Monday 2 December 2013

Tomato Section of Mile 12. Waste, disorganised arrangement and so on.



Hello everyone! It is a Monday and I have a bad sore throat. I picked up a bug from my market trip on Friday. So I am on my home made concoction (Garlic + Ginger + Honey  + Hot water). And yes,  constant TLC from my darling hubby.
I want to talk about how we dispose our waste in the market and also general display of farm produce, Tomato section. Everywhere you go in Mile 12 market is like a waste dump. The air around there smells like vomit. Every tomato stand has a heap of waste next to it. The ground is marshy, wet and stinky. I do not want to believe this is the best we can have. I can imagine the huge turn away this has been for a lot of customers so definitely this has brought the traders loss of revenue.
Waste dump at every corner
Waste everywhere, this can't be right

There just has to be something better than this

In the tomato section alone we have tomatoes from Zaria, Sokoto, Katsina, Ogun, Ghana, Cotonou, Jos and all sorts of places. I do not know how it is done elsewhere but I believe we need to arrange them by source in an organised way for ease of access/identification by the customers. Grading of the produce is also key as more than half of the produce are rotten by the time they get off the truck.
The baskets are not standardized, the weight is not known so when you shop you actually are not sure of what you are getting until you get to your home/office. 
Nothing identifies the source of this tomato. Whatever the trader tells you cannot be verified.
Rotten, over ripe, green, unripe, all in the same basket
Some baskets come covered with brown paper, some opened, some with sack. Various sizes of basket. Anything goes.
what is the arrangement, which tomato is from where. what is the weight and size of the basket


I’m sure there is a better way we can plan this so that farmers/growers that want to supply to Lagos market have a standard basket and standard grade of each produce to follow. Anything goes right now. In an average basket of tomatoes about a third is rotten. Buying the sorted basket is more expensive and that is an exception to the rule. The rule has to be all the produce are of standard, good grades. If you want to buy lower grades/rotten then that should be the exception.
I will be meeting the representatives of Association of Tomato sellers and dealers this week and I’ll post our discussions and pictures here. My agenda for that meeting is to get  a full low down of all source of the tomato supplies to Mile 12? Discuss the waster situation around the stands, Find out the present produce grading standards are? what the present arrangement for display is? how it can be improved to help the customer and most importantly show them how we can improve the earnings of their members by improving the organisation of the market?.
Win-win is what we are after and we need all stakeholders to buy into that.
I want to hear your thoughts on this. Thank you for reading.
Food Safety Rocks!