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Australian Strawberry Farmers: "We're going through a trauma!"

Pickers help farmers bounce back from strawberry crisis
  • 28 Sep 2018
Australian Strawberry Farmers: "We're going through a trauma!"

Three-year-old Jacob Carroll sits elated in a Perth strawberry field, mouth stuffed with berries. “Yummy,” he beams to his mum, Amanda Charles, 41, naturally oblivious as to why she’s brought him here.

The two are among hundreds of West Australians who have flocked to Kien’s Strawberry Farm in Gnangara, north of Perth, to pick berries.

“We’re here to show the farmers we care,” says Amanda, whose cousin Amanda Harvey, 44, and her daughter Chloe, 15, trawl a nearby field for plump red berries. West Australian growers have opened their farms to the public to help clear excess berries after the sabotage catastrophe, which one grower has termed “the 9/11 for strawberries”.

Australia’s $280 million dollar strawberry industry is now in turmoil, with more than 100 instances of strawberries and other fruits contaminated with sewing needles reported around the nation in two weeks.

NSW Police Force

Half a kilometre up the road, at D’Uva’s Strawberry Farm, it’s a similar scene. “It makes me so happy to see people supporting us while we’re going through this trauma,” says the farm’s owner, Doan Dep. “This is the worst thing that’s ever happened to our18-year-old business. I’ve been crying on my husband’s shoulder every night.”

Bizarrely, one isolated case of needles in berries found in a punnet in Queensland quickly turned into a national crisis, the criminal behaviour repeatedly reoccurring Australia-wide. Across the nation, shops have removed certain brands from the shelves.

The alarm was raised on Sunday, Sept. 9, after Brisbane man Joshua Gane posted on Facebook that friend Hoani van Dorp had bitten into a strawberry and swallowed “half a sewing needle” and was in hospital with stomach pains. “We then checked the other strawberries and found another sewing needle lodged inside one of them,” he posted. “They suspect it is foul play, but unsure whether it was via the supplier, Woolworths, or a customer.”

7 News Sydney on Twitter

For more on this story, be sure to get the latest issue of WHO.

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