From alfalfa to oats to wine grapes, prices for organic produce
and products have held steady for about 52 percent of the organic
farmers queried in a new survey, and more than a quarter said they
are seeing prices inching up.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – From alfalfa to oats to wine grapes, prices for organic produce and products have held steady for about 52 percent of the organic farmers queried in a new survey, and more than a quarter said they are seeing prices inching up.

But about 27 percent also predicted falling prices, as more farmers, including big businesses, try to grab a share of the sector’s success, according to the survey by the Santa Cruz-based Organic Farming Research Foundation.

More than 1,000 growers – roughly 16 percent of country’s certified organic farmers – sounded off on a variety of subjects related to the fast-growing, $9 billion marketplace, including genetically modified organisms.

The survey gives “an incredibly detailed snapshot of a tough, hard, but generally profitable way to farm,” said Bob Scowcroft, the foundation’s executive director.

Organic was not the buzz word it is now when Dennis Dierks and his wife Sandy started working their three and a half acres 30 years ago. Dierks, owner of Paradise Valley Produce in Bolinas, has seen organic awareness spreading immensely in the ensuing years.

As organic sales surge an estimated 20 percent annually, the Dierks prefer to stay small, selling the bulk of their cool-weather vegetables like kale, chard and lettuce locally. Some of it is sold through a subscription service and to restaurants, but most sells at neighborhood farmers markets, where they interact face-to-face with consumers. More than three-fourths of their sales comes from repeat customers, “people trying your stuff and becoming regular because they like it so much,” said Sandy Dierks, 57.

Like the Dierks, many of those surveyed say they rely on a direct connection with consumers to stay in business, with 79 percent of them unloading products within 100 miles of their farms, and a majority of them using word of mouth as their main marketing tool. Unlike conventional agriculture, the organic marketplace boasts that flexibility because it attracts customers who are willing to pay more for products they trust from a grower they know.

“It’s a different kind of consumer,” said Erica Walz, who analyzes data for the Organic Farming Research Foundation.

Other growers are dealing with increased competition by becoming bigger and more innovative. About 58 percent said they wanted to expand the amount and type of organic products they offer, while 50 percent said they were planning to increase acreage.

Vanessa Bogenholm, who owns VB Farms in Watsonville, went from 29 to 50 acres about a year ago. Like 51 percent of those surveyed, Bogenholm was once a conventional farmer who went organic about eight years ago because she wanted to produce pesticide-free products. She grows mostly strawberries and raspberries, as well as the occasional vegetable, and grosses between $1 million and $1.5 million a year through diversified products. She supplies yogurt companies like Dannon, picks berries specifically for high-end restaurants and hotels, and grows specialty produce, such as a cauliflower the size of a fist that chefs can plop on a fancy plate.

“It’s a lot more labor,” Bogenholm, 38, said. “It’s a lot more packaging. But it’s something that brings in money. I can’t compete with a guy who can produce 500 acres of cauliflower when I can do eight. So somehow my cauliflower has got to be special or different.”

Bogenholm said she is going head to head not with small farmers at the local farmers market but conventional growers who devote a small portion of their lands to organic. “That’s the guy that causes me problems,” she said.

In addition to competition and flat prices, growers also pointed to the threat of pollution from genetically modified organisms as a looming concern. Forty-six percent said they believed the risk of contamination from GMO products to be moderate to high, with 48 percent singling out contaminated seed stock as the greatest threat and 42 percent worried about pollen drift.

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