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Community

Farmers market to launch in Spryfield in April

'It’s the right time and place’ for more local produce, says organizer

4 min read
caption Tomatoes are a seasonal fruit and most abundant during the spring and summer months.
Shelby Bona
Tomatoes are a seasonal fruit and most abundant during the spring and summer months.
caption Tomatoes are a seasonal fruit and most abundant during the spring and summer months.
Shelby Bona

The freshly plowed parking lot of the J.A. Walker Golden Age Social Centre looks bare and cold on a chilly Saturday afternoon in January.

But this spring, the Spryfield and District Community Market, a bi-weekly farmers market, will have the Golden Age Social Centre stocked with fresh produce, hand-crafted soaps, and a plethora of other locally grown and crafted fare.

Organizer Marian Munro said Spryfield and the surrounding communities (Ketch Harbour, Sambro, Herring Cove and Armdale) have been waiting for a farmers market to open for a while.

The J.A. Walker Golden Age Social Centre is located on the Herring Cove Road.
caption The J.A. Walker Golden Age Social Centre is located on the Herring Cove Road.
Shelby Bona

“It was the right time and place for it. There’s a bus stop just in front of [the Golden Age Social Centre], so it’s accessible for everyone, whether you have a car or not,” said Munro over the phone.

Munro, who had been a vendor at a farmers market in Dartmouth before moving back to Spryfield, says she knows first-hand how these markets can function as a gathering point within a community.

“This project was a collaborative effort and will give [the community] a space where they can gather together, check out local producers and meet their neighbours,” she said.

Munro has confirmed 16 vendors for the opening week, including Halifax Press, Sense and SensibiliTea and Wild Mountain Farm.

The less than-almighty dollar

For Julia Kemp, Community Development Coordinator with Brendan Maguire, the MLA for Halifax Atlantic and lifelong Spryfielder, bringing the community together was only half of the equation.

“It’s an important time [for the farmers market] because of the rising cost of food. With the value of the dollar so low, people are feeling the effects [on their food budgets]. It’s even worse on imported food products,” says Kemp.

Sobeys on Herring Cove Road offers both imported and Canadian produce. These apples are grown in Canada.
caption Sobeys on Herring Cove Road offers both imported and Canadian produce. These apples are grown in Canada.
Shelby Bona

Locally produced food prices remain more stable, according to Kemp, making the community market a reliable source for nutritious and affordable food for the community.

Kemp says that the timing of the Spryfield market is advantageous to the community as it comes on the heels of the Mobile Food Market pilot project.

The Mobile Food Market will receive the donation of one Halifax Transit bus and one driver for a 21-week test run this year.

The bus will travel to six different areas of the city identified by the municipality as areas that the Mobile Food Market will benefit.

Modelled after other successful endeavors in Toronto and Ottawa, the Mobile Food Market aims to bring healthy food options to areas of Halifax that don’t have easy access to grocery stores and for whom food costs can be prohibitive.

According to a group representing communities, universities and government, many people in Spryfield don’t have adequate access to food that is nutritious, affordable, and culturally appropriate.

Kemp says the Spryfield and District Community Market and the Mobile Food Market will take place on alternating weekends, providing the Spryfield community with access to fresh food every week during the spring and summer months.

The Spryfield and District Community Market will open April 17, 2016 from 12:30 – 4:30pm.

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