Mini ‘crop copter’ could be godsend for citrus growers, farmers, says UF professor

 

By Martin E. Comas, ORLANDO SENTINEL

6:15 p.m. EDT, July 24, 2011

LAKE ALFRED — The small black-and-white device with rotating blades at the end of six arms looks like an alien spaceship from a science-fiction movie.

But this contraption is no fantasy for citrus growers. It quietly shoots straight up into the air, zips toward an orange grove and then hovers hundreds of feet above the trees, sounding much like a distant swarm of bees.

On the ground is Reza Ehsani, an associate professor of agricultural and biological engineering at the University of Florida, holding a small electronic box that looks like a mini iPad he uses to control the “crop copter.” Ehsani and his team of researchers from UF’s Citrus Research and Education Center built the flying machine, about 2 feet wide and weighing 3 pounds. On board is a camera that can capture a variety of images of a citrus field from as high as 1,000 yards.

Ehsani and citrus experts say their crop copter is the latest in cutting-edge technology that citrus farmers could one day use to gather data on their crops in a cheap and quick way, including checking to see if plants are affected by pests and diseases, taking inventory and monitoring irrigation systems. In Central Florida, the copter could be a boon for citrus growers trying to spot citrus greening, a disease that attacks and kills trees and is currently wreaking havoc on Florida’s $9 billion-a-year citrus industry, Ehsani said.

“I absolutely think this is the way of the future” in agriculture, Ehsani said. “This is a valuable tool to collect data cheaply.”

Typically, large growers pay “scouts” to drive up and down rows of citrus trees to take inventory and check on the health of each tree by looking at it from top to bottom. That can be time consuming and cost up to $100 per acre in some cases.

“You could spend three-fourths of a day doing that,” said Nick Faryna of Faryna Grove Care & Harvesting, which manages about 1,800 acres of citrus in north Lake County. “And you could spend several days if you’re looking for greening …. It’s expensive when you start paying people to ride every row. You’re using a lot of resources and time.”

Large growers also hire private pilots to fly above their groves to photograph and collect data. That can cost several thousand dollars a pop.

‘Looking for ways to cut costs’

There are already a variety of other small remote-controlled flying machines — or unmanned aerial vehicles — used to capture images and data, including for urban planning, real estate and infrastructure surveying. Even the U.S. military uses drones piloted remotely for reconnaissance and attack missions.

But Ehsani’s device, along with the software his team is developing, is designed strictly for agricultural applications. And the team has already received calls from growers and companies from around the country showing an interest in his crop copter. The university’s center would then sell the research to a private company or investor.

“Our goal is to develop applications for growers and agriculture,” Ehsani said.

Though the copter is still in its early stages, it could one day become a godsend for growers and farmers, Faryna said. “It quite possibly could develop into an important scouting tool,” he said.

The crop copter shows how the agricultural industry is always looking into the latest in high-tech gadgets to improve production, said Lisa Lochridge of the Maitland-based Florida Fruit & Vegetable Association.

“Growers are more and more looking for ways to cut costs, be more efficient and get higher yields, especially in today’s economy,” she said.

Ehsani recently tested his copter at an oil-palm plantation in Malaysia, where trees can grow higher than 20 feet. That makes it difficult for scouts on the ground to gather data, especially in the warm and humid climate.

“If you’re trying to monitor your trees for a disease on a fixed timetable, then it becomes very expensive,” Ehsani said.

Changing face of farming

On the market, Ehsani said his mini-helicopter would cost about $10,000 but could run as high as $20,000 for “all the bells and whistles,” including one able to carry several cameras and longer-lasting batteries.

In the air it snaps pictures of a grove’s zones using a high-resolution camera and imaging sensors. When the crop copter returns, Ehsani and his team use the images to look at tree canopies, identify irrigation and drainage problems and check soil conditions. The device also can be used to estimate harvesting yields.

Ehsani keeps it at an altitude of about 400 feet because of Federal Aviation Administration regulations. Unlike remote-controlled airplanes or balloons tethered to a line, which growers have experimented with in the past, the copter can hover in place at a defined altitude.

