Experimental Plot At WSU Mt. Vernon - Biodegradable Weed Barrier |
If you are a crop farmer, a small landowner, enjoy shopping at the local farmer's market, or are just generally interested in sustainability and local agriculture, you should be reading Growing Magazine. Here's a link to a few of the articles I've written for the magazine over the last couple of years; http://www.growingmagazine.com/author/Jack/
Also, here is a piece I wrote for the magazine featuring some of the work going on at WSU's research facility in Mt. Vernon. If you're into local fruits and veggies you owe this facility thanks. They've developed the planting and growing approaches local farmers need to grow and bring products to market (tomatoes, for example) that could never be grown commercially in the Northwest before.
Enjoy:
Horned melons, jicama, purple
sweet potato, starfruit – visit a local supermarket or specialty food
store in even a small city today and you will find an array of fruits
and vegetables such as these that would have bewildered many a shopper
of just a generation ago.
While many of the unusual products
were originally grown and shipped in from overseas then introduced to
the marketplace as mysterious and exotic offerings, increasingly today,
North American farmers are successfully growing and marketing fruits and
vegetables their mothers and fathers never even heard of, much less
considered to be possible to plant, grow and profit from.
Unusual crops can improve profitability
Unusual fruits and vegetables,
successfully introduced, can be significant profit centers for farms of
all sizes. A pound of an exotic vegetable or fruit can sell for two,
three or even more times the price a more ordinary product commands. A
marginal operation able to convert from reliance on an ordinarily priced
fruit or vegetable to one that can be successfully grown and reliably
marketed for two or three times the price of the ordinary product can
dramatically increase the ability to not only survive but thrive.
Sea buckthorn berries, for example,
driven by an enthusiastic reception by Dr. Mehmet Oz, known as “Dr. Oz,”
have become a sensation in the health food and cosmetics marketplace. A
pound of dried berries can sell on the Internet for between $12 and
$20. Other unusual fruits and vegetables can bring equal, or even more
spectacular premiums.
The sea buckthorn is a heavily
thorned, deciduous plant found in northern Europe and Asia. Research
done at Washington State University’s Northwestern Washington Research
and Extension Center in Mount Vernon, Washington, demonstrates sea
buckthorn can be grown with excellent results in areas like Mount
Vernon, a temperate, maritime region similar to some of the areas the
plant thrives on in its natural habitat.
A switch to an unusual crop can be thorny
Popularity and a good price are not always enough to assure success when venturing into the business of raising an unusual crop.
Sea buckthorn has been cultivated and
studied on a limited basis by Gary Moulton at the Mount Vernon center
for some time. In a 2009 paper published by Moulton and other members of
the WSU team, the results of the sea buckthorn plantings were reported:
“Not all crops that are well adapted horticulturally in our region are
suitable for commercial production in this area. In some
instances…market factors are unfavorable, with cheaper product available
from other regions. In other cases there are problems of harvest (sea
buckthorn) and processing for which technology or infrastructure are not
readily available.”
Research by Dr. Carol Miles, a
vegetable Extension specialist investigating alternative crops at WSU’s
Mount facility, also demonstrates some of the difficulties a grower
might face when working with an out-of-the-ordinary crop. According to
Dr. Miles, four issues need to be carefully considered when a grower
decides to diversify by growing and marketing an unusual fruit or
vegetable. “Variety suitability, market, equipment and profitability are
primary considerations before trying a new crop,” she says.
A new grower then must understand that
the variety selected needs to be one that can be successfully grown
with good yields. A market for the yield needs to be developed.
Equipment suitable to the harvest and, if necessary, the processing of
the produce need to be available. The selling price must be high enough
to justify the risk involved in planting, growing, harvesting,
processing and marketing an unusual product.
In the case of sea buckthorn, for
example, Moulton’s investigation into sea buckthorn demonstrates that,
in an area like Northwest Washington, a grower interested in entering
the marketplace in any serious way would likely have to be willing to
invest in the specialty equipment needed to harvest, preserve and
process the product or, alternatively, a small-scale farmer could grow
the plants, harvest them by hand (watch out for the thorns), and sell
them fresh or dried either through local channels like farmers markets
or via Internet marketing.
