive odors

  • Significantly reduce flies, rodents and other pests

  • Improve your animals’ health

  • Create nutrient-rich compost product that is safe to use on pastures and gardens

  • Utilize the finished compost for an absorbent stall bedding

  • Earn revenue by selling your finished soil amendment and create a return on your investment

  • Enhance the appearance and value of your farm or stable.

If you or someone you know could benefit from this easy-to-use and environmentally friendly solution for on-farm waste management, please send us an email at info@o-towncompost.com.

Silly horse rolling around in the dirt.

Silly horse rolling around in the dirt.