Planting Seeds - Food & Farming News from CDFA

New vegetable variety caulilini on market – from the Salinas Californian

Caulini

By Kate Cimini

Salinas-based company Mann Packing has introduced a new vegetable to the U.S. market, debuting a 10-ounce packet of caulilini florets in Chicago, at the United Fresh Produce Association’s 2019 Convention & Expo .

Previously only sold wholesale to restaurants, caulilini is now set to be available to the American public. 

But what is caulilini?

What looks like a blanched version of broccoli, caulilini is a non-GMO hybrid variety of cauliflower common in Asia. It has a sweet-tasting stem that is less fibrous than that of the American versions of cauliflower or broccoli. 

The introduction of caulilini to U.S. markets is down to Mann Packing Director of Growing Operations Rick Harris, who spent close to three years working with 12 different varieties to determine everything from bed size to harvest times.

It all began with a challenge: a friend of Harris’ brought caulilini to a barbecue and dared him to do something with it. 

“Well, you know, it was curiosity,” said Harris. “It was a challenge. Can I take that variety and manipulate it to something I can use as a new type of product?”

After three years of development and trialing, it turned out that he could. 

I started with twelve different varieties and I needed to find the ones I could produce here in Salinas year-round,” said Harris. “We process in Salinas, so I really didn’t want to grow it in Yuma in the wintertime to truck it up here for processing, and then truck it right back down for shipping.”

Harris trialed the twelve different varietals — most of which had been designed for growth in a tropical climate in Asia — and found one that grew well in a cool, temperate climate like Salinas. Then, he set about trialing that one, trying to create a long-stemmed cauliflower varietal.

As he tried different cultural methods — such as different watering amounts, different bed sizes and so on — he learned what set caulilini apart from your traditional cauliflower.

“I call it an open-face cauliflower because we don’t tie it, we let it spread to allow sun exposure,” said Harris. “As it draws color from the sunlight, it filters down through the plant and enhances the greenness of the stem.

“The flavor is in the stem, not the floret,” said Harris. “The floret is so important for the stem just because it draws the sunlight, enhances the color, and the flavor of the stem is where it’s at. Where cauliflower’s not sweet, caulilini’s sweet.”

Caulilini looks to follow in the footsteps of broccoli rabe, a mustard green patented by D’Arrigo Brothers for sale in the U.S. 

Link to story

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#CDFACentennial – Centennial Reflections video series with Victor Velez

The California Department of Food and Agriculture is celebrating its 100th anniversary as a state agency in 2019. Throughout the year this blog will feature a number of items to commemorate this milestone. Today we continue with the Centennial Reflections video series, featuring CDFA employees remembering their histories, and the agency’s.

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CDFA joins with DPR for tour of Asian Citrus Psyllid/Huanglongbing response projects

CDFA undersecretary Jenny Lester Moffitt and DPR acting director Val Dolcini (both center) at Gless Ranch in Riverside County

CDFA undersecretary Jenny Lester Moffitt and Department of Pesticide Regulation acting director Val Dolcini recently traveled to Riverside County to join a tour of several projects being utilized in the Asian citrus psyllid/huanglongbing eradication program, with an emphasis on integrated pest management approaches that reduce the need for pesticide usage.

The tour, which was coordinated by California Citrus Mutual, began at the new California Citrus Research Foundation Laboratory in Riverside. This lab will perform research for solutions to huanglongbing. The group then moved to CDFA’s Mt. Rubidoux Field Station for a tour of the Tamarixia radiata rearing facility. Tamarixia radiata is a parasitic wasp that helps to eradicate and control Asian citrus psyllids.

Undersecretary Moffitt with CDFA staff working on the Asian citrus psyllid/huanglongbing program

Riverside County agricultural commissioner Ruben Arroyo joined the group at lunch, helping to underscore that an essential piece of the partnership that works to protect California citrus is comprised of agricultural commissioners, growers, the research community, and UC Cooperative Extension.

The tour concluded with a stop at a nearby citrus grove owned by the Gless family, and then a visit to a previous huanglongbing detection site for a demonstration of survey and trapping techniques.

