Tag Archive for farm

Additional Ranking Dates Set for Major Conservation Initiatives

Madison, FL., January 18, 2012 – Florida agricultural producers have extra chances this year to be approved for cost share funding for the Organic, On-Farm Energy and Seasonal High Tunnel initiatives this year.  The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has announced three ranking periods for Fiscal Year 2012 for these funding opportunities; in the past there was one per year. All three initiatives offer technical and financial assistance through the Natural Resources Conservation Service’s (NRCS) Environmental Quality Incentives Program.

“Moving to multiple ranking dates for each initiative is going to make it easier for more producers to apply and help them get started with implementing the practices they need to benefit the natural resources on their operations,” said Carlos Suarez, NRCS state conservationist for Florida. “We hope producers will visit their local USDA Service Center for more details on how NRCS can help them conserve Florida’s natural resources.”

 

NRCS accepts applications for financial assistance on a continuous basis throughout the year but there will be three ranking periods for the Organic, On-Farm Energy and Seasonal High Tunnel initiatives, all ending on February 3, March 30 and June 1, 2012. At the end of a ranking period, NRCS ranks all submitted proposals for funding consideration. NRCS will notify all applicants of the results of the rankings and begin developing contracts with selected applicants.

 

Initiative Overviews

On-Farm Energy Initiative:  NRCS and producers develop Agricultural Energy Management Plans (AgEMP) or farm energy audits that assess energy consumption on an operation. NRCS then uses audit data to develop energy conservation recommendations. Each AgEMP has a landscape component that assesses equipment and farming processes and a farm headquarters component that assesses power usage and efficiencies in livestock buildings, grain handling operations, and similar facilities to support the farm operation.

 

Organic Initiative:  NRCS helps certified organic growers and producers working to achieve organic certification install conservation practices for organic production. New for fiscal year 2012, applicants will be evaluated continuously during the ranking periods. Applications meeting or exceeding a threshold score may be approved for an EQIP contract before the end of the ranking period. Applications rating below the threshold score will be deferred to the next period. A new threshold score will be established at the beginning of each ranking period. This new scoring process allows organic producers to implement conservation practices in a timelier manner.

 

Seasonal High Tunnel Pilot Initiative:  NRCS helps producers plan and implement high tunnels‒ steel-framed, polyethylene-covered structures that extend growing seasons in an environmentally safe manner. High tunnel benefits include better plant and soil quality, fewer nutrients and pesticides in the environment, and better air quality due to fewer vehicles being needed to transport crops. More than 4,000 high tunnels have been planned and implemented nationwide through this initiative over the past two years.

 

For additional information please contact the NRCS Office in Madison County at (850) 973-6595, Ext.3 or visit the NRCS National Web site for more information on how to apply for these initiatives.

 

 

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USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer and lender. To file a complaint of discrimination, write:
USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410
or call (800) 795-3272 (voice), or (202) 720-6382 (TDD).

 

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U-Pick Tuten Farming

By Jacob Bembry
Greene Publishing, Inc.

On Tuten Farming’s Facebook page, there is a request from a former resident of Madison, now living in Auburn, Ala. Vicki Brown writes: “I’ll pay double for some Tuten acre peas…just sayin.’”

The reply comes from Sharon Underhill, who keeps the page updated for her family’s business. “Ms. Vicki, as much as we love yah, we refuse to deliver that far away.”

Underhill extends an invitation for Brown herself to travel back to Madison to come get the vegetables.

In addition to acre peas, there are requests for zipper peas and other vegetables that the Tuten family grows.

The orders are filled on a first-come, first-served basis. Some may choose to go to the Tuten Farm, on Highway 14 South and pick the vegetables themselves or some may choose to pay a little extra and have the Tutens gather the food for them. If you are fortunate, you may just catch up with Lisa Tuten, wife of Timmy, on a day when she has some farm fresh vegetables on the back of her pickup.

Friends and neighbors have come from miles and miles to buy some food grown by the Tutens. This summer, the Tutens offered fresh cantaloupes, as well as those peas that people are pining for in northern Alabama.

The peas will be gone by the end of this week, but the Tutens will still have boiling peanuts. Tomatoes and sweet potatoes will be among the produce harvested in the fall.

In addition to Tuten’s U-Pick, Timmy and Mickey Tuten, who operate the farm with the aide of other family members, also truck farmed watermelons. The melons went to Browning & Sons for shipment to grocery stores.

