HMC News – February 2022

Pink blossoms on a tree in an orchard

After a winter with sufficient chill hours, some of our earliest stone fruit varieties have started to wake up from their winter hibernation as they push the first blooms of the 2022 season. These first flowers bring anticipation for the upcoming season along with the anxiety of knowing that unfavorable weather conditions can now have deleterious effects on the 2022 crop. Blossoms become commonplace around the valley as hundreds of different stone fruit varieties will be in different stages of bloom in late February and early March.

Dirt field with stick. Man wearing jeans, boots, and gloves wrapping white tape around stick.

We are in the process of grafting trees in some of our stone fruit orchards. Grafting is a process in which scion wood (a piece of wood from the desired varietal) is bonded to existing rootstock. This allows the new variety to reach harvest more quickly than planting entirely new trees. Different root stocks are beneficial for different reasons, such as drought resistance, increased vigor, or successful growth in a particular soil type.

Bundles of baby trees in two white bins

We’re planting new trees on the blocks of land we’ve spent the last few months preparing for this very thing. Selecting new varieties is a process which requires a lot of research to ensure that only the best tasting varieties make it to our farms, but we also take other factors, such as harvest timing, into consideration to ensure a consistent flow of delicious fruit is available throughout the harvest season.

Unlike peaches and nectarines, most of our plum varieties are not self-fertile and require pollination from another variety to set a crop. Many blocks of plums are comprised of two or more varieties for cross-pollination. Every year we place beehives in our plum orchards to promote the cross-pollination process. Often, we include “bouquets” of a third plum variety in bins near the orchard as a supplemental pollen source.

HMC News – January 2022

We’re starting the new year with a good amount of precipitation on the books already this winter, and a gorgeous view of the snowy Sierra Nevada mountains from our office. September-December of 2021, we received 7.52″ of rain on our farms, compared with only 1.89″ in the same timeframe in 2020. We have already blown past the 7.07″ total for Sept 2020-June 2021, and more rain is likely on the way over the next couple of months. In December alone, we received just over five inches of much needed rain on our farms, which is a big step forward from the 1.45″ of precipitation we measured in December of 2020. We are close to wrapping up pruning in our stone fruit orchards, and pruning more heavily in our table grape vineyards during this break in the rain. The weather has been cold, which is perfect for pruning and for accumulating necessary chill hours for our trees and vines. 

dormant grape vineyard with puddle of water, blue sky with clouds above

With the rain we’ve had this winter comes another weather event: Tule fog. Tule fog is a radiation fog that forms in the Central Valley when the ground is damp and temperatures are low. The fog is so dense that visibility is measured in feet, and when visibility is too low our local schools have a late-start “foggy day schedule” to allow the fog to lighten up a bit before school buses can safely operate. Once we’ve finished pruning our trees, we will go back through our traditional orchards to repair any damaged roping, which helps keep the trees in a vase shape and supports the weight of next season’s crop. We are almost ready to plant new trees in the blocks we prepped over the past few months.

satellite image of California with thick white streak of Tule fog through the middle

January is National Blood Donor Month, and HMC Farms recently hosted an employee blood drive in partnership with Central California Blood Center. Our participants ranged from multiple first time donors to a member of the five gallon club. All of the blood collected at our event will be put to good use in life-saving measures in the Central Valley.

Man with HMC Farms hat looking down - first time blood donor sticker on shirt

We are done pruning trees in our stone fruit orchards, and through the majority of our grapevine pruning. We are finishing up the final touches on new irrigation systems in our prepped blocks, and we will plant new trees once installation is complete. Field activity will slow down over the next couple of weeks as our trees begin to bloom. By mid-February, the Central Valley should be full of orchards covered in pink and white blossoms.

Dormant peach orchard - trees with no leaves or fruit and blue sky

Noticias del HMC - Abril de 2020

Vea el antes y el después del aclareo de árboles en uno de nuestros huertos de melocotones, en la foto de abajo. El aclareo es un proceso en el que eliminamos de nuestros árboles las piezas de fruta de tamaño insuficiente o excesivamente pobladas. Esto permite que nuestros árboles proporcionen mejores nutrientes a la fruta restante para mejorar su tamaño y sabor. También protege las ramas de los árboles para que no se rompan debido al gran peso de demasiadas piezas de fruta. Durante este proceso, nuestros equipos también son capaces de eliminar el nuevo crecimiento innecesario para ahorrar tiempo y costes al no tener que pasar de nuevo por los huertos para podar este crecimiento más tarde.

Estamos en pleno proceso de plantación de nuevas variedades de uva en nuestras fincas. Una vez preparado el terreno y colocadas las líneas de riego, se marcan los lugares de plantación y se plantan las nuevas cepas. Es importante que el riego se establezca primero para regar la tierra antes y después de la plantación, permitiendo que las vides se adapten a su nuevo entorno. Como se puede ver aquí, a cada nueva vid se le da un palo de bambú para que se sostenga y se forme y un cartón para protegerla. Después de plantar las vides, trabajamos en la instalación de nuestro sistema de V-trellis, que ha comenzado con las estacas visibles en la foto de abajo.

Nuestros huertos de fruta de hueso están creciendo muy bien. Los melocotones de principios de temporada que aparecen en la foto de arriba, que están justo delante de nuestra oficina, tienen el tamaño de una pelota de ping pong. Como se puede ver, ya están ganando un color de rubor. En las próximas semanas, crecerán bastante mientras se preparan para la cosecha, que comenzará pronto en nuestros huertos. Con temperaturas a mediados de los 80, deberíamos tener una calidad y un sabor muy buenos para empezar la temporada. El año pasado, las temperaturas fueron más bajas de lo normal y llovió durante gran parte de mayo, lo que afectó a la calidad. La cosecha de este año parece excepcionalmente buena, y deberíamos tener fruta de gran sabor a mediados de mayo, con un calendario de cosecha similar al del año pasado.