Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Let's check the roots




If you are growing perennial crops, you will have to wait at least 3 years before seeing first crop and first results of your efforts. For some fruit crops this can take 5-7 years. In between you have to think if everything will be fine. Imagine, worrying about what's going to come around in 5 years time! This seems quite a struggle but if you know what signs to watch and check, then it is a lot easier to deal with anxiety. 

Here, after exactly a year, we put out some plants from last year's planting campaign. We wanted to see how well the root system has developed and what we have seen exceeded our expectations. This means everything is going in right direction and we should keep our good work.






Picture: Comparing root volumes of the plant (left) which was planted last year and the plant (right) which we just got from nursery few days ago. A year ago the plant on the left was as small as the one on the right.






Picture: Closer look at the well growing kiwifruit plant



To contact the blogger, email:
Konstantine.Vekua@nergeta.ge 


Thursday, April 7, 2011

We Got New Measuring Tools

Professional orchard management is a little science. You depend on what's below and above your soil. You should know what is the level of critical nutrients in the soil but you should also know your soil's acidity and its water holding capacity. Many samples are sent to professional labs every year but modern times offer tools to make some express analyses right in the field.


We bought express pH tester and tensiometer from German company Stelzner. With these, we can check acidity in unlimited number of spots and we can monitor our soil's water holding capacity in several spots. Tensiometer will help us to know how much water/humidity is near the root zone and if irrigation is needed or not. It is great to know what's beneath!


Picture: Water Tensiometer in Our Kiwifruit Orchard



Thursday, March 17, 2011

Berlin Fruit Exhibition: Provenance Paradox & Continuous Assurance of Quality


Picture: One of exhibitor's stand in Berlin

Every year Berlin hosts the biggest European trade exhibition of fruits and vegetables. 9000 participants and more than 50000 visitors: it is very Große. We decided to visit it to talk with our future customers, learn about their approaches and just get the sense of trading environment. We went there with the list of questions in our writing pad but for us the most important question was: What should we do to price our kiwifruit (whenever we start to export) according to its quality and taste and not according to the perceptions about the country of its origin.  

What are we talking about here? Well, while quality of the product is important, the quality is not the only factor and buying side will try to justify lower bidding price if the product comes from less known country, or less known country for that product category. Example: one Venezuelan chocolate and cocoa beans producer El Rey supplies leading European chocolate makers with its high quality cocoa but is not able to sell its own chocolate at the same or even similar prices of European chocolates made on the same very cocoa. This is called Provenance Paradox and you can get more examples and more analysis on this from Harvard professor Rohit Deshpandé here http://tinyurl.com/2bhw23x

Is this barrier impossible to overcome for Georgian companies(well, for really quality Georgian companies)? As we talk about Provenance Paradox it is worth mentioning that Swiss watches, German cars and French wines gained and keep their unrivalled reputation through continuous and uninterrupted delivery of quality and over and over and over, every single year since 1855 Château Lafite and Mercedes Benz since 1886 deliver highest imaginable and possible customer satisfaction. Customers just get used to these brands' qualities. Countries are also like brands. So we think that constant delivery of quality leads to absence of any doubts and customers start to affiliate certain products to certain companies and countries.

Georgian companies and particularly their owners and managers should "just" define quality of product as their N:1 priority, make and always keep it. Quality for customers is like a promise which you either keep or break.

Let's give an example. We see in Georgian supermarkets how some X brand puts a nice product promotional display. They look very sophisticated but if we look at some other Y company's display, we see wearing facing materials, edgy corners, glass not being rounded(one can cut a finger) etc. Customers of course notice these differences and make judgements. These judgements are in favour of the company which did not stop just at making a good chocolate and went further to offer a better display or a better packaging i.e. gave more to customers. Quality of even simple product such as fruit consists of 20, 25 or 30 nuances and all these nuances should be thought after from first year, every year.

To Contact the blogger, email:
nergeta@gmail.com 

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Setting Up Windshelters





It's March and we are setting up artificial wind shelters in our orchard. They will not let occassional strong winds to break young shoots of our kiwifruit plants.


Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Our Blog in Georgian Language

Just to inform our Georgian readers that we will be running blog in Georgian language and it's here: http://www.nergeta-geo.blogspot.com/

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Post Driving by Machine

Kiwifruit vines cannot support themselves and wooden posts and wires are needed to support the canopy. While "inside" posts can be set manually, it is advisable to use hydraulic post driver for perimeter, end and side posts. Today we started to learn how to use this machine.


Picture: First Day of Post Driving

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Video: Planting Our Kiwi



This most recent video on our YouTube channel. You see how our team is planting kiwifruits. They are placing it directly on the point marked by the bamboo pole, then make sure that the width of the hole is wide enough for the roots to fit, and also spreading roots evenly to maximize feeding area for the vine. We planted several thousand fruits that way, in the last two weeks. More images to follow.