Farmers' markets: A history
Farmers' markets are often praised as the solution to many of our nation's food problems. "Farmers markets are an integral part of the urban/farm linkage and have continued to rise in popularity, mostly due to the growing consumer interest in obtaining fresh products directly from the farm" (Farmers Markets, 2012, USDA). Farmers' markets are defined as places were farmers can sell products directly to consumers. The products are believed to be more likely to be locally grown and the food sold there is viewed as having a lower carbon footprint regarding transportation. According to the USDA: "farmers markets allow consumers to have access to locally grown, farm fresh produce, enables farmers the opportunity to develop a personal relationship with their customers, and cultivate consumer loyalty with the farmers who grows the produce" (Farmers Markets, 2012, USDA). In an age in which so many people feel disconnected from the land and have no control over their food supply, the idea of being able to talk to the people who grew the products while touching and smelling it before they purchase it is profoundly attractive. Many farmers' markets also offer home-baked pies, preserves and other items that have long left the industrialized kitchens most people call home.
Consumers who enjoy farmers' markets have a more visceral experience of how crops are grown or how animals are raised so they can satisfy their concerns about the products' sustainability and health: whether it is organic, small-scale, free of genetically-modified organisms, and humanely-raised. "Milling around the farmers' market with like-minded foodies, buying fresh produce grown on nearby small farms, listening to local musicians play local songs, and supporting a variety of homegrown artisans certainly qualifies as an enriching community experience" beyond that of impersonal supermarket shopping (McWilliams 2009).
For many consumers, the bonds forged at farmers' markets are a more effective and reassuring relationship than simply reading a label which may contain vague phrases like 'cage-free' or 'vegetarian-raised.' Even commercial products which meet USDA standards of being organically raised may not necessarily be environmentally-friendly, in terms of the resources demanded to bring the product to the buyer's table. Farmers' markets offer the image of a more communal, local, and traditional connection between the consumer and the land. Once upon a time, there were no specific 'farmers' markets.' Roadside stands were the predominant means by which people were able to obtain crops that they did not grow themselves. "In colonial America...all markets were initially driven by face-to-face interaction" (McWilliams 2009). "When supermarkets rolled around in the late 1930s, they offered a respite from confrontational direct interaction with pushcart vendors and hucksters who could cheat or discriminate against outsiders" (Smith 2012). For decades, the variety of imported goods in American supermarkets was a source of pride; farmers' markets turn this concept on its head. Often, products are limited based upon seasonal availability. There are no tomatoes in winter; no cauliflower in summer.
Farmers' markets have exponentially increased in number, paralleled with the growing concern over the health and viability of the industrialized food system. Food health scares regarding products as diverse as hamburger meat, spinach, and peanut butter have caused many consumers to seek out their local farmers' markets and driven their growth. "As of mid-2011, there were 7,175 farmers markets operating throughout the U.S. This is a 17% increase from 2010" (Farmers Markets, 2012, USDA). However, not all areas have equal access to farmers' markets. "Farmers markets tend to be most heavily concentrated along the perimeter of the continental United States -- areas that also correspond with the highest concentration of vegetable acreage harvested for fresh market sales" (Jekanowski 2012). In areas with farmers' markets, the markets are becoming increasingly institutionalized, permanent parts of the areas where they are located. "Farmers markets are evolving. They are moving...
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