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June 4, 2009
Deconstructing Dinner
Sailing Zucchinis in Puget Sound
A fossil-fuel
free distributor of food is emerging in Seattle and creating new connections
between the field, the water and the fork. Jon Steinman
For over a year now, Deconstructing Dinner has been documenting the
evolution of Canada's first community supported agriculture (CSA) project for
grain. Located in the West Kootenay region of British Columbia, the CSA has
also been the catalyst for many more firsts, one of which was likely the first
inland distribution of food by sailboat in the province's history. In October
2008, a fleet of four sailboats transported 5,000lbs of the CSA grains from the
Creston Valley to Nelson along Kootenay Lake. Upon completion of the journey,
sailor Jay Blackmore went on a short mission to find other intrepid communities
who were also transporting food using the power of the wind. In no time, Blackmore came across Dave Reid and his Sail Transport
Company (STC) based in Seattle. Only two months before the grains were
transported in B.C., Reid had already embarked on a maiden voyage across the
Puget Sound just two months earlier. His cargo, however, was organic
vegetables! When Reid first began writing the business plan for STC, he was thinking
about transporting people. Economically, it's seemed to work out better.
Psychologically and culturally, however, it was believed that people just
aren't ready to be transported by sail; a much longer travel time. Food, on the
other hand, was seen as the next best thing. Food can be kept fresh on the open
water and a zucchini is not capable of complaining that the trip is taking too
long. "Initially, I thought that if I can just go to a farm and get one bag of
vegetables and sail it across Puget Sound and sell it, then we'll learn
something. So we went to a farm and we bought enough produce for twenty people
and went back to Seattle and sold it all," says Reid. In its first year, STC moved produce between
August 2008 and February 22, 2009 and transported honey year-round. STC has developed working relationships with three farms but has twenty
more they're looking at. The business purchases shares through the farms' CSA
programs and once back in Seattle, Reid sells the produce at a premium. One of
the farms is Nash's Organics in Dungeness - a small community located
across the Strait of Juan de Fuca from Victoria, B.C. On a typical delivery to Nash's, his crew will take a leisurely
two days before arriving at Port Townshend and then continue onto Sequim. Once
there, local resident Sid Maroney arrives with about 1,000lbs of vegetables and
unloads them from his fifteen-year old electric truck. This is serious
post-carbonism in action. On the return voyage en route to Seattle, STC picks up the pace in order
to preserve the freshness of the goods. The crew takes part in rotating shifts,
24/7. Within 25-30 hours, they're on the city dock in Seattle and loading
produce from the boats onto bicycle cargo trailers or their electric-assisted
trike! The trike is the product of Frankentrikes - a Seattle-based
business that manufactures custom electric-assisted front-loading cargotrikes and
rickshaws. The trike is capable of travelling at speeds of 20-25mph and is an
efficient way to bring the produce to the doorsteps of STC's 25-50 regular
customers. Dave believes the trike is the "most efficient vehicle in the U.S.
for transporting small loads." The bicycle trailers are custom designed by STC,
with the intention for the trailers to double as dock-carts capable of being
maneuvered into small places at marinas. STC's goal is to incur no more than 0.5% of its operating costs on the
consumption of fossil fuels. So far, they've exceeded that goal by achieving
0.0% hydrocarbon cost! Of course one of the
common questions posed by anyone with a skeptical view of such alternative
models is one of ‘practicality'. "Is sailing food practical?" "We're running free
of fuel... how practical is that?" responds Reid. When you really look at it,
we're talking about comparing against a system where you need aircraft carriers
to get oil into your tank, so how practical is that too? All we need is the
wind and tide... it's there, and it's going to be around for a long time. If you
look at a 1/4 ton pickup truck and you look at our trike, it's pretty obvious
which is going to be economically viable in the long run, because pushing
around 2,000lbs of metal to transport 700lbs of produce is a lot different than
using a vehicle that weighs less than the actual load it's carrying. So I
actually think we're the ones who are practical." In the coming year, STC will seek to transport 2-4 times as much produce
per delivery than they did in their first year. Deconstructing Dinner is heard on radio stations across Canada and is
available as a Podcast. An interview with Dave Reid can be found at www.cjly.net/deconstructingdinner/061109.htm |
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