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and maintained
by Debbie Roos,
Ag Extension Agent.

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©2007
North Carolina
Cooperative Extension

 

Sunny Slope Greenhouses

Photos and text by Debbie Roos, Agricultural Extension Agent.

Sunny Slope Greenhouses
Dave Denson and Jim LeTendre
734 Sunny Slope Rd.
Bear Creek, NC 27207
919-742-7439
Email: letendre@pinehurst.net
Hours: Monday-Saturday
8:00 am til dark, March-July

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Produce: pesticide-free greenhouse tomatoes and European cucumbers

Sunny Slope Greenhouses were started in 1979 by Dave Denson and Jim LeTendre. Dave, a native of Apex, had been growing greenhouse tomatoes for four years and was looking for a new location for his operation. Jim, a native of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was already farming and looking for a situation in which he could also raise his two kids. Sunny Slope Greenhouses is now in its 26th year on Jim's farm, with Dave and Jim having a combined 56 years of tomato growing experience.

Sunny Slope was originally a mostly wholesale operation with only a few tomatoes sold at the greenhouses. In 1980 Jim took tomatoes to the Carborro Farmers' Market, looking for a new market. Dave and Jim soon realized that local farmers' markets were a perfect place to showcase and sell their tomatoes. At the markets they could sell ripe tomatoes that had not been refrigerated and also have an interaction with their customers, things they could not do through the grocery stores. Currently, Sunny Slope sells their tomatoes March-July at the following farmers' markets:

  • Fearrington - Tuesdays, 4:00 p.m. til early evening in Fearrington Village
  • Pittsboro - Thursdays, 3:30-6:30 p.m. in Pittsboro
  • Carrboro - Saturdays, 7:00 a.m. til noon in Carrboro
  • Durham - Saturdays, 8:00 a.m. til noon in Durham
  • Southern Village - Thursdays, 3:30-7:00 p.m. in Chapel Hill

They also sell at the greenhouses Monday through Saturday (March-July) from 8:00 am 'til dark.

Sunny Slope tomatoes are pesticide-free. Dave and Jim started using biological controls and innovative cultural practices in 1980, which was quite avant-garde in the U.S. greenhouse industry at that time. Some organically approved pesticides were also used in the early 1980s. Since 1985 no pesticides - organic or otherwise - have been used to grow Sunny Slope tomatoes. Sunny Slope has served as a model for many greenhouse vegetable producers in North Carolina to be pesticide-free.

Jim and Dave believe that the things that set Sunny Slope tomatoes apart from most other tomatoes are their great taste and exceptional shelf life, which exceeds 14 days in the bag or on the counter. Sunny Slope tomatoes have never been and should never be refrigerated. The great taste comes from proper nutrition and handling and the fact that they are soil-grown in the rich mineral soils of Chatham County.


Take a virtual farm tour of Sunny Slope!

 

This page last updated July 13, 2006.

 

North Carolina Cooperative Extension, Chatham County Center
P.O. Box 279, Pittsboro, NC 27312
919-542-8202

Website created and maintained by Debbie Roos, Agricultural Extension Agent.

URL: http://chatham.ces.ncsu.edu/growingsmallfarms

North Carolina Cooperative Extension is an educational partnership helping people put research-based
knowledge to work for economic prosperity, environmental stewardship and an improved quality of life.