🌱 CommonTilth

Connecticut Farms & Producers — Community Platform
In CT Now: Maple · Oysters · Storage Veg · Greenhouse Greens

Map Legend

Produce / Veg
Meat / Protein
Dairy / Eggs
Fruit / Orchard
Aquaculture
Specialty / Trail
CT has 5,500+ producers.
This shows a curated starter set.
Full data: ctgrown.org
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Farms
0
Product Types
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Counties
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CSAs Open

🌿 What's Available in CT — March 2026

Late winter / early spring. These products are in-season or available from CT producers right now.
🍁
Maple Syrup
PEAK SEASON
🦪
Oysters
Peak quality
🥩
Pastured Meat
Year-round
🥛
Dairy & Cheese
Year-round
🥚
Eggs
Year-round
🍯
Honey
Stored harvest
🥬
Greenhouse Greens
Limited availability
🥕
Storage Vegetables
Root veg, squash
🌱
Asparagus
Coming: April
🫛
Peas, Spinach
Coming: April/May
🍓
Strawberries
Coming: June
🌽
Sweet Corn
Coming: July

🔍 Supply Gap Analysis by County

Where does CT need more producers? Red = underserved. Based on current curated dataset + CT Dept. of Agriculture data.
CountyProducers (Sample)Key GapNeed Level
Tolland 2 CSA farms, specialty producers, year-round access High Gap
Windham 3 Protein (meat & dairy), farmers market presence High Gap
Middlesex 2 Vegetable CSAs; strong on orchards, weak on diversified farms High Gap
New Haven 4 Urban food access, SNAP-accepting farms near New Haven Medium Gap
Fairfield 5 SW corner (Stamford, Greenwich area) nearly farmless Medium Gap
New London 6 Strong aquaculture; needs more vegetable farms Low Gap
Hartford 7 Good coverage; urban Hartford lacks nearby farm access Low Gap
Litchfield 7 Strong farm density; needs better aggregation/distribution Low Gap

📦 Product Distribution

Producers by category (sample dataset)
Vegetables
22
Fruit/Orchard
13
Meat
11
Eggs
12
Dairy
7
Flowers
6
Honey
5
Aquaculture
4
Maple Syrup
4
Cheese
3
Mushrooms
2

🆚 How This Compares

Feature comparison with existing CT food discovery tools
Feature This Platform CT Grown LocalHarvest
CT-specific focus ✘ (national)
Seasonal availability now
Supply gap analysis
Oyster/Cheese/Wine Trails
SNAP/EBT filter Partial
Institutional buyer mode
Surplus / gleaning board
Network coordination
Self-registration Via DOAG only
Producer-to-producer tools
Free to use / open Freemium

💰 Active Funding & Opportunities for CommonTilth

State and federal programs supporting CT farm networks as of 2025–2026
ProgramAmountFocusWho Can Apply
CT DOAG Resilient Food Systems Infrastructure (RFSI)$2.1M awarded 2024Mid-supply chain, food hubs, aggregationFood hubs, cooperatives, processors
USDA Local Food Purchase Assistance$2M+ CT awardsConnecting producers to underserved communitiesNonprofits, food banks, institutions
USDA FMPP (Farmers Market Promotion)Competitive grantsMarket infrastructure, SNAP matchingMarket operators, farm networks
CT NOFA Farm Share AssistanceSliding scale subsidiesCSA access for low-income familiesConsumers + participating farms
City Seed (New Haven) Aggregation HubRFSI fundedAggregation & distribution for CT farmsCT producers seeking wholesale access
Key takeaway: A platform that can demonstrate producer coordination, institutional procurement, and food access equity is well-positioned for USDA and state grant support.

🤝 CT Farm Network Boards

Live coordination tools for producers, institutions, and food hubs. Post surplus, needs, collaborations, and events.

📋 Surplus & Availability Board 0

Farms post what's available now — excess produce, bulk orders, pickup windows. Institutions and consumers respond directly.

🏫 Institutional Needs Board 0

Schools, hospitals, restaurants, and food banks post procurement needs. Farms respond to find new buyers.

