Farmers’ Market Sainte Genevieve, Missouri

Farmers’ Market Sainte Genevieve, Missouri Welcome to the Farmers’ Market Sainte Genevieve, Missouri. Open May-October STE. Hours of operation will be from 7:00 a.m. until 12:00 p.m, located at the Ste. a. c.

GENEVIEVE COUNTY FARMERS’ MARKET
Rules and regulations
Revised March 25th, 2021. Genevieve Knights of Columbus Hall parking lot. The market will start the first Saturday in May andcontinue through October. 2. It is the responsibility for the individual sellers to maintain clean and healthful conditions within his or her assigned area, and to leave that area free of debris prior to quitting each

market day. All products should be displayed in an attractive and orderly manner. 3. All vegetables, fruits, and other agricultural products must be grown in the county by the seller, unless prior approval has been granted by the Board of Directors at least one week in advance. The exception to this rule is locally grown Missouri/Illinois fruits, honey, maple syrup, sorghum, & molasses.i. These products not grown by the seller must be identified as such, and clearly marked as to the place of origin produced. ii. Products grown by a member may be sold by another member as long as the products are identified as such, and the place of origin produced is alsoidentified.4. All value added items (homemade canned goods, baked goods, soaps…ect.) must list its ingredients. (per minutes from the 2000 member meeting)a. Refreshments and samples must be individually wrapped. (per minutes from the 2009 member meeting)b. A disclosure such as “Product has not been inspected by Dept. of Health and Senior Services” should be on all food items.c. Handmade artistry items approved (per the 2022 member meeting approval) with the following stipulations:i. 90% of the final product must be handmade out of natural materials. No plastics, silk flowers, premade purchased structures, or store bought containers.ii. The seller must be the one who made the items. No buying and reselling items.iii. Any item in question must be voted upon by the board of directors.5. Each seller must furnish their own display racks, tables, sacks, change (money), and a MoDept. of Agriculture acceptable scale. 6. Prices must be posted in full view of the consuming public. Each seller may set their own prices, however, prices should set in keeping with customer satisfaction and in consideration of the other sellers at the market. Each seller is responsible for collecting and paying sales tax. 7. Spaces will be issued to annual members first, then will be on a first-come-first-serve basis. Ste. Genevieve County residents will have priority over non-resident sellers.b. Any seller living outside the Ste. Genevieve county boundary must be approved by the Board of Directors. No parking by sellers will be allowed in front of the market building, or blocking any driveway entrance.d. A distance of six feet in front of each stall will be allowed for displaying and/or selling. 8. The annual dues for membership in the Ste. Genevieve Farmers’ Market Association are $50.00 paid by April 1st. Membership is encouraged, but nor required. A copy of the seller’s membership card must be present at the market.a. Only members who have paid the annual dues, and who have participated in the sale of products at least 6 times during the market season will have voting privileges for the following fiscal year. b. Non-members will be required to pay a fee of $10.00 for every Saturday they participate in the market. i. Non-members are required to abide by the same rules, regulations, and code of conduct as the annual members. 9. Disputes are left up to the board of Directors to resolve. If a dispute involves one or moredirectors, then the director(s) must excuse themselves from the determination of said dispute.10. For the courtesy of the members, please notify a board member if you are not going to be present at the market on a given date. 11. Genevieve Farmers’ Market Association will not be responsible for any accidents, lost or stolen property. 12. No drugs or drinking of alcohol will be allowed on the market premises. No smoking willbe allowed on or within 30 feet of the market premises by vendors. 13. In general, all sellers shall abide by a code of conduct:a. To abide by the Farmers’ Market constitution, rules & Regulations.b. To behave and speak in a civilized and business-like manner at all times.c. Any seller who does not abide by the rules & regulations, and adhere to the code of conduct shall be subject to warning and/or dismissal by the Board of Directors. 14. No pets allowed under the pavilion (amendment added february 2020)

Guess who’s back? 🍄Midwest Mushrooms will be joining us this weekend for their first market of the year! If you’ve been ...
06/05/2026

Guess who’s back? 🍄

Midwest Mushrooms will be joining us this weekend for their first market of the year! If you’ve been waiting for fresh lion’s mane and blue oyster mushrooms, now’s your chance.

