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Day 2, Part 1: The La Paz Foodshed, Part 1

by: Jill Richardson

Mon Aug 22, 2011 at 18:10:00 PM PDT


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This diary is part of a series describing my trip to Bolivia to study food sovereignty, agroecology, and climate change. On our second day, we saw a presentation from the Bolivian Forum on the Environment and Development (FOBOMADE) and then took a tour of the La Paz foodshed. I'm going to start with the tour of the La Paz foodshed, mostly because it's a relatively easy and fun topic with lots of pictures. This is part 1, which only covers the market. Part 2 will show some of the last remaining agricultural land in La Paz and what has happened to it (it's not good).

Previous diaries can be seen here:

Day 1, Part 1: The El Alto Market
Day 1, Part 2: Intro to Bolivian Climate and Climate Change
Day 1, Part 3: Intro to Andean Biodiversity
Day 1, Part 4: Potatoes, Quinoa, and the Climate Crisis
Day 2, Part 1: The La Paz Foodshed
Day 3: Agriculture in Chicani, A La Paz Suburb
Day 4: Coffee!
Day 5: Yungas
Day 6: Yungas to Santiago de Okola
Day 7: Santiago de Okola
Day 8, Part 1: Festival in Cochabamba - Morenada
Day 8, Part 2: Festival in Cochabamba - Morenada
Day 8, Part 3: Festival in Cochabamba - Tinku
Day 8, Part 4: Festival in Cochabamba - Caporales
Day 8, Part 5: Festival in Cochabamba - Street Food

You can also find diaries from my 2010 trip to Bolivia here.

Jill Richardson :: Day 2, Part 1: The La Paz Foodshed, Part 1
The history of agriculture in La Paz goes back before the Spanish conquest of South America. La Paz is located in a valley in the Andes and it's a great location for agriculture. As such, it provided food for the Tiwanaku civilization before the Incan conquest. There are some 1600 documented pre-Columbian settlements in the valley of La Paz. La Paz then continued to grow food up until modern times when agriculture has mostly been pushed out of the city due to urban sprawl.

Once the Spanish showed up, they were after silver, and they found it in Potosi. But they had to travel to and from Potosi, carrying the silver on donkeys and mules, and needed to eat and sleep along the way. One of the two routes from Potosi, the one to Lima, went through La Paz. They established a walled Spanish city in La Paz and they would not allow the indigenous people inside the city. Because it wasn't considered dignified for the Spanish to engage in the market, the Aymara people became the tradespeople.

During this time, the Aymara evolved into groups like guilds. To this day, these guilds still exist and manage the commerce. They are grouped around the city with shoes in place, paint in another, electronics somewhere else. We headed to the food part of the city. Our guide, Stephen Taranto, told us that even a woman selling potatoes in a square meter on the street is paying someone for that spot and she's associated with an organization. Many of the sellers survive day to day, and each day's sales help them get by.

Here are my photos of the market. It was a Monday so the market wasn't very busy.


I love this picture because it shows how modernity (the woman in a suit) and tradition (the cholita next to her) live side by side here in La Paz.

One of the typical features of the markets here is the "casera" relationship. Customers become loyal to one particular seller, and they are one another's "casera." The seller will give her caseros a "llapa" (a little extra) with their purchase. It's kind of like a baker's dozen - you pay for 12 and the baker throws in one extra for you. Also, if the seller knows that her casero always buys 2 kilos of a certain type of potatoes, she will set them aside for him. And if he doesn't show up to buy them, she'll scold him. She'll also scold him if she sees him buying from another vender. While you walk through the market, venders call out to you, saying "Casera," hoping you will come buy from them and perhaps become their casera.


Peppers


Tunta, one form of traditional freeze-dried potatoes


Tunta close-up

Much of the food here is from within Bolivia, but not all. This woman is selling spices. I asked her where her cinnamon was from, expecting she would tell me it was from the Amazon. Nope, India.


Chicken eggs and quail eggs. Apparently the thing to do with quail eggs is hard boil them and eat them with "salsa golf," a mixture of ketchup and mayonnaise. No thanks!

With Bolivia's low trade barriers, they are increasingly flooded with imports, both legal and otherwise. You see an awful lot of perfect-looking red delicious apples around Bolivia. And no, they weren't grown here.


Apples from Chile, imported here legally... maybe.


Cargill wheat, likely from the U.S.

The market sells meat too. Sometimes in stores, sometimes on the street. Beef can come from either the Altiplano (La Paz department) or the tropical lowlands (mostly Beni and some from Santa Cruz), and it is often identified accordingly.


