Picky buyers hurting farmers
Megan McNaught From: Herald Sun December 14, 2009 1:10AM
Tough gig: Picky customers are making life hard for farmers.
"UNREALISTIC" consumer expectations for their fruit and vegetables are sending farmers broke.
Victorian Farmers Federation president Andrew Broad said fruit and vegetables with even the tiniest marks on them were virtually unsaleable as consumers had become increasingly picky.
"Twenty or 30 years ago people would have been happy to buy a small tomato or fruit with some superficial marks," Mr Broad said.
"Expectations have gone up more and more over the years and now they are unrealistic."
The search for perfect food was causing some retailers to look overseas.
"People want standardised food at a low price but the victims are the producers who have to throw away perfectly good food," Mr Broad said.
Choice spokesman Christopher Zinn said in most cases, consumers didn't get an opportunity to buy the produce.
"Often the big two supermarkets only put out the most shiny and polished produce but fruiterers put out slightly older fruit or vegetables wrapped in cling wrap and it will be snapped up," he said.
"Many consumers would be happy to pay less for slightly blemished fruit so it is a real pity that it is juiced or thrown out, especially at a time when so much fuss is being made of food prices."
Vegetable Growing Association of Victoria president Luis Gazzola said it wasn't worth picking imperfect food.
He said farmers were ploughing about 25 per cent of crops back into the ground.
The situation was even more frustrating because of an over-supply of almost all fruit and vegetables.
A spokesman for Coles said shoppers expected high quality produce. "It is our job as a retailer to meet those expectations," he said.
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