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Page added on March 18, 2014

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The true cost of asparagus

The true cost of asparagus thumbnail

The first tender spears of asparagus are always a welcome sight at the farmers market, a sign that spring is on its way. But some of that seasonal excitement is fading, now that bunches can be found on grocery store shelves throughout the winter.

“Asparagus has become available year round, whereas before it was just a springtime crop in the United States,” says Roscoe Zuckerman of Zuckerman’s Farm, whose asparagus season typically runs about 16 weeks, from February through May.

The recent influx of Mexican asparagus has farmers like Roscoe worried about the future. A fourth-generation asparagus and potato grower in Stockton, he farms about 260 acres of asparagus, a number that has been decreasing over the years as the wholesale market has shifted. He grandfather once grew 4,500 acres of green and white spears.

On the shelf, imported asparagus may be as cheap as $2 a pound. At such prices, it’s nearly impossible for domestic growers to break even. “Mexican asparagus is being bought wholesale at around $0.64 a pound,” Roscoe says. “My cost this time of year is about $1.03 a pound for harvesting and packing, and that’s without growing costs.”

Because the costs of harvest are so high, he has been cutting his losses by doing something no farmer wants to do: disking viable crop, which means cutting spears and leaving them in the field. “How can you grow a crop and not be able to sell it?” he laments.

Loss of Market Share

Asparagus was first planted in California in the 1850s in the fertile Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, and the state still leads the nation in asparagus production. But acreage has been in decline in recent years. According to the National Agricultural Statistics Service, there were 12,000 acres of asparagus in 2012, down from 29,000 in 2003.

“The asparagus industry in our area is dying a slow death,” says Roscoe.

Over the last two decades, free trade agreements like NAFTA have contributed to this shift, dramatically changing what’s on the American plate. The glut of imports has created a year-round expectation for cheap asparagus, tomatoes, raspberries, and other seasonal crops.

While global trade seems like a win in terms of food availability and access, particularly in colder parts of the US, the elimination of tariffs means that wholesale prices have fallen, making it difficult for US growers to compete with countries like Mexico and Peru. Today, more and more Americans are eating asparagus, but it is estimated that imports make up as much as 90 percent of the market.

Food of the Kings

Though it is referred to in the industry simply at “grass,” asparagus has historically been considered an aristocrat of the plant kingdom, commanding higher prices than most vegetables. Few consumers understand the patience and hard work that go into growing this unusual perennial crop.

Planting asparagus “crowns” is a significant time investment for farmers, as new plants must establish themselves for two or three years in the ground before producing harvestable shoots. Once mature, the plants may be harvested for up to 20 years, but only about half a pound of spears may be picked from each plant over the course of a season.

It’s a demanding plant that requires vigilant attention from growers. “Asparagus is temperature- and light-driven,” Roscoe explains. “For example, during a full moon, you have water that’s coming up in the soil, which gives the plants more oomph. You’ve also got light from the moon, so production usually spikes.”

On hot days, asparagus can grow upwards of 7 inches a day, which means that Roscoe may be sending workers out into the field to harvest from the same plants within 18 to 24 hours.

Fair Share for Labor

Harvesting asparagus is one of the more labor-intensive jobs in agriculture. Roscoe estimates that every spear is touched by human hands about 20 times from field to market, as it is cut, picked up, passed down rows, put in piles, and eventually sorted by size in the packing shed. Thick shoots come from younger, stronger plants, while the thin shoots are from older plants.

Second-generation farmer Thaddeus Barsotti of Capay Organic, which grows 60 acres of organic asparagus for direct sales as well as wholesale markets, estimates that his asparagus harvest costs are 30 to 50% of the total production cost.

A discrepancy in labor standards is a significant factor in the higher price of locally grown asparagus. Zuckerman’s conventionally grown asparagus sells for $3.50 a bunch at the farmers market, while Capay’s organic asparagus is $5.

“In California, we’re required to pay minimum wage and we have Cal/OSHA responsibilities,” explains Thaddeus. “These things are important, and they are also expensive.” According to Roscoe, a Mexican laborer gets paid $10 a day.

Taking “Stalk” in Direct Markets

In a depressed wholesale asparagus market, both Zuckerman’s Farm and Capay Organic rely heavily on farmers markets and CSAs to keep their sales afloat. “The only business that I can make money at is farmers markets, which includes restaurant trade,” says Roscoe. He estimates that farmers markets make up half of his business.

