Bertha Carp rolled a wire cart through Owen Brown Place’s parking lot on a recent afternoon, stopping at a bench to examine the contents of her navy blue bag stamped with big, red letters, spelling out Roving Radish.

“Ain’t nothing like fresh vegetables,” Carp, 85, said while she revealed asparagus, lettuce, peaches and watermelon. A van marked with the same red letters displayed trays of produce behind her.

The van, known as the Roving Radish Mobile Marketplace, was created to expand on a marketplace in Columbia’s Long Reach Village Center that opened in 2021.

Roving Radish has partnered with about 25 farms in and around Howard County to offer meat, produce, meal kits and other locally sourced products for affordable prices to areas that are in most need of fresh foods. Food costs are subsidized by other purchasers, for people who need assistance.

The mobile market visits 12 areas in Columbia, Cooksville, Elkridge, Laurel and Ellicott City six days a week. These areas were chosen based on a data analysis of the areas within the county that demonstrated the most need for food, said James Zoller, Roving Radish’s program manager.

“Food insecurity isn’t going to be solved by one program,” said Zoller, who also serves as the county’s Agricultural Preservation Board executive secretary. “It’s a collective effort.”

The U.S. Department of Agriculture defines food insecurity as a “household-level economic and social condition of limited or uncertain access to limited food.” In 2022, more than 32,000 people were considered food insecure in Howard County, according to data from Feeding America, a nonprofit network of food banks. That’s a rate of 9.7% in the county, which is lower than the 12.2% — or 749,260 people — who are food insecure in Maryland, according to Feeding America.

To Cathy Hudson, a member of the county’s Agricultural Preservation Board and the former owner of Morningside Farm, the Roving Radish program is able to supply a “tremendous food need” with “no stigma.”

“It’s a win-win-win to be able to get subsidized healthy food into communities that don’t have that as an option,” Hudson said. “We’re so far away from food security that it’s laughable.”

To qualify for an “exclusive membership” with 50% off all food items and a free bundle once a week, community members must have participated in at least one the following programs in the past 12 months: Food stamps/SNAP; Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program; Temporary Cash Assistance; Medical Assistance in Medicaid or Maryland Children’s Health; free or reduced-price school meals program; or Social Security disability income. A “regular membership” applies 50% off weekly special items.

Anyone who applies to be a marketplace member receives the same Roving Radish card, according to Zoller, and when the card is scanned discounts are applied to a purchase.

Discounted and free items are subsidized by people who pay full price for their products, Zoller added.

Since the mobile market’s first day on June 1, about 170 members have joined Roving Radish, Zoller said. Since its launch in 2014 the program has prepared more than 67,000 meal kits — boxes with recipes, meat and produce ingredients that makes four servings of a meal — 38% of which were subsidized, Zoller added. The market has served nearly 600 families (63% subsidized), while spending more than $800,000 at local farms.

While many people benefit from the program, Hudson said she also sees how it fosters community. People not only interact with their neighbors by visiting the mobile market, but also can connect with local farms, Hudson said.

“It just brings us together in a different way that a supermarket just doesn’t,” Hudson said.

For county residents such as Carp, having a van that brings the marketplace to her makes it much easier to eat affordable produce. Carp said she has to plan her shopping trips in advance to ensure she has a ride. Many times she misses out on buying produce, due to the high cost of supermarket offerings.

Carp said she “wouldn’t miss” the Roving Radish mobile market when it drives by her apartment complex.

“Everybody got nice vegetables today,” Carp said, watching the van drive away from her perch on a bench.

The Roving Radish Mobile Market visits the following locations:

Mondays 2:30-4:30 p.m., Howard County Library System East Columbia Branch, 6600 Cradlerock Way, Columbia 5-7 p.m., Swansfield Elementary School, 5610 Cedar Lane, Columbia

Tuesdays 2:30-4:30 p.m., Columbia Commons, 7601 Woodpark Lane, Columbia 5-7 p.m., Gary J. Arthur Community Center, 2400 MD 97, Cooksville

Wednesdays 2:30-4:30 p.m., Howard County Library System Elkridge Branch, 6540 Washington Boulevard, Elkridge 5-7 p.m., Laurel Woods Elementary School, 9250 North Laurel Road, Laurel

Thursdays 2:30-4:30 p.m., Owen Brown Place, 7080 Cradlerock Way, Columbia 5-7 p.m., Deep Run Elementary School, 6925 Old Waterloo Road, Elkridge

Fridays 2:30-4:30 p.m., Monarch Mills Apartments, 7600 Monarch Mills Way, Columbia 5-7 p.m., Stevens Forest Elementary School, 6045 Stevens Forest Road, Columbia

Saturdays 9-11 a.m., Hickory Ridge Place, 10799 Hickory Ridge Road, Columbia 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Town & Country Apartments, 8732 Town and County Blvd., Ellicott City.