“Eating is in agricultural act.” -Wendell Berry

What is a CSA…?

CSA stand for “Community Supported Agriculture”, and it is a way for eaters and farmers to connect to & support each other for an entire growing season.

CSA shareholders sign up early in the year, and pay for their whole share (or a deposit) which helps us, as growers, cover the costs of running a farm (seeds, compost, labor and more). And as we begin to harvest produce, it goes to our shareholders on a weekly or bi-weekly schedule, usually May- October. You quite literally receive a “share” of our harvest.

Check out a Gallery of Some of Our Previous shares here!

The BUG CSA. . .

  • our CSA usually runs for 22 weeks, May 28 - Oct 22

  • we offer weekly, or bi-weekly shares

  • pricing is TBD, but will probably be around $675 for bi-weekly shares, and around $1300 for weekly shares for the full season.

  • Most shares include between 6 and 15 different vegetables, greens and herbs. We say our shares will feed 2 to 4 people/week — depends on your level of vegetable obsession.

  • The variety and quantity will change with the season —see the crops we grow here!

  • Pick ups are on Thursday evenings, deliveries thursday mornings

  • We will offer 3 pick up sites in Salt Lake City:

    1. Glendale 1415 S Cheyenne Streeet (at the farm)

    2. Wasatch Hollow Park

    3. The Avenues

    We also offer a home delivery for $12/delivery!

  • Shareholders can reschedule their shares if they are out of town or unable to pick up at no additional charge

Greetings! We will be opening sign-ups for 2026 sometime the first couple weeks of February. If you are interested in joining our CSA, please sign up for the waitlist below, so you can receive updates.

We offer previous members first dibs on signing up, and then we will reach out to contacts on the waitlist to sign up if we have open spots!

keep reading for more details about the BUG CSA

Join the CSA Waitlist

The CSA partnership is so much more than just a vegetable subscription — it is an exchange that acknowledges both the risks and rewards in small-scale agriculture. If we lose our entire crop of tomatoes, for example, , then our shareholders understand they will be taking that risk on with us, and foregoing tomatoes for the season. And on the flip-side, if we’ve got a bumper crop of peppers, you know you’re gonna get some of that!