LOCAL FOOD HEROES: Lois & Allan Higgins of GrassRoots Meat

Healthy Archuleta, a local non-profit in Archuleta County also known as the FSFE/Food Coalition, continues to celebrate the local food heroes that make up the food system in Archuleta County and the surrounding southwest region. These individuals uniquely contribute to the community’s vision for a sustainable, health promoting, and equitable local food system so that everyone has access to affordable nutritious foods. The effort to capture the profiles of these integral community members was initiated as part of the Archuleta Food System Summit that took place April 9, 2022.

Today we would like to share the story of Lois and Allan Higgins of GrassRoots Meats, who shared this narrative with us:

“In the early 1980s we started raising beef in Colorado using a conventional program. After learning how much healthier finishing animals on grass is for the animals themselves, for the consumer, and for the environment, we became committed to providing grass-finished beef to our family and friends. In 2003 we launched the GrassRoots label in an effort to supply our beef and lamb (and now chicken, pork and duck) on a larger scale throughout the country.”

“GrassRoots meat uses strict animal husbandry guidelines that focus on the humane treatment of animals raised in a healthy environment where they are allowed to mature naturally. We utilize pasture rotation, controlled grazing, natural fertilization, and water source management – a low energy, environmentally sound approach to raising cattle. As a result our animals yield tender, great tasting and nutritious meat.

“Many folks in the meat industry use the term “grass fed” to describe their meat, but nearly all cattle and sheep are fed grass early on in their lives. Our animals are distinguished by the fact that they are not only raised on grass they are finished on grass, with no supplemental grain. We harvest young, finished lambs directly off pasture, our cattle are on pasture a minimum of 20 to 22 months. Until a beef reaches 20 to 22 months of age the rich yellow fat of the grass-finished meat has not reached its maximum nutrient potentials and flavor.

“One of the many problems in the commodity industry today is that producers are trying to fatten the animals (with grain) as quickly as possible, and they use hormones to speed up the process. Taking longer to finish the animals on grass costs the producer more, but we think that you will agree that the extra cost is well worth the price in terms of health benefits and the quality of the meat. We are deeply committed to producing and supplying our customers with the finest grass-finished meat available today, and we hope that once they try our meat they will be committed to us as well.”

For more information, contact GrassRoots Meats at 970-582-0166 or visit www.grassrootsmeats.com.

For more information about the local food heroes and Healthy Archuleta, please contact us at: fsfearchuleta@gmail.com, or call 401-206-4579… or visit https://www.foodcoalition4archuleta.org/.

Rosa Chavez

Rose Chavez is Executive Director for Archuleta Seniors, Inc. and Public Health Consultant at Archuleta Food System/Food Equity Coalition.