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Louisiana: Armenian Produce Growers Visit LSU AgCenter

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  • Louisiana: Armenian Produce Growers Visit LSU AgCenter

    LOUISIANA: ARMENIAN PRODUCE GROWERS VISIT LSU AGCENTER

    US Official News
    April 2, 2015 Thursday

    Baton Rouge

    LSU AgCenter, The state of Louisiana has issued the following news
    release:

    Five Armenian farmers and food processors are visiting Louisiana this
    week (March 30-April 4) as part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
    Cochran Fellowship Program, which provides short-term training to
    agriculture professionals from middle-income countries.

    The visitors have been touring Louisiana fruit and vegetable farms and
    attending workshops taught by LSU AgCenter faculty members on topics
    including pruning techniques, drip irrigation and cold-storage systems.

    "The whole purpose is to expose the Armenian growers to applicable
    technologies that we use here for small family farms in Louisiana
    for the betterment of their livelihoods in rural Armenia," said David
    Picha, director of AgCenter International Programs. "There are a lot
    of appropriate applicable technologies that made our small farmers
    strong that we would like to share with the growers to uplift their
    rural sector."

    The visiting Cochran fellows grow and process crops such as figs,
    persimmons and pomegranates. In Louisiana, they've seen strawberry
    farms - which are in full swing now - and are interested in starting
    berry production in Armenia, Picha said. That could help them diversify
    their income and make use of land they don't currently use.

    "Most of their income is received in two or three months, and they
    must do their planning in the first three months for the whole year,"
    said Smbat Grigoryan, the group's translator. "Berry production can
    get them income in other months."

    Picha said shifting from low-value grain crops to specialty crops
    like berries could boost the Armenian economy.

    "We're focusing on high-value horticulture crops, which are more
    applicable to small-scale family farms," Picha said. "You can
    make a lot of money on fruit and vegetable production and their
    value-added products - dried fruits, juices, jams - for local and
    regional markets."

    The Armenians said they plan to share the information they're learning
    in the U.S. when they return home, where agriculture is very different,
    and farms are much smaller. They visited a several-hundred-acre farm
    in Louisiana, but the largest farm in their region of Armenia is
    about 25 acres, Grigoryan said. And many growers still use Soviet-era
    techniques and technologies.

    "There are three stages of agriculture: agriculture, effective
    agriculture and high-value agriculture," Grigoryan said. "We are
    still in stage one."

    Yields of Armenian crops could stand improvement, he said, and
    the group hopes what they're learning about varieties, pruning and
    irrigation will help.

    The Armenians will travel next to California to meet with farmers
    and tour their operations.




    From: A. Papazian
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