Photo: Mini bells to ring in National Farmers Market Week in Belmont
Around 2 p.m. on Thursdays from late spring to the end of October, a bell rings in the weekly farmers market to open the day’s activities. For 20 years, the market – which brings a slew of vendors selling produce, baked goods, prepared foods, and sundries – has been a staple of the community, bringing approximately 1,000 patrons to the back of the Claflin Street parking lot in Belmont Center.
This past week, on Aug. 7, the market commences not the ringing of one bell buy with the sound of dozens as nearly 100 mini-replicas were given out to celebrate National Farmers Market Week.
The day’s big event was the dedication of the new storage shed, partly paid through a grant from Mass. Department of Agricultural Resources, and the sponsorship of Belmont’s Hillside Garden Ace Hardware. Hal Shubin, chair of the market committee, invited Gary and Troy DiGiovanni from Ace and Mary Jordan of the MDAR to cut the red ribbon as the clammering of tiny bells could be heard.
But the farmers market, one of the more successful in the state, is more than just a place to buy corn, tomatoes, fish and loafs of bread, said Shubin.
“It’s a place to congregate,” said Shubin. “There’s music, there’s community information, folks have office hours from Town Hall and Beacon Hill. They say that you’re more likely to run into people you know at a farmers market than a supermarket. It’s just a fun place to be.”
Leave a Review or Comment