Beef from the lowlands


Beef from Santa Cruz & the Chaco, in the lowlands


These white cows are Green Revolution cows. I think these might be Brahman but there's another breed that is very popular in Bolivia's tropical lowlands that is also white. But I think the other breed has less droopy ears.


Meat on the street. Who needs a fridge anyway?

The dairy industry is a bit depressing in Bolivia. It's hard to produce milk in the tropics, but the Altiplano and Cochabamba do have quite a bit of dairy cows. However, the dairy industry is controlled by a foreign monopoly (Pil). Bolivia does not produce enough dairy for its own needs, and yet Bolivian milk is often exported, and powdered milk is imported into Bolivia. I think I've also been served milk from a can, which I did not drink, milk from a plastic bag, and milk from a box. Probably all ultrapasteurized. Bolivians often buy yogurt instead of milk because they don't have refrigerators. They just let the yogurt sit out.


Lots of potatoes


I hate Nescafe. But you can't escape it here. I go without coffee if my choice is Nescafe or nothing.


Chicken from Yungas. They produce a lot of chicken there.

There are now quite a few ecological food stores popping up around La Paz and other cities. Of course, what qualifies to someone in the U.S. as nutrition or ecological might not be the same as what qualifies in Bolivia. In this store (photo below), we found lots of Andean grains, products made with flax and sesame, far too much soy for my liking, El Ceibo organic chocolate, and yogurt. They also typically carry various types of tea, including many that promise health benefits via herbal medicine. In one natural foods store in Santa Cruz, I found Kraft Philadelphia cream cheese. God, that's sad if that's a natural food compared to Pil dairy products!

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Interesting, your note on milk and the import/export issue (4.00 / 2)
I was surprised, back when I was researching international trade in ag commodities, how much beef and cattle going for slaughter we import, and how much we export. I think that it was pretty close the amount that was being imported vs what the export was in actual beef. On the surface it doesn't make sense that 'we' would import as much as 'we' export, the 'we' being the USA. It would seem odd until you consider that it's not the USA that's doing the importing and exporting. It's individual companies who are tapping different markets around the world.

So it shouldn't be surprising if you look at it from that perspective that someone (a company) would be exporting fluid milk and then either they or someone else (another company) might be importing powdered milk. It wouldn't make much sense if it was the government of the country doing that, but it makes plenty of sense if it's companies doing that. The companies are, after all, operating to make money, so they produce where it makes sense, either economically or logistically, and sell into the markets that can return the most profit.

Kind of like someone working for the company that will pay them the most. It's no different. The employee is, usually, not working because they have some noble calling, they're working to make money in order to pay their bills, and, hopefully, have something left over by the time the next pay check comes in. Companies do the same thing. The people who own the companies do what they have to do in order to make enough money so that at the end of what ever accounting period they use, there's something left over after all the bills are paid. Individual people call that money to put in savings, companies call it profit. But what ever you call it, it's the same thing.

The powdered milk actually makes more sense than selling fluid milk, especially if you're selling milk to customers with no refrigeration, it really doesn't make any sense to sell them fluid milk. Even ultra pasturized milk will sour pretty quick after the container's opened. Powdered milk you can store and add water to as you need it. The fats in the powdered milk will eventually go rancid, but not anywhere near as fast as fluid milk will sour.

I think that's why people started making things like cheese, especially hard cheese. Aside from cheeses being delicious, if you don't have refrigeration, it's really the only way to store milk for any lenght of time. You've got to process it and make it shelf stable. Plus, you can feed the whey to livestock which will also store their meat until you slaughter them, that's the ultimate in 'shelf stable'.

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.


Did you know... (4.00 / 1)
Colonists began making cheese pretty much as soon as they arrived in North America. Some of this cheese was exported to Britain, where it was called American cheese to distinguish it from better quality products. That's the first use of the term American cheese. American cheese was still real cheese when I was a kid.

[ Parent ]
I'm not surprised (4.00 / 2)
First, that's the only way to store milk if you don't have refrigeration. Second, if you're used to eating that food, then you want to make the food, and you're probably going to be making a lot more than you can eat yourself. Third, and this is the most important, a lot of the innitial colonies were started as business ventures backed by wealthy europeans. The business venture needs to make money, although it don't always happen that way.

I'm reading Carles Mann's book 1493 right now, and it's fascinating about the american colonies and why and how they were founded. I think it was Jamestown that was founded by a business venture, that's the only reason. It was founded to produce tobaco to send back to England. Tobaco was huge back in the 1500s or 1600s. The people who originally funded it had to keep socking money into it as the venture was loosing money like crazy, in large part because the colonists kept dieing of malaria. I think at one point the mortality was something like 4 out of 5 colonist in 6-12 months. But they kept throwing money and people at it and eventually there were enough people who survived disease and other hardships that they were able to grow enough tobaco that the colony started to become quite the money maker. Unfortunately, by that time, the investors were so far in debt that I don't think they ever recovered financially. So eventually it got to be a success and failure all at the same time.

