The plight of Pukekohe

It’s not often in today’s consumer focused world that vegetables are delivered direct to your door or, in this case the footpath and road outside your home. While there is currently a shortage of onionsdue to uncertain weather conditions, this week residents around Pukekohe’s productive rural sectorfound that this menu staple was readily available on berms, in driveways and footpaths as they were washed from fields into neighbouring streets. And not just one or two onions, but rivers of them. Residents found that in the absence of having space for their own vegetable plot, the vegetables had come to them. Tonnes of vegetables washed into drains, culverts and streets as heavy downpoursover days turned the prime growing soils around the Franklin district into a soup.

It’s been a tough few years for Pukekohe growers faced with labour shortages, increasing costs andthe encroachment of new housing subdivisions where new neighbours request that you don’t spray your fields as they have washing to hang up. After months marked by labour shortages resulting incrops being left in fields to rot the unseasonal and unexpected weather experienced across theregion was the icing on a very unpalateable cake.

Onions that should have been left lying drying in the heat of an Auckland summer to prepare them for final harvesting and distribution, along with other crops, flowed as a result of the continualtorrential downpour, into residential neighbourhoods adjacent to fertile and productive fields. This came on the heels of extreme winter weather, which damaged crops and produce such as broccoliwas left to rot in fields due to labour shortages and the inability to harvest crops. This came at a time when consumers reacted to the hike in price of produce in supermarkets and lettuce was deemed‘unaffordable’.

Growers are facing unprecedented cost pressures to keep their businesses viable, with fertiliser increasing 300%, fuel costs up 200% freight along with increased seed costs and labour shortages alladding to the pain in getting produce to market and while cost pressures are out of control, therecent weather highlighted that the weather is also beyond our control.

The interesting thing is that the elite soils around Pukekohe’s border mitigate the effects of climate change and while a hot topic on every politician’s agenda right now with the government looking to find answers and solutions, nature controls the weather and our weather is changing.

An MP said recently “this has been a bloody tough year for farmers” and he is right. What we also need to remember is that the growers and producers are also ‘the rock stars’ of our food andbeverage sector. And while Elton John’s concert was a ‘wash out’, it was the same for these rockstars of our food economy.

Speaking of rock stars, Pukekohe grower Allan Fong had this to say: “We have put in measures overthe past 15 – 20 years to mitigate situations like this. The thing is that the crops that are drowned have drowned. There will be some impacts on crops for a while and it depends too how the land liesas to what crops will be grown and what is produced. It’s different with different growers as they are geographically spread across the region and not all suffered in the same way as those who lost cropsfrom fields. In 3 – 4 months we will be back to normal again. There is so much propaganda out thereabout prices and so forth but lettuces for example have come down in price and not everything hasrisen; it depends on what is being said in the press at any given time. And climate change? That’s debatable as to whether this was a result of climate change or not. Weather happens and it’s part ofthe growing cycle”.

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From the Ground Up: Creating a sustainable food and beverage economy

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Getting fresh in the field: a day with The Fresh Grower