Professionals at your service
The example of the sea buckthorn also
illustrates an important point anyone looking at growing and selling an
unusual product should consider when thinking about growing and
marketing that product. Much of the research necessary to assess a new
product’s viability is, as often as not, just a phone call, or a few
keystrokes on the computer keyboard, away.
Ongoing research like what Dr. Miles
is engaged in at WSU is being done every day across the nation and much
of it is freely available through extension services like WSU’s and
other outlets (the USDA has a website on alternative crops). Dr. Miles
routinely published papers on the results of her work; most of them are
available on the Internet. “It’s important to me that growers,
especially those with small to mid-sized farms, have access to the
results of our work here,” she said. “So I try to make sure those
results are available on our website.”
Review “common” fruits and vegetables
While exotic fruits and vegetables
seize the “unusual crops” limelight, more ordinary produce fills the
definition of “unusual” when successfully grown and marketed in regions
historically out of the crops’ usual range.
Few would consider the tomato to be an
“unusual” or “exotic” plant but, much of Dr. Miles’ work on alternative
fruit and vegetables is oriented towards finding ways common fruits
and/or vegetables can be successfully grown and marketed locally in
areas not previously suitable for cultivation of the plant.
Dr. Miles points to the tomato as an
example of how new approaches to growing can change the marketplace. “It
can be challenging to profitably grow tomatoes in Western Washington
for a number of reasons,” she said. “So, for years, nearly all the
tomatoes sold in our stores and other outlets were shipped in from
elsewhere.”
However, through research at the Mount
Vernon facility, Dr. Miles and her peers found that “…high tunnel-grown
tomato was three times more profitable than open-field tomato
production,” in the region and the characteristics of the high tunnel
made for a better quality fruit than could usually be grown in open
fields.
Today, at least in part to the
research done at the WSU Mount Vernon facility, “There are literally
hundreds of high tunnels producing quality tomatoes throughout Western
Washington and Oregon. Now, locally grown tomatoes are not only
available in the marketplace but are common.”
The result of the high tunnel work,
Dr. Miles said, is not only enhanced profitability for the farmers of
Western Washington and improved quality for local residents, it is also
the environmental benefits that come when products can be grown and sold
locally rather than having to be shipped in from afar.
Following up on the work of growing
tomatoes in a high tunnel, Dr. Miles and her students are now
investigating vegetable grafting. “With a high tunnel, depending on the
location and soil characteristics, yield can be increased by two to six
times,” she said. “Grafting tomatoes can increase yield another two
times.”
Expert advice
So, to take advantage of the potential
for profit and other advantages that come with growing an unusual crop
what should a farm owner or manager do first?
In general, Dr. Miles said, “I
recommend looking to see what sells well in big markets close by, what
seems to be trending in what I call the ‘glossy’ magazines (Epicure,
Organic Gardening, Sunset, etc.), and how much of the crop/product can
the market in your area bear. Also, what products have demand in the
times of the year that you can grow it?”
Regarding what crops have seen success
in Western Washington and Oregon, Dr. Miles said, “I think baby leaf
salad mix is still a good choice; it needs to be high quality and as
year round as possible. Pea shoots are easy to grow and are still
underutilized. Wasabi is hot in several ways; it’s hard to grow but
brings top dollar. Novelty melons harvested when ripe (not under-ripe as
needed for shipping) have unbeatable flavor. Yellow and orange
watermelon are easy to grow even in a cool climate like the Northwest if
you use the right variety, and also have wonderful flavor. Other food
types that are trending include bitter and fermented products such as
bitter melons and fermented kimchi, sauerkraut and pickles.
Both research by experts like WSU’s
Carol Miles and market experience by growers demonstrate considerable
opportunity exists for especially small and mid-sized farms with owners
willing to do the work necessary to successfully cultivate and market
unusual crops. Growers attempting to take advantage of the opportunity
are well advised to look carefully before leaping. Using the expertise
offered by research centers like Washington State University’s
Northwestern Washington Research and Extension Center to guide the leap
greatly improves the chance the new approach will be “unusually”
rewarding.
Photos by Jack Petree
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