Tag Archives: Virginia State University

Filling a Niche with Fruits and Vegetables

Reza Rafie, Extension specialist at Virginia State University, discusses locally-grown produce with a Whole Foods employee. Rafie is working to connect producers with local outlets for their products.

Reza Rafie knows there is money to be made in the specialty fruit and vegetable crops arena – and he wants farmers to know it, too.

Reza Rafie, Extension specialist at Virginia State University, discusses locally-grown produce with a Whole Foods employee. Rafie is working to connect producers with local outlets for their products.

Rafie, commercial vegetable Extension specialist at Virginia State University (VSU), has been working for two years to grow and market unusual produce in what he calls a “niche” agriculture effort.

“It’s a different way of thinking about agriculture,” Rafie says. “I help farmers look at it this way: they’re not growing a ‘crop’; they’re growing ‘food.’ That opens up a lot of possibilities if they are willing to explore niche markets and adapt what they are growing to suit today’s buyers and new trends.”

Consumers today are more interested in locally grown produce and in the nutritional value of the foods they eat. Additionally, as the population of Hispanic, Asian, and Middle Eastern natives in the United States continues to grow, more people are looking for fruits and vegetables that are important to their culture and traditions – which may not be available in typical American grocery stores. Read the full story in Solutions.

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Farmers See Profits Blossom with Cut Flowers

Yellow flowers.Delphinium, lisianthus, celosia, and rudbeckia are not familiar words to most Virginia farmers. However, for a group of growers experimenting with cut flower production, these flowers and others represent a new source of revenue.

“Virginia consumers buy millions of dollars of fresh-cut flowers each year, but more than 90 percent of them are grown outside the state,” says Andy Hankins, Extension specialist in alternative agriculture at Virginia State University (VSU). “Standard cut flowers, such as roses, chrysanthemums, and carnations can be grown outside the U.S. and shipped in because they last a long time after cutting. However, there are more than 200 other species of flowers regularly sold in floral markets that do not have a long enough shelf life to ship long distances. Virginia growers have an opportunity to fill this demand.” Read the full story in Solutions.

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