This pdf on the crop alternatives site may help you with a small orchard. ON our state you cannot have a profitable peach orchard if you buying land for more than $8,000 per acre.
http://agalternatives.aers.psu.edu/Publications/peachprod.pdf Jerome L. "Jerry" Frecon Agricultural Agent I (Professor 1) Gloucester County Extension Department Head Cooperative Extension, Gloucester County 1200 North Delsea Drive, Clayton, N.J. 08312 Phone 856 307-6450 Ext 1 Fax 856 307-6476 http://gloucester.njaes.rutgers.edu -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mark Angermayer Sent: Monday, March 21, 2011 11:02 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [apple-crop] Peach orchard We currently have what I call a micro orchard of mostly peaches. The planting is on basically 3/4 of an acre. I sell part time to a farmers market and at roadside. Demand is excellent in this area for local peaches. Farmer's markets do a brisk volume and there is only one other peach grower of any significance in the immediate area. We've been looking for some land to start a "real" orchard. We've found some land for sale that we are considering making an offer on and have some questions before we do anything. Here are a few for starters. In terms of the economics, what is a reasonable price/acre to pay for land and make a reasonable return selling most the crop retail? The land is 7 miles away from my home. Is this too far? Are there others out there who successfully manage orchards off their home site? What are some of the problems associated with having an orchard several miles away? I'd appreciate any comments in this regard. Thanks, Mark Angermayer Tubby Fruits _______________________________________________ apple-crop mailing list [email protected] http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop _______________________________________________ apple-crop mailing list [email protected] http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop
