(Even
though this study is in Texas, it still offers good ideas for small and
beginning farmers in Missouri.)
Video of Dr. Luis Ribera on
economics of growing organic vegetables on small-acreage plots.
Growing
organic vegetables on small plots of land in South Texas can be profitable,
according to a feasibility study recently concluded at the Texas AgriLife
Research and Extension Center at Weslaco.
A recent study shows growing organic vegetables on small-acreage plots in South Texas can be profitable. (AgriLife Communications photo by Rod Santa Ana |
Until
now, there had been no studies on the economic feasibility of small-scale
production, according to Dr. Luis Ribera, a Texas AgriLife Extension Service
agricultural economist who helped conduct the study.
“We’ve
always had all kinds of data on large-scale, commercial production of crops
here, but until now we just didn’t have any numbers to offer people wanting to
know how much money they could make on a 1- or 2-acre plot,” Ribera said.
Ribera
said the interest in growing organic vegetables on small plots here has grown
in recent years.
“What we
found, bottom line, is that organic vegetable production on a small plot of
land can be profitable,” he said. “It’s a lot of work, but one family can earn
a $45,000 annual salary on a 3-acre plot.”
To come
up with those numbers, Ribera and his colleagues put together a panel of three
local producers with experience in small acreage vegetable production, he said.
They then created a representative or model 3-acre organic vegetable farm.
“We based
the study on a 3-acre plot producing a wide variety of organic vegetables and
selling them to three different outlets: a farmers market, local restaurants
and a
CSA, or
community supported agriculture program,” he said.
The
community supported agriculture program in the study has 100 customers who each
pay a fee for the supply of farm-fresh produce throughout the growing season,
from late November through early June, Ribera said.
“There’s
obviously a lot of work involved in preparing the land, planting, growing the
crop and harvesting in such a way that produce is available throughout those
six to seven months,” he said.
What the
study found was that such an operation can take in gross returns of $60,000 to
$65,000, Ribera said. Expenses, which include everything from labor, seed and
water to delivery bags, electricity and fuel, total about one-third, or
$20,000.
“That
leaves a net cash return of $40,000 to $45,000,” he said. “So, obviously, it is
feasible to create a profitable business on a relatively small parcel of land,
provided the customers, especially the CSA, are there. But it is a lot of work
and a lot of planning, based on what our three producers told us.”
The work
involved growing 30 to 50 different vegetable crops that were partially
harvested and replanted every two weeks to keep up with demand.
“Throughout
the project we worked with small-acreage producers in workshops on production,
food safety, government funding, business planning and marketing,” Ribera said.
The work
can be tedious, “but if you enjoy growing vegetables and talking with
customers, you can make a living out of it,” he said.
“It’s not
like planting 50 acres of onions, growing them, then harvesting for sale to one
buyer,” Ribera said. “It is very hard work and detail intensive, but based on
the input of our three growers in the study, it can be done. Growing organic
vegetables on small plots of land in the Lower Rio Grande Valley can be
profitable. And now we have the numbers to prove it.”
The
feasibility study was done with a grant from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture. A
publication of the study, “Economic feasibility of a small acreage organic
vegetable farm in South Texas,” can be found online.
No comments:
Post a Comment