🔒Small Maine farms and niche food makers must be crafty to distribute to broader markets

Sitting at the kitchen table in his Nobleboro farmhouse, Robert Spear, a third-generation farmer, juggles conversations between his guest and a series of phone calls to and from prospective produce buyers.“Do you need tomatoes?” he asks one caller. “We’re sitting on top of a lot of tomatoes.” One caller wants peppers, but Spear’s short on […]

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Value-added foods can expand markets

Maine’s small farms and niche food marketers are becoming craftier in making a living. While some, like Spear Farms Inc., still snowplow and provide heating wood to others in the winter, they also are increasingly looking to value-added goods to stretch their income and products.

Robert Spear, treasurer of Spear Farms, says he’s started peeling the farm’s butternut squash and making smaller, two pound bags of carrots available to stores.

“Household consumers are looking for ready-to-eat foods,” he says. “You have to be looking out for different avenues to expand your operation.”

Spear, who used to have a dairy farm that was sold to Oakhurst, switched his focus to vegetable growing four years ago. He also sells meat, taking care of more than 125 head of cows for others, but has his own herd of 70 animals that he is raising to sell as meat to butchers, to Rosemont and other places.

“There is a trend toward value-added producers in Maine,” says John Schreiber, a produce worker in Rosemont Market’s warehouse in Portland he adds, citing nearby Tortilleria Pachanga, which mills organic corn grown in Maine.

“And lot of people in state are experimenting with growing new products like ginger,” Schreiber says. “It’s young and doesn’t have the tough skin of usual ginger.”

Aroostook is growing some canola as a rotational crop that it is selling to Canada, adds Spear, and another farm in The County is growing red beets for New York markets.

Spear says one issue for Maine is the lack of processing facilities, for example, a plant where excess tomatoes can be processed into sauce or beans can be flash-frozen to give farmers an added income stream. The problem is, it’s expensive to start such plants and keep them profitable.

“I wish there was a place farmers could go to balance produce surpluses,” he says.

Some help may be on the way. In May, the Obama administration’s “Investing in Manufacturing Communities” partnership initiative designated greater Portland as a food manufacturing hub. As a result, a partnership of public and private industry groups plan to launch an ambitious and multi-tiered sustainable food production program that will get priority consideration for a piece of the $1.3 billion in total funding from several federal agencies.

The program, led by the Greater Portland Council of Governments, aims to boost the region’s food economy, grow new and existing businesses and create new jobs with a multi-tiered approach that will involve the Maine Port Authority, Maine International Trade Center, Axiom Technologies, Maine Food Strategy, the city of Portland and Gulf of Maine Research Institute, among many others.

Among the program’s plans is building a 100,000-square-foot food warehouse on Portland’s waterfront that will help address storage issues for local food producers. It also could open up potential trade opportunities with shipping companies, thus expanding the markets for food producers seeking new buyers.

“I think it will be good for farmers,” says Rosemont’s Schreiber. “A big problem is finding markets for their products.”

— LORI VALIGRA

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