🚜 Farm-to-Farm Collaboration 0

Share equipment, coordinate deliveries, co-purchase inputs, plan market rotations. Unique to this platform.

📅 Events & Open Farm Days 0

Farm dinners, workshops, open farm tours, harvest celebrations. Discoverable in one place.

🙋 Volunteer Directory

Network members who've opted in to be publicly listed. All introductions go through CommonTilth — no contact info shown directly.

🔑 The Data Advantage: What No Other Platform Does

CT Grown is a marketing tool. LocalHarvest is a national directory. Neither has a coordination layer. The opportunity is to build the operating system for the CT local food economy — where supply meets demand, farms talk to farms, and institutions reliably source local food at scale.

📡
Real-Time Availability
What's in the ground, what's ready to sell, what's surplus this week.
🔄
Supply Chain Coordination
Shared delivery routes, co-packing, aggregation with NW CT Food Hub.
📊
Network Intelligence
Which counties are underserved. Which products have no local supply. Where to grow next.

🌿 CT Growing Calendar

What's available from Connecticut farms, month by month. No other CT platform has this. Green = peak; lighter = available; gray = not in season.

January

DairyMeatEggs Storage VegOystersHoney Goat Cheese

February

DairyMeatEggs Storage VegOystersEarly Maple Goat Cheese

March NOW

DairyMeatEggs Storage VegOysters🍁 Maple PEAK Goat CheeseGreenhouse GreensHoney

April

DairyMeatEggs AsparagusSpinachRadishes OystersRhubarbHerbs

May

DairyMeatEggs AsparagusPeasLettuce HerbsKaleSpinach OystersEarly Strawberries

June

DairyMeatEggs 🍓 StrawberriesPeasLettuce ZucchiniHerbsBeets FlowersCherries

July

DairyMeatEggs 🌽 Sweet CornBlueberriesTomatoes CucumbersPeppersBeans ZucchiniPeachesFlowers

August

DairyMeatEggs 🍅 TomatoesSweet CornPeaches EggplantPeppers🍎 Apples start Flowers🫐 Blueberries

September

DairyMeatEggs 🍎 Apples PEAK🎃 PumpkinsWinter Squash TomatoesGrapes/WineSweet Potatoes Oysters return

October

DairyMeatEggs 🍎 Apples PEAK🎃 PumpkinsWinter Squash Root VegBrussels SproutsOysters 🍯 Honey harvest

November

DairyMeatEggs Storage VegRoot VegOysters Kale/Greens🌲 Christmas TreesCider

December

DairyMeatEggs Storage VegOystersGoat Cheese 🌲 Christmas TreesHoney

🥇 Connecticut Agricultural Trails

🦪 CT Oyster Trail — 13 producers

Connecticut is one of the nation's top oyster-producing states, with nearly 80,000 acres under cultivation. The CT Oyster Trail connects 13 farms statewide — no other platform maps them in a searchable directory. Best season: September–April.

Mystic Oysters Stratford Point Oysters Noank Oysters Riverhawk Oysters Niantic Bay Oysters Copps Island Oysters White Rock Oysters Sixpenny Oysters Stella Mar Oysters Hammonasset Point Oysters Leetes Island Oysters Stonington Farms Oysters Aquaculture Center (UConn)

🧀 CT Cheese Trail

Connecticut has a growing artisan cheese scene — from goat chevre in the Litchfield Hills to sheep milk cheese on the shoreline. CT has a published Cheese Trail (buyctgrown.com) but no searchable, filterable directory with hours and availability. Year-round producers.

Lavender Hills Farm (Canaan) Rustling Wind Creamery (Falls Village) Meadowstone Farm (E. CT) Sankow's Beaver Brook (Lyme) Thorncrest Farm / Milk House (Goshen)

🍷 CT Farm Winery Trail — 45 licensed wineries

Connecticut has 45 licensed farm wineries — a largely undiscovered tourism and purchasing opportunity for local food network participants. Most buy from CT grape growers, creating a direct economic loop. Best season: May–November.

Jones Family Farms & Winery (Shelton) Saltwater Farm Winery (Stonington) Aquila's Nest Vineyard (Newtown) Bishop's Orchards Winery (Guilford) +41 more…