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- Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University’s James R. Jewett Fund
- Massachusetts Department of Agriculture
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- The nursery /floriculture industry standard practice is to develop new
plant material. The push is to get something different. New and
different things tend to sell.
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- Researchers are required to serve existing commodity groups which are
often in trouble.
- Researchers are rewarded for focusing on one aspect of one crop--new
crop development takes a generalist’s approach.
- Farmers tend to identify themselves with one crop and are afraid to
invest in untested systems.
- New crops take time and money. The goals and economies of farmers and
researchers are usually only short term.
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- Small diversified farms often located near urban areas who do retailing
or value added processing in addition to production.
- Organic farmers.
- Farmers who see traditional commodities becoming increasingly
unprofitable.
- Those with an entrepreneurial spirit.
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- My Experience:
- Long term effort--beach plum since 1996.
- Worked with outreach and growers from day one.
- Treated new crop development as a serious venture.
- People do not know what to think of new crops--what category does this
belong to…?
- Usually asked to speak last in the session at scientific
conferences…guest lecturer in class the day before Thanksgiving…
- Been referred to as “the beach plum nut…”
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- Horticultural History
- Indigenous Use
- 1524--John de Verrazano, a Florentine voyager, who recorded “damson
trees” in the vicinity of what today is southern New York.
- 1600’s--Probable colonist collection
- 1700’s--European plums are just fine
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- --Other region’s needs
- 1800’s--Native plum development did not occur until settlers spread to
the Prairie States and parts of the South where European plums did not
thrive. Northeast natives had been passed over because European
selections were available and thrived in the climate.
- 1890’s--Luther Burbank (originally from Worcester County, Massachusetts)
breed beach plum in Santa Rosa California. He crossed these improved
varieties with a hybrid Japanese plum to produce what he called the
‘Giant Maritima’ but it was too soft to ship.
- [Burbank’s Success: Japanese P. salicina x Chinese P. simonii x P.
Americana]
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- Studies in Plant Variation
- 1901--Inspired by Darwin’s, Animals and Plants Under Domestication, J.
M. MacFarlane (U. Penn) set out to document plant variation.
- 1932--Edgar Anderson of the Arnold Arboretum with Oliver Ames (the
pilot) published “Botanizing from an Airplane,” in the Arnold’s Bulletin
of Popular Information.
- What is the definition of a species?
- Is a species more variable at the center of its distribution or at the
periphery?
- Are unusual forms found with greater frequency in one part of its range
than in another?
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- Depression, frugality, nationalism
- Ruth Eldridge White (Mrs. Wilfrid O. White) 1940
- “…to add a drop in the dry old bucket of New England industry…”
- “The development of an industry from this native product seemed a
sensible practical idea to me. A great industry had been developed on
the Cape through the Cranberry…Why shouldn’t the beach plum make as
important an industry as the cranberry? The flavor is certainly more
appealing. That sweet bitterness comes from a life of hardship, I
guess.”
- James R. Jewett Prize at the Arnold Arboretum, 1940
- “render good service to Cape Cod by working for the development of the
beach plum industry”
- “these prizes be offered primarily for the scientific and empirical
improvement of the beach plum (Prunus maritima), including however, the
social significance of work with this native species or its products.”
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- October 1941--Bertram Tomlinson (Barnstable County Extension Agent)
established the Cape Cod Beach Plum Growers Association.
- December 1941--WWII
- 1952—State Grade Label
- 1950’s—Priorities Shift
- 2000’s--Sustainability/ new markets
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- An Old Woman there is, who lives by the Sea.
- A squatter all scraggy, and bent with the years
- She heeds not the Wind and his masterful beating.
- She turns a deaf ear to the Tide and his tears.
- —Ruth Eldridge White, 1940, The Beach Plum, Bulletin of the Garden Club
of America
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- A focus group is a marketing research tool which gathers information
from a small group of representative consumers.
- Qualitative method designed to gather ideas--not quantitative data or
product testing.
