Yes. Very popular in Scandinavian countries, not so much in the UK.I don't claim to know who invented it, but that idea has been around quite a long time!
Yes. Very popular in Scandinavian countries, not so much in the UK.I don't claim to know who invented it, but that idea has been around quite a long time!
It is called protectionism, and while there are arguments in favour, there are also arguments against, and it is illegal within the EU.Yes. Very popular in Scandinavian countries, not so much in the UK.
We aren't in the EU.It is called protectionism, and while there are arguments in favour, there are also arguments against, and it is illegal within the EU.
Except EU farmers are 'protected' under the CAP.It is called protectionism, and while there are arguments in favour, there are also arguments against, and it is illegal within the EU.
A policy I support. It’s just that, even after living here twenty years, I get surprised at how much things cost when I convert to “real” money.Yeah - Norway has this weird policy of ensuring that Norwegian farmers produce is cheaper than imported thus protecting their farmers. Those Norwegians and their crazy ideas!!!
I remember, when I came to the UK 35 years ago, there was only (British) seasonal produce in the supermarket. To buy a head of garlic you had to go to an Italian or Greek delicatessen.This is in stark contrast go a former company 20 years ago. They would buy a crop and make it fit the customers requirements.
To be honest, I was very surprised too. Here in Scotland we are famous for not eating our veg, mainly because they are traditionally boiled to deathBecause it tastes disgusting and no one wants to buy it.
Before reading this article, I wouldn't have thought that a country with a climate like Spain needs a lot of greenhouse space.https://www.theolivepress.es/spain-...rias-environmental-and-humanitarian-disaster/
I've driven past areas like this, its staggering how much plastic must be used. The article doesn't paint a pretty picture
When I left home to go to university, more than 50 years ago, I was SHOCKED beyond all of my expectations, when I went to an ordinary greengrocer (no such thing as supermarkets then! Well, maybe in London ...) to find that they didn't have peppers, garlic, fresh herbs(other than curly parsley) or ... loads of things ...I remember, when I came to the UK 35 years ago, there was only (British) seasonal produce in the supermarket. To buy a head of garlic you had to go to an Italian or Greek delicatessen.
This is one difficult to disentangle. I used to work regularly in Cyprus on a citrus farm. They used to complain bitterly about our never ending demands on visual quality, blemishes, scars etc. No-one likes to supply the British market a senior member of this farm personally told me, no-one else in the world is so fussy.I was very surprised, though, when everything started to appear in supermarkets visually uniform, unblemished, already washed.
Totally different from a continental veg market: somehow, the British consumer is now expecting perfectly shaped veg, all the same size and weight - and clean!
I suspect we were very limited in expectation and need say 40/50 years ago. The vast vast majority of people never travelled...it says a lot when a Vesta curry was seen as something exotic...and we did consider it exoticWhen I left home to go to university, more than 50 years ago, I was SHOCKED beyond all of my expectations, when I went to an ordinary greengrocer (no such thing as supermarkets then! Well, maybe in London ...) to find that they didn't have peppers, garlic, fresh herbs(other than curly parsley) or ... loads of things ...
I soon found the Chinese shops in Manchester - same with the Italian and Indian shops.
All things which my dad grew (obviously not the same varieties as dad grew but still) in his allotment and greenhouse in a northwest England hill village, which my mum cooked and which we as a family enjoyed eating. Mind you we were the first people in the village - other than the butcher, the fishmonger and the people at the 'big house' - to have a fridge and I think we had an actual freezer before any of them, for my dad's produce. STILL can only rarely get some of the veggies and soft fruits my dad grew and that I still enjoy - thank goodness for Booth's here in the northwest.
I suspect we were very limited in expectation and need say 40/50 years ago. The vast vast majority of people never travelled...it says a lot when a Vesta curry was seen as something exotic...and we did consider it exotic, us that had no former access to chili's, pepper, noodles etc etc.
If I think back to my childhood in the 1960s and 70s, grapes and oranges were available but that was about it . I assume they were shipped in.
As aside subject, what astounds me is how people haven't cottoned on the environmental impact of the flowers available at supermarkets, a huge amount are flown in from Africa and South America, the carbon footprint must be enormous.
I think its the human condition, you only have to look around average urban estates now, few people seem to care about their own environment! Why would they care about anyone else's? Look at the low level fly tipping, its like no--one can be bothered to do the simple stuff. See our local junior school, the playground looks like a rubbish tip after a weekend, crisp packets, cake packets, cups, bottles strewn all over. Schools seem reluctant to encourage kids to do litter pick, if you cant encourage children to care, you're lost in 20 years time.I've noticed a big upsurge in interest eating more seasonally over the last few years.
It's no longer seen as just a niche obsession for middle class hippies.
And there's lots of youngsters keen to enter the trade, I train quite a few here, but opportunities to get started are scarce.
We could grow far more of our own fresh produce though.. Even the more 'exotic' stuff, just not expect it all, all of the time.
Garlic for example does fine here.
And my avatar is mine own produce
And there's a much greater awareness of problems caused by flown in produce grown at scale on other peoples soil, where labour conditions and safety regs are poor.
Fertile ground in hungry countries is being used to grow temporary decorations, and non essential food for our tables here .
Using substantial quantities of chemical inputs in industrialised systems, with all the environmental consequences alongside..
Of course these issues are not really drawn attention to to by the large retailers.
But in our 'information' age there's not much excuse for not knowing about these things.
Perhaps some people would rather not know??