You make way less selling things wholesale, than you do selling small amounts to a larger number of people.
I’m not arguing that. I can empathize when the costs are broken down.
But what I don’t understand is how they can justify selling u-pick at $4/pound.
I remember many years ago, being able to get 50lbs of potatoes for less than what the stores were selling 10lbs for, because I would go directly to the farm growing them. That’s how I would imagine it’s supposed to work.
But this trend of charging way, way more for stuff directly from the farm or farmer’s market is frustrating.
I see apples from local orchards selling for $0.99 / lb in local grocery stores (then those same apples are 3-4x more when you pick them yourself). So if nobody is losing money, maybe farms are undercharging wholesalers and overcharging u-pick customers?
They are definitely being underpaid with wholesale, but you often don’t get to set your price to the factories. The processing/distribution company tells you how much they are buying for, and you can either agree to sell at that price, or move on. Since there are only so many places who will buy that amount of food, you kinda need to suck it up.
Sounds like farmers should focus on selling “to the people” again, and screw these greedy corporations who don’t give a fuck about farmers or other people, for that matter!
I’m not arguing that. I can empathize when the costs are broken down.
But what I don’t understand is how they can justify selling u-pick at $4/pound.
I remember many years ago, being able to get 50lbs of potatoes for less than what the stores were selling 10lbs for, because I would go directly to the farm growing them. That’s how I would imagine it’s supposed to work.
But this trend of charging way, way more for stuff directly from the farm or farmer’s market is frustrating.
I see apples from local orchards selling for $0.99 / lb in local grocery stores (then those same apples are 3-4x more when you pick them yourself). So if nobody is losing money, maybe farms are undercharging wholesalers and overcharging u-pick customers?
They are definitely being underpaid with wholesale, but you often don’t get to set your price to the factories. The processing/distribution company tells you how much they are buying for, and you can either agree to sell at that price, or move on. Since there are only so many places who will buy that amount of food, you kinda need to suck it up.
Sounds like farmers should focus on selling “to the people” again, and screw these greedy corporations who don’t give a fuck about farmers or other people, for that matter!