I agree. I've heard farmer's markets described as a "sleeping giant" in the media. The media is correct. I'm at the market every week, and see it in person. People really do want to know where their food comes from. We raised a few meat chickens this year for ourselves this year, and just to test things out, I put a sign up at the farmer's market to sell a few spare birds. It took about 10 minutes, and one fellow took them all. I got requests for a couple of weeks after by people who had seen the sign, even though it was only up for 10 minutes. The demand is there. No doubt. More chickens next year.....
As for the beef side of the equation for our farm, Hubby has absolutely no interest in finishing cattle, or dealing with the public. It's just not his thing. In fact he really REALLY dislikes it. If we lived closer to a big city, I'd work on him to change his mind, but at this point, I don't see it happening. You never know though, he may change his mind some day. In the meantime I'll hone my marketing skills. LOL
I also agree with the unsustainability of large scale fossil fuel based agriculture. Bigger is not always going to be better. You hear people speak about "quarter section farms" with a condescending attitude. I don't remember back to the days when there was almost literally a farm on every quarter, but I do remember when there were a lot more smaller farms than there are now. One thing that comes to mind is how people on these farms reacted to market downturns. I think that back then market signals actually worked better than they do now.
At one time, prices would drop, livestock numbers would drop, and prices would come back up. The main difference between then and now is that at that time, a lot of people would cut back a bit, and now, a few people have to cut back a lot. Back then no one lost the farm over it. Today, in order to correct the balance, farms will be lost, and the skilled people running them along with them. And the really big ones, I'm thinking along the lines of million dollar hog barns for example, will not cut back production simply because they've got too much invested. When that happens, the market and supply balance does not exist any more, and you see the kind of mayhem that just took place in the hog business.
As for the beef side of the equation for our farm, Hubby has absolutely no interest in finishing cattle, or dealing with the public. It's just not his thing. In fact he really REALLY dislikes it. If we lived closer to a big city, I'd work on him to change his mind, but at this point, I don't see it happening. You never know though, he may change his mind some day. In the meantime I'll hone my marketing skills. LOL
I also agree with the unsustainability of large scale fossil fuel based agriculture. Bigger is not always going to be better. You hear people speak about "quarter section farms" with a condescending attitude. I don't remember back to the days when there was almost literally a farm on every quarter, but I do remember when there were a lot more smaller farms than there are now. One thing that comes to mind is how people on these farms reacted to market downturns. I think that back then market signals actually worked better than they do now.
At one time, prices would drop, livestock numbers would drop, and prices would come back up. The main difference between then and now is that at that time, a lot of people would cut back a bit, and now, a few people have to cut back a lot. Back then no one lost the farm over it. Today, in order to correct the balance, farms will be lost, and the skilled people running them along with them. And the really big ones, I'm thinking along the lines of million dollar hog barns for example, will not cut back production simply because they've got too much invested. When that happens, the market and supply balance does not exist any more, and you see the kind of mayhem that just took place in the hog business.
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