Georgia - Fewer Vidalia onions expected this year due to rain, winds

29.06.2015 248 views
Georgia - Fewer Vidalia onions expected this year due to rain, winds

Heavy rainfall and high winds contributed to Georgia farmers growing fewer Vidalia onions this year, but demand for the popular vegetable and low yields for Texas onions helped keep prices steady. According to Cliff Riner, coordinator of the University of Georgia Vidalia Onion and Vegetable Research Center, Georgia's onion crop was limited this year due to an accumulation of inclement weather. Weather conditions added to a crop that was already short this year.

Heavy rainfall and high winds contributed to Georgia farmers growing fewer Vidalia onions this year, but demand for the popular vegetable and low yields for Texas onions helped keep prices steady.

According to Cliff Riner, coordinator of the University of Georgia Vidalia Onion and Vegetable Research Center, Georgia's onion crop was limited this year due to an accumulation of inclement weather.

"We had temperatures as low as 15 degrees (Fahrenheit), hail storms, 40- to 50-mile-per-hour winds and really heavy rain," Riner said.

Weather conditions added to a crop that was already short this year.

"We were already planting 400 to 600 acres fewer than what we have been planting. There weren't many growers that increased their acreage planted after last year. We just harvested an average crop, with some major losses to fields that weren't even brought in," he said.

Riner said the biggest hit came on the second maturity group of onions, what is referred to as the "early main season." Two major storms brought hail and winds through southeast Georgia just as fields were starting to mature.

"This group of onions makes up our largest acreage. Some fields weren't harvested because of the hail damage, and where there was just strong wind, we just didn't get the size we needed. When the wind lays the tops down and knocks the leaves off, the onion won't increase in size as it would normally. Some growers suffered losses worse than others, but the weather brought some challenges (to all growers) this year," Riner said.

Vidalia onions are harvested in only 20 state-sanctioned Georgia counties from mid-April through May.

Though production was lacking this season, farmers that did produce a good crop were rewarded with strong prices. Riner said the price could continue to rise through the summer, as demand is still strong and shipping is at full capacity.

A crop shortage in Texas this year also led to a robust market for Georgia producers, according to Riner.

"Back in January and February, the national price situation on onions was pretty low. However, all of that changed because the Texas crop was poor this year. They were only able to sell about 20 percent of their onions. That 80 percent loss really changed Vidalia's outlook," Riner said. "We could have had a very bad year price-wise, but it really turned out to be positive by the time our onions were ready.

UGA onion fertility trials

Tim Coolong hopes to help boost Georgia farmers' onion crop in the near future. The UGA Cooperative Extension horticulturist is working with Riner to study fertility treatments of Vidalia onions with the goal of boosting the industry, which had a farm gate value of $163 million in 2012.

This year, Coolong is studying 14 different fertilizer treatments and programs in search of one that best improves overall yield quality while reducing risks.

One potential risk is "bolting," when an onion plant flowers prematurely.

"With our fertility trials, some varieties bolted very heavily. In some varieties, up to 30 percent bolted. Other varieties weren't nearly that bad. Some were down around 5 to 10 percent," Coolong said. "When they flower like that, you can't sell them."

Coolong is also studying fertilizer's impact on onion flavor and storage life.

"Our goal at the end of this is to develop a common program that we can make available to growers to say, in most years, that this fertility program will manage their risk effectively," Coolong said. "There may be an odd year where heavy rains require a more nitrogen-intense program to maintain high yields, but, on average, what we're hoping to do is to take out some of that variability."

Source - http://www.bellinghamherald.com

26.05.2026

“Timac Agro Ukraine” launches crop insurance against drought

Timac Agro Ukraine, in collaboration with the insurance company PZU, has launched a crop insurance program against drought for farmers in five regions of Ukraine. 

26.05.2026

Hansen announces "dialogue with the EIB on new agricultural insurance models"

Integrated European framework for climate resilience 'is on the way'.

26.05.2026

Nigeria - Oyo Steps up Enforcement Against Illegal Livestock Trading, Open Grazing

The Oyo State Government has stepped up enforcement against illegal livestock trading and open grazing, arresting offenders and impounding animals in parts of Ibadan during a fresh compliance operation.

26.05.2026

Philippines - Tacloban braces agri, health mitigation measures amid looming super El Niǹo

The City Government of Tacloban has intensified its preparations and mitigation measures as the threat of a possible Super El Niño continues to loom over several parts of the country, bringing concerns over prolonged dry spells, water shortages, and impacts on agriculture and public health.

26.05.2026

India - Punjab Govt Deploys 500 Teams for Special Girdawari as Rains Damage Wheat

In Punjab, to calculate the damage done to the standing crops in the fields due to the inclement weather for the last many days, the state government has formed teams of 500 officials from the agriculture department to assess losses.

26.05.2026

Brazil - Agricultural insurance plummets in Paraná, putting the sector at risk.

Cevio Alberto Mengarda, a soybean and corn producer in Marechal Cândido Rondon, in the western region of Paraná, followed in his father's footsteps in agriculture and today manages the family property. 

25.05.2026

Algeria - CASH Assurances to diversify into agriculture insurance

CASH Assurances will launch agriculture insurance plans in June 2026, as part of its diversification strategy.

25.05.2026

U.S. specialty crop growers push for stronger Farm Bill support

Specialty crop growers in the U.S. are calling for stronger support measures in the 2026 Farm Bill, particularly around risk management, market access, and crop insurance.