Feature Article October 3, 2001
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Making
a living from her market gardenby
David Brison
Thanksgiving, traditionally a time to celebrate the fall harvest,
will be just another day at the Kingston Farmers Market for Titia
Posthuma of Maberly.Titia
trucks in organic vegetables from her market garden and greenhouse
to Kingston every week from May 1 to December 1.
In the peak of her growing season, she goes on Tuesdays,
Thursdays, and Saturdays. She
tapers off somewhat when she doesnt have as much produce, as
happened this summer during the prolonged drought, but packing up
her truck and getting to the market
by 8:30 a.m. is a part of her weekly routine for seven months of the
year.
When she isnt at the market, she is busy planting, weeding,
irrigating, mulching, ploughing, building and repairing fences,
clearing more land, milking her goats, and attending to four pigs. During the winter months, she sorts seeds (gathered from her
own plants, many of them heritage varieties) for the coming year,
and plans next years crops.
She is a busy woman - but whoever said that farmers dont
work long hours?
Titia believes in what she does.
There are a set of ideas that motivate her and she doesnt
need much of an opening to talk about them.
However, she doesnt stop working to talk in fact her
mind and body both seem to be constantly in motion.
She thinks that fruit and vegetables (and meat too) taste
better, and are better for you, if they are grown organically
without artificial fertilizers and pesticides.
In addition, she is convinced that the centralization of food
retail outlets dictates what will be grown and how to grow it to
the detriment of many consumers who want naturally grown food; also,
that increasingly the impact of this big business control of
agriculture is to drive the small farmer out of business.
The
Kingston market is a key to her farm operation.
It enables her to get her food, in large quantities, to the
people who want it and they certainly want what she has to
offer. By the time she arrives at 8:15 or 8:30 a.m., and even before
she has an opportunity to unpack her produce, the customers are
lining up to buy. They
wait patiently in line - no shuffling of feet or looking at watches
- while she attends to each customer, most of whom she knows by
their first names. They
know that when it comes to their turn, they will get her sole
attention, and most importantly, they are confident that she will
have - and be able to find in the dozens of blue containers in her
truck - something that they will savour.
Elizabeth, a regular customer, summed it up: Titia is the bringer
of the most exquisite culinary delights. Others said that they appreciated the quality, textures, and
flavour of the food. Another
spontaneously said,
She is the best organic gardener that Ive ever purchased from.
The average purchase per customer seemed to be about $15, and she
must have made at least $300 in the first hour.
Cost doesnt seem to be a factor customers seldom ask
what something will cost until they are ready to pay.
There is a large range of vegetables available green and purple
beans, Bok Choy, Swiss chard, arugala, garlic, beets, carrots,
potatoes, zucchini, cabbage, mixed greens ready for a salad,
tomatoes, and many, many more.
Many are available in several varieties - often heritage
ones. She grows cucuzzi
zucchini for Mario, an Italian customer, and usually has only one or
two, which he picks up every week.
The market is run by the city of Kingston, and is one of Ontarios
oldest farmers markets. Last
year, relationships between the city and the vendors became strained
when the city, without consultation, leased the market space to a
film company as a movie site. The
vendors objected to having their market cancelled, formed their own
association (the Kingston Market Vendors Association) and the
filming was eventually moved elsewhere in the city.
Since that time, relationships with the city have improved
markedly.
Wayne Hawley (who lives in Parham and reads The News) is the market
clerk for the city. We
meet monthly with the executive of the association (Titia is a
member), and it has been very helpful. They handle a lot of problems
before they get to us and the operation has been much smoother this
year. In fact, this
year attendance and revenue are both up from last year, said
Wayne.
Titia
and Wayne both say that there is a need for new vendors and that
those vendors who produce their own food (as opposed to purchasing
it from wholesale food outlets) will be given preference.
Vendors can start small. Titia herself started nine years ago
with her then partner, Chris Petzold, selling only potatoes and
maple syrup. There are
still day spaces available for those who dont want to have a
years lease. The
vendors association has an informal network set up to welcome and
help new vendors, so that what looks forbidding to the newcomer is
made easier.
I think that a lot of people have been squeezed out of farming,
but would like to stay in. There
are others like myself, who always wanted to farm, but didnt
think it was possible. I
think that farmers markets (Perth also has one) make it possible
for many to stay in agriculture.
I make a living, and love doing it.
Furthermore, markets arent the only outlets for my
produce. Community
Supported Agriculture (CSA) has also worked for me.
People pay me in advance, and I give them a basket of
vegetables every week during the growing season.
I also sell to Foodsmiths in Perth, said Titia.
Titia has made it work for herself, and would like to encourage
others to start market gardens - and perhaps join her in Kingston
next year.