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2002 Display
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Produce
stand makes spring official
With the opening
of his produce stand next Monday, Richard Greene has officially proclaimed
that, "Winter is over. Spring is upon us and it's time to get the fresh
produce out once again."
"I'm glad he's back," said
one onlooker who thought the photo-op last weekend was the real thing.
"I hate to go by this building and see it boarded up. You can't miss it
from the highway and it looks so desolate, like winter around here," she
said.
"This is a good omen to have
it open again. That means not only is winter over, but that good Oregon
fresh produce is back."
This will be the sixth season
for Greene operating under the banner "Richard's Produce Stand," located
behind the Space Age Gas station at the corner of West Cascade and Pine
Streets.
"I'm really happy that Jayne
Simmons will be back with me again this year," he said. "I'm making her
my assistant. She has so many friends in Sisters who just drop by to chat
and that's what it's all about, friends, good neighbors and fun."
Richard Greene has lived in
this area 31 years. He has six children, now all grown and gone.
"I couldn't raise my family
on what this stand brings in," he said. "This is more of a love business
than a money maker."
One of his three daughters
attends college in Alabama, and his youngest son goes to Western Oregon
University. Three of his children are teachers.
"Mostly, they still live around
here or come back home when they can. Yes, they do help around the stand
when in town, but I don't push 'em," he said.
Greene, a member of the Sisters
Rotary Club, worked for Sentry Market here before it was bought by Ray's
Food Place. He was the assistant manager for 10 years and then produce
manager. Now, he is starting his sixth year on his own.
"It's been tough, but it's
been great, too," he said.
What about the winter months?
"Well, I handle the produce
at Sisters Market and, if I work it right, I take off on my vacation.
From April until November, I'm pretty well stuck here. We're going from
8 a.m. till 6 p.m., seven days a week. That's when we're open. I also
have to meet and unload the trucks and do my ordering before or after
regular hours," he said.
"Jayne is really a big help
in getting me some time off or I'd go bonkers."
The owner of Richard's Produce
has a "stable full" of truckers and others whom he buys from directly,
avoiding the middleman and wholesale produce markets, "as much as possible.
I do have to go through some of the brokers once in a while to get non-Oregon
grown produce," he said.
"Bananas, kiwis, oranges and
things like that. But the vast majority of what I carry and sell is local,
out of Yakima, Roseberg, and up and down the Willamette Valley. My guys
call me or I'll call them the night before and they're in the field at
day break, as early as 4 a.m., picking what's ripe and what's priced right.
They're on the road heading here by about 6 a.m. and their just-picked
produce is on my shelves when I open at 8 a.m."
One of the things Greene advocates,
generally not found in the major supermarkets, is to let customers sample
before they buy.
"We'll have a plate of freshly
cut fruits, or we can snap a bean and peel a pea. If I wouldn't take it
home for my table," he said, "I don't want my customers to buy it."
"And, I want them to try before
they buy."
Richard's can be reached from
Highway 20/126 (Cascade Avenue) turning south onto Pine Street (towards
the mountains) and then turning right into his parking lot -- a block
from the intersection.
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