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Challenges Await Georgia Watermelon Growers

By Clint Thompson
 
Watermelons stacked on the side of a row on a farm at the UGA Tifton Campus.
 
The cost of controlling plant diseases combined with the cost of irrigation continues to push Georgia watermelon growers to become more innovative and productive, according to University of Georgia Cooperative Extension vegetable horticulturist Tim Coolong.
 
The watermelon industry is extremely popular in Georgia – watermelons are grown on an estimated 20,000 acres per year, according to Coolong – but consistently making a profit requires constant innovation and hard work.
 
“The only way that growers are able to consistently stay profitable is to steadily increase productivity,” Coolong said. “We have plenty of challenges, including diseases such as fusarium wilt, phytophthora blight, gummy stem blight and anthracnose. Input costs have steadily increased, while many times, revenue has stayed the same. Therefore, overall profitability has been tightened up.”
 
During last year’s growing season, Colquitt County Extension Coordinator Jeremy Kichler said watermelon acreage was on the rise because of low prices for row crops like cotton, peanuts and corn. He predicts that this year’s acreage in Colquitt County will remain the same, primarily because peanut acreage is expected to increase.
 
Picking, grading, packing and shipping melons remains the most costly aspect of watermelon production. Irrigating fields and applying newer, more effective fungicides to combat the diseases of watermelon remain two of the more expensive input costs.
 
To aid farmers in producing the most cost-efficient and high-yielding crop, several scientists at the UGA Tifton Campus, as well as county Extension agents, conduct watermelon research trials.
 
In his research plots, Coolong looks for different qualities in watermelon varieties, including varieties that produce quality fruit of consistent size.
 
“Total yield is not everything,” Coolong said. “Uniformity is often overlooked, but it is very important to a grower. Suppose someone has a market for one particular size of fruit. Then a variety that may be a high yielder, but produces highly variable sized fruit is not going to be useful to them, despite being at the top of the list in terms of yield.”
 
Because an estimated 95 percent of Georgia’s watermelon crop is seedless, the majority of Coolong’s research focuses on seedless watermelons.
 
While taste and texture are desirable characteristics that farmers look for in selecting a particular watermelon variety, Coolong says other traits may sway a farmer’s thinking.
 
“Consumers buy what tastes good, and farmers naturally want to grow what consumers buy. However, aspects such as disease resistance, yield and other traits are factors that the farmer must consider that the consumer doesn’t,” Coolong said. “Thus, when you talk about a farmer’s preference, it is really a combination of qualities, which they carefully weigh.”
 
According to the UGA Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development, watermelon’s 2015 Georgia farm gate value totaled $124.5 million. Watermelon accounted for 11.41 percent of all vegetables grown in Georgia.
 

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"You realize you've got a pretty finite number of years to do this. If you ever want to try something new, you better do it."

That mindset helped Will Groeneveld take a bold turn on his Alberta grain farm. A lifelong farmer, Will had never heard of regenerative agriculture until 2018, when he attended a seminar by Kevin Elmy that shifted his worldview. What began as curiosity quickly turned into a deep exploration of how biology—not just chemistry—shapes the health of our soils, crops and ecosystems.

In this video, Will candidly reflects on his family’s farming history, how the operation evolved from a traditional mixed farm to grain-only, and how the desire to improve the land pushed him to invite livestock back into the rotation—without owning a single cow.

Today, through creative partnerships and a commitment to the five principles of regenerative agriculture, Will is reintroducing diversity, building soil health and extending living roots in the ground for as much of the year as possible. Whether it’s through intercropping, zero tillage (which he’s practiced since the 1980s) or managing forage for visiting cattle, Will’s approach is a testament to continuous learning and a willingness to challenge old norms.

Will is a participant in the Regenerative Agriculture Lab (RAL), a social innovation process bringing together producers, researchers, retailers and others to co-create a resilient regenerative agriculture system in Alberta. His story highlights both the potential and humility required to farm with nature, not against it.