|
Greetings!
Aloha Kākou, welcome to the Summer 2013 issue of Hānaiʻ
Ai, the sustainable agriculture newsletter of the College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources.
Tired of waiting 3 months for your next SOAP fix? Then follow us and be our friend. SOAP is now on:
Where are Hawaii's next generation of farmers coming from? In our new, continuing section entitled "For New Farmers" we highlight programs across the state that will ensure diversified agriculture remains a vibrant and sustaining force to Hawaii's economy.
- Also in this issue of HānaiʻAi, we travel to Waiʻanae, Oʻahu to visit our featured farmer Owen Kaneshiro who has been growing local vegetables, providing jobs and utilizing sustainable farming practices to stay in business for over thirty years.
- Agribusiness Incubator Program (AIP) Director, Steve Chiang reminds us of the importance of calculating our cost of production and gives us some simple strategies every farmer can do.
- Our friends from NRCS highlight two important programs on land and sea, and we feature articles and publications from CTAHR research and extension faculty with information on everything from the benefits of eating local to the importance of nitrogen nutrition to maintain healthy crops and everything in between.
- Make sure to visit the "back pages" of the newsletter for upcoming Workshops, Conferences and Meetings (there's LOTS coming!), and the Organic Corner.
- Support your local farmers and bring about more awareness about the importance if Hawaii Agriculture by supporting the 2013 Hawaii State Farm Fair this weekend at Kualoa Ranch. SOAP will be there.
We hope you find this issue of HānaiʻAi useful, and welcome your input.
|
From the AgriBusiness Incubator
|
Cost of Production
By Steven Chiang Director, UH Agribusiness Incubator Program
In our Agribusiness Incubator Program, we have provided a variety of business consulting services to over 300 client agribusinesses over the past eight years. In our experience, finding out their Cost of Production (CoP) is an eye-opening exercise for our clients that often provides them with the confidence to raise prices and adjust their product mix, and is a key contributor to our record of almost tripling our clients' average profitability. Read here.
FMI: Steve Chiang, email: [email protected]
|
Sustainable & Organic Research & Outreach News
News from Hawaii's researchers & extension professionals |
The Nutrition Benefits of Eating Locally
Corilee Watters, UH-CTAHR
The verdict is in: local is mo'bettah! Evidence shows that locally grown produce can have a higher nutritional value than produce transported long distances. In Hawaiʻi this is especially important since imported food travels a minimum of 2,500 miles. In this article Dr. Corilee Watters highlights several compelling reasons for buying locally produced food. Read here.
FMI: Corilee Watters, email: [email protected]
Investigating the probable cause of crop decline in central Oʻahu
A.P. Pant, N.V. Hue, J. Uyeda, J. Sugano, and T. Radovich, UH-CTAHR
Vegetable growers in the central district of Oʻahu have recently faced a problem of foliage yellowing on their crops. Was it insects? Disease? Nutrients? A research and extension team from CTAHR set out to address the problem. Eliminating pests and disease as the culprit, a series of nutritional studies were conducted to solve the mystery. Want to know what they found? Read here.
FMI: Archana Pant, email: [email protected]
West Maui Coral Reef Initiative
Adam Reed and Ranae Ganske-Cerizo
USDA NRCS
The USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has dedicated funding specifically to West Maui for the implementation of water quality related conservation practices. NRCS is actively looking for agricultural producers who would be interested in improving their fertilizer management. Read here.
FMI: Adam Reed, email: [email protected];
Ranae Ganske-Cerizo, email [email protected]
Rapid Carbon Assessment comes to Hawai'i
Cynthia Stiles, USDA NRCS
Hawai'i and Alaska are the last two states in the US to collect soil carbon data for USDA-NRCS sponsored Rapid Carbon Assessment (RaCA). Soil scientists Mike Kolman and Amy Koch from the USDA-NRCS Kealakekua Soil Survey Office, along with Michelle Lazaro and Susan Crow from the University of Hawaii-Manoa, are the primary team members working this summer on soil sampling. Read here.