Link to more information about Asian citrus psyllid/huanglongbing

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Virulent Newcastle Disease update

Statement from California State Veterinarian Dr. Annette Jones

Thanks to cooperation from Southern California residents in very difficult circumstances, and a tremendous commitment from emergency response teams, the joint CDFA/USDA Virulent Newcastle Disease Project has found no new positive detections of the disease since June 4, 2019.

While this potentially moves us closer to eradication, we must emphasize that any subsequent detections would represent a significant setback.

This is an extremely critical time. It is imperative that bird owners continue to work together to ensure that previously-infected areas remain free from disease, and it is vital that all bird owners within the regional quarantine area of Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties continue practicing enhanced biosecurity and do not move birds

The VND project team will now survey and test in areas where disease has previously existed to make sure there are no remaining residual pockets of virus in poultry. However, it is important to recognize that the virus will remain in the environment for several more months, and that the risk of infection remains. If additional birds test positive, those birds and any exposed birds on adjacent properties will be euthanized. 

Remember – we’re all in this together, and we must continue working together until virulent Newcastle disease is eradicated in California. 

Link to CDFA’s Virulent Newcastle Disease page

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#CDFACentennial – Centennial Reflections video series with Roger Spencer

The California Department of Food and Agriculture is celebrating its 100th anniversary as a state agency in 2019. Throughout the year this blog will feature a number of items to commemorate this milestone. Today we continue with the Centennial Reflections video series, featuring CDFA employees remembering their histories, and the agency’s.

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A California farmer goes in search of a successor – from the Daily Democrat

By Julia Mitric

As a generation of farmers in California enters retirement age, these growers and ranchers face difficult choices about what to do with their farms and how to support themselves as they age.

There is no “cookie-cutter formula” for farmers navigating this chapter, said Rod Carter, an expert in land succession planning who has advised California farmers for several decades.

“The only thing I can tell you (is that) out of 300-plus families I’ve worked with here in California on this particular topic, none of them are the same,” Carter said.

In 2017, the average age of California farmers rose to 59, according to the most recent USDA Census of Agriculture. The national average is 57.5 years old, up from 56.3 years old in 2012. More than a third of U.S. farmers are 65 or older.

While each case is unique, there are common factors at play, such as personal health; the type, scale and viability of the business; the market; and the multi-generational needs of the family, Carter said.

In the case of Riverhill Farm in Nevada County, business succession plans didn’t involve younger family members.

Until about a year ago, Alan Haight and Jo McProud, both 62, were still actively planting and tending organic produce on seven acres of flattish land nestled below a ridge in the Sierra Nevada foothills. Farm succession was on Haight’s mind from the very beginning, he said.

“I started [the farm] with the intention that it would survive my ability to farm,” Haight said. “Farms aren’t common in this area, and so when someone undertakes to build a farm, that’s a tremendous investment of time and effort. There’s a lot at stake for community in that farm surviving.”

The couple came to farming in their early 40s as a second career. Haight left a San Francisco law firm as a paralegal and later married McProud, who was a landscape architect.

At a time when there wasn’t a local food movement to speak of in Nevada City, they built a successful business selling organic produce. Haight said they sold 85% of their produce within 10 miles of Riverhill Farm and the other 15% went to the Tahoe Food Hub in Alpine Meadows, which buys produce from regional growers and distributes it in the Lake Tahoe area.

It was common for Haight to work 10 to 12 hour days, seven days a week, he said. That’s the time it took him and McProud to plant, weed, trim and harvest, even with the help of a farm crew of three or more people on weekdays. Beyond growing and tending vegetables, there’s the work of developing customers, buying materials, paying bills, fixing equipment and irrigation lines, running the weekend farmers market, and hosting a pick-your-own berry patch in the summer.

Unsurprisingly, the most frenetic pace came at the height of summer, when Haight, McProud and their farm laborers were working in the fields as temperatures pushed into the mid-90s.

On the hottest days, Haight said he couldn’t wait to drive the air-conditioned delivery van to Nevada City. Even though it meant loading and unloading thousands of pounds of produce for the farmers market, at least it was a break from the heat, said Haight.

“June and July were…the months of the season when I always thought ‘This is going to be my last season!’” Haight admitted, laughing.

