Some farmers markets in âoversaturatedâ area finding a tough row to hoe
It was a hot Saturday morning at Old World Village in Huntington Beach. In the west parking lot, 11 booths were set up for the commercial centerâs weekly farmers market, but guests were few and far between.
Market manager Gabriele Utz walked around, asking vendors if they needed help with anything. Utz, who started the job in July, has tried everything from social media to handing out fliers at the Bella Terra shopping center across the street to get the word out about the farmers market.
Less than a dozen people visited that morning to examine the marketâs fresh produce, succulents and craft soaps.
âPeople came earlier today, maybe because of the heat,â Utz said. âWhen itâs cloudy, itâs a completely different scene. Last Saturday was cloudy and more people came, but as soon as thereâs a sign for people to go to the beach, they donât show up.â
Farmers markets can be found in almost every nook and cranny of Southern California. Orange County has 36 state-certified farmers markets, which is down from 42 tallied last year by the California Department of Food and Agriculture, said Donna Barnes, deputy agricultural commissioner for the state agency in Orange County.
âOrange County may be oversaturated with farmers markets, which is evidenced by the number of markets that have opened and closed,â she said.
Huntington Beach alone had four certified markets this year â at Old World, Surf City Nights in the downtown area, Pier Plaza and Peterâs Landing in Sunset Beach.
That number dropped on Sept. 12, when the Peterâs Landing farmers market closed because the property owner did not want to renew the marketâs five-year special-event permit, said Mary Ann Senske, who organized the event during its last three months.
âThe business owners in that plaza ⌠didnât want us there,â she said. âSome of them would park their car in the lot where the farmers market would set up.â
Nevertheless, Senske has been busy managing other successful farmers markets, including Surf City Nights in Huntington Beach, the seasonal market in Fountain Valley and the Orange County Great Park market in Irvine.
Having a variety of vendors and transparency about the products make for a successful market, Senske says.
âYou want to have something that makes people come out and stay all day or for a couple of hours,â she said. âItâs also important to let people know what theyâre purchasing, what the differences are between a grocery store and a farmers market and who theyâre supporting. I donât think people understand that when theyâre purchasing produce at a farmers market that theyâre supporting California farmers.â
The Old World market is not the only such business that has troubles. Michi Ward, the market manager and a produce vendor for Pier Plazaâs Friday farmers market, said her marketâs schedule has not been kind to the business, which typically has 20 vendors each week.
The market runs from 1 to 5 p.m., which puts a strain on farmers who go to other markets early the next day, Ward said.
âAfter the market is done, the farmers have to go back to their ranch, offload their unsold products and reload [their truck] with new produce for the next day,â Ward said. âItâs a long day for them and theyâre really tired the next day. Iâm having trouble having farmers stay at my farmers market right now.â
Ward added that the marketâs beachside location primarily brings in tourists who donât buy much.
âThe vendors always tell me that this is a touristâs market, but I tell them there should be a few locals,â she said. âThe kettle corn and peanut vendors do well because theyâre snack foods. Sometimes people will buy one peach instead of 5 pounds worth of fruit.â
Like Barnes, Ward said she believes there are too many farmers markets in Orange County and possibly in Huntington Beach.
âI think reducing the number of markets could help,â she said. âAs a farmer, I donât want to push people to grocery stores, but the farmers need a steady stream of clients that come every week.â
At Old World, Utz said she would try to keep her market open until the end of the year. Senske has helped Utz with the project, providing her with vendors who used to go to the market at Peterâs Landing. The challenge is helping those vendors turn a profit and stay at the location.
âI really love the vendors, and they like me as a market manager, but I have to make some money from this and they have to make money too,â Utz said. âIâll go from month to month and see how things are developing. I havenât lost vendors over the past weeks and I actually got new ones.â
Huntington Beach resident Marah Johnson is one of the new vendors, selling personalized trinkets made from silverware.
She has been at the market the past three weeks and said she plans to stay, despite the slow business.
âYou need to stick with it to keep people coming; they need to know that youâll be there, and I have repeat customers,â Johnson said.
Huntington Beach Farmers Markets
Surf City Nights
When: 5 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays
Where: On Main Street between Pacific Coast Highway and Orange Avenue
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Pier Plaza
When: 1 to 5 p.m. Fridays
Where: At Main Street and Pacific Coast Highway
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Old World Village
When: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays
Where: 7561 Center Ave. (west parking lot)