Lovelies Brandie Michelle and Rachel Axtell opened their busy Baywood Park biz this May at the 3rd Street corner where Farmer's Market runs Mondays.
Be Love grew from a farmers' market booth serving popular fresh-squeezed fruit and vegetable juices. The red and green Liquid Love is still a Be Love staple, along with after-hour deliveries to about 75 daily customers. Everything about Be Love is about giving back--to the community, to farmers, to the environment--so no surprise the juices are either filled in recycled mason jars or poured into the jars customers then recycle for their favorite fuel.
No surprise, either, that this green business's goal of zero waste ties in to the love of feeding others.
Be Love's organic waste feeds the Red Wigglers out back, too.
Calling the Worm Whisperer.
Brandie chatted up Mark Sowell while booth buddies at the Morro Bay Farmer's Market. His calling card: GrumProductions. In webspeak,that's http://www.quickcompost.org/. Worms, castings, bins, natural pesticides. They spoke the same love language. "They call him the worm whisperer," explains Brandie. "He has a way with them."
She brought in Sowell for his vermicomposting expertise right after opening her cafe. Vermicomposting is the consumption of organic material by earthworms. Yum. Thriving worms in cool wood bins of soil eat the scraps, poop and die to form a highly nutrient fertilized soil. The compost soil is mixed with top soil to grow herbs and garden delectables, which the Be Love partners are growing now for flavoring future dishes.
Sowell's company installed and closely monitors the system to prevent odor and collect the castings. Brandie says the new worm farm behind the cafe was a community project.
Sowell's company installed and closely monitors the system to prevent odor and collect the castings. Brandie says the new worm farm behind the cafe was a community project.
Labor of Love. The weeds were cleared and the Be Love family helped Sowell's company build the big heart-shaped mounds of composted soil for future herb gardens. Brandie's son Taylor is among those who water and tend to the waste kept in covered Miner's Hardware buckets.
"It's important to do this," Brandie says. "We fill so many buckets of pure organic waste. It needs to go back to the earth, to show respect to the farmers, to show respect to the earth."
I jumped when Brandie called to say she wanted the organic peanut butter Joycups in her cafe. No surprise there, either.
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