Fue Yang makes a sale while customers wait their turn at Tuesday’s Webb City Farmers Market.
Lots of activities and shoppers at the market Tuesday
Jessica Linder takes a selfie with Hunger Free America head Joel Berg (right) and freelance videographer Kevin McKinney from Kansas City.
Karen Scott accepts a compliment about the salsa she demonstrates.
Joel Berg visits with vendors, making sure they are receiving the Pandemic EBT card for their children.
Special music and food, a visiting national official – and the high season – combined to make the Tuesday Webb City Farmers Market about as busy as it is on Saturdays.
For one thing, it was a culture Roots Celebration, in conjunction with Missouri Humanities. Vendors, such as Karen Scott, of Oakwoods Farm, demonstrated and shared a salsa recipe.
Lee Ann Sours and Friends played music of Appalachia, and JoMo Jazz played music originating in the African-American communities of New Orleans.
As usual on the third Tuesday, it was also Eat Street, featuring food trucks as well as treats prepared in the pavilion.
There was a special Clickety Clack – We’re Reading down the Tracks session, featuring children’s book reading while riding around King Jack Park in Streetcar No. 60.
The national official was Joel Berg, the head of Hunger Free America, from New York. His organization is helping to provide three VISTA workers at the market this summer. It also seeks to alleviate hunger by supporting the SNAP and WIC programs, which are offered at the market.
Market customer Jessica Linder was interviewed for a forthcoming documentary about the benefit she receives from WIC, the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children.
Berg urged everyone to:
Berg made it a point to meet the vendors, speaking at times in fluent Spanish. Like it is in New York, he said he appreciates the diversity of the market’s vendors.
After eating a plate of pupusas that he exclaimed were “delicioso!” he gave one of the vendors his email address so that he can help ensure she receives a Pandemic EBT card to help purchase food for her children.
For more information about Hunger Free America, go to hungerfreeamerica.org.
Lee Ann Sours and Friends in the pavilion.
JoMo Jazz on the lawn. (The bands didn’t play at the same time.)
The Webb City Sentinel isn’t a newspaper – but it used to be, serving Webb City, Missouri, in print from 1879-2020. This “newspaper” seeks to carry on that tradition as a nonprofit corporation.
© All Rights Reserved 2024
DIY website design by Bob Foos