Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) gained increasing attention and experienced rapid growth in the US and Western Europe over the past 25 years as an emerging international movement and special form of direct marketing where producers and consumers form an alliance in a relationship based on mutual trust, openness, shared risk and shared rewards. This constellation can be good for the producers as they develop a direct and long-term relationship with their consumers, and possibly can concentrate their efforts on growing high-quality produce. CSA can be good for consumers who may become members of the farm as they can be sure of where their food is coming from and can get to know more about how it has been produced. CSA can also be good for the environment, because when producers and consumers of food get together they realize that food security is assured when farming methods are environmentally sound (Vadovics and Hayes 2010).