Nova Scotia

Mobile market garden sprouts up in Halifax-area community

A farmer from Hammonds Plains, N.S., has a unique location for his new plant and produce market — the customer’s driveway. Pat Fogarty of Fogarty’s Market Garden recently overhauled his 2015 Ford Micro Bird bus into a makeshift market on wheels.

Fogarty’s Market Garden sells everything from plant transplants to local produce and baked goods

Meet the farmer who runs a mobile market garden out of a bus named Shirley

4 years ago
Duration 2:22
A farmer from Hammonds Plains, N.S., has a unique location for his new plant and produce market — the customer’s driveway.

A farmer from Hammonds Plains, N.S., has a unique location for his new plant and produce market — the customer's driveway.

Pat Fogarty of Fogarty's Market Garden recently overhauled his 2015 Ford E450 Micro Bird bus into a makeshift market on wheels.

It's an accessible way for people to purchase locally grown food and plants during lockdown.

"It's quite an experience," said Fogarty, standing next to rows of fruit and vegetable transplants situated where people would normally sit.

"We have been blowing up. Everyone is excited about this."

Fogarty says customers must sanitize their hands before coming onto the bus, and must wear a mask at all times. (Aly Thomson/CBC)

As customers step onto the bus, they are often greeted by Fogarty sitting at the steering wheel behind a wood-framed Plexiglas shield, with a small rectangular opening at waist height to process transactions.

There are more than 2,000 plant transplants that line the left and right sides of the bus, everything from tomatoes and cucumber to more exotic varieties such as the chocolate bhut jolokia and the Carolina reaper, known as "the hottest pepper on Earth."

As people scan the lush bounty, 1970s grocery store music plays over the speakers.

There are more than 2,000 varieties of plant transplants on Fogarty’s Market Garden. (Aly Thomson/CBC)

In a few weeks, Fogarty will pivot away from plants and start filling the shelves with local produce and food, grown on his residential farm in Hammonds Plains and obtained from a dozen other Nova Scotia farmers and producers.

Being "ultra local" is very important to him.

"With us, quality is first and foremost, and price as well," said Fogarty, who has an infectious larger-than-life personality.

Fogarty says customers get excited about the exotic plant varieties he carries. (Aly Thomson/CBC)

The bus — dubbed "Shirley" after Fogarty's late grandmother, who died last year — came from Ontario earlier this year, where it was previously owned by Canadian Blood Services.

Fogarty then got to work transforming the vehicle into an energy-efficient mobile market. 

Fogarty and his wife grow the plants at their residential farm in Hammonds Plains. (Aly Thomson/CBC)

He installed 800 watts of solar panels on the roof of the bus, which power its point-of-sale system, cameras, refrigeration, heating and lighting.

"On a sunny day like today … Shirley can produce twice the amount of power that we can actually consume," said Fogarty, who operates the business with his wife.

"It didn't make much sense to show up selling plants, being an ultra-local business, and trying to cut down the carbon, and then have a generator blasting in the background."

Solar panels produce 800 watts of electricity. (Submitted by Pat Fogarty)

Fogarty also removed the vehicle's commercial compressor and installed an air conditioner, turning it into a refrigerator compressor, making it twice as efficient, he said.

Fogarty's Market Garden is making house calls in the Hammonds Plains, Upper Tantallon and Glen Haven areas from Monday to Wednesday. Customers simply send him a text message with their address and a timeframe.

From Friday to Sunday, the bus is parked in the parking lot of Cornerstone Wesleyan Church on Hammonds Plains Road.

In early June, Fogarty will switch from selling plants to locally grown produce and goods. (Aly Thomson/CBC)

Although the concept works well during lockdown, the idea wasn't born out of the COVID-19 pandemic. Fogarty's residential farm is private and therefore not open to the public, and he wanted an accessible way for the community to purchase his goods.

Fogarty said he believes he is the only solar-powered garden centre on wheels in Canada, and given the positive reaction so far, he's considering adding to his fleet.

"There's a reason why the bus is named Shirley. She might have a brother in the future. We'll see," he said.

Fogarty named the bus Shirley after his late grandmother, who died last year. (Aly Thomson/CBC)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aly Thomson

Reporter/Editor

Aly Thomson is an award-winning journalist based in Halifax who loves helping the people of her home province tell their stories. She is particularly interested in issues surrounding justice, education and the entertainment industry. You can email her with tips and feedback at aly.thomson@cbc.ca.