Nutrition spotlight: How choosing local dairy boosts your community and your health
March 5, 2019Bee kind: how BC’s farmers support pollinators (and how you can help!)
May 13, 2019The next time you’re enjoying a relaxing bath, consider this: the average BC greenhouse can produce 150 pounds of tomatoes, 160 cucumbers, or 55 pounds of peppers in a space smaller than your bathtub takes up. And they’re using water and heat more efficiently too!
When you eat local, you’re contributing to the same goal BC’s farmers have: producing food in a sustainable way for local communities. That used to mean limiting yourself to in-season food, but BC’s greenhouses mean you can enjoy delicious locally-grown veggies almost year-round while also supporting a sustainable approach to farming. Here’s why:
Greenhouse growers make super-efficient use of the land:
Greenhouses take up just .01% of BC’s farm land but are responsible for 11% of BC’s total agricultural production. To produce the same amount of vegetables in fields, you’d need 11,550 acres (more than 11 times the size of Vancouver’s Stanley Park!). With tools like climate control, and making use of vertical space, greenhouses can grow 10 to 20 times the amount of vegetables on the same area as a field-based farm, and they can extend the growing year.
They conserve water:
Here’s one thing you won’t find in a greenhouse: soil. Your cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers and lettuce are grown hydroponically in biodegradable mediums like sawdust and coconut fibre. This lets farmers keep nutrients where they belong - at a plant’s roots. Some other ways greenhouses practice water conservation include using computerized watering systems to deliver the exact amount of water needed without wasting it, collecting rainwater, and re-claiming water for reuse.
They use little to no pesticides - and zero herbicides:
The veggies that are greenhouse grown are herbicide-free...and growers use little to no pesticides. So how do they get their plants looking so perfect? One way is Integrated Pest Management: using ladybugs and other “good bugs” to get rid of harmful pests. This is not a recent development - from 1987 onwards, almost 100% of greenhouse growers have been using biological pest controls.
The long harvesting year means more stable local farming jobs:
BC greenhouses produce 10 months out of the year (and, using lighting, some produce veggies year-round!). That long harvest means you can enjoy local veggies most of the year, and there’s a human element too: it means that the people who work on the farms have secure, virtually year-round jobs in a safe working environment. Growers live and work in their communities, so it’s no wonder they’re so committed to sustainable practices! They also live less than a day’s drive from the majority of the markets they serve.
Greenhouses take up just .01% of BC’s farm land but are responsible for 11% of BC’s total agricultural production.
Want to see these practices in action and meet a local BC greenhouse grower? From April 26 - May 4, BC Greenhouse Growers will be hosting BC Greenhouse Veggie days. School tours take place April 30th and May 2nd, with local youth learning about topics like energy cycles and greenhouse careers. Members of the public are invited to tour select greenhouses in Abbotsford, Surrey and Delta on May 4th from 10 am - 2 pm. Visit BC Greenhouse Veggie Days to find more details about these tours as well as in-store promotions.
Can’t make it to a tour but want to support locally grown greenhouse veggies? Check the produce section of your local grocery store - just look for the farms and labels listed at the end of this document. Meet some of your local producers on the BC Farmers section of our site, and learn more of the science behind greenhouses here at the BC Greenhouse Grower’s Association website. For recipe ideas, follow us on Facebook or Instagram - we’ll be sharing some of our favourites this month!
Photo credit: BC Greenhouse Growers' Association