Archive for the ‘Soft Fruit (outdoor)’ Category

Blackcurrants top new research

UK companies are considering upping the ante on the blackcurrant offer after it emerged as the champion in new health research which saw darker fruits leading the way.

A new study from the Scottish Crop Research Institute (SCRI) conducted in-depth research to analyse an array of fruits and declared blackcurrants as a ‘superfruit’.

Results highlighted that fruits with a deep colour perform particularly well – the darker the fruit the higher the anthocyanin content, meaning it had the most powerful antioxidants.

The news comes ahead of the UK blackcurrant season, which runs from July through to August. Consumers, caterers and retailers can often find it difficult to easily locate the fruit, favouring imports from Poland and eastern Europe.

With the currency issues continuing to dog the UK import market, the home-grown offer is looking more attractive and Treelinks Ingredients, in conjunction with AJ & CI Snell, has come up with a new marketing initiative.

It will be marketing frozen English blackcurrants as they will be individually quick frozen (IQF) and can be ordered in quantities of 12kg upwards.

The fruits are grown, managed, harvested, frozen and processed in Herefordshire and will then be sold and distributed via Treelinks.

Yellow rust on increase in raspberry crops

An estimated 20 per cent of raspberry crops are infected with yellow rust.

If left untreated it will lead to blossom and fruit damage and defoliation, the latter reducing next year’s yields, ADAS berry fruit specialist Janet Allen has warned.

Allen said the disease has become more prevalent in recent years, probably due to climate change. Milder winters and wetter summers and autumns favour its development and spread. Most varieties are susceptible to infection, particularly, Polka, Tulameen, Glen Ample and Joan Squire.

Raspberry yellow rust is unusual in having just one host. Its spores overwinter on the new cane of summer-fruiting varieties and the old cane stubs of autumn-fruiting types, Allen explained.

In the spring, new spores infect the lower leaves of both types and, unless it is well controlled, the disease will spread out on the plants and onto the flower stalks, sepals and fruit.

Outdoor and polytunnel raspberries are equally susceptible to yellow rust, Allen added. Conditions in tunnels, including high temperatures and relative humidity and lack of air movement due to the dense crop canopy, are ideal for spore multiplication and spread.

She advised growers to apply a fungicide at the first sign of attack, displayed as slightly raised, bright orange spots on the tops of the leaves. Crops should be regularly monitored for infection.

Fortunately, growers have a good armoury of fungicides with activity against the disease, she said. They include Amistar, Corbel, Systhane, Folicur and Signum, which can be used on outdoor or protected crops or both.

“If infection is serious, one or two pre-harvest sprays and two or three post-harvest will be necessary,” Allen recommended.

Strong winds at times during May have caused damage to outdoor summer-fruiting raspberries, particularly those on less-sheltered sites, she reported.

Octavia was the hardest hit, with the older foliage turning yellow and necrotic, and even dying. In addition, in some cases the lower bud break had been poor and only the laterals at the tops of the fruiting cane were growing well.

Morrisons strawberry sales rocket

Sales of UK strawberries at Morrisons are up 50 per cent on last year and are showing no signs of slowing down, with experts predicting a further rise of 10 per cent by the end of June.

Morrisons is stocking 100 per cent British strawberries during their season from May until September each year and expects a peak during Wimbledon fortnight, starting next week.

Glen Cooper, strawberry buyer for Morrisons, said: “Our customers just can’t get enough of this summer fruit. Sales of strawberries go through the roof in the weeks leading up to Wimbledon, so we will be stocking up to meet demand.”

The retailer is promoting the fruit at ‘£1.80 – Better than half price’ until June 28

Soft-fruit SOLA gains approval

A new abamectin insecticide is now available for growers, targeting Two-Spotted Spider Mite and Western Flower Thrip in a range of vegetables and soft fruit.

The launch of Acaramik by global crop protection firm Rotam adds an alternative abamectin product to the market.

As well as its benefits in ornamental crop production, Acaramik has several farmer-applied Specific Off-Label Approvals (SOLAs) for use in strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, lambs lettuce and baby leaf production, tomatoes, peppers, aubergines and herbs.

The product provides residual control of the Two-Spotted Spider Mite and Western Flower Thrip on both the upper and lower surface of the leaves, penetrating the leaf to reach all surfaces and ensuring quick immobilisation of the pest when it ingests it.

Similarly, for effective control of Western Flower Thrip, Acaramik is applied as soon as the first nymphs are seen in the crop – a programme of two or three sprays should be applied seven days apart to ensure control.

Trevor Smith, Rotam’s sales and marketing manager for the UK and northern Europe, said: “We anticipate that Acaramik will play an important role in protection of ornamentals and soft fruits in particular – strawberry, raspberry and blackberry crops.

“For Two-Spotted Spider Mite control, growers should apply Acaramik as soon as mites are seen, preferably before leaf damage or ‘webbing’ occurs. A repeat application can be made seven days later if needed, but our advice is to avoid making more than two sequential applications without changing to a product with a different mode of action.

“It can be used all year round and there is no restriction on the number of treatments for thrip, however, if there is a persistent problem it is good practice to rotate Acaramik with other products that have different modes of action for thrip control.”

Co-operative Farms buys Gowrie Growers site for strawberry-packing operation

Co-operative Farms has bought a site at Longforgan near Dundee as part of a splurge to build a new strawberry-packing plant.

It bought the site from Gowrie Growers and installed high-tech kit to pack locally grown strawberries for sale throughout the UK.

Co-operative Farms, part of The Co-op Group, is the UK’s largest farm company and grows food for the chain’s Grown by Us range.

Strawberries grown at Blairgowrie will be trucked to Longforgan where they will be checked, weighed, sorted and packed before being distributed.

Co-op eventually plans to use the kit to pack Grown by Us broccoli. It also has farms in Aberdeenshire and Berwickshire, and a potato-packing unit, also near Dundee.

Co-operative Farms head of vegetable operations Rob Hull said: “Longforgan will help us get fresh strawberries into our shops and to customers as efficiently as possible.”