?? Mahalo nui #FrolicHawaii for highlighting our story with #HonoluluMagazine! Read the full article here ?? https://lnkd.in/gDZgmdUy
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Founded by and for farmers in 2015, Farm Link Hawai?i is the premier marketplace for local online grocery shopping, delivering across O?ahu every day. We offer an ever-growing selection of fresh produce, eggs, meat, pantry staples, prepared foods, snacks, alcohol, mixers, and more! We're committed to making local food accessible to everyone by accepting SNAP-EBT and Double Up Food Bucks (DA BUX), while delivering fresh, local food in communities where it can be hard to find! With Farm Link, buying local is easy peasy.
Farm Link Hawai‘i的外部链接
743 Waiakamilo Rd
Suite J
US,Hawaii,Honolulu,96817
?? Mahalo nui #FrolicHawaii for highlighting our story with #HonoluluMagazine! Read the full article here ?? https://lnkd.in/gDZgmdUy
Such a joy connecting with the incredible?#KaimukiHighSchool?#WormClub???! FLH Sales Director, Jane , had a great time sharing our passion for amplifying local, sustainable agriculture with these young eco-champions alongside?#NorthShoreEconomicVitalityPartnership??? Let’s keep cultivating a greener future together! Discover our organic offerings and learn more about local farmers on our website ?? https://lnkd.in/enkrXNhX
Why did the chicken cross the road? To get to J. Ludovico Farm, of course. ?? Fun fact: their first flock literally snuck in by accident! Now, two out of their three farm sites are dedicated to pasture-raised poultry using Korean Natural Farming methods. ???? With fresh, rotating pastures and moveable coops, they’re raising chickens that are healthy, happy, and full of island flavor. Now, you don’t have to go to that farm-to-table restaurant to enjoy them (although it is always a nice treat). Farm Link Hawai?i is thrilled to deliver their pasture-raised chicken, raw dog food, and dog treats to your door. ??? Head over to our?Do Good, Eat Better?Blog for an EZPZ and flavorful?Orange Honey Lemongrass Roast Chicken recipe that takes this farm-fresh poultry to the next level. ?? https://lnkd.in/eqfffbAk No need to wing it— order by tonight and taste the difference tomorrow! ??
?? Curious about what’s in season here in Hawai?i? Head over to our Do Good, Eat Better blog https://lnkd.in/eBzkACNU for your guide to some of our fall harvest favorites—from avocados to persimmons, lilikoi, and more! ?????
I'm so thankful to you and the Elemental Impact team that continues to deepen and widen the impact in Hawai?i and beyond. Thanks for the support of Farm Link Hawai‘i to date. We wouldn't be here without it!
At my daughter’s kindergarten open house this week, her teacher unveiled the theme for the year:?Growth Over Time. “The important thing isn’t where you start or where you end up,” she told us. “What’s important is that you grow every day." In this same spirit of growth, I’m excited to share two milestones today: 1. We are renaming to Elemental Impact to mark our 15 year anniversary and our expansion to a broader investing platform, and 2. We are launching a $100M funding program and opening applications for entrepreneurs to access capital from the US EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund. Read about why we're renaming, and our plans for this next chapter as we continue to support projects with deep community impact https://lnkd.in/g4KgYtCj I am so grateful to our team (check them out below... they were kindergarteners once too!), partners, and teachers -- and each and every one of YOU who has contributed to this journey ?? One of my greatest teachers, the late Pono Shim, wrote me a note a few years ago about learning and the practice of aloha. He said:?aloha and leadership aren’t something to know but rather something to struggle with. It is like a martial art: we learn a move and practice, learn a new move and practice, and practice and practice and practice until one day there are no more moves, only movement. This is our definition of Growth Over Time. Avra van der Zee, Melissa Uhl, Lauren Tonokawa, Mike Jackson, Ramsay Siegal, Austin Blackmon, Matt Logan, Brianna Rodrigues, Christina Angelides, Sara B. Chandler, Mark Chambers, Aparna Reddy, Danielle J. Harris, Danya Hakeem, Mike Curtis, Krystle Jackson, +++
OH SNAP ?? Hawaii is expanding SNAP eligibility, allowing tens of thousands more local families to access federal support. Removing the more restrictive “net income limit” for SNAP eligibility (a trend adopted by 28 other states) will bring more federal funds to benefit low-income residents in need. The state still needs to update their computer system for these changes to take place but ultimately that means more DABUX discounts and more $$$ to local producers. P.S. all SNAP-EBT customers get free delivery + 50% of all produce and poi on the Farm Link marketplace. Check out a snippet from our CEO,?Claire Sullivan at the last Pehea Ka ‘āina? Community Conversation — a powerful talk story with, and surrounded by, folks all working towards the goal of moving towards a pono & organic food system. **If you need help with grocery needs, go check your eligibility!** read the full?Honolulu Civil Beat?article for more information: https://lnkd.in/eWNAZcfV
Incredibly grateful for this powerful hui! DM us for a special code from this event ?? #WomenInTech Honolulu Tech Week
I help entrepreneurs mindfully scale companies without burning out ?? Exited Founder turned Executive Coach ?? Raised $40M and managed 100s of employees ??♀? ?? I write coaching and healing modalities for leaders. ????
