logo
Baltimore Farmer's Market vendors find support, personal connections from customers

Baltimore Farmer's Market vendors find support, personal connections from customers

CBS News3 days ago

More than 160 vendors gather each week at the Baltimore Farmer's Market under the underpass at Jones Falls Expressway to offer homemade and homegrown products.
Local produce, pastries, crafts, and other products are sold from 7 a.m. until noon each Sunday from April through December.
"We're going to have corn next week, and then we'll be getting into tomatoes and watermelons and cantaloupes, and everything will be full swing," said Stave Knopp, owner of Knopp's Farm on the Shore.
Personal connections at the Farmer's Market
Knopp will tell you farming isn't just a job to him, but rather his crops are rooted in tradition.
"This isn't just like a business or not just a market, this is like family," Knopp said. "I've been coming here since I was two. This isn't just any old regular day, this is family."
Knopp's parents sold produce at the Baltimore Farmer's Market before he was born, so he grew up pulling a wagon up and down the aisles.
Now, he runs the stand himself.
"I know a lot of the customers, I've known their grandparents, now I'm meeting their children," Knopp said. "I'm meeting their grandchildren. I'm telling my age now, but it's really awesome, it's very special."
Those personal connections with shoppers keep them coming back.
"We really just try to support the local folks who live here as much as we can. If we're not going to, who is?" said customer Jason Ward.
Supporting local businesses
Delaney Cate, the farmer's market's manager, told WJZ she enjoys watching Marylanders support each other through the Baltimore Farmer's Market.
"You get to kind of see the city and the area wake up in a way," Cate said. "It's a great idea to keep money in the community. If you're shopping local, you've also got folks that live here that are being hired to vend."
Vendors say what you get at the Baltimore Farmer's Market is not just a vegetable off a shelf, it's also an interpersonal experience.
"When you come here, you're talking to the farmer, you're talking to me," Knopp said. "It's know your farmer, know your food."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tariffs Make the World Poorer and More Perilous
Tariffs Make the World Poorer and More Perilous

New York Times

time8 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Tariffs Make the World Poorer and More Perilous

President Trump's on-again-off-again tariffs have disrupted the global trading system and caused whiplash for businesses and consumers. He has vacillated mightily, announcing tariffs on imports from practically every U.S. trading partner and then pausing or rolling some back. Legal challenges have added to the turmoil. No matter where the tariffs eventually settle, they will have repercussions that go far beyond trade. Raising tariffs, or at least the constant looming threat of that happening, undermines trade and weakens economic links that stabilize international relations. By shredding rules that have governed trade and by disregarding free trade agreements, Mr. Trump has undercut the entire international rules-based order. This includes ignoring the rules of the World Trade Organization, hindering its work and threatening to abandon it. Denying low-income countries with growing young work forces the opportunity to develop their economies through trade could lead to a surge of migrants that will put pressure on the countries that receive them. A retreat from free trade will hurt consumers worldwide through higher prices and more limited choices, raising the prospect of political discontent in their countries. Whatever their ostensible objectives, the Trump tariffs will make the world a poorer and more perilous place. A full-scale retreat from global trade is unlikely, but international commerce is already shifting in ways that can deepen geopolitical fissures. Business interests have long kept relationships between rivals on an even keel. In the past two decades, for instance, U.S.-China frictions have been smoothed by the eagerness of American companies to sell their products and services to China's rapidly growing middle class and to use Chinese suppliers. American investors keen to gain access to China's financial markets played a similar role. When China manipulated its currency during the 2000s to gain a competitive advantage for its exports, the presence of U.S. commercial interests ensured that the United States did not take punitive action. For China, the benefits from opening up to American businesses and investors pushed Beijing, for a while, at least, to align its own economy with U.S. free market principles. It eased restrictions on investments flowing into and out of the country, and even took steps to reduce government intervention in foreign exchange and other financial markets. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store