“Pushing through those hard times was doable through our 50s,” McProud explained, “[but] then as we got into our 60s, the lack of sleep, the stress on our joints…you’re not as resilient. Our physical bodies are aging.”

And other changes were happening. The couple welcomed their first grandchild into the world last year, and they wanted to spend more time with family.

“One of the worst outcomes would’ve been that we had to keep going beyond our ability to do it and worked ourselves into the ground, to an early grave,” McProud says.

In order to retire in their 60s, the couple needed a way to leave the fields but still draw income from the successful business they had built. Haight and McProud agreed they needed to find someone who would appreciate their “legacy” of sustainable farming and carry it forward.

That person turned out to be Antonio Garza, who worked as farm manager at Soil Born Farms. The non-profit organization in the Sacramento suburbs offers educational programs for school-age children and farm apprenticeships for rookie farmers. “Finding someone like Antonio is not easy in itself,” Haight said.

The relationship developed slowly over two years after the couple recruited Garza as Riverhill Farm manager. Observing him over that time, Haight and McProud were confident that Garza had the skill and stamina to become the sole farm operator.

The timing of the couple’s retirement hinged on Garza’s readiness to be his own boss. When he first met Haight, he’d already been farming for other people for seven years.

“I was looking for a long-term opportunity … an opportunity to work for myself in a situation that could carry me through the rest of my farming career,” said Garza, who’s now 40. “I was looking for a long-term plan rather than a year-to-year plan.”

He says he had been looking to start his own farming operation in and around Sacramento. But he found “most land [that’s] suitable for farming is priced for residential and commercial development, not agriculture.”

“So, it’s very difficult to afford that [on] a farming income, particularly a starting farming income,” Garza added.

California’s high real estate costs are a major barrier for first generation farmers, according to data collected by the National Young Farmers Coalition.

Garza says the lease at Riverhill Farm offered long-term security at an affordable price. He, Haight and McProud fleshed out the terms of the agreement with guidance from CA FarmLink, a non-profit organization that provides farm loans and connects land owners with farmers in search of land.

Haight knows the benefits of CA FarmLink. He is the organization’s board president.

In 2018, the organization worked with roughly 200 farms with gross sales ranging from $20,000 to $1.5 million, according to Gary Peterson of CA FarmLink.

Garza pays the retired couple monthly on a two-year lease with an understanding that both parties are looking to establish a longer term arrangement. The lease allows Garza to use the land and equipment. He also inherits Haight’s connection to a base of loyal customers and clients who’ve bought vegetables and fruit from Riverhill Farms over the years.

Garza lives on the property with his partner, Daylin Wade, who works part time on the farm.

Meanwhile, Haight and McProud retain ownership of the land and stay in their house overlooking fields, orchards and forest.

Whether a farm has relatively small acreage, like Riverhill, or is a giant dairy collective, designing a farm succession plan is a matter of balancing personal goals and financial reality, said Tim Phlegar, national program director for Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.’s Land Is Your Legacy program.

For multi-generational farming families, Phlegar said the question at the heart of this transition is “how does the senior generation become independent without being detrimental to the farm itself?”

Haight and McProud have found a way to solve this quandary through a non-family farm succession.

For her part, McProud admits to being happy when she looks out her window in the morning and sees Garza and Wade harvesting cabbages and winter greens, while she stays indoors with a hot cup of coffee.

“There’s not a detachment, but there is a sense of relief,” McProud said. “The timing was just right. We’re ready to turn the reins over, and we appreciate [the farm] going forward without having to do so much of the day-to-day physical and emotional work involved in farming.”

McProud says things could have ended much differently if they had waited too long or failed to find a next generation farmer.

“That’s happened in California, sadly,” she said, “[when] a farmer can’t create a workable succession and they can’t continue physically or financially to keep farming. And so the farm goes out of business.”

Link to story

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CDFA leadership: Governor announces appointments

Secretary Karen Ross with the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) was very pleased this afternoon with Governor Gavin Newsom’s announcement that he has confirmed the appointments of current CDFA Undersecretary Jenny Lester Moffitt and CDFA Deputy Secretary Rachael O’Brien. Secretary Ross also looks forward to welcoming newly appointed CDFA Deputy Secretary Arturo Barajas, who comes to the department from Assembly Member Joaquin Arambula’s office, where he served as Legislative Assistant.

