Friday, 22 August 2008

Local Farmers anticipate crisis








Farmer’s Markets are springing up all over Ireland and the UK, as farmers, towns and shoppers discover their advantages.

They can give farmers additional income for farmers in today’s difficult climate, and fetch higher prices for crops by cutting out the middlemen. They diversify crops, so that a bad year for one type of plant does not mean a total loss.

They mean that more money is spent in the local economy, and it circulates in the locality for longer. The UK organisation Friends of the Earth has found that people who frequent Farmers’ Markets also spend more in surrounding shops on market days, so they are good for local business. People who buy from markets get healthier food than they would from supermarket produce that may be shipped from around the world, as vegetables lose nutrients the longer they are stored.

Finally, they are good for the environment – food grown in a different part of the county, rather than a different part of the planet, use less oil in transportation, affect climate change less, and use less plastic packaging.

Finally, the small farmers who supply farmers’ markets offer jobs to people instead of machines, as on Liam Ryan’s farm in South Kildare. Ryan owns the 13-acre fruit-and-vegetable farm in Ballytor, sells his goods at Newbridge’s new Farmers’ Market.

While most farms still use the oil-powered machines that have taken over food production in the last century, Ryan finds human power to work best on a small scale.

“It means we can’t grow potatoes,” he said. “It’s hard to compete with machines. But we can grow French beans, tomatoes, carrots, all kinds of things. We also try to produce not just what will grow, but what grows well in this climate, as opposed to peppers or aubergines.”

“Farmers’ Markets create a win-win situation for everyone,” he said. “People know you, so they know where their food is coming from, and growers understand their customers because they are right in front of them.”

Ireland, he said, doesn’t have the long tradition of farmers' markets that other countries do, and until recently many of the vegetables grown were basics like potatoes and cabbage.

“The modern version is more cosmopolitan,” Ryan said. “Horticulture was very underdeveloped here, and most farming was grain, dairy and meat.”

For these reasons, markets would be a boon in any era, but the end of cheap oil gives them greater urgency. Ryan may be one of a select few now, but in a few decades other farms may have to follow his model.

“We’re seeing what happens from
giving the Chinese all our business, and using our new money to buy all these cheap things,” Ryan said. “They haven’t necessarily made our lives better, but they’ve taken away a lot of our local self-sufficiency.”

If we didn’t have the small farms and
a lot of local things like the farmers’ markets, and something happened to the oil supply, people wouldn’t know where to go,” Ryan said. “My concern is that it will happen too quickly, before people have a chance to build back the local infrastructure.”

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

What I would like to see at UK Farmers Markets is a realisation that people need more than a monthly market, and if I may dream a bit more, one within walking distance of home. The markets around my area are held monthly, and the nearest one is three miles away. I can't store a month's worth of fresh vegetables or fruit, and since I don't have a car, I must either walk or take a bus or train, and certainly can't carry that much!

I lived in the US for many years, and farmers markets were local and frequent (and popular!)

Kevinaugustine said...

Future Perfect

I read the article Future Perfect in The American Conservative online newsletter; it is a reasonable, sober and uniquely humane meditation on post fossil fuel existence.

The balance and gentle wisdom of the piece reminded me much of a book I recommend called "Muddling Toward Frugality" by Warren Johnson.

Praise and thanks,

Kevin Walsh
Chicago Peak Oil
kevinaugustine@juno.com