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US (NY): Ginger identified as high value-potential crop

The farmer-driven Northern New York Agricultural Development Program has released the results of field trials indicating that fresh market baby ginger produced by regional growers can sell for four times the price of conventional ginger sold in stores.

But should every grower start planting ginger?

The market potential of ginger as a season extension and profit builder for Northern New York growers was evaluated as part of the Advancing Season Extension and Protected Culture Efficiency Project funded by the farmer-driven research program. The project also included enterprise budgeting for growing the high-value alternative high-tunnel crops of ginger, turmeric, summer lettuce and basil.

The term protected culture refers to the use of high tunnel and greenhouse structures that allow growers to better manage the impact of such elements as temperature, humidity, light and moisture.

Six growers: one each in Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Jefferson, Lewis and St. Lawrence counties at farms in Carthage, Glenfield, Malone, Peru, Potsdam and Willsboro hosted field trials for the project.


Ginger freshly harvested on a Northern New York farm as part of a season extension project funded by the farmer-driven Northern New York Agricultural Development Program. Photo: Amy Ivy.

A project survey evaluated market opportunities for Northern New York-grown ginger. Some farms in the six-county region currently grow ginger on a small scale for community supported agriculture or farmer’s market sales.

‘Buyers indicated they enjoy the pleasant, light and surprisingly fresh taste of the Northern New York-grown ginger. Small volume, high margin ginger sales for fresh market sales appear feasible for farmers with high tunnel or greenhouse structures,’ said Cornell Cooperative Extension regional marketing specialist Bob Weybright, who conducted the survey.

However, Weybright states in the project results not available on the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program website that the limited survey and the noted high return income opportunity do not necessarily support large-scale production expansion without evaluating value-added processing costs to extend crop value beyond the short fresh harvest window.

This project responded to grower-identified needs and opportunities related to extending the growing and sales seasons in Northern New York and draws on previous projects identified by the farmer leaders of the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program to help growers maximize productivity and profitability.

For more information:
www.nnyagdev.org
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