You know, people talk about international trade and companies trying to dominate markets and each other like it's something new. But things really are just the way they always have been for thousands and thousands of years. It's just that you have to read a lot of history, and the history of colonization and trade, to understand that. The only thing that's changed over the past 5,000 years is technology. We communicate faster, travel faster (or ship goods), store and share information faster than we ever have before. So, of course, that makes commerce move faster.

If you look at the space industry, it's going the same way. It's all about trade and making money. Research is all well and good, but it's really all about business. If/when we get to the point of people living on the moon, or any other planets, that'll all be about commerce. It won't be so we can say "We did it", it'll be for resources or some other business reason.


Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.


[ Parent ]
Agreed about the powdered milk (4.00 / 2)
and the cheese too. The Altiplano is a big cheese producing area since of course that's how you store the milk. The cheese they make is delicious!

Also, I've got a stat for you and will provide details once I get into the soybean issue in later diaries: No more than 10% of soy is for human consumption. Need to check on whether that's in the world or in Bolivia but I think it's in the world. There is a LONG LIST of industrial products it goes into, like paints and glues. And of course livestock feed. It's actually really interesting and, like most everything else in factory farming, totally sick how soybeans became such an important animal feed.

I'm reading a great book in Spanish about Bolivian soy called All Grains that Glitter Are Not Gold, or something like that. I'm getting through it with my dictionary in hand and I need to start giving myself vocab quizzes so I can stop looking up the same freaking words every time I come to them. But it's a GREAT book.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman


[ Parent ]
PIL (4.00 / 1)
[Bolivia not to nationalize company owned by Peru's Gloria Group]

July 6, 2010

Peru's Chancellor José Antonio García Belaunde dismissed the possibility that Bolivia nationalizes Planta Industrializadora de Leche (PIL) Andina, the dairy company that Peru's Group Gloria owns in that country, as the Bolivian press had reported.

That's a little bit funny. Gloria acquired Bolivia's dairy industry in the 1990s during Bolivian privatization.

PIL also makes soy milk.

You're right, the box and bag milk is UHT if it's from PIL or another Gloria subsidiary. This is consistent with Gloria's mission of dominating all of South American dairy. The company wants to refrigerate milk only until it gets to a plant for processing into shelf-stable products. PIL makes powdered milk, but perhaps not enough to supply all of the domestic market.

History of the Gloria Group

Gloria is in a joint venture with Dean Foods in Puerto Rico.

PIL


PIL, second try (4.00 / 1)
Let's try that link again. Difficult to keep my mind on business, what with all the fascinating news about celebrity weddings.

Bolivia not to nationalize company owned by Peru's Gloria Group


[ Parent ]
LOL (4.00 / 1)
oh dear, who is it this time? The only non-Bolivian news I've paid much attention to recently is the stuff in Libya. I turned on Rachel Maddow for roughly 30 seconds my first night in Bolivia and then decided not to listen to it til I got back to the states because really I don't give a shit about the goddamn debt ceiling and don't want to hear about it while my brain is focused on Bolivia.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
Kim Kardashian (4.00 / 1)
Talk about an odd couple.

I find the most interesting U.S. news since you've been in Bolivia is today's release of a poll showing Obama to be even up against either Michelle Bachmann, Rick Perry, Mitt Romney, or Ron Paul. In other words, half the country wants anybody but Obama, however crazy the alternative may be.


[ Parent ]
don't even know who that is (4.00 / 1)
I suppose I don't need to either.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
I'm not sure how many of the consumers (4.00 / 2)
in the central and south american countries have refrigeration. But if a lot of your potential market doen't have refrigeration, then it would make sense that you'd want to sell them shelf stable products.

I'm also not surprised that the company wants to dominate the market down there. That's what businesses do. It's kind of like someone working for a company not wanting to share their job, and thus their paycheck, with another employee. Exclusion is what most employees and businesses go for.

I do the same thing. While I do see others working in my industry as colleagues, and I especially see others in my industry whom I could partner with and/or am friends with in that light, I still want all the market for myself. I can't serve all the market, no one can, but we want as much as we can get our hands on. For one thing, the more income you have the more profits (one hopes) and the more you can sock away to expand the business, improve the business, or just sock away against hard times. Also, the more varied your markets are, the more potential you have for stability. If you serve only one or two markets (either by providing only one or two products, or selling into only one or two market types) if one or both drop out from under you, you're basically screwed. Kind of like someone who only worked for one employer doing one or two things for most of their career. Employer goes out of business, or lets you go, you're going to have a hard time finding work if your skills aren't in demand or if there's too much competition out there.