FMI: Cynthia Styles, email: [email protected]
|
Publications & Programs
for sustainable and organic production systems
|
NEW from CTAHR
More Great Resources
|
Organic Update
|
Local agriculture producers and consumers invited to take organic industry surveys
The Kohala Center has launched a series of online surveys aimed at soliciting input and feedback from various sectors of Hawai'i's organic food industry. The surveys are accessible online at http://www.laulimacenter.org/organic_survey.html through Friday, August 2, 2013.
- For full media release, read here.
- For more information on the Organic Industry Advisory Group, click here.
Organic Industry Advisory Group
Organic agricultural producers operating in the state of Hawai'i currently do not have a local agency or organization where they can obtain information on infrastructure, production, processing, marketing, certification, and business development. Hawai'i's existing, beginning, and transitioning organic farmers thus have limited local support. At the behest of Hawai'i's organic industry, The Kohala Center applied for USDA Specialty Crops Block Development Grant funding, through the Hawai'i Department of Agriculture, to conduct a Hawaiʻi Organic Industry Analysis and generate a final report.
Hawaii-specific Information on Organic Farming
Vilsack: Vision for U.S. Organic Agriculture
USDA will be providing new guidance on organic production to all USDA agencies in support of organic agriculture and markets. USDA is now asking each agency to address the needs of the organic sector in their programs and services. "Organic agriculture is one of the fastest growing segments of American agriculture and helps farmers receive a higher price for their product as they strive to meet growing consumer demand," said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. Read here.
|
For New Farmers
|
AgCurious?
Are you thinking of becoming a farmer? GoFarm Hawaii is launching the second round of their new farmer training program this July 9th with their AgCurious seminar. Visit their Facebook page and Website for more information.
Molokaʻi Native Hawaiian Beginning Farmer Program - Lessons Learned
The Molokaʻi Native Hawaiian Beginning Farmer Program was a three-year program whose grant period ended in August 2012. Funded by the USDA-National Institute for Food and Agriculture Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program (BFRDP), the program focused on native-Hawaiian homesteaders in Hoʻolehua, Molokaʻi. Read here.
Hawaiʻi Guide for New Farmers (Oʻahu RC&D + GoFarm Hawaii)
New Farmer Programs
New Farmer Resources at SOAP
|
Workshops | Conferences | Meetings |
Chinese Catfish Hatchery & Spawning Workshop
- July 20, 2013, Waimanalo Ag Research Station Aquaponics Lab
- 8:15 - 8:45 am Registration and Check In, 9:00 - 12:00 pm Workshop
- $25 per person, workshop limited to the first fifty registrants.
FMI: email: [email protected] Website: http://aquasustainability.com/
Hawaii Public Seed Initiative: Train the Trainers Workshop
Mealani's Taste of the Hawaiian Range and Agriculture Festival
LICH Green Industry Conference and Tradeshow
Registration is now open for the LICH Green Industry Conference and Tradeshow with a native plant theme, four concurrent breakout presentations, student research posters, tradeshow, evening social, day after native landscape bus tour, the first LICH Sustainability Awards, and a complimentary native plant poster.
4th National Women in Sustainable Ag Conference:
Cultivating Our Food, Farms and Future
|
FMI / FYI |
Hilo Grown Ag Tours
The Hawaii Agri-Tourism Association (HATA) has announced a new website to book their "Hilo Grown Ag Tours". The new website (www.hawaiiagtours.com) will allow visitors and local residents to learn more about the tours and book them well in advance of their visit to Hilo. Read here.
Horticulture Applications (Apps) for Mobile Devices (Dr. Kent Kobayashi)
The Leaflet, news from the Kohala Center
Dig Deeper: SARE Cover Crop Topic Room
SARE has funded hundreds of research and education projects related to cover crops since 1988. This topic room features only a glimpse into SARE's entire portfolio of cover crop research.