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- Consumer Focus Groups
- New York City on March 13, 2002
- Wen-fei L. Uva Applied Economics and Management, Cornell University
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- Present concept to potentially high margin market(s)
- Present to cutting edge operations and individuals
- Determine level of interest in fruit
- Identify price potential & price points
- Determine preferred method of purchase
- Identify potential uses, both traditional and non-traditional
- Learn preferred fruit forms
- Determine potential demand, in total and per site
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- Gourmet Chef Interviews
- September of 2003
- Robert Weybright of the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station
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- Chef Interview Conclusions
- Excited about beach plum and the process of new crop development.
- Chefs expressed interest in high quality fresh as well as frozen fruit.
- Direct purchase preferences through grower contact and farmers’ markets,
secondarily through specialty purveyors.
- Concerns and challenges--maintaining a consistent seasonal supply, high
fruit quality, adequate quantities and a viable delivery system.
- Cost and size of fruit was of concern especially for bakery use where
the cost and feasibility of pitting will be an issue to deal with to
serve this market.
- $6.00 per pound was an easily obtained price for frozen/whole fruit.
- Fresh fruit must be clean and in consistent packing. Frozen fruit would
need to be quick frozen (IQF) and stored sub-zero and be of the same
quality as mentioned above for fresh fruit.
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- Fruit Quality and Processing
- August 2001 wild collected fruit
samples
- New York State Experiment Station
- Department of Food Science
- fruit color varied in intensity, hue, and lightness
- pulp yield varied from a low of 81 to a high of 91%
- width ranged from 13.5 mm to 20.8 mm
- soluble solids (Brix) of juice samples ranged from 9.4 to 19.0
- acidity varied from 0.7 to 3.2 % (expressed as citric acid).
- pH values ranged from 3.1 to 4.1
- consistently high in phenolic content and acidity
- antioxidant capacity of water soluble substances fell between 87 and 397
mg per 100 g of fruit, indicating that the beach plums are very good
source of antioxidants.
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- August of 2001 germplasm collection across the native range
- seed and data from several plants per site were collected (142 plants in
all)
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- 1-year-old plants were distributed in April 2003
- Cornell University
- Western MD Research & Education Center
- University of Massachusetts
- Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station
- 2 grower/collaborators
- Future Plans-- to evaluate and select beach plum cultivars
- regular bearing
- good fruit quality
- yield well
- disease resistant
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- Growers meet with processors, researchers, and industry leaders on
farms.
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- CITY STATE Number of Plants
- El Dorado KS 100
- Nantucket MA 10
- Amherst MA 20
- Plymouth MA 40
- Brewster MA 40
- Brewster MA 50
- Cotuit MA 100
- Siasconset MA 100
- Wareham MA 200
- Cataumet MA 200
- Carver MA 500
- Mattapoisett MA 500
- Rochester MA 800
- West Gardiner ME 30
- Corrolla NC 30
- Westmoreland NH 50
- Cape May Ct. HouseNJ 15
- W. Cape May NJ 250
- Clinton Corners NY 10
- Appleton NY 20
- Ithaca NY 20
- Trumansburg NY 25
- Dryden NY 40
- Cutchoge NY 100
- Malone NY 100
- Liverpool NY 100
- Rome NY 100
- East Hampton NY 200
- Southampton NY 200
- New Paltz NY 200
- Riverhead NY 400
- Alburg VT 40
- 4590
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- Integrate stakeholders into a self-directed consortium to produce,
process and market beach plum fruit with the potential for a sustainable
regional market for high value products (2005).
- New sustainable fruit industry (2010).
- Release tested and improved cultivars to member of the consortium
(2015).
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- a wild collected fruit on the cusp of being agriculture
- beach plum is a stone fruit that can be easily cultured on orchard soil
with adequate drainage
- goal is not mass production but a high value product
- growers not large fruit production specialists but diversified retail
operation who want something new
- marketing most innovative part of project
- local market, heritage, “terroir” key to success
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- “To the student, our native and domestic plum flora will long remain the
most inviting, perplexed and virgin field in American pomology”
- —L.H. Bailey, 1898, The Evolution of our Native Fruits
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