
Way to grow: Newfoundland organic farm yields national tourism
award
Mike Rabinowitz tends to his garden at the Organic Farm in Portugal
Cove-St. Philip's. The farm received a national award for its work.
- Reprinted with permission from The Telegram
By Kerri Breen, November 5, 2009 issue of The
Telegram (St. John's)
Melba Rabinowitz of the Organic Farm in Portugal Cove-St. Philip's
got a standing ovation in Saint John, N.B., Tuesday when her family
farm won at the National Awards for Tourism Excellence ceremony.
After
presenters read the farm's name from an envelope, Rabinowitz stepped
on stage to receive a glass statue and give an acceptance speech
she was supposed to have prepared, but didn't.
" It's like the Academy Awards of tourism - no, seriously. Like,
it's all black ties. It was huge and amazing," she said.
Beating
out two other nominees, the farm received the Starwood Hotels and Resorts
Corporate Partner of the Year award from the Tourism Industry
Association of Canada for its work in supplying fresh, organic produce
to high-end restaurants that tourists frequent such as Magnum and Steins
in St. John's and Atlantica in Portugal Cove-St. Philip's.
" We really do grow and try to cater to what people in the restaurants
in and around St. John's need," she said. "That's what makes
us a corporate partner."
She says it's the farm's relationships with
the chefs and the businesses they supply that make it worthwhile despite
the challenges of organic
farming in the province.
" What I tried to explain to the group last
night is, because basically we're a small town and everybody knows everybody,
it's more
like family."
Rabinowitz and her husband Mike moved to Portugal Cove-St.
Philip's from Seattle in 1975. In the summer of 1977, they bought a heavy-duty,
walk-behind tractor to turn the sod for a vegetable garden. Not long
afterwards, they discovered
that gardening on the Avalon Peninsula is a lifetime challenge.
Mike Rabinowitz
says the farm was created out of their desire to feed themselves and
show people just how many things can be grown here.
Over the years, their
10,000 square-foot family garden expanded into a three-acre organic farm,
partially to give his teenagers and those
from the neighbourhood something to do.
" It sort of grew out of hand
after that."
Now, they grow everything from artichokes to zucchini.
Rabinowitz says he believes the province could be producing a lot more
local food
with enough effort.
The biggest challenge is not the weather, he says,
but the acidic, rocky soil, which lacks in nutrients, making organic
farming - growing
without chemical pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers, preservatives
or genetically engineered seed - very difficult.
The farm has never broken
even, he adds."It's not an easy thing
to do here."
Earlier this year, the farm received the Corporate Partner
of the Year award from Hospitality Newfoundland and Labrador's Tourism
Excellence
awards, leading to its nomination for the national award. Melba Rabinowitz
says the recognition is not just an honour for the farm, but is significant
for the organic movement in the province,
which they have been leaders in.
" It brings attention to (the fact) that restaurants want good,
local food and prefer organics," she said.
OACC gratefully acknowledges
the author and The Telegram for permission to post this article.
Posted January 2010
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