By
Moira Brodnax MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Improved efficiency, favorable
weather and
new technology contributed to a record-breaking
blueberry
harvest
for Mississippi producers this year. Mississippi
blueberry producers who are members of the Miss-Lou
Blueberry Growers Association harvested 2 million pounds
of blueberries
during the state's prime harvesting period. Harvesting
of about 1,000 acres began in May and continued
until the
second week of July, with most varieties finished by July
4. Dr.
John Braswell, extension horticulture specialist
in Poplarville,
said these figures do not account for the
additional
500
acres of blueberries in the state from which growers
market to
local stores and roadside stands. Association
members posted a 1.57 million pound
blueberry
crop
in Mississippi in 1994. This
year's record-breaking yields will provide
consumers
with
1.05 million pounds of fresh blueberries and 1
million pounds
of frozen blueberries. The previous record was more
than 1.66
million pounds of blueberries harvested in 1992. Prices
for fresh berries have remained steady for the
past eight
years, with an average of $12 a flat. One flat is
measured
as
about 10 pounds or 12 pints of fresh berries. "Prices
have been fantastic this year," said Jerry
Hutto, co-owner
of Amber's Blueberry Farm in Wayne County.
"Producers
like
the prices to remain stable." Hutto
received more than $12 a flat from his 32,000
pounds of
berries harvested from 6 acres of marketable
plants. The
favorable weather conditions throughout the
growing season
and the dry weather during harvest helped
producers
achieve
these record yields. Also, as the blueberry plants
age, yield
per plant increases. "The
good weather growers experienced this year
helped tremendously
with the record harvest," Hutto said. "Last year
we had
a lot of rain which hurt yields." New
technology and improved efficiency also played key
roles in
Mississippi's record blueberry harvest. "Growers
are becoming more efficient and are using
new technology
and mechanical harvesting equipment which have
helped them
increase their harvest volume," Braswell said. Profit
margins will increase as use of mechanical
harvesters
and
mechanical grading speeds up the process of preparing
berries for
market. "Mechanical
harvesting costs producers about 8 cents a
pound compared
to 30 cents a pound for hand-picked," Braswell
said. Midges
caused limited damage in some areas of the state,
but no
crops were destroyed. Midges have not been a problem
for Mississippi
producers in past years. "Producers
will need to be on the lookout for midge
damage next
spring," Braswell said. "Midge problems result after
mild winter
weather in the blueberry producing areas of
Mississippi." The
newest addition to the blueberry industry in
Mississippi
is
the Nature's Wonders processing plant located in Collins.
The blueberry
processing plant which began business in June
houses the
latest equipment for processing both fresh and frozen
fruit. Dean
Daughdrill, president of Nature's Wonders, said
in their
first year of production the plant averaged 10,000
pounds of
fresh and frozen fruit processed a day. "Nature's
Wonders saw the need for a processing plant in
a central
location for Mississippi's smaller volume producers
who did
not have their own processing equipment," Daughdrill
said. "We
were able to met the needs of many blueberry producers
and hope
this year's success will encourage others to give us
the opportunity
to do their custom processing work." Released:
July 14, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Blueberries Set
Records
Contact: Dr. John Braswell,
(601)
795-4525
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0714.html
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