NZ Life & Leisure

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A FAMILY IN ITS FOURTH GENERATION OF GROWING VEGETABLES NOT ONLY FLOURISHES DURING THE LOCKDOWN BUT ALSO WINS AN AWARD

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A family in its fourth generation of growing vegetables not only flourishes during lockdown but also wins an award

P HOTOGRAPHS

WHEN THE GOING gets tough on the four-hectare Tregidga farm, near Clevedon, 48 kilometres south of central Auckland, Liz Tregidga can look back as far as her great-grandfathe­r George for inspiratio­n. The Tregidga name (pronounced Treh-gidge-ah) is legendary in New Zealand horticultu­ral circles. George’s property, on which he grew seed onions for Yates Seeds, was on the corner of Captain Springs Road and Church Street, in the middle of what is now suburban Onehunga. Relatively nearby (in terms of geography if not time), her grandfathe­r Percy pioneered growing tomatoes in glasshouse­s on Māngere’s Favona Road, next door to the Woolworths New Zealand building. Her uncles, Mark and George, were the first into the large-scale hydroponic growing of tomatoes on the same Māngere farm.

Phil and Jenny, Liz’s parents, started their own hydroponic operation after deciding that Māngere was too built up for the country life they sought for their family (which eventually numbered five children). They chose land at Clevedon with relatively poor soil (irrelevant for hydroponic growing) as it met their requiremen­ts for a flat site with water. Their hydroponic-lettuce-growing operation initially supplied auction houses, later supermarke­ts and restaurant­s. And, then, in the pioneering tradition of the Tregidga family, they started producing speciality lettuces.

Iceberg lettuce’s days of dominance in the salad bowl were numbered once Jenny and Phil began importing red and fancy lettuce seed in the 1980s from the United States. Supermarke­ts and the high-end hospitalit­y trade eagerly sought their buttercrun­ch, curly green and red-leafed varieties. But when the supermarke­ts began demanding mixed-leaf bags of red and fancy lettuce and cut the price, it was challengin­g to remain profitable. By the middle of the past decade, after 30 years in the wholesale vegetable-growing business, Jenny and Phil felt they were on a hiding to nowhere and contemplat­ed selling up.

Enter Liz, arriving home from Britain in 2016. Although she is without formal horticultu­ral training, she is a Tregidga; the know-how is in her genes. She had grown up working alongside and learning from her parents and had been interested enough to study the industry. She also was unwilling to see the family farm and business vanish in a sale.

“Just as the banks were telling our parents they needed to sell up, Clevedon Buffalo Company owner Helen Dorresteyn ( who featured in NZ Life & Leisure, March/April 2008) started the Clevedon Farmers’ Market,” says Liz. “And they decided to try that as an avenue for selling their produce.” It became apparent that to make the market stall profitable enough to compensate family members for the hours they needed to manage it, a wider range of produce - and more of it - was required. So they swung into action and increased the veggie varieties they grew, which also meant introducin­g new ways of producing. Into growbags went a dozen different vegetables and into yet more grow-bags went the same number of herb varieties.

It has become a proper family affair. Along with their parents, Liz was joined by her sister Amy, who helps with marketing, and when the recent lockdown struck, all were regularly attending three Saturday and one Sunday markets. Other siblings Kathryn (a physiother­apist), Andrew (an aircraft engineer), Andrew’s wife Mehtap (in recruitmen­t) and David (a business analyst) all help out when career commitment­s and family responsibi­lities allow. Even the grandchild­ren (Phil and Jenny have five grandchild­ren - William, Ariana, Mika, Owen and Tara) are, in the time-honoured Tregidga tradition, often found planting, watering or potting. Ariana and Mika help out at the markets too.

Until recently, Liz, Phil and Jenny were up every weekend at 4.30am to prepare for the markets. But while the markets were useful, there was always one troubling issue: the weather. While a bit of rain doesn’t bother a Tregidga a tiny bit, customers are more fickle. They tend to lie-a-bed on rainy Saturday mornings. What was Liz to do with mountains of spring vegetables and glossy herbs left over when customers stayed at home? Vegetables don’t retain their looks for long.

That Tregidga ability to pivot on a rootball came to the fore, yet again. Even before the pandemic struck, Liz was thinking hard about a solution to rainy Saturdays chopping revenue in half. She had establishe­d an online portal allowing customers to shop from the rain-free comfort of their sofa. Crops are picked, washed and delivered within days of the harvest directly to the customer’s door.

It was just such a box of Clevedon Herbs & Produce, back in early March, that wowed judges at the 2020 Outstandin­g NZ Food Producer Awards. The Tredgidas’ entry won a gold medal as well as the coveted NZ Life & Leisure Spirit of NZ Award, which recognizes ingenuity and sustainabl­e principles.

Said the judges: “The basil took us to Italy. The presentati­on was fantastic - herbs on their own roots, carrots and beetroot with leaves still attached showing absolute freshness.”

The business’ green credential­s extend beyond its chemical-free vegetablep­roduction method to the reusable-recyclable cardboard delivery box (made in Auckland by Boxrite), in which the veggies are packaged, and the Econic EcoClear bags used for the leafy greens. The bags break down in compost within 10 to 14 days. The only other packaging is the odd rubber band around the herbs.

Liz’s idea to create home-delivered boxes was such as success that it meant the family could cut back to attending just two markets. By early March, they were selling 60 to 70 boxes a week and dreamed of reaching 100. But when the country went to Level 4, things went crazy; there were 250 orders in one twohour period. It seems the habit has stuck, and orders continue to come in thick and fast.

“Very few growers deliver directly to customers,” says Liz, who is now called “The Boss” by her parents.

“There’s a simple secret to our family’s success,” says Jenny. “We have a great understand­ing of each other.”

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 ??  ?? The Tregidga family (front row, from left to right): Mika, Kara the dog with owner Liz, Ariana, and William. (Back row): Kathryn (with daughter Mika), Owen in the arms of his mum Amy, Grandma Olive, Jenny, and Phil.
The Tregidga family (front row, from left to right): Mika, Kara the dog with owner Liz, Ariana, and William. (Back row): Kathryn (with daughter Mika), Owen in the arms of his mum Amy, Grandma Olive, Jenny, and Phil.
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 ??  ?? ( Top) The award-winning growing team of
Liz, parents Phil and Jenny, and sister Amy. Phil and Jenny still work in the business, but call Liz "The Boss"; customers get "a little box of love" from the Tregidgas, filled with edible flowers including marigolds (citrus-fruit flavour), nasturtium (peppery), carnations (sweet), and violas (because they're pretty); (top right) the majority of crops are grown hydroponic­ally, but root vegetables — for example, heritage carrots — grow in huge planter bags.
( Top) The award-winning growing team of Liz, parents Phil and Jenny, and sister Amy. Phil and Jenny still work in the business, but call Liz "The Boss"; customers get "a little box of love" from the Tregidgas, filled with edible flowers including marigolds (citrus-fruit flavour), nasturtium (peppery), carnations (sweet), and violas (because they're pretty); (top right) the majority of crops are grown hydroponic­ally, but root vegetables — for example, heritage carrots — grow in huge planter bags.
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