CDFA Deputy Secretary for Administration and Finance Kevin Masuhara, who is appointed by Secretary Ross, will also continue in his current role.

Congratulations!

See the original announcement on the Governor’s site here.

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CDFA Secretary Karen Ross honored as “Agriculturalist of the Year” at State Fair Gala

Secretary Ross (middle) with State Fair CEO Rick Pickering and Board Chair Rina DiMare.

California Agriculture Secretary Karen Ross was formally honored as the 2019 Agriculturalist of the Year last night at the annual State Fair Gala at the Cal Expo fairgrounds in Sacramento.

The gala also includes an auction that benefits the youth scholarship programs of the Friends of the California State Fair.

Secretary Ross is joined at the Gala by (from left) CDFA Undersecretary Jenny Lester Moffitt, Deputy Secretary for Administration and Finance Kevin Masuhara, and (right) Deputy Secretary for Legislation Rachael O’Brien.
State Board of Food and Agriculture members (current and former) joined in the celebration. From left: Bryce Lundberg, Rachelle Arizmendi, Mike Gallo, Nancy Cassady, Frank Muller, Secretary Ross, and Don Cameron, Chair. Board member Eric Holst was also in attendance.
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Best of Show: California’s finest wine, beer, cheese and olive oil recognized at State Capitol

It’s fair season! With the State Fair coming up July 12-28, judges have been busy tasting and testing some of California’s finest agricultural products for the coveted annual “Best of Show” awards.

CDFA Undersecretary Jenny Lester Moffitt joined in the festivities on the west steps of the State Capitol this morning, helping California State Fair officials recognize the “Best of Show” winners from the 2019 Commercial Wine, Beer, Cheese, and Extra Virgin Olive Oil competitions. Our winners:

Wine

Best of Show Red – Concannon Reserve, Livermore Valley
Best of Show White – Las Positas Vineyards, Livermore Valley
Best of Show Dessert – Lewis Grace, El Dorado
Best of Show Pink – Buttonwood Winery & Vineyard, Santa Ynez Valley
Best of Show Sparkling – Korbel, California
Best Value Wine – Trader Moon Wine, California
Golden State Winery of the Year – Jeff Runquist Wines, Plymouth

Beer

Best of Show – Angel City Brewery, Los Angeles
Brewery of the Year – Morgan Territory, Tracy

Cheese

Best of Show Cow – Point Reyes Farmstead Cheese Co. (4th year in a row!), Point Reyes
Best of Show Other Milk Type – Laura Chenel, Sonoma

Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Best of Show EVOO – Bondolio, Winters/Yolo County
Best of Show Flavored – Calivirgin Olive Oil, Lodi/San Joaquin County

California Assembly Committee on Agriculture Chair Susan Talamantes Eggman poses with Brewery of the Year winners Craig Cauwels and Kyle Manigold from Morgan Territory Brewing in Tracy. Also pictured are State Fair Board Chair Rina DiMare and State Fair CEO Rick Pickering.

About the California State Fair
The California State Fair is dedicated as a place to celebrate the best the state has to offer in agriculture, technology and the diversity of its people, traditions and trends that shape the Golden State’s future. Join us for the 166th California State Fair, July 12-28, 2019.

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UC Climate Smart Ag Team (including CDFA) showing results – from CalCan


Glenda Humiston, Vice President of UC Agriculture and Natural Resources (left) and California Secretary of Agriculture Karen Ross sign a memorandum of understanding in the fall of 2018 to begin a new partnership advancing climate smart agriculture in California. Photo from CalCan

Note – CalCan is the California Climate and Agriculture Network

Technical assistance for farmers and ranchers is a critical tool for scaling up the widespread adoption of climate-beneficial agricultural practices. In the fall of 2018, University of California’s Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources (UCANR) launched a collaboration with the California Department of Food & Agriculture (CDFA) to provide technical assistance for CDFA’s Climate Smart Agriculture programs.

