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King George Farmers Market taking root Date published: 6/28/2009
BY CHELYEN DAVIS By noon at the King George Farmers Market Community Appreciation Day, Monica and Jeff Schenemann's fish were sold out. Vegetable grower Benny Goodman had only a few cucumbers and other vegetables left. The egg co-op was out of eggs. Carol and Craig Wheeler were looking at the last few packages of Carol's homemade baked goods. The Rotary Club was out of barbecue. In other words, market organizers said, yesterday's events were a success. "We just invited the whole community to come and celebrate this new market," said farm market manager DeLaura Padovan. "The crowd has been really big today." The farmers market is a new one, started in May. The first Saturday it was open, there were three vendors. Now there are 15. The community day was to celebrate and help make the community aware that the market is there, in the parking lot of King George Elementary School. Besides the food, attendees could watch Aubrey Mitchell make butter, look at a 1955 Allis-Chalmers CA tractor rebuilt by local high school students, view a demonstration on spinning wool, listen to the Marenje Marimba Ensemble (a group of young people from Fredericksburg) and watch Signora Bella, a slackrope walker. Padovan said she didn't have a crowd count, but estimated that several hundred people visited the market yesterday. She said 200 schedules were gone, along with 250 magnets. The market is designed to showcase local food--vendors must be from King George County and must sell items they have raised, made or caught themselves. For Benny Goodman, who began gardening this year, that's part of the market's appeal. "I like the philosophy behind this market," Goodman said. He said the market is helping educate consumers, some of whom wonder where the tomatoes are (they're not in season yet). Elizabeth Bewick, who sells plants raised in her greenhouse and whose idea the market was, also likes the educational aspect of selling locally grown food. "People need to know where their food is coming from," Bewick said. "Kids think milk comes from a grocery store. I wanted people to get back to their roots. This used to be a huge farming community." Monica Schenemann, whose husband, Jeff, catches and sells fish, mostly to wholesalers, said the farmers market gives them another outlet for their catch.
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