Fruits
Speed kills, but not when it comes to airblast spraying. Here’s how to ensure your sprayer gets the job done without pesticide, fuel waste.
Learn more about a new biological technology that develops and multiplies disease-resistant citrus plants using “hairy roots.”
This year’s crop is expected to rebound from the small 2022 crop by nearly 30%.
Universities team to develop a sprayable mulch suitable for organic production.
Study indicates rootstocks matter — some more than others, like B.10 rootstock — in the control of troublesome disorder.
You can work with your crop consultant and other financial experts to help firm up variables that affect your ability to earn a return.
Report from Organic Produce Network suggests that inflation is not as apparent in organic produce as it was in conventional produce this past quarter.
Fighting fire with fire, study reveals how fungus delivers RNA weaponry.
Farmers’ Almanac is predicting the return of a more traditional winter weather season. See what that means.
American Fruit Grower Editor Tom Skernivitz curates a few hot takes from Kenny Barnwell, the 2023 Apple Grower of the Year.
Five-year strategy developed by Spotted Lanternfly Strategic Planning Working Group to combat invasive pest by limiting its march West.
Studies have shown ‘weeping’ architecture — branches growing downward — helps allocate more resources and other nutrients toward reproductive growth.
Adoption of biological crop protection is taking off big time around the world; and yet, there is still room for more growth.
Ensuing Tau fruit fly quarantine is the first ever in Western Hemisphere.
Here are the most prominent technologies making strides in agriculture and saving farms by protecting harvest production and profit margins.
Though popular in many parts of the world, apples hold a special place in the hearts of Americans.
Even wine grape growers who report no shortage of labor say they’re paying through the nose.
Too bad more of the residue from California’s bountiful winter can’t be stored.
The era of HLB has some thinking about alternative crops.