Good Fruit Grower

March 2012

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Avoid the Orchard of No Return Replant disease can take the profit out of any orchard. Soil fumigation services offered by Trident manage replant disease and other soil-borne pathogens. Trident offers custom applications of Telone® C17, Telone C35, and Pic-Clor 60. QUICK BITES Read more Quick Bites at www.goodfruit.com. Conserve energy G rowers who want to conserve energy on their farms can obtain financial and technical assistance from the federal Environmental Quality Incentives Program. The program is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service. The NRCS works with producers to develop Agricul- tural Energy Management Plans or farm audits to assess current energy consumption. Then, it uses audit data to • Row and broadcast applications available • Specializing in tree fruit, hops, grape, berry, and nursery crops Telone® II, Telone C-17, and Telone C-35 are registered trademarks of Dow AgroSciences LLC. Telone II, Telone C-17, Telone C-35, and Pic-Clor 60 are restricted-use pesticides. develop recommendations on how to save energy. An energy management consultant will work with producers using a new energy assessment tool to help evaluate options and identify potential energy savings on each operation. Applications can be submitted at any time and will be evaluated periodically as funding becomes available. Contact your local NRCS office, or check the Web site www.wa.nrcs.usda.gov. New plant hardiness map T Soil Fumigation Specialists Serving the Northwest for 27 years orchardfumigation@tridentag.com NORTHWEST, WA: Tim Purcell..........Mobile 360-630-4285 EASTERN WASHINGTON: Robert Rauert....Mobile 509-728-2004 EASTERN WASHINGTON: Jason Rainer.......Mobile 509-731-5424 THE DALLES & HOOD RIVER, OR: David Sbur ..........Mobile 971-563-8848 he U.S. Department of Agriculture has released a new version of its plant hardiness zone map, updating the zones and maps for the first time since 1990. The new map is more accurate and Internet friendly, and includes two new zones. It was developed jointly by USDA's Agricultural Research Service and Oregon State University and offers a Geographic Information System-based interactive format, incor- porating a "find your ZIP code" function. Zones 12 (50-60°F) and 13 (60-70°F) are newly added. Plant hardiness zone designations represent the average annual extreme minimum temperatures at a given location during a particular time period. Hardiness zones are useful to growers, gardeners, researchers, and USDA's Risk Management Agency in setting crop insurance standards. The new map uses weather station data from 1976–2005 and greater mapping accuracy, especially in mountainous regions of the western United States. Download the map atwww.planthardiness.ars.usda.gov. Oppenheimer expands starting this season. Blue Mountain produces fruit in the Grande Ronde Valley of Oregon and in Washington's A Walla Walla Valley and Columbia Basin. The partnership with Blue Mountain adds critical mass to Oppenheimer's Pacific Northwest offerings. John Anderson, president of Oppenheimer, said in a press release that varieties include Jazz, Pacific Rose, and Envy apples grown throughout eastern Washington, and cherries from Orchard View Farms in The Dalles, Oregon. For information, go to www.bluemountaingrowers.com. 38 MARCH 1, 2012 GOOD FRUIT GROWER www.goodfruit.com pples, cherries, plums, and Italian plums packed by Blue Mountain Growers, Inc., of Milton-Freewater, Oregon, will be marketed exclusively by The Oppenheimer Group

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