Timmy and Mickey have been farming all of their lives and got into the U-pick business about 20 years ago.

If you want to visit Tuten Farms, go Highway 360 South for 13 miles. To place an order, call (850) 251-5463 or visit the Tuten Farming Facebook page.

 

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LAST CALL – Madison Peach Farm’s Final Weekend Coming Up

Regular customer Rev. Willis Philips, farm owner Charlene Blomquist, and Phillips’s daughter, Telisha, show off the buckets of Sam Houstons picked moments earlier.

Regular customer Rev. Willis Philips, farm owner Charlene Blomquist, and Phillips’s daughter, Telisha, show off the buckets of Sam Houstons picked moments earlier.

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.

Turn off Colin Kelly Highway onto Dusty Miller Road, and look for the small “U-PIK Peaches, Madison Peach Farm” besideCaladium Drive on the right.  Next to it is an overturned white five-gallon bucket painted with the word “OPEN” in big black letters.

This Saturday and Sunday, July 16 and 17, are the last two days you’ll see that bucket there, at least until peach season rolls around again next year.

Last weekend, (July 9-10), the farm was busy with those who love the smell and the taste of warm, fuzzy, fresh-picked peaches.  While not as crowded as it had been at the peak of the season, the orchard still hosted plenty of people braving the heat and humidity to gather the loads of peaches that bent some of the branches toward the ground.

Carl and Sharlene Blomquist have been running the Madison Peach Farm for nine years now.  Before that, they had bought some “good hunting land” just south of Greenville, but “Carl really loves agricultural stuff,” said Sharlene.  So, when the 60-plus acres off Dusty Miller came up for sale, “he fell in love with it,” in spite of the seven-foot-tall weeds everywhere.

Originally from Georgia, Sharlene loved the idea of a peach farm, but realized that Georgia variety peaches would not get enough “cold hours” in Madison to set fruit.  After some research on the internet, she selected six varieties that would thrive in Madison’s shorter winters:  June Gold, Southern Pearl, Texas Royal, Suwannee, La Rouge, and Sam Houston.

Different customers have different favorites: Nina Jo Chamblee likes the small June Golds and Southern Pearls for making the perfect pickled peaches, but she loves any variety fresh out of the bucket.  Some customers like the big, white-fleshed Sam

Houstons, while others want only the Suwannees and call Sharlene to ask when they will be ripe.

The different varieties also ripen at different times, meaning the picking season lasts much longer.

Sometimes it can be a challenge knowing when to hold the first weekend “u-pick.”  Because the weather was so hot so early this year, the peaches ripened faster, and the farm was open for business two weeks early.

“This year was just perfect for really good peaches,” said Sharlene.  It has been really dry, of course, but the trees are watered with a drip irrigation system (one year, there was too much rain, causing a lot of brown spot fungus because the leaves and fruit stayed too wet).

While the trees were blooming, she and Carl rented some beehives from Chris Gunter of Perry, who ended up with some really good peach blossom honey to sell afterward.

Rev. Willis Phillips of Madison and his daughter Telisha, the first customers of the morning, emerged from the rows of trees with three buckets of Sam Houston peaches.  “(Sharlene) told us we could pick all down that row,” said Phillips. “But all we had to do was stand at three or four trees to get all we wanted.”

When he is not out picking peaches, Phillips oversees 14 churches.  Music is a big part of his ministry, so he also stays busy writing gospel music and performing with his band.  Sharlene spoke of the CD the band had made, featuring both original songs andclassics like “When the Saints Go Marching In.”

“We played that one every which way you can play it,” said Phillips.

While Philips and his daughter paid for their buckets, Wes Kelley, a former Madison county tax collector (who is usually the first customer of the day, according to Sharlene), drove up for a bucket or two or peaches, exchanging some jokes with the Reverend and the Blomquists before heading off into the orchard.

Other customers, like brother and sister Terrill and Terrica Blackshear of Madison, were first-time visitors to the farm.

Several more family groups arrived in short order, like mom and dad Stephanie and Clay Driggers from Hamilton County, with sons Zack and Caleb, and the boys’ grandmother, Charlsie Gaston of Greenville.  Cathy Norris brought her grandsons Gabe and Ezra Sivyer.

As more and more people arrived and began gathering peaches, they chatted back and forth from row to row, like neighbors chatting across backyard fences.

It didn’t take long to fill their buckets, with so many peaches on every tree.  While they paid for their pickings, more cars drove up – more familiar faces looking for their weekly fill – and as they prepared to drive home later with the warm, sweet scent of peaches filling their cars, many of them said they would be back next weekend, July 16 and 17, for one last picking.

