231 research outputs found
Physical Requirements and Capital Costs for Establishing Field Nurseries for USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Five and Six
Container Nursery Overview - Size, Systems, and Enterprise Mix in USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Six
Comparison of Costs of Producing Container Grown Plants in USDA Plant Hardiness Zones Five and Six Differentiated by Species of Plant
Comparison of Costs of Producing Container and Field Grown Plants in USDA Plant Hardiness Zones Five and Six Differentiated by Size of Nursery
Field Nursery Overview - Size, Systems, and Enterprise Mix in USDA Plant Hardiness Zones Five and Six
Comparison of Costs of Overwintering Plants in Nurseries Differentiated by System and USDA Plant Hardiness Zone
Traveler Gun Irrigation of Field Grown Nursery Stock
The objective of this study was to determine annual irrigation costs for field-grown plants in Ohio by species of plant and size of firm. This objective was accomplished by synthesizing two model field nurseries using an economic engineering approach. Once the nurseries were simulated, growing space was divided into five equal parts with each segment being assigned a plant group. In the 50-acre nursery each group was allocated 8 acres of field production plus corresponding space in the propagation house, overwintering facility, holding area, and field bed area. In the 200-acre nursery each plant group was allocated 35 acres, plus corresponding space in the central facility. In each plant group, one specific species was chosen as representative for the group. Total costs of installing irrigation systems were estimated at about 167,800 for a 200-acre field nursery. Total annual costs for irrigating the 50-acre nursery were 0.73 for slow growing evergreens (Taxus), 0.49 for deciduous shrubs (Viburnum), 1.11 for ornamental trees (Malus), and averaged 35,355. Per salable plant costs were 0.28 for fast growing evergreens (Juniperus), 0.86 for shade trees (Acer rubrum), 0.39 for all species. Costs of irrigation were about 2.9% of total annual costs for the 200-acre nursery. Costs of irrigation averaged approximately 87% higher per salable plant in the 50-acre nursery than in the 200-acre. Large-size commercial field nurseries use equipment and labor more efficiently than small-sized nurseries. As a result, large nurseries have a lower cost of irrigation per salable plant
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