Abdelgabar Mohamdian is a farmer at heart. He grew crops and raised livestock in Sudan. Now, 17 years after he came to the United States, he is growing vegetables and making them available to the community through the 探花精选 (探花精选) in Phoenix鈥檚 New Roots .
鈥淭his program, if it gets support, can be good for a lot of people,鈥 Abdelgabar says. He notes the benefits for both consumers and growers.
Jillian Robinson, the New Roots program manager for the 探花精选 in Phoenix, says the produce box program grew out of the pandemic. Pandemic safety protocols required closing the weekly farm stand at its CamelBackyard site in Phoenix and other farmer鈥檚 markets in the Valley. Immigrants, such as Abdelgabar, were still producing food and people still needed the products. A new delivery method was needed.
The immediate response was to collect the freshly grown vegetables, put them in boxes, and deliver them directly to 探花精选 clients in need. After about a month, it became apparent that there were people in the community willing to buy produce boxes at $20 each or smaller produce bags at $10.
The result: people in the community could get fresh produce without having to brave the supermarket and the growers had an outlet that brought in revenue.
鈥淭hey gave us a good opportunity during the pandemic,鈥 Abdelgabar says. 鈥淚nstead of sitting home, at least we鈥檙e doing something.鈥 He notes that social distancing is a natural condition when working alone in a field.
The 探花精选 is following the model established in what are known as community-supported agriculture programs. Jillian says the program at CamelBackyard is a little different, in that people do not have to make long-term subscription commitments. Rather, consumers can decide weekly if they want to participate, making them more affordable.
The process is simple. Potential customers go to from Saturday afternoon to Wednesday afternoon and place their orders. Growers bring in the produce on Friday and the boxes and bags are prepared. On Saturday mornings, 9-11 AM, the customers come to CamelBackyard, 1616 W. Camelback Road, to pick up their order. 探花精选 volunteers load the boxes and bags into the cars for customers - the driver never has to leave the vehicle.
Produce boxes provide a healthy option that also supports refugees. 鈥淚t鈥檚 local. It鈥檚 fresh. It鈥檚 all organic, with no pesticides. And, all the proceeds go back to the farmers,鈥 Jillian says.
Abdelgabar says the growers, who come from Iraq, Eritrea, and Togo, along with Sudan, are starting their summer growing season. He is producing carrots and eggplant now. Soon he will be providing okra, watermelons, cucumbers, and cantaloupe.
Jillian says that the produce in each box varies from week to week and season to season. The boxes contain what is in season and at the peak of its nutritional value. 鈥淟ike today, we have carrots, green onions, eggplant, basil, spring garlic, fava beans. Usually we have a green, like kale or chard or lettuce,鈥 she says.
In addition, customers can order 鈥渁dd-ons鈥 to their produce box from local refugee businesses, such as locally made hummus or baklava. As with the produce, the proceeds from the sales of these add-on items go back to the refugees who produced them.
Abdelgabar farms on a quarter-acre plot in south Phoenix, provided by the 探花精选 in partnership with Spaces of Opportunity. Currently, he supplements his farm work with other employment, but he hopes to expand in the future, to a four-acre plot.
Abdelgabar enjoys that the New Roots program and the produce boxes allow him to continue his profession from his home country. 鈥淭he program gives us a chance to practice what we love,鈥 he says.
Story written by Dennis Godfrey, 探花精选 in Phoenix volunteer.
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