Cork farmer calls for 'matchmaking service' linking local food-growing enthusiasts to farmland
'We have in the city loads of fantastic people who would love to grow food but they canât.'
A matchmaking service linking food-growing enthusiasts with farmers is needed to make it easier to grow local produce.
A meeting of farmers, restaurant owners and others interested in local food was held on Monday under the auspices of the Cork Food Policy Council.
The group is developing Cork Cityâs first Sustainable and Healthy Food Policy, a year-long project gathering feedback from more than 400 people and groups.
Former dairy farmer John Murphy is co-founder of in East Cork, a community farming project that sees people pay to receive boxes of chemical-free produce.
âThis year, we have 29 households so far,â he said, adding members also work on the farm.Â
âItâs been really successful. We have people from all sorts of backgrounds and theyâre very much involved in creating a community on the farm.âÂ
However, access to land is challenging and Mr Murphy described how just one of eight farms near him âhas an identified successor whoâs actually going to farmâ.Â
Creative solutions were needed, he said.Â
âI would like to see a system put in place where people who are interested in mixed farming and growing food for the domestic market are in a position where they can get access to land,â he said.
Aishling Moore, chef at seafood restaurant Goldie, raised similar concerns about access to wild fish for future generations.
âSince covid, the boats have been reducing,â she said.Â
âI worry about that, I wonder whether Goldie will still be a seafood restaurant in 10 years.â
Ideas from farmers and business people will feed into the overall policy, according to Professor Janas Harrington, chairperson of the Cork Food Policy Council.
âHow can we support growers to access land? asked Ms Harrington.Â
"We have in the city loads of fantastic people who would love to grow food but they canât.âÂ
Referring to calls for a matchmaking service, she said: âIs it something we could help support or facilitate? It possibly is.âÂ
She expects the final policy document, when published, to encourage solutions like this.
She also spoke of growing concern at the lack of vegetable shops or smaller supermarkets in socially-deprived areas.
âThereâs more density of fast food shops than actual supermarkets where you can do your weekly shop, affordably,â she said.
The project has held talks with Bus Ăireann about better links between housing estates and shopping areas.
âFixing it [lack of fresh food access] doesnât just belong to one group. It doesnât sit only in health, it doesnât sit in planning or transport â itâs all of those,â she said.
Healthy Cities coordinator Denise Cahill warned some parts of Cork have so many fast-food shops they are becoming âfood desertsâ, where affordable healthy food is difficult to access.


