Don’t leave your success to chance: Place your bet on a solid crop protection strategy  

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Specialty crop growers are high-stakes gamblers. Despite meticulous planning and vast experience, any grower can succumb to factors out of their control. Every season, you put everything on the line, taking a chance on a crop to make a profit — or lose it all. Like any gambler, you aim to stack the deck to ensure you’re not leaving success up to chance.       Shan Brooks, Atticus director, Florida & specialty markets/products, is no stranger to the risks you take season after season.       “Growers of specialty …

Specialty Crop Industry: USDA Announces More Than $243 Million in Grants

Web AdminFruit, Top Posts, Vegetables

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced today an investment of more than $243 million in grants to support specialty crops, including fruits, vegetables, tree nuts and nursery crops through two USDA programs – the Specialty Crop Block Grant Program and the Specialty Crop Research Initiative grants program. USDA is investing $169.9 million through the Specialty Crop Block …

Making Sense of Biologicals: Sponsored Content

Web AdminBiologicals, Top Posts

Biofertilizers encourage bigger vegetable roots By Clint Thompson Bigger is better when it comes to vegetable crop roots. Larger roots lead to greater exploration of the soil, where roots can capture more nutrients. A more robust root system leads to improved fertilizer efficiency and better crop quality. So how do growers achieve this kind of success? According to Mark Egan, …

Spotlight: Arthropod Pest Management in Conventional Strawberry Production

Web AdminFlorida, Strawberry, Top Posts

By Sriyanka Lahiri Thrips Crop rescue through a well-planned pesticide rotation program currently remains the most effective method of pest management in conventionally grown strawberries. However, close monitoring for pests should be conducted as the first line of defense, especially since most strawberry pests are not visible through unaided vision. Flower thrips immatures and adults can feed on the fruit …

Early Start: Neopestalotiopsis Fruit Rot Discovered in Georgia Field

Web AdminDisease, Georgia, Strawberry, Top Posts

By Clint Thompson It didn’t take long for Neopestalotiopsis Fruit Rot Neopestalotiopsis Fruit Rot to rear its ugly head in Georgia strawberries. According to the UGA Extension strawberry blog, a Georgia strawberry field is confirmed to have the disease. Symptoms and presumptive spores of the pathogen have been observed. The infected plants were obtained from a nursery in Canada. Plants …

Sneak Peek: November 2021 VSCNews Magazine

Web AdminTop Posts, VSCNews magazine

By Clint Thompson The November issue of VSCNews Magazine highlights the upcoming Florida Ag Expo, which will be held on Nov. 18 at the University of Florida (UF) Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS) Gulf Coast Research and Education Center in Wimauma, Florida. The Expo’s return is highly anticipated following last year’s cancellation due to COVID-19. The magazine outlines …

Watermelon Producer: Unknowns a Real Problem for Growers

Web AdminFlorida, Top Posts, Watermelon

By Clint Thompson The supply chain crisis that is gripping the U.S. is leaving watermelon farmers in a state of flux on how to proceed with the upcoming season. Florida growers are two months away from planting this year’s crop. Input costs and availability are on top of producers’ minds, says Lara Land, watermelon producer and executive council member of …

Chlorpyrifos Ban: Tolerances Don’t Expire Until Feb. 28

Web AdminEnvironment, Top Posts

By Clint Thompson The final rule regarding the ban of chlorpyrifos by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) goes into effect on Friday, Oct. 29. However, Stormy Sparks, University of Georgia Cooperative Extension vegetable entomologist, reminds vegetable and specialty crop producers that the tolerances do not expire until Feb. 28. “(Feb. 28) is the date you lose the tolerance, but if …

Increased Blueberry Demand Helping Florida Growers

Web AdminBerries, Florida, Top Posts

By Clint Thompson The increased marketing and promotion effort from the U.S. Highbush Blueberry Council (USHBC) has helped offset some of the lost market share by Florida growers due to increased trade from Mexico. “The Florida blueberry industry has been through the ups and downs that the rest of agriculture in the U.S. has been through. One of the most …