But if you serve many markets, then if one or two drop out from under you, you can still use the others to pick up the slack. Just like someone who's worked many different jobs. Some people might see that as a bad thing. Maybe see a person as being undependable, etc. because they've had so many different jobs. But I'd see that as a potential advantage, depending on the types of jobs that person's held. Person who's done lots of things in their life, if they've got half a brain, will have a lot of skills in different areas.

Kind of like a farmer growing only one or two types of crops. It's much easier for a crop or market failure to sink you. If you're very diversified, you can weather a market or crop failure. That's why I grow so many different things, and sell into multiple markets. I have the CSA, the food co-op, the distributor, the nursery business that I sell plants to the public through the co-op and anywhere else I can, and I'm working on becoming a plug grower for other nurseries and farms.

Right now my biggest customer is the distributor, and even though sales have increased every month for the past 3 months, it scares the crap out of me to have the bulk of the businesses gross receipts coming from one source. Got to expand the markets and increase the production on all of the other enterprises. Got to get that income base nice and wide.

That's one reason why I'm essentially taking no wage right now. I keep aside just enough to buy me beer and cigarettes, and pay utilities, fuel. Everything else gets socked right back into the business and I'll probably operate that way for a couple more years. By then, if things keep going the way they're going, financially, the business should be pretty profitable and I'll be able to start rebuilding the savings I've depleted to get the business going.

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.


[ Parent ]
I understand businesses wanting to dominate markets (4.00 / 1)
but I don't understand countries letting them. Yes, the business wants to make as much money as possible. But a country's interests should be fair competition and not having a monopoly exist in a way that it can screw the nation's people with low prices for farmers, low quality products, and high prices to consumers.

Also, I want to check on the rates of lactose intolerance in Bolivia. I know that the way many people buy milk is as yogurt, so they don't have to worry about refrigeration. And cheese is really popular. But that could be explained by lactose intolerance among the indigenous and mestizos as well as by the lack of refrigeration.

I saw a lot of dairy in the humid puna and valley regions, you don't really find it in dry puna because cows can't live there. In the tropical lowlands, the high producing dairy breeds like Holsteins simply drop dead if you try to raise them there. Tropical breeds used for dairy don't produce nearly so much milk, so unless your cow is for family milk consumption, I think it would be a bad business to have a dairy cow in the tropics when you're competing with producers in more suitable climates. If I lived in Bolivia, I'd get my own cow.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman


[ Parent ]
low prices for farmers (4.00 / 1)
quoting from a recent email from my cousin about agriculture in Africa:

Government doesn't help, they are more often predators, exploiting farmers through state or parastatal "co-op" monopolies, that set low prices so that corrupt government officials can pocket huge profits when they resell at market prices.


[ Parent ]
Your cousin is exactly right (4.00 / 1)
In an ideal world, a nation's government would act in the interest of all of it's citizens. But let's face it. We don't live in an ideal world. We live in a human world. Which means that governments don't always act in the best interests of its citizens, at best members of a government act in what they think are the best interest of its citizens, but they actually wind up acting in the best interests of a few of its citizens after getting a good sales job from those citizens whom the government's actions will benefit. And in a worse case scenario the governments powerful act in their own best interests, seeing the bulk of the citizenry as cogs in the wheel that will gain the official's goals (self agrandizement, power, wealth, or a combination of all of those) the fastest.

In our country we have for former. Most countries, alas, have the latter.

Sheesh, do I sound jaded or what???

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.


[ Parent ]
cogs (0.00 / 0)
My vocabulary is somewhat different. Bureaucrats and elected officials in some countries view farmers as a resource to be exploited to benefit themselves and their wealthy benefactors, and I think that is exactly the situation in the U.S.

[ Parent ]
True. (4.00 / 1)
One of the tragic differences between here and there is that our people actually think (at least some of them do) that they're helping. What's more tragic is that we keep hiring them back.

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.

[ Parent ]
Were there any llama products? (4.00 / 2)
Such as llama cheese or meat? Or is it just cattle and chicken? I read somewhere than Peru has a famous llama cheese, but I figure it was the Spanish who invented that.

You can eat llama meat all over (4.00 / 1)
although I did not see it for sale in the market. But I really didn't scrutinize the meat area too closely.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
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