- Author: Jeannette E. Warnert
On Saturday, the Fresno Bee published its take on the Valley's burgeoning blueberry industry. Writer Robert Rodriguez, well acquainted with UC Cooperative Extension, spoke to farm advisor Manuel Jimenez for perspective on producing a crop whose value climbed from zero at $30 million in less than 10 years. Jimenez's home county, Tulare, is the state's leading grower, producing a blueberry crop valued at $17 million.
"We have nearly every level of production right now from small plots to large commercial plantings of more than 1,000 acres," the Bee story quoted Jimenez.
Rodriguez noted that Valley farmers have spent years...
- Author: Jeannette E. Warnert
I'm not sure about writer Cecelia Parsons' opening analogy - the "blue wave" cresting and growers "still putting their boards in the water" - but her article in Capital Press about last week's blueberry field day at the UC Kearney Research and Extension Center did hit all the important points.
Now that blueberry production in the Central Valley has been underway for the better part of a decade, and many growers have invested heavily to coax the healthful fruit out of the Valley's uncooperative alkaline soil, folks are starting...
- Author: Jeannette E. Warnert
Farmers may wish to welcome bats to their agricultural fields. Genetic testing of bat scat proves they eat the menacing pest coddling moth, according to an Ag Alert article published in the Woodland Daily Democrat.
Rachel Long, University of California Cooperative Extension farm advisor in Yolo County, is studying bats' diets to ascertain their role in combating insect pests in agriculture. She captures the winged rodents and keeps them until she can collect their guano for analysis.
"We just have one year under our belts, and so we don't have much data at all. But we do know that bats are feeding on codling moths because the test shows...
- Author: Jeannette E. Warnert
California farmers interested in branching out with blueberries have gained much wisdom from UC Cooperative Extension farm advisor Manuel Jimenez, who has maintained extensive research plantings of the crop at the UC Kearney Research and Extension Center near Parlier since 1998.
Annual blueberry field days consistently bring significant numbers of farmers to the station to get the latest information on blueberry varieties and cultural practices, the most recent of which was held last week. According to a report on the field day in The Packer, more than 60...
- Author: Jeannette E. Warnert
The Sunday Riverside Press-Enterprise ran a lengthy article marking the 10th anniversary of news that rocked the fledging Temecula wine industry: newly arrived glassy-winged sharpshooters were spreading Pierce's disease and threatening to wipe out grapevines.
The article said the region is a key battlefront in the quest for ways to overcome the challenges of producing quality wines in the presence of GWSS. Almost $400 million has been spent on Pierce's research in California since the outbreak, the newspaper reported, but experts believe it could be 7 to 10 years before the experiments yield a practical...