“We wanted something that could go to a specific height location and stay there,” Ehsani said.

A grower or farmer can learn how to use the copter within a day, according to Ehsani. He and his team are now looking into a model that can be recharged in the air through a laser-beam shot from the ground.

It’s still too early to tell, but the mini-helicopter by Ehsani’s team could be the latest in modern gadgets and software that are changing the face of farming, said Chris Oswalt, commercial citrus extension agent for UF’s cooperative extension service in Polk and Hillsborough counties.

“We’re not farming like we did 10 years or even five years ago,” Oswalt said.

Small U.S. Farms Find Profit in Tourism


By WILLIAM NEUMAN
Published: June 9, 2011

SANTA MARGARITA, Calif. — For all the talk about sustainable agriculture, most small farms are not self-sustaining in a very basic sense: they can’t make ends meet financially without relying on income from jobs off the farm.

But increasingly farmers are eking more money out of the land in ways beyond the traditional route of planting crops and raising livestock. Some have opened bed-and-breakfasts, often known as farm stays, that draw guests eager to get a taste of rural living. Others operate corn mazes — now jazzed up with modern fillips like maps on cellphones — that often turn into seasonal amusements, with rope courses and zip lines. Ranchers open their land to hunters or bring in guests to ride horses, dude ranch style.

Known as agritourism, such activities are becoming an important economic boost for many farmers.

Early each morning, Jim Maguire milks the sheep and goats and feeds the pigs on his small dairy farm here before heading off to his day job as a public defender in San Luis Obispo County. His wife, Christine, makes cheese and tends the animals.

But in recent years, Ms. Maguire has added some new chores: changing linens and serving food to the guests who stay at Rinconada Dairy’s two bed-and-breakfast units, one in a private wing of the farmhouse and the other in a remodeled corner of a barn. Money from the paying guests is now enough to pay for the animals’ feed, one of the farm’s biggest expenditures.

“The whole idea is to get the farm in a productive state so that it carries itself, so that it pays its own way,” Mr. Maguire said early on a recent morning as he watched sheep file onto the raised stainless steel platform of an automatic milking machine. “The farm stay is an important economic portion of that.”

The United States Department of Agriculture predicts that this year the average farm household will get only about 13 percent of its income from farm sources. Agritourism is appealing because it increases the family’s income from the farm, potentially reducing the need for off-farm jobs.

The U.S.D.A.’s census of agriculture, which is conducted every five years, estimated that 23,000 farms offered agritourism activities in 2007, bringing in an average of $24,300 each in additional income. The number of farms taking part fell from the previous census, in 2002, but at that time the average agritourism income per farm was just $7,200.

California, the nation’s largest farm state, was among the leaders in agritourism, according to the census, with nearly 700 farms averaging more than $50,000 in agritourism income.

The agritourism movement is fueled by city dwellers who want to understand where their food comes from or who feel an urge to embrace the country life.

Scottie Jones, who raises sheep and runs a farm stay in Alsea, Ore., received $42,000 in U.S.D.A. grants to start a Web site, Farm Stay U.S., which maintains a listing of farm stays around the country. The site began last June and now includes more than 900 farms and ranches, with about 20 listings added each month.

World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms acts as an online clearinghouse for people who want to trade labor for lodging on a farm, with stays ranging from days to months. Ryan Goldsmith, who manages the group’s branch in the United States, said that interest had grown strongly. Currently more than 11,600 people are registered as members of the American branch, with access to a database of about 1,300 farms, in all 50 states.

Even the corn maze, a staple of rural tourism for decades, is becoming more popular.

Brett Herbst, the owner of The Maize, a Utah company that designs and creates corn mazes, estimated there were more than 1,000 mazes around the country each year, from simple versions to complex behemoths that include games for visitors, with clues delivered by text message. His company expects to build about 220 mazes in the United States this year, about 20 more than last year. Ten years ago he created about 130 mazes.

