The University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
Georgia FACES SEARCH STORIES:  
"News to use about Georgia Family, Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences"    November 24, 2009


  Calendar
  Economics
  Environment
  Home and Garden
  Lifestyles
  Science
  State & Region

The University of Georgia
UGA Home
CAES Home
GA FACES Home
 
Latest News
Media Resources
Tips & Trivia
Q&A
Special Info Sites
Images
Infographics
Other News
Search Archives
 
Subscribe Me!
About Us
Contact Us
   
 
June 19, 2009
 
Georgia blueberry crop ripe, ready and robust
 
Despite a rocky start, Georgia's blueberry crop is coming in good and strong.
 
A late spring freeze followed by heavy rains were a blessing for some Georgia blueberry growers. But they brought more hard work to others, according to University of Georgia experts.
Complete Story
Photo: John Amis/UGA
Georgia blueberry growers are harvesting a bumper crop of high-quality, rabbiteye berries.

By Faith Peppers
University of Georgia

A late spring freeze followed by heavy rains were a blessing for some Georgia blueberry growers. But they brought more hard work to others, according to University of Georgia experts.

The heavy rains delayed harvest of the southeast Georgia crop, causing some early concerns about highbush berry quality. “We had to work harder to make grade due to the heavy rains this spring, but it’s turning out to be good year for rabbiteye growers,” said UGA Cooperative Extension blueberry agent Danny Stanaland.

“We grow two blueberry crops in Georgia – highbush and rabbiteye,” Stanaland went on to explain. The highbush crop in some areas of southeast Georgia, which is the state’s major commercial production area, “was hit hard by the late freeze and will produce only about 35 to 50 percent of the crop.”

Robust rabbiteye crop

Fortunately, blueberry fans all over Georgia can expect a bumper crop from the rabbiteye variety.

“It will be the largest crop of rabbiteye blueberries we’ve had in several years,” Stanaland said.

That’s especially good news for Georgia’s 300 blueberry growers. The majority of the crop is rabbiteye variety, and about 10 percent of the total crop is highbush variety.

“The highbush variety blooms and fruits early, making it more susceptible to the low temperatures and rain,” Stanaland said. “But, May 20 we finished harvesting highbush. That crop is gone.”

Growers are now harvesting rabbiteye berries in three phases.

“The early rabbiteye berries were wet and had some grading issues because it required more selective picking to get the good berries,” he said. “Now that it’s dry again, it’s much easier to harvest and grade, and fruit quality is very positive. We have the heaviest rabbiteye fruit set we’ve had in years. So, while we were short on highbush berries, we are going to be long on rabbiteye.”

Pick-your-own time

In the northern half of the state, where most blueberry operations are pick-your-own, growers are reporting larger-than-normal berries and an abundant crop, just in time for many markets to open this weekend.

In 2008, Georgia blueberry growers harvested more than 14,000 acres of blueberries with an off-the-farm value of close to $61 million dollars, slightly above the five-year average.

This year, growers expect to harvest between 12,000 and 14,000 acres, but that figure could surge as high as 15,000 to 20,000 acres, according to Stanaland and county Extension agent reports. About 75 percent of those acres are in southeast Georgia.

Prices are holding steady in spite of the abundance of available fruit this year, which usually drives prices down. Growers are getting about $14 per flat — or $1.40 per pound — for fresh berries, only a shade lower than last year’s price.

(Faith Peppers is a news editor for the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.)

 
 
Back to Top
FORMATTED FILES
  View 'Clean' Text File
   
 
AUTHOR
Faith Peppers
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
770-640-4840

(Faith Peppers is a news editor with the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.)

 
SOURCE
Danny Stanaland
912-632-5601
 
 
 
MULTIMEDIA

Graphics included in this story:
  blueberries22807lr.jpg
 

 


 
 
Georgia FACES Calendar | Economics | Environment | Home & Garden | Lifestyles | Science | State & Region | Latest News
Media Resources | Tips & Trivia | Q&A | Special Info Sites | Images | Infographics | Other News | Search Archives
UGA Home | CAES Home | GA FACES Home | Subscribe Me! | About Us | Contact Us
"News to use about Georgia Family, Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences" © 2009 The University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
An equal opportunity/affirmative action organization committed to a diverse work force