SoilWeb App available [CA Soil Resource Lab]
SoilWeb provides GPS based, real-time access to USDA-NRCS soil survey data (including Hawaii) formatted for iPhone and AndroidOs smartphones. This application retrieves the soil series (local names such as Molokai, Wahiawa, Hilo) associated with the phoneʻs current geographic location. The SoilWeb app is a portable version of the UC Davis California Soil Resource Lab's Web-based interface to identify your soil based on USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) soil surveys. It provides on-site soil series identification, soil depth, and a color picture of the soil. This app will help identify your series so you can compare broad temperature, rainfall, geology, and soils with that of other growers or locations. Interestingly, it gives the changing soil series information while riding in a car or bus.
Use this app or the Web Soil Survey to identify your soil series when submitting soil samples for analysis to CTAHR ADSC.
|
|
VIDEOS |
Hundreds Learn about Taro in Waimanalo (KITV News)
Over 250 people attended the Taro Field Day held on June 21st at The Waimanalo Research Center, which showcased CTAHR's Taro Germplasm Collection and raised awareness of the statewide Taro Security and Purity Task Force. See the agenda here. For a beautiful list of CTAHR taro pubs click here.
| Hundreds learn about taro in Waimanalo |
Under Cover Farmers [USDA NRCS ENTSC]
To conserve moisture and reduce fertilizer inputs, farmers have turned to mixes of 5 to 25 species of covercrops to produce healthy stands. Follow farmers from Stanly County, NC in Under Cover Farmers to learn how three successful agri-entrepreneurs used multispecies cover crops to "drought-proof" their soil and realize economic returns on their investment in the first year (~28 min).
| Under Cover Farmers - Feature Length |
|
Funding Opportunities |
West Maui Coral Reef Initiative
The USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has dedicated funding specifically to West Maui for the implementation of water quality related conservation practices. NRCS is actively looking for agricultural producers who would be interested in improving their fertilizer management. Read here.
WSARE Grants
Western SARE has posted all of our Calls for Proposals. These include: Farmer/Rancher, Professional Development Program, and Professional + Producer. Descriptions of each type of grant with a link to the specific Call can be found at http://www.westernsare.org/Grants/Types-of-Grants.
USEPA Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) - Phase 1
|
Western Region Sustainable Agriculture and Education Program (WSARE)
|
Strengthening Agriculture's Infrastructure Conference
Since 1988, the WSARE program has been supporting agricultural profitability, environmental integrity and community strength through grants that enable cutting-edge research and education to open windows on sustainability across the West, including Hawai'i. The goals of WSARE are:
- Promote good stewardship of our natural resources.
- Enhance the quality of life of farmers and ranchers and ensure the viability of rural communities.
- Protect the health and safety of those involved in food and farm systems.
- Promote crop, livestock and enterprise diversification.
- Examine the regional, economic, social and environmental implications of adopting sustainable agriculture practices and systems.
|
This e-publication has been prepared by CTAHR research scientists and extension staff to deliver science-based information about sustainable and organic production systems to serve Hawaii's farming community.
- To continue receiving this newsletter, please confirm your interest by updating your profile/email address (see link below).
- If this publication has been valuable, please forward it to others.
- Send in your suggestions for what you want to read about in our articles.
- Tell us about your research needs.
Mahalo nui loa,
Jody Smith, e-Extension Manager Sustainable and Organic Agriculture Program Cooperative Extension Service College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources
On-line version of newsletter available at
|
|
|
| Featured Farmer: Ann and Owen Kaneshiro Kane Farm, Waiʻanae, Oʻahu |
Area under production: 30 acres
Years farming in Hawaiʻi: 33 years (1980)
Crops grown/ products/ services:
Manoa lettuce, kai choy, pak choi, daikon, kale, beets, mizuna, radish
Number of employees: 17 employees and 2 family members.
Read the full article here.
Mahalo nui loa to Ann and Owen Kaneshiro for this interview.
|
| HOT TIP from Kane Farm | The ability to work very hard (7 days a week), but also to strive for perfection if possible. And to never be satisfied, there's always room for improvement!
|
|
|