Posts in Specialty crops
From the Front Line to the Field

Brandon Breaux started the first elderberry farm in Louisiana.

Michael Davis produced and marketed the first goat milk gelato in New England.

Joshua Morris developed a multi-speciated operation to create ecosystems on his farm in Missouri.

When each of these veterans returned home from their military service, they were driven to take their lives on a new path — farming.

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CenLA Pecan Crop Takes A Hit In Drought Conditions

In Grant Parish, the pecan is the king of the crop. But just like every crop this year, pecan farmers are bracing for the record drought’s impacts.

“All we can control is our inputs. That’s what we can buy at the store and put out here. We can’t control the weather,” said Ben Littlepage, owner of Littlepage Farms on Highway 8 outside of Colfax.

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Specialty cropsdon molino
Louisiana Citrus Farmers Brace for Saltwater Intrusion

Projections show the saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico continues to push up the Mississippi River in the coming weeks, threatening the drinking water of thousands of people in Louisiana.

Farmers are also scrambling for ways to save their produce.

Commissioner for the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry Dr. Mike Strain said Plaquemines Parish is the heartbeat of Louisiana’s citrus industry.

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Louisiana Citrus Farmers are Seeing a Mass Influx of Salt Water that Could Threaten Seedlings

Commercial citrus growers have dwindled over the past few decades in south Louisiana, where farmers have had to battle hurricanes, flooding, invasive insects, freezes and drought to keep their groves alive.

The latest hurdle comes from a slow-moving threat — a mass influx of salt water from the Gulf of Mexico that is creeping up the drought-stricken Mississippi River.

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Cassidy, Colleagues Introduce Bills to Protect Louisiana Agriculture Against Dumping from China, India

U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) introduced two bills to protect Louisiana rice and shrimp against China and India’s dumping of cheap shrimp and produce into U.S. markets. The Prioritizing Offensive Agricultural Disputes and Enforcement Act and the India Shrimp Tariff Act will both protect the Louisiana agricultural industry while ensuring that food that appears on U.S. store shelves meets U.S. health standards. 

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Nursery Crops Flourish in Louisiana as Growers Focus on Local Plants, Diversification and Helping Others

On any given day, Mark Mese can field messages from growers and nursery owners around the world about acquiring some of the hundreds of plants in his Baton Rouge nursery. Mese, a retired attorney, has about 3,000 square feet of greenhouses on his property, where he carefully tends each day to bromeliads, rare ferns, begonias, succulents and more.

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The Beloved Pecan is Officially the State Nut of Louisiana

There is an age-old debate about how to pronounce “pecan.” The pronunciation of the word changes across state lines, and sometimes even depending on how a person is using the word.

But in Louisiana, there’s not much debate. It’s “puh-kaan,” as could be heard in the Louisiana Legislature this session when lawmakers unanimously voted to make the pecan the official state nut.

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Celebrating Louisiana’s Specialty Crops: Local Farmers Boost Economy and Provide Fresh, Nutritional Delights

A fresh tomato on a lunchtime sandwich. A cool slice of watermelon on the patio. Fresh peppers tossed into a pot to season an evening meal.

Thanks to Louisiana’s soil conditions and adequate rainfall, it’s easy to find these types of specialty crops at local farmers markets, roadside stands and some stores. This year, the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry (LDAF) is celebrating these crops and those who grow them, which creates an ecosystem that has economic benefits for people across the state.

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Vietnamese Farming Cooperative in New Orleans East Creates Jobs with Healthy Food

Amid the long commercial thoroughfares and sprawling subdivisions of New Orleans East is a little oasis of fruit trees, chickens and row after of row of leafy greens that Thanh Nguyen tends to so closely that they brush the brim of her wide sun hat.

“It’s hard work but I enjoy it,” Thanh, 77, said in Vietnamese as her 81-year-old husband, Tham, tinkered with a finicky rototiller. “And for (Tham), his doctor said it’s good for him to not just be sitting at home.”

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