I just wrapped up a sold-out magical Women in Tech panel in Honolulu! My biggest takeaway? Silicon Valley has a lot to learn from Hawai’i: 1) Hawaiians have hustle. Because of the high cost of living here, Hawaiians have multiple jobs. This is the infamous paradise tax of living here. But that also means they aren’t tied to finding the “one job.” They aren’t corporate. They are unafraid to consult and strike out on their own. That’s why there are so many fashion, food, agriculture, and hospitality brands coming out of the Islands. Panelist Chenoa Farnsworth, as one local founder put it, does more work supporting companies at Blue Startups than teams 5x their size. Watching Michael B. build the first Honolulu Tech Week in 5 months has been nothing less than inspirational. 2) Hawai’i is “small but mighty.” That’s the basis of the community here. 2 weeks before the event I didn’t have a venue. 1 week before I didn’t have food and beverage. But the ohana (or family) here has a way of providing with a level of warmth I’ve never experienced in San Francisco tech events.?Thanks to Hub Coworking Hawaii, Planted by La Tour Cafe, and Ashley Lukens Consulting we had a roof over our heads and food in our bellies. Gratitude to my friends and volunteers who came early to set up and break down the space. 3) There’s a love of the ?āina (the Hawaiian word for land) that isn’t just a green-washed trend - it’s a deep-rooted way of life. The respect for the land and sea is embedded into non-agricultural companies. Panelist Alexia Akbay runs Symbrosia a startup reducing methane emissions in livestock through the use of innovative seaweed feed additives. Farm Link Hawai‘i (one of the event sponsors) supports local food producers and the founder Rob Barreca is a technologist who owns a farm. Native Hawaiian Amy McKee of ?āinaQuest is building a game to educate people about native plants and to overcome plant blindness. Consideration for the earth is woven into the culture and the entrepreneurial ecosystem in an organic way that other communities can learn from. Mahalo (or thank you!) to all the Ohana who supported the Wahine Wednesday event. Hawai’i is small but mighty, and we’re going to see some loving and mighty companies get built here. Meeta Vu Krystal Alcayde Loren Groves David Scott Melanie Platt Lia Yue Jennifer De Rose Michelle Carmack Ashley Lukens, PhD Honolulu Tech Week Summer Kim Photos courtesy my dear friend Alexi Drouin
LINKEDIN EXCLUSIVE ?? https://lnkd.in/g2vBY6fy Shop Hawai?i made goods and groceries with us in one easy click + get $10 off your order with code LINKFORLINKED Skip the traffic, parking lots and long lines. We deliver daily, rain or shine ??? Check out our site and chat with a?real human?in the bottom-right corner of the new website! Every day from 8am - 5pm.
Do you know where your food comes from? We source from producers across da pae ‘aina to make eating local easy peasy and traceable as possible. Check out this 100% local breakfast sandwich feat: ?? #EmptyElleBagels ?? #EdiblePeace ?? #BraddahDavesTaroBurgers ?? #WaialuaGrowers ?? #MauiGrownTomatoes ?? #MaoOrganicFarms ?? #MeliWraps Everything available on our marketplace. Get it all & more delivered tomorrow. Check us out: https://lnkd.in/g2vBY6fy
Love this article about my work! “It’s like asking a fish, ‘does the water really matter?’” Sullivan says when asked why the local food system is so important, especially when judging by the state’s list of priorities—agriculture makes up less than 1% of the state’s budget. “The reason I started working in food 20 years ago is because it was the space where all important things come to meet—our economic health and vitality, our ecological well-being, our cultural source of joy and history and opportunities to perpetuate that, our personal physical health, and our familial well-being. All of those things are impacted by food and how we interact with the production and the consumption of food. So the local food system matters because it’s touching all of those things.” Farm Link Hawai‘i