Never did. When i listen to that and then i see the horror that he has left us. The reason im here is because of president obama and joe biden. So much to say so much to say so much to say. Steve live from new york city, it is fox friends for a thursday, august 20th, 2020. And you can look into the new york harbor and there is lady liberty. And she starts our show today. Dnc last day is today. Last night were going to talk a little bit about how Kamala Harris was nominated officially as Vice President for the democrats. And ainsley and brian, you know, since the pandemic hit life has not been normal thats why they have had a virtual convention. What is interesting now is the fact that we are getting a little closer to normal on this program because they were gone for a while, born four years ago, the diners are coming back today. Ainsley yes. Pete hegseth is out there in new jersey. He is at a diner, breakfast with friends. Hey, pete. We are at the bacon beach long you cant beat this v
One New York school district is saving thousands of dollars each year by making food in the cafeteria from scratch rather than buying frozen. And students love it!
Are upstate farms equipped to become the Amazon of food?
Are upstate farms equipped to become the Amazon of food?
Pandemic forces many farmers into e-commerce, but not every farm is ready to turn their produce into a click-to-buy product
Robin Catalano
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For upstate New York farmers, being able to sell online was a game changer during the pandemic. But the fees involved in e-commerce and lack of high-speed internet access in rural locations posed problems.Amy Scott Photography
Dale-Ila Riggs knew a monumental change was in the works the moment the Troy Farmers Market one of the region’s oldest and largest closed down in March 2020. For the past several years, Riggs, the owner of The Berry Patch in Stephentown in Rensselaer County, had made the bulk of her annual sales there. In the earliest days of the pandemic, as many farms scrambled to come up with a solution to getting their products into customers’ hands, she recalls, “I just put out an email b
Sheep at Blue Pepper Farm in Jay (News photo Andy Flynn) A shopper stops by the Reber Rock Farm table at the 2018 Adirondack Harvest Festival in Westport. (News photo Andy Flynn) Pictured from left are agriculture protection planner Jeff Kehoe with the state Department of Agriculture and Markets, Essex County Cornell Cooperative Extension Agriculture Resource Educator Carly Summers, Juniper Hill Farm owner Adam Hainer, North Country Creamery co-owner Steven Googin and Asgaard Farm & Dairy co-owner Rhonda Butler at the Hand House in Elizabethtown in December 2019 during an information session on the county’s new strategic plan for agriculture. (News photo Elizabeth Izzo)