This year, with $1.1 million from the Strategic Growth Council, UCANR and CDFA deployed 10 UC Cooperative Extension (UCCE) Community Education Specialists to 10 counties across the state to partner with farmers to scale up climate smart agricultural practices on farms and ranches throughout California. See the contact list of Community Education Specialists. This is a helpful complement to the CalCAN-sponsored bill AB 2377 to scale up technical assistance for farmers and ranchers wanting to develop Climate Smart Agriculture projects.

UC Climate Smart Agriculture Team

To better understand the role of the CDFA-UCANR Climate Smart Agriculture team, CalCAN recently interviewed two of the UCCE Community Education Specialists, Britta Baskerville based in Mendocino County and Alli Rowe of Ventura County. We spoke to them about their work so far after several months in their positions, as well as the potential they see in these roles in the future.

In collaboration with Cooperative Extension and local Resource Conservation Districts (RCDs), the Community Education Specialists work to improve delivery of technical assistance to farmers and ranchers interested in Climate Smart agriculture. The new UC team will also assist with extension and outreach efforts, including farmer-to-farmer field days and train-the-trainer events.

“While we’re still just building relationships in our first year in these roles, we also get the benefit of leaning on the long history of Cooperative Extension’s relationships with growers in our community, which provides a depth of experience that helps us tailor our assistance in ways that are most meaningful and effective for our local community. These roles put us in a unique position to meet the needs of our local clients and the state goals at the same time,” Alli said.

Both Britta and Alli explained that they have been able to support other technical assistance providers in their communities, like RCDs and Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), and add capacity to understaffed offices. Rather than a sense of competition between the different TA  providers, there is one of collaboration. Ultimately, they have seen this result in the ability for the technical assistants to reach more growers in the community. Additionally, the ten Community Education Specialists can keep in constant communication throughout the CDFA Climate Smart Agriculture grant solicitation, acting as a team and relying on one another for support with questions.

Making the climate connection

Additionally, the positions’ specific nexus with climate change issues is helping to resource other providers to bring the climate lens into their work with growers.

Alli said, “For example, a Cooperative Extension advisor working with a farmer on a nutrient management plan to meet water regulation requirements can then come to me to discuss opportunities to adopt climate smart agriculture practices and use Healthy Soils funding to meet those goals.”

She added that she and her fellow Community Education Specialists have been able to demystify the state grant programs for growers, breaking down information and making it more accessible by doing things like tailoring lists of eligible practices specific to certain crops that growers in the community specialize in.

Alli explained that she is able to compile climate-related information and resources for other technical assistance providers while also rapidly scaling up farmer-to-farmer learning.

“Serving as a central hub of information and stories helps me share producers’ stories with other producers, speeding up the learning curve for producers and exposing growers in our community to feasible practices for their operations that may fall outside of the mainstream or current common understanding of what can work for their operations,” she said.

Technical assistance making a difference

In the recent Healthy Soils Program award announcements, almost every project that Britta and Alli assisted with were funded, amounting to ten total projects that include a demonstration project in Ventura County. However, they both know that the impact of their work extends beyond the promising initial success rate, and even beyond direct ties to CDFA funding. While many growers do need incentive funding to make their projects work on the ground, Alli is working with a grower interested in implementing cover cropping systems without formally applying for funding through the Healthy Soils Program to do so.

Similarly, Britta is working with a grower who is enthused about implementing several climate smart practices in his vineyard even though the scope of his project is currently incompatible with CDFA guidelines. Britta is committed to working with him to figure out how to best resource him to make it happen.

Moving forward, both Specialists see a lot of potential for their roles. Britta is currently working with the Mendocino RCD to develop a protocol for demonstration projects through the Healthy Soils Program, which she knows the community is interested in, but wasn’t prepared to apply for in the last round of funding.

“There’s so much potential for climate smart agriculture here. There is a high level of interest from farmers. It’s more a matter of helping them find pathways to success to implement these practices,” Britta said. “I’m looking forward to my role in assisting with implementation of these projects, as well as continuing to build relationships with growers, many of whom were interested in applying for CDFA grants but not yet ready to do so this year.”

Link to blog post

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