Farmers markets also offer the opportunity to communicate the freshness of a locally grown product that is harvested the day before market, in contrast to asparagus that has traveled thousands of miles and may be a week old before it hits market shelves.

Direct channels also allow farmers to talk about the true costs of their product. Thaddeus notes, “I think free trade has its place, but it can make things difficult for local ag producers, because when a product comes across the border, people don’t know the story behind it.”

“That’s what’s cool about farmers markets, CSAs, and any direct connection farms can have with the consumer,” he continues. “People are willing to pay fair prices for fair food.”

Center for Urban Education about Sustainable Agriculture



12 Comments on "The true cost of asparagus"

  1. Davy, Hermann, MO on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 1:09 pm 

    One needs to ask if dry California should be growing asparagus in the first place? I have it on my farm. It is a great seasonal crop and should be planted by many more people. Even city and suburban folks can plant it with ease.

  2. yellowcanoe on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 1:52 pm 

    This perfectly illustrates why eliminating tariffs on agricultural products from low wage countries is a dumb idea. We see the same idiocy in Canada — produce farmers now fly in labourers from Mexico and Jamaica to do the picking as they could not compete if they hired local labour.

  3. rollin on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 3:06 pm 

    I like rhubarb. Grow my own.
    Maybe we should all grow our own asparagus and see how Mexico likes getting cut off from the market. Hand it out free to your friends, make them dependent upon you.

  4. PapaSmurf on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 3:16 pm 

    Who gives a fuck. Most people don’t like asparagus. Let it die.

  5. Makati1 on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 3:21 pm 

    Obviously some here have never grown asparagus. I have and it is not just sticking some rots in the ground and waiting. Weeding, manure, and the right kind of stone free soil is required. If you live in the north, it gets even more interesting. But try it. There is nothing better than fresh cut asparagus steamed with a bit of butter drizzled over it.

  6. PrestonSturges on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 3:34 pm 

    This doesn’t mention US subsidies of foreign asparagus growers in Peru to provide an alternative to cocaine. Then we also subsidized US growers to make up for their losses.

  7. ghung on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 4:35 pm 

    Smurf: “Most people don’t like asparagus.” Source? Wasn’t it you telling people to put up or shut up yesterday?

    Since many children don’t like asparagus, maybe you’re projecting.

  8. GregT on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 4:49 pm 

    Thanks Makati1,

    Never thought about growing my own. After checking out a couple of videos, asparagus crowns are now on my ‘to do’ list. The entire family absolutely loves the stuff, and I’m sure homegrown is much better than store bought!

  9. green_achers on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 6:19 pm 

    Last year I tried a new experiment with my asparagus. I did a one-week harvest in the spring, and then allowed the ferns to grow. About mid-way through summer, I cut them back and did a second harvest. I can’t say I got as much yield, as I only have five 10-foot experimental rows, and I really haven’t collected yield data before. But I took a few bundles of spears to the market, and the first rich housewife that saw them, before I had my table set up, bought the whole lot for $6/lb.

    I’m also not bothered with any of Makati1’s concerns. I planted in the stoniest site I have, a place where an old building burned down many years ago, for the precise reason that I didn’t want to have to work that soil after planting. That area is for perennials.

    I throw a layer of compost on it after harvest and water it fairly well, and after the ferns grow up, they and the weeds have the run of the place.

    I’m sure I don’t get the yield that most commercial growers do, but that’s OK. My whole strategy is to settle for lower yields in exchange for lower inputs, and to gradually build the soil through continuous organic matter input, and the use of companion plants and green manures.

  10. Northwest Resident on Tue, 18th Mar 2014 6:41 pm 

    ghung — Epic smackdown. Well deserved. But will the dim-witted cartoon character posting under various absurdly comical sock-puppet names be able to fully comprehend just how hard the back-handed smack smote him across his furry blue face? Somehow, I doubt it. If bitch-slaps were all that was required to whip the rude one into shape, he would have changed his ways long ago. Repeated bitch-slaps seem to have no effect.

  11. Makati1 on Wed, 19th Mar 2014 2:24 am 

    NWR, some people are so dense, they make lead look like plastic foam. ^_^

  12. Davy, Hermann, MO on Wed, 19th Mar 2014 2:53 am 

    N/R PoopSmurf can be interpreted but he is probably not worth the effort because I have not seen much grey matter effort. I have seen medulla oblongata effort. That is why the poop stinks so much

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