Project Overview
Commodities
- Additional Plants: ginger
 
Practices
- Crop Production: high tunnels or hoop houses, intercropping
 
Proposal summary:
  Baby ginger
  represents
  a potentially
  high-value crop of interest to diverse retail customers. While ginger has been grown
  successfully as a Northeast niche crop, it typically requires
  substantial initial investment for
  seed stock
  and,
  given the
  time to
  harvestable maturity, commitment of
  a protective
  growing environment. Ginger has high profit potential as a
  standalone crop, but these investments
  may deter
  farmers
  from
  growing
  ginger. However, cost and time-related
  barriers to production might be mitigated by reducing
  infrastructure
  costs and increasing overall revenue. This project aims to
  determine whether total row-foot
  profitability can
  be increased by incorporating intercropping
  practices to ginger production and whether ginger productivity can
  be maintained with lower infrastructure
  inputs than
  previously thought. Ginger will be grown in
  raised beds
  in three
  different environments—a high tunnel from planting to harvest, a
  caterpillar tunnel erected in late summer, and in
  the field without protective
  cover. Two additional annual vegetables
  (carrots and green
  beans) will
  be interplanted alongside ginger in each of these environments
  during the first half of the seasons and compared to a
  ginger-only control crop, with yields of all crops
  compared across growing environments to determine production
  success. Demonstrating that ginger can
  be successfully
  grown
  with
  reduced infrastructure costs
  while
  increasing
  revenue from
  the production space
  via
  intercropping may encourage ginger production among
  Northeast growers toward boosting farm
  profits. Findings will be
  disseminated
  to
  regional
  farmers
  and Extension
  professionals via social media,
  onsite
  tours and
  workshops,
  a
  conference
  presentation, and a published fact sheet
  and journal
  article. 
Project objectives from proposal:
There are two primary objectives for this trial:
  Objective 1: Evaluate the yield of baby ginger in an
  intercropping system with two distinct interplanted annual
  vegetable crops (carrots and green beans) toward maximizing
  row-foot profitability of production space.  
  Objective 2: Compare the productivity of baby ginger with and
  without the two interplanted annual vegetable crops across three
  distinct growing environments (field-grown, caterpillar tunnel,
  high tunnel) towards demonstrating potential for reduced
  infrastructure needs.