Farms.com Home   News

Intermountain REC Calls for Proposals

Intermountain REC Calls for Proposals

By Pamela Kan-Rice

The Intermountain Research and Extension Center is soliciting proposals from researchers for new and continuing research projects in 2022-23.

IREC is a 140-acre research facility located at 4,000 feet elevation near the Oregon border. The center specializes in crops grown in Northeast California including potato, small grain, onion, peppermint, forage grasses and alfalfa; however, most cool season field and vegetable crops can be accommodated and grown at the center.

Research topics of interest include variety development, integrated pest management, irrigation management, plant nutrition and agriculture-wildlife interactions. Available facilities and equipment at the center include a greenhouse, controlled postharvest facility, drying ovens, an automated potato grading line, a mini-still for essential oil extraction, clean and dirty laboratory space, specialized small-plot pressurized irrigation equipment, research-adapted small plot planters and harvesters, and a full line of commercial farm equipment for field and vegetable crop production. 

IREC also has a multi-purpose conference and laboratory building for extension events with high-speed internet connection, Wi-Fi and audio-visual equipment for video conferencing. Technical assistance is available for all farming practices, field instrumentation and equipment operation, data collection and data entry and analysis.

The center's Research Advisory Committee will evaluate proposed research for scientific merit and regional need. Approved projects will be eligible for center-provided support, which includes land, labor, technical assistance, equipment and facilities.

Source : ucanr.edu

Trending Video

2025 Crop Weather Challenges: Ohio Flooding vs Idaho Drought Impact

Video: 2025 Crop Weather Challenges: Ohio Flooding vs Idaho Drought Impact

The tale of the two farmers is about as different as you can be this year. Ben Klick farms in Ohio while Jamie Kress is based in Idaho. They’re joined by a common denominator - the weather and the impact it can have when too much or too little falls. We start in the Eastern Corn Belt where delays have been the story of the year. Here is our second installment with the two producers this 2025 growing season.