Come stock up on local favorites and support your community. ❤️

Stop by Saturday for:
🍞 Fresh sourdough bread
🍪 Cinnamon rolls and other baked goods
🍄 Blue oyster & lion’s mane mushrooms
🥚 Farm fresh eggs
🥬 Leafy greens
🥕 Seasonal produce
🫙 Canned goods & more

What are you hoping to find at the market this week?

06/05/2026
06/04/2026

An oldie but a goodie! 🚩 Almanac.com/WeatherProverbs

06/04/2026

This is what your Saturday morning could look like here at the market! 🫶🏻

Farm to table anyone?

We hope to see you Saturday morning!

06/04/2026
06/03/2026

Some garden advice gets repeated so often it stops being questioned. These five sound right — and aren't. 🌿

MYTH 1 — GRAVEL IN THE BOTTOM OF POTS IMPROVES DRAINAGE:
What actually happens: adding a gravel layer creates a perched water table. Water doesn't move from a finer medium (potting mix) into a coarser one (gravel) until the finer zone is fully saturated — so the gravel layer raises the wet zone directly into the root area, not below it. A continuous mix of potting soil with perlite mixed throughout drains better than any layered pot. The fix is simple: drill more holes in the bottom and use perlite throughout the mix, not gravel underneath.

MYTH 2 — WATERING IN MIDDAY SUN BURNS LEAVES:
Water droplets on smooth leaves don't focus enough light to scorch plant tissue — this has been tested in controlled conditions and the burn simply doesn't happen at realistic droplet sizes on most plant surfaces. There are good reasons to water in the morning: less water is lost to evaporation, and foliage dries before evening when fungal infection risk is highest. Water early for those reasons — not because of a sunburn effect that doesn't actually occur. Exception: some waxy or hairy-surfaced leaves in certain succulents and ferns may respond differently.

MYTH 3 — EGGSHELLS ADD CALCIUM QUICKLY:
Eggshells are among the slowest-decomposing materials in garden soil. Coarse pieces tossed into beds sit there largely unchanged for two to five or more years before releasing anything plants can use. If you want eggshells to contribute calcium in one season, grind them to a fine powder. If you need rapid calcium availability — for blossom end rot or other acute deficiencies — gypsum or lime with a soil test is far faster. The main functional value of eggshells is as a physical slug barrier at the soil surface, not as a nutrient source.

MYTH 4 — USED COFFEE GROUNDS ACIDIFY SOIL:
Brewing extracts most of the acid from the grounds. Used grounds test close to neutral pH. They won't lower soil pH for blueberries, azaleas, or rhododendrons the way most gardeners assume. They are useful as a nitrogen source in compost. Don't spread them thick on the soil surface — they form a dense hydrophobic crust that repels water. Mix them into compost or work them into the soil instead of using them as mulch.

MYTH 5 — MARIGOLDS REPEL MOST GARDEN PESTS:
French marigold (Tagetes patula) roots release alpha-terthienyl, a compound that suppresses specific plant-parasitic nematodes in the soil. That is real and documented — but it's underground, it's nematode-specific, and the effect requires growing marigolds as a cover crop and tilling them into the soil at the end of the season for maximum impact. Marigolds don't repel aphids, beetles, caterpillars, or the vast majority of above-ground pests. The visual presence of marigolds among tomatoes is not a pest deterrent for anything except those specific soil nematodes. French and Mexican marigolds (T. patula and T. minuta) have the nematode-suppressing effect; African marigold (T. erecta) is much less effective 🌱

Five corrections. Same garden. Better decisions.

06/03/2026

Many areas in the U.S. are already experiencing drought heading into summer, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. However, dry conditions and drought are not exactly the same thing: A dry summer forecast points to below-normal rainfall ahead, while drought reflects longer-term shortages in soil moisture, rainfall, and groundwater as well as streams and reservoirs.

After several dry summers, some homeowners are starting to experiment with smaller lawn areas, native grasses, pollinator-friendly plantings, and meadow-style landscaping that require less irrigation overall.

For example, in parts of Colorado and the Plains, some homeowners are replacing small sections of traditional turf with drought-tolerant buffalo grass. See what YOU can do to save water and prepare for a dry season ahead at Almanac.com/gardening-in-a-dry-summer

06/03/2026

It's been a rainy weekend & morning, time to get out & have some fun! Come bowl with us & check out our summer specials 🎳

Address

K C Hall Pavilion 600 Market Street
Sainte Genevieve, MO
63670

Opening Hours

7am - 12pm

Telephone

+15733520984

Website

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