Thoughts on Rice
This podcast is for growers, PCAs, consultants, and other industry professionals in the California rice industry. We'll primarily be focusing on the Sacramento Valley and Delta Region of California. The UCCE Rice Farm Advisors aim to deliver extension information relating to the California rice industry.
Find out more about UCCE and California rice here!
Thoughts on Rice
1.15 - Rotating rice with Sara Rosenberg (Pt. 1)
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Together, the UCCE Farm Advisors seek to provide relevant, topical research-backed information relating to CA rice production.
In this two-part episode, Sarah Marsh sits down with Dr. Sara Rosenberg, who is currently the UCCE Regenerative Agriculture Farm Advisor for Mariposa, Merced, and Stanislaus Counties to talk about her work in rice crop rotation systems. Sara worked with rice growers in her graduate school experience at UC Davis, where one of her focuses was to understand the barriers to adoption, opportunities, and required resources for successful implementation of crop rotation in rice systems.
Upcoming Rice Events
Rice Winter Grower Meetings - February 10-13th, 2025
Rice Crop Rotation Tools
Rice Crop Rotation Calculator
Publications on Rice Crop Rotation
Resources and Links from Sara Rosenberg
Regenerative Agriculture Information and Listening Session
Part 1: Nut Tree Orchards of Central Valley: Future Directions - December 16, 2024
Regenerative Agriculture information
Other Resources
UC ANR is an equal opportunity provider and employer
Transcript
00:00:23 Whitney Brim-Deforest
My name is Luis Espino. I'm the rice farming systems advisor for Butte and Glenn counties.
00:00:38 Michelle Leinfelder-Miles
How are you? How has everything been?
Not, yeah, but yeah, it just seems like a huge drop in in pressure and.
Like just a dump of rain that's going to happen all of a sudden, just at the peak of it, yeah.
Sure. Yeah. And I'll just mention.
Kind of this conversational piece of.
Back to them and then opening up more of a multi stakeholder conversation.
Health and some of the other stuff that we may get into or not.
The environments that they they weren't working in.
That particularly means the soil.
The second thing that came out of that was the requirements.
The rotation crops, which should oftentimes missing in kind of these rice only regions.
You know these fields don't grow row crops very well and these fields.
So those those are some I think some really important factors that came.
A factor that was kind of a barrier towards rice crop rotation.
For social networking in those regions, there's more information in terms of.
Finding markets in those regions.
And there's definitely more farmer to farmer.
Communication efforts for people to lean on if there's certain.
And the culture that they're coming from was a really important factor that played.
What I really enjoyed learning about for this work is how diverse peoples rotations were.
The dominant was the summer rope, crop rotations and a lot of that was using things like tomato.
Yeah, most. Most of it's been phased out now.
So that was there when I was doing this work.
By garbanzo beans. Those were some of the cool season beans, things like that that were integrated.
Yes, one of the outcomes of the interviews.
The profitability of crop rotations with rice.
Give any information from the rice perspective of what it costs to transition.
Put down all of the inputs and then looked at profit and.
So I used that model and in collaboration with Western IPM and Whitney Brown, Deforest and.
And there's like an average of that's selected based on the research this average cost.
And so it is really this combination of.
Try to make at least one of them the same information will be presented at all of them.
Without further ado, here are the dates and area locations for the 2025 rice winter.
February 10th in the morning will be the woodland meeting.
Whether it's from using our text link in the show notes.