After that, it’ll be nearly a year before more peaches are ready and the gates of Madison Peach Farm swing open once again.

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The Madison County Farm Bureau Women’s Committee Attend The Annual State Women’s Conference

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by Tall Timbers.
Florida Farm Bureau President, John Hoblick was also on the program and in his presentation, challenged the Farm Bureau Women to keep up their effective and hard work on many Farm Bureau programs and projects.
Madison County Farm Bureau had more Farm Bureau women to attend this Meeting than any other county Farm Bureau in Florida.  Eleven folks attended this excellent meeting.
Another key program idea that was discussed was Ag In the Classroom, of which the Madison County Farm Bureau is involved with.  Ag Education for school children is extremely important to Madison Farm Bureau’s Women’s Program.

The Madison County Farm Bureau Women’s Committee recently attended the Annual State Women’s Conference which was held this year at the Hotel Duval in Tallahassee.
Usually, this Annual Conference is held in the Southern part of Florida, but this year, the meeting was held in North Florida.
Nearly one hundred and twenty-five farm women from all over the state attended the event.  A certain highlight of the meeting was a tour of several interesting forestry-based operations in Gadsden and Leon Counties.  Perhaps the most interesting stop on the tour was the Coastal Plywood plant just north of Havana.  The ladies got to see up close just how plywood is manufactured.   Coastal Plywood is one of the most modern facilities in the country, and there are many forestry owners in North Florida that sell their timber to the Coastal plant.
Another stop for the ladies was a huge ornamental nursery located near Havana.  The May Nursery is a total family-owned operation that has been in operation for over 50 years.  The May family is also heavily involved with Farm Bureau, and have been for many years.  At May Nursery, the primary varieties grown are woody ornamentals, and most of their production is shipped to Atlanta and up the eastern seaboard to as far as Canada.
The last stop on the tour which also included dinner was the Tall Timbers Research center, located north of Tallahassee.  This facility has done tremendous work with growing forestry products, but enhancing wildlife predication as well.  Wild quail production has definitely benefited from the research done by Tall Timbers.

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MURPHY PLACES IN STATE CORN YIELD CONTEST

Jimmy Murphy of Jennings recently won first place in the No Till/Strip Till Irrigated division of the 2010 National Corn Growers’ Association’s (NCGA) Corn Yield Contest in Florida.  Murphy won with Pioneer® brand hybrid 31P42, which yielded 241 bushels per acre.

Murphy earned one of the 359 state titles won by growers planting Pioneer hybrids. The NCGA awarded 522 state titles in this year’s contest. Growers planting Pioneer hybrids dominated the contest and won 69% percent of all state awards presented. 

The NCGA Corn Yield Contest is an annual competition among corn producers with the goal of producing the highest yields. In the contest, growers compete within a broad range of corn production classes, including non-irrigated, no-till/strip-till non-irrigated, no-till/strip-till irrigated, ridge-till non-irrigated, ridge-till irrigated and irrigated classes.

“Each year, we continue to see growers planting Pioneer corn hybrids succeed in the NCGA Corn Yield contest, and we’re thrilled that these growers choose Pioneer products for these winning yields,” says Pioneer President Paul E. Schickler. “These results continue to demonstrate the impressive yield potential that Pioneer genetics bring to our customers, and it also demonstrates what growers can achieve by planting the right product on the right acre.

“We’re excited about the diversity of hybrids represented in this year’s contest by growers planting Pioneer products,” he says. “It shows that Pioneer is advancing hybrids locally to help growers’ succeed across diverse environments.”

Pioneer Hi-Bred (www.pioneer.com), a DuPont business headquartered in Des Moines, Iowa, is the world’s leading developer and supplier of advanced plant genetics, providing high-quality seeds to farmers in more than 90 countries. Pioneer provides agronomic support and services to help increase farmer productivity and profitability and strives to develop sustainable agricultural systems for people everywhere. Science with Service Delivering Success(TM).

DuPont (www.dupont.com) is a science-based products and services company.  Founded in 1802, DuPont puts science to work by creating sustainable solutions essential to a better, safer, healthier life for people everywhere.  Operating in more than 90 countries, DuPont offers a wide range of innovative products and services for markets including agriculture and food; building and construction; communications; and transportation.

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For additional information about our company or our products, check our worldwide Web site: http://www.pioneer.com.
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