University of Maine Cooperative Extension

 
   September 5, 2008
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newQuality Harvesting of Maine Wild Blueberries   Video   Download Windows Media Player
60 Minutes: What's Wrong with the Bees?
PBS Nature:
Silence of the Bees:How You Can Help the Bees


The Wild Blueberry...Maine's Native Berry

This file requires Macromedia Flash and details the 2-year production cycle of the wild blueberry

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Wild Blueberry 2-year Production Cycle
1st year (vegetative): mowing and/or burning fields, emergence of new plants. 2nd year (fruit-bearing): pollinating and irrigating fields, monitoring for insects and disease, harvesting berries.

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Maine's 60,000 acres of wild blueberries grow naturally in fields and barrens that stretch from Downeast to the state's southwest corner. Adapted to Maine's naturally acid, low fertility soils and challenging winters, wild blueberries are a low input crop requiring minimal management. The berries are grown on a two-year cycle — each year, half of a grower's land is managed to encourage vegetative growth and the other half is prepared for a wild blueberry harvest in August. After the harvest the plants are pruned to the ground by mowing or burning.

Wild blueberries hold a special place in Maine's agricultural history — one that goes back centuries to Maine's Native Americans. Native Americans were the first to use the tiny blue berries, both fresh and dried, for their flavor, their nutrition and their healing qualities and it was not until the 1840's that wild blueberries were first harvested commercially. As a symbol of Maine's agricultural heritage — a heritage that respects and values the environment — growers consider the future well-being of the land in their management practices, allowing neighbors and visitors to continue to enjoy some of Maine's most scenic vistas and precious wildlife habitats.

Integrated Crop Management

Because wild blueberries are indigenous to Maine, they are naturally resistant to many native pests. Still, there are times when environmental stressors such as disease, drought, insect pest damage and winter injury can ruin much of the fruit and it is a grower's challenge to minimize such crop damage.

Since 1945, Maine's blueberry growers and processors have provided financial support for research at the University of Maine. Through this successful research partnership, improved cropping practices have been developed such as Integrated Crop Management (ICM) and Integrated Pest Management (IPM). Growers throughout the crop cycle monitor disease and insect levels to help minimize fruit destruction without harming the environment. When critical levels are reached, growers consider a full range of control methods, from cultural techniques to the selective application of pesticides.

Future of the Wild Blueberry

Today, with an annual crop valued at more than $75 million, wild blueberries make a major contribution to Maine's economy. What's more, thanks to new research on the health and nutritional benefits of blueberries, there is a growing demand for both fresh and processed wild blueberries in the U.S. and abroad. The future looks bright for Maine's wild blueberries!

To find out more about Maine wild blueberries and the land they grow on, talk with a local blueberry grower, contact Dave Yarborough, Extension Blueberry Specialist, or contact the Wild Blueberry Commission of Maine.


   

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Last Modified: September 5, 2008
These pages are currently being maintained from the
Wild Blueberry Extension Office, University of Maine Cooperative Extension.
Send comments, suggestions or inquiries to David Yarborough

 
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