Inside Triple Crown Salon, a studio in the Clinton Hill neighborhood of Brooklyn, sustainable agriculture is a growing topic of conversation between stylists and their clients—and that’s by design. We spoke to owner and longtime CSA member Natasha Speth, back in early March, right before the pandemic, climate disasters, and political upheaval of this year had really taken a hold, and even then she said, “I think going back to the root of all things is really important…we need to think about the whole picture. When I opened my own salon, I wanted to carry products that don’t just perform on a professional level but also align with my personal belief systems around sustainability and wellness. Davines was the clear-cut choice.” “It is so important to take care of ourselves as well as the environment,” said Speth, reflecting recently on the past year of turmoil. “When we look at the storms devastating the South and the fires ravaging the West, it is hard to ignore the result of climate change. It only exemplifies the fact that we have to do more. We have to think about where our products come from.” As a certified B Corp and a 1% for the Planet partner, Davines is paying it forward by circling back to where it all starts and blurring the lines between beauty and agriculture. In doing so, they are showing how beneficially interdependent these two worlds can be for our communities and the environment. “Almost everything in our modern lives has agriculture to thank—personal care, textiles, furniture, food,” says Megan Larmer, a director at Glynwood Center for Regional Food and Farming in Cold Spring, New York. The demand for clean, natural products has skyrocketed, but it’s not as simple as knowing that something is farm-grown. With modern industrial agriculture, we consumers have little information about where exactly our food comes from, how it was grown, or who grew it. It will take top-down change to totally repair. But in the meantime, we have more avenues than ever to help build a better agricultural future, thanks to efforts like Davines North America’s Beauty, From the Ground Up initiative. The program is a natural opportunity for a beauty brand to join forces with agriculture’s grassroots, yet quickly growing CSA movement to reshape the food system into one that implements responsible farming practices, works together to value everyone from the farmer to the consumer, and rebuilds the connections between people and their products. To do it, Davines has teamed up with prominent CSA coalitions (think networks of CSA farmers and support staff) across the U.S., working with leaders like Larmer to spread awareness about the power and value of local food systems and directly support those closest to it, including many of you reading this article. Besides the challenge of nurturing the health of their land’s soil for the health of their harvest, farm life involves “making choices that allow us to be financially sustainable. When I came into farming,” Perrotti shared earlier this year, “I was more interested in doing the ‘right thing’—making our farm harmonious with nature and feeding our community. But if we can’t pay our bills, the people who are working on the farm with us, or ourselves, then that’s not sustainable.” After the last six months of uncertainty, Perrotti has learned that doing “the right thing” and making a living are inseparable. “It wouldn’t be my business if it didn’t have my values embedded in it. Not so that I can advertise the farm’s values but so that I am living my life in alignment,” she told us in September. Over on the East Coast, Larmer described the steep challenges facing local farmers: “Most of the small farmers in the Hudson Valley can’t afford to own their own land, are working at or below the poverty line, 80 or more hours a week during the height of the season, and all that is really alienating.” That was back in March. Since then, thankfully, the demand for CSA has increased dramatically. According to Larmer, “While farmers are missing the opportunity to connect in person with customers and each other, CSA farmers in particular have actually seen unprecedented demand for CSA, and many are operating larger programs or running wait-lists for the first time. This incredible support is keeping them all afloat during these challenging times.” Carrie Sedlak, director of the FairShare CSA Coalition in Madison, Wisconsin, agrees, sharing “The COVID-19 crisis has quickly brought the ‘returning to our roots’ theme to bear. Consumers have flocked to CSA as their source for safe, reliable, and nutritious food, and CSA sales are stronger than ever. We have only unofficial data as we don’t survey our farmers until the end of the year,” she shares. “That being said, based on ongoing communications with our farmers, we believe that all (or at least 90%) of our farms sold out this year…or in some cases, sold even more than the number of shares they were originally intending to provide in 2020. Compare this to roughly 60% of our farms selling out in recent years.” Could such a landscape become our reality? In a year of upheaval, the silver lining is that reality may have, in fact, been fast-tracked. Sedlak said, “As larger food and manufacturing chains have broken down at different junctures and left certain products hard or impossible to find, CSA has thrived. CSA consumers have a direct and reliable connection with their farmer.” That’s the beautiful, meaningful thing about CSA. At Coyote Family Farm, Perrotti tells us that it’s the “directness of the relationships” that’s so beneficial on both sides. “I don’t meet all of our customers, but even over email I get to hear directly what they enjoy and what excites them. Having that relationship and seeing people come back is really motivating for us.” “The pandemic has highlighted many of the injustices and weaknesses in our society at large, and the food system is no exception.” Larmer shared, “It is now clearer to people than ever that the most resilient and reliable food system is one that is built on hyperlocal relationships and connections that do not rely on consolidated, elongated supply chains.” During the campaign period, Speth says that almost all of Triple Crown’s clients offered a donation after talking with her staff about sustainable farming. “A lot of people don’t know about Davines as a company—many don’t even know that there’s such a thing as sustainable beauty products or anything like that,” she says, “until they’re sitting in my chair and they say, ‘Oh, this smells so good, what is it?’”