Hydroponic produce is blooming in Churchill, Man. - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 05:58 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Hydroponic produce is blooming in Churchill, Man.

Three months into a hydroponic experiment in Churchill, Man., the project is exceeding expectations. Fresh greens grown in a shipping container are being delivered door to door in the northern community, where fresh produce is otherwise hard to come by.

Company raising northern veggies in a shipping container sees room to grow

Carley Basler, system manager of the Growcer system at the Churchill Northern Studies Centre, delivers fresh produce around Churchill, Man., the same day she picks it. (Warren Kay/CBC)

As in most northern towns, the concept of "locally grown" is exotic in Churchill, Man.

So when Carley Basler shows up at people's homes with a big bags of fresh vegetables,it's little wonder people get excited.

"It's fresh food, fresher than probably anything that Churchill has ever experienced,"Basler said.

She knocks on a door, and inside seven-year-old KaralinaBurke is excited. As the door opens, she declares:"I ate three heads of lettuce!"

Her mother, Sandra Cook, is subscribing to Basler'sRocket Greens,Churchill's first locally grown produce.

"It's really remarkable we can have this here," she said.

The produce grows in a hydroponic farm inside a repurposed shipping crate while chilling winter winds swirl outside. (Carley Basler)

In the town of 800, perishables need to be flown in, making produce expensive.Ahead of lettuce at the grocery store can cost up to $7. By the time it arrives, it's often wilting, and itsfreshness and nutritional value have diminished.

Basler's produce is fresher andshe's getting prices down to $3.50.

Food security

Food security is a problem across Canada's North, where climate and geography make it impossible for most communities to grow their own produce.

Three months ago, the Churchill Northern Studies Centre started growing vegetables hydroponically as an experiment to see if it could address local food security on a commercial scale.

The seedlings do not require soil in order to grow. (Cameron MacIntosh/CBC)

It's turning into a fledgling business.

Rocket Greensis named for the old rocket testing range where the Northern Studies Centre is set up.

As winter windwhips up a windchill that feels like50 Coutside,Basleris tendingto her soil-less hydroponic gardenin a computer-controlled climate.She's harvesting giant plants oflettuce, arugula, spinach, and kale.

"What we are doing is growing about 400 to 450 units of produce that we can harvest weekly and make available in our community," saidBasler,anelectrician whotook on the role ofsystem manager.

She's already supplyingtwo grocery stores anda few restaurants whilerunning herweeklysubscriber program.

Rocket Greens has only been up and running for a few months, but there is already talk of expanding. (Cameron MacIntosh/CBC)

Eighty dollars a month gets each subscriber a weekly Launch Box, a bag full of greens guaranteed fresher than any southern grocery store. It's deliveredthe same day it's picked, she said..

It's also putting some variety into people'sdiets.Basler is growing items like pak choi, a Chinese cabbage and close cousin to the more widely known bok choy.

"We've been showing people how to cook it, they're putting it in stews," she said. "It goes great with caribou."

Originally set up asa break-even proposition, Rocket Greens is already talking about expanding by potentially adding another farm.

No reason not to grow food in North

The"farm" is built into a shipping container also known as a sea can.Seedlings grow without any soil underLED lights in nutrient-enriched water.

It wasdesigned by Growcer Modular Food Solutions, an Ottawa company focused on northern food security.

The Churchill system is the first of its kind in Canada. Growcer has six others in Alaska, all growing food on a commercialscale.

"We really think there is no reason why every community shouldn't be growing their own food," said Corey Ellis, Growcer'sco-founder and CEO.

The company is named for the Black Brant rocket, which marks the location of the former Churchill rocket range. (Cameron MacIntosh/CBC)

While hydroponics have been tried in the north before with little commercial success, Ellis says Growcer is designed to turn a profit by letting growers start small and scale up. Each unit costs about $210,000 and is basically plug-and-play,requiring only electrical and water connections.

Ellis says each unit has the potential to turn a profit of between $30,000 and $40,000 a year.

"Many communities want to create jobs and economic development,they want to produce food so they don't have to rely on the south, but not in a way where they have to depend on grants," he said.

The one thing it can't do right now is grow a root vegetable like a potato.Ellis says Growcer is working on it.

The companyplans to add half a dozen systems in Northern Canada this year, including one at Manitoba's NorwayHouse.

Fightover fixing rail line

It all comes at a good time for Churchill.

Last May, record flooding washed out portions of the rail line that was itsonly land link to the south, driving up the costs of goods thatnow need to be flown in.

It's unclear when or if the service will be restored. The rail line's owners and the federal government are in court fighting over who will fix it.

In the meantime, Churchill has beenput on federal Nutrition Northsubsidies, which cover some of the costs of transporting essential groceries.

Operating locally, with virtually no transportation costs, theGrowcersystem has the potential to relieve that vulnerability.

"It's available weekly regardless of rail service or air service or weather," Basler said.

"It's a lush green garden in the dead of winter, so that's pretty unique."

Hydroponic produce is blooming in Churchill, Man.

6 years ago
Duration 3:44
In Canada's north, produce can cost several times what it does in the south. It's often weeks old, and wilted by the time it arrives. In Churchill, a Canadian company has helped develop a technology that's sprouting some some big changes.