“It’s virtually impossible to make a living just off traditional farming on a small farm,” said Mr. Herbst. “This really provides an opportunity to keep the land, keep a family farm existent, even amongst urbanization, and allows someone to depend less on an outside job for their income.”

Still, there are hurdles. For example, many farmers complained about insurance costs, which rise with the number of farm visitors.

For years, Christine Cole has charged for tours of her farm, in Sebastopol, Calif., where she keeps horses, raises vegetables and chickens and has three farm stay units.

At the end of April, her insurance carrier dropped her, although she said she had made no major claims. She began looking for new insurance, she said, but was repeatedly turned down. She said insurers seemed unwilling to cover the broad range of activities on her farm. Finally, she found a policy that cost her almost $9,000 a year, about triple the cost of her previous coverage.

“That is more than 10 percent of my income,” Ms. Cole said. “I broke down and cried.”

Some states have acted to make it easier for farmers. Next month, a new law will go into effect in Indiana to limit the liability of farmers when someone is injured on their property while participating in agritourism activities.

Although many farmers said they enjoyed the city-country interaction at the heart of agritourism, it takes a particular type to pull it off.

“If you’re not a people person, forget it,” said Vince Gizdich, who runs Gizdich Ranch, in Watsonville, which includes a “Pik-Yor-Self” operation with berries and apples. The ranch also has a farm stand and a pie shop. As Mr. Gizdich talked with a reporter on a recent afternoon, he was interrupted repeatedly by people popping into the shop or customers calling to ask when his boysenberries and olallieberries would be ripe.

Bonnie Swank, of Hollister, Calif., runs a corn maze and haunted house each fall on land that grows vegetables the rest of the year. At a recent agritourism workshop for farmers sponsored by the university extension service, she explained the extensive planning that goes into the annual six-week extravaganza, which can draw up to 30,000 people and brings in about a quarter of the farm’s annual revenue.

“People look at what we’re doing and they say, ‘We could do that and make a lot of money,’” she said. “It’s not that easy.”

Kim A. Rogers understands the hard work. For seven years, she and her husband ran a farm and orchard in Templeton, Calif., along with a busy bed and breakfast.

Finally she had an epiphany: farming was exhausting work and the bed-and-breakfast was providing an increasing portion of their income. So last year she and her husband pulled up their 700 fruit trees and became full-time innkeepers, with a cottage and a bungalow that rent for $150 to $285 a night.

They still have a few sheep, hens and a large vegetable garden — enough to maintain the farm feel.

“A lot of people just want that rural farm experience,” she said.

Citrus industry is healthy

By GARY PINNELL

Highlands Today

Published: May 13, 2011

SEBRING – In 2006, the late Mason Smoak was driving by his family groves and spotted a yellow shoot of leaves among citrus trees that are normally dark green. It was where an Asian citrus psyllid had laid her eggs.

That was big news at the time, because it was among the first discoveries of greening disease in Highlands County.

Five years later, the big news is that citrus growers are now certain their industry will survive and do well, said Raymond Royce, executive director of Highlands County Citrus Growers Association.

“Greening was a game changer,” Royce said, “but growers have stepped up collectively to fight the disease, and collectively they have funded $12 million in research.”

Statewide, growers have funded $50 million, and last week, the Florida Legislature appropriated another $2 million.

A cure for greening hasn’t been found, but University of Florida scientists have developed treatments to kill psyllids – tan, grasshopper shaped bugs 1/8 of an inch long that feed on citrus leaves.

“There are a number of heroes,” Royce said. “A lot of credit goes to the scientists, but the other heroes are the growers themselves, paying a 25-cent tax on every box of fruit. And they are working together to fight this. They are saying, ‘I can’t do this like my father and my grandfather did it.’”

If one grower sprays one week, and his neighbor sprays three weeks later, psyllids simply move across the road. Royce said growers are coordinating their spraying to the two-week egg cycle of the psyllid.

