By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- "Green industry" certainly describes Mississippi's
horticultural businesses. Not only is it an industry of
plants, but it's environmentally-friendly and making lots of
money. Dr.
David Tatum, Mississippi State University's extension
horticulturist, described the green industry as an
agricultural industry consisting of nursery production,
landscaping, arborists and retail. The
nursery division produces ornamental trees and shrubs,
bedding plants, turf grass and specialty crops such as
poinsettias and Easter lilies. The landscape division
includes architects and those who plant and maintain
landscapes. Arborists prune, care for and remove trees.
Retail encompasses lawn centers, mass markets, roadside
stands, Christmas trees and florists. There
are around 657 nurseries and 1,923 greenhouses in operation
in Mississippi, as of 1995. The green industry farms more
than 6,000 acres, and each acre can generate in excess of
$40,000 to $60,000 in nursery stock a year, Tatum
said. Dr.
Charles Walden, MSU extension horticultural economist,
estimated the industry's worth at $250 million to $500
million this year in Mississippi. No exact statistics are
kept so the number is very broad, but he called it a
"reasonable estimate." This
value is growing nationally at a rate of 6 percent a year,
Tatum said. In Mississippi, the green industry has grown an
estimated 17 percent from 1985 to 1993. And the industry is
not affected by recession, Ken Hood, extension economist,
said. "Even in
a recession, the sales figures tend to increase at the same
rate," he said. "When people have extra income, they spend
it on the lawn. In a recession, they don't have the money to
go places and do the things they usually do, so they stay
around the house and spend money on the lawn." Thanks
to disposable income and environmental appreciation, the
green industry gets an average of $342 a year from each
American household, Tatum said. Not surprising, as gardening
holds the No. 1 spot as the nation's favorite outdoor
activity. In
today's good economy, the average green industry patron is a
college-educated male 30 years old or older. He is married
and lives in a small town or rural area of the Midwest. This
man typically is employed at $30,000 or more a year in a
professional, business or clerical/sales occupation. Buyers
are also often farmers or retirees. The
majority of the state's green industry is in South
Mississippi. George County housed the most nurseries, with
46 in 1995. Pearl River County had the most acreage, at
1,100. Unlike
the enormous tracts of land owned and farmed by many row
crop producers, those in the green industry work small plots
of land. Many start in the business as a part-time hobby,
working a day job then tending a greenhouse on evenings and
weekends. Few are involved in the green industry in addition
to another agricultural crop. "This is
an industry you can start at small and grow," Hood said. "It
lends itself to small acreage, which makes it more
accessible, and the return is good." Release:
Jan. 6, 1997
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Green Industry
Has Growers Cashing In
Contact: Dr. David Tatum, (601) 325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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