“That dramatically reduces the population,” Royce said. New equipment reduces the size of the insecticide droplet. Growers are spraying more often, but using less chemicals. An alternative treatment – ladybug beetles, wasps and spiders, which eat psyllids and nymphs.

Prices

Florida groves are expected to produce 140 million boxes of fruit, according to a May 11 USDA estimate. That’s better than last year’s 133.7 million boxes, but only 40 percent of the 1997-98 bumper crop of 244,000 boxes.

Highlands produced about 20 million boxes in 2009-10, or about 15 percent of the state crop.

“We understand there has been a little more fruit drop and smaller sizes than initially expected,” said Michael W. Sparks, CEO of Florida Citrus Mutual. “This is still a quality crop and I think we came through the cold weather earlier this year better than expected.”

Cold weather and greening affected Florida’s east coast more than the central region, Royce said. The problem here was dry weather, which caused trees to drop some of their fruit before it matured, and decreased the size of fruit – and therefore won’t produce as much juice.

“Growers can get pretty good prices for their fruit today,” Royce said. “Of course, it costs more than to produce that crop. Fuel and fertilizer and chemicals are higher than ever.”

“The industry, though, is very healthy, for people that are approaching it in a professional, businesslike manner. It’s harder for the guy with one, small, 20-acre grove, who does it half heartedly, who’s taking minimal care of his grove.”

Citrus future looks bright

 

 

Economist tells commissioners next decade viable

By JEFF ROSLOW
Editor
Published:

Wednesday, March 23, 2011 10:05 AM EDT

The next 10 years of citrus production from the United States looks pretty good, Mark Brown told the Florida Citrus Commission last week.

Appearing before the commission at its monthly meeting Wednesday, March 16, Brown summarized during his production report that, “It’s difficult to predict anything with HLB, but Florida citrus production can be maintained at a viable level. The further we’re looking into this there is a good chance for disease control and that could be a game changer.”

HLB is another term for citrus greening. It was first discovered in Florida in the summer of 2005 and is now present in 34 citrus-producing counties in the state.

Brown told commissioners the number of orange trees in Florida peaked in the 1990s at 80 million and now there are 58.3 million. Among the grapefruit trees there is a similar situation as the high of 8.4 million trees dropped to 4.8 million.

He said the loss rates over the last decade was about 10 percent with the HLB disease along with canker problems and the hurricanes that came through Florida in the last six or seven years.

“Despite the dire side of (HLB) disease there is hope, we believe, significant hope on controlling HLB,” he said. “The ultimate goal is to grow a disease-tolerant tree but that will take some time. These insects are a major focus of our research and it has been effective in some areas.”

Brown showed commissioners a chart showing how many boxes Florida can expect in the next decade. He maintained that 140 millions boxes can be maintained with a drop of 4 to 5 million in the next five years, but “we think the top (of the high-low) chart is more likely where we’ll end up,” he said.

“Based on the average yields we could be as high as 160 million boxes,” he said.

In grapefruit he said the more likely scenarios would be in the 17-19 million box range.

“Higher productions are more likely,” he said.

Robert Behr, commission member who represents Polk among other counties, asked if his predictions took into account Brazil’s production and how it would impact the U.S. over the next decade.

“Their production trend over the last decade has fallen off quite significantly,” Brown said. “They formerly shipped about 350 million boxes and have dropped to 300 million and less in the latest I’ve seen.”

He said Brazil does have more options than the U.S. because it has more plant to plant citrus, but he doesn’t know exactly what they’re going to.

“I don’t have an exact number,” he said. “But they are continuing to have a tight supply situation.”

When asked if his predictions were based on acreage or trees as there has been a great tree loss in Florida, Brown said he used tree production on predictions and based it on a yield per acre on trees.

“We’re using acres but using a combination,” he said. “We moved to that because of the high density.”

Deputy Executive Director of Research and Operations Robert Norberg said the loss rates and replanting were the two biggest parts of the equation. The losses are outstripping the ability to replant, he said, referring to the periods of canker, the effects of the hurricanes and the HLB disease.

“It put us behind the eight ball when we eradicated” millions of trees.