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		<title>Arkansas Peach Wins First Place in Alabama Festival</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Tammy Teague]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Jul 2019 21:21:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Arkansas]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[By Fred Miller U of A System Division of Agriculture @AgNews479 Fast Facts: White County peach wins first and second place in Chilton County Peach Festival White County is white-fleshed [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>By
Fred Miller<br>
U of A System Division of Agriculture</p>



<p><a href="https://twitter.com/AgNews479">@AgNews479</a></p>



<p><strong>Fast
Facts:</strong></p>



<ul><li>White
     County peach wins first and second place in Chilton County Peach Festival</li><li>White
     County is white-fleshed peach released from Division of Agriculture in
     2004</li><li>First
     and second place entries were submitted by brothers Mark and Seth Knight</li></ul>



<p>CLANTON, Ala. — Mark Knight
wasn’t even considering entering a white-fleshed peach in the Chilton County
Peach Festival contest in Alabama this year. His daughters talked him into it.</p>



<p>Knight had harvested some
White County peaches, a variety developed in the University of Arkansas System
Division of Agriculture fruit breeding program, that looked good on the morning
of June 29, the day of the contest. But they were only one of several varieties
he was considering for his entry. He was leaning toward an Alabama yellow
peach, because it was bigger, when his older daughter, Andrea Williams,
objected.</p>



<p>“She said, ‘Dad, I’m just
going to go with that one right there,’” Knight said. She was pointing to the
White County peaches. “She told me, ‘It’s just too pretty.’”</p>



<p>Younger daughter, Alyssa
Knight, added her vote for the Arkansas white peach variety.</p>



<p>“Naturally, little sister
sides with big sister,” Knight noted. “I said, ‘You don’t know what you’re
talking about.’”</p>



<p><strong>Talking About Peaches</strong></p>



<p>Knight does know what he’s
talking about. M and M Farms, which he runs with his wife, Melissa, and their
two daughters, has about 50 acres in peaches, nectarines, plums and a couple
rows of blackberries in Alabama’s premier peach-growing region. He has been
entering the Chilton County Peach Festival contest for years and, though he
hasn’t won more contests than some of the more senior peach growers, he has the
record for the most consecutive wins.</p>



<p>Those blackberries, by the
way, are Arkansas varieties from the Division of Agriculture’s fruit breeding
program. “You guys got it going on with blackberries,” Knight said.</p>



<p>Knight planted his first
peach trees in 2003 and harvested his first peaches in 2006. Most of his
peaches are yellow-fleshed — he only has about 30 trees in white peaches. White
County shines among those, he said, because it’s a reliable producer with
healthy trees.</p>



<p>Nevertheless, Knight had a
few doubts about entering White County in Alabama’s top peach contest. First,
white peaches just didn’t have a very good record in the Chilton County Peach
Festival contest. Only two white peaches had ever won in the festival’s 60-70
year history, and the last one was about three or four years ago. White, low
acid peaches just don’t have the consumer following in Alabama that is enjoyed
by traditional tangy, yellow-fleshed peaches, and he didn’t think another white
peach stood a chance of winning again so soon.</p>



<p>Also, it wasn’t an Alabama
peach. It wasn’t even a neighborly Georgia peach. This usurper came from
Arkansas, way over on the wrong side of the Mississippi River.</p>



<p>White County was released by
the Division of Agriculture fruit breeding program in 2004, said John Clark,
Distinguished Professor and fruit breeder for the division’s Arkansas
Agricultural Experiment Station. It is one of a series of white-flesh, low-acid,
fresh market peaches to come out of the program that was begun in 1964 by James
N. Moore, the division’s first fruit breeder.</p>



<p>“White County is an
outstanding product with fabulous flavor in a reduced-acid peach,” Clark said.
“It has a large size and attractive and healthy trees. It deserves to be grown
more widely in Arkansas and beyond.</p>



<p>“I’m glad the folks in
Alabama were able to use a product of our Arkansas fruit breeding program,”
Clark said.</p>



<p><strong>Taking the Prize</strong></p>



<p>In the end, Knight bowed to
his daughters’ wishes, and went with White County. He was glad he did.</p>



<p>“I fixed that basket for the
contest in 10 minutes,” Knight said. “It usually takes about 20 minutes to make
a basket of peaches look good for the judges.”</p>



<p>Knight thinks the basket was
easy to arrange because the White County peaches were all about the same size.
That consistency and reliability has sold him on the peach.</p>



<p>Most fruit growers in
Chilton County — the peach capital of Alabama — are looking at greatly reduced
harvests this year because of late freezes early in the growing season. Several
nights of temperatures in the 20s took a huge bite out of most peach
production. However, White County has thrived where other, more tradition
Alabama peaches have suffered, he said.</p>



<p>When the judges announced
their decision, Knight’s White County peaches took first place. “It was a
surprise for me,” he said. “And I’m happy it was.”</p>



<p>Even more surprising,
Knight’s brother, Seth, won second place in the contest with the same variety.
Arkansas’ White County peach won first and second place in Alabama’s premier
peach festival.</p>



<p>“I didn’t know he was going
to enter a white peach,” Knight said of his brother.</p>



<p><strong>Peach Breeding</strong></p>



<p>Margaret Worthington, Division of Agriculture fruit breeder who has been
heading up the peach breeding program since 2016, said White County has made an
excellent parent in crosses to develop new breeding lines.</p>



<p>“The peach season usually
begins in June, when the earlier ripening fruit is harvested, through about
late August,” Worthington said. “Each peach variety usually has about a
two-week window when it’s ready for harvest.”</p>



<p>Worthington said one of her
goals for the peach breeding program is to develop good quality white peach
varieties that ripen earlier and later. “Nice firm, delicious white peaches
that go earlier or later,” she said. “That would stretch out that harvest
season for white peaches.”</p>



<p>Knight said he likes the
firmness of White County’s flesh. That means the peaches hold up longer so he
can get them to market and consumers can still keep them at home for a few
days.</p>



<p>Knight usually sells his
peaches in mall markets — a fresh market Alabama variation on farmers markets.
When he has an abundant crop, he said, he picks some White County a little
early, letting them ripen off the tree, and ships them to a wholesale market in
Birmingham.</p>



<p>Developing firmer flesh
peaches — both white and yellow — is one of the goals of the peach breeding
program, Worthington said.</p>



<p>Worthington noted that the
earliest peach varieties from the Arkansas breeding program were developed for
an Arkansas canning industry that existed at the time. But James Moore changed
direction in the 1990s, when canners declined in the state.</p>



<p>“Dr. Moore wanted to build
variety,” Worthington said. “He wanted to use firm-fleshed canning peaches to
breed fresh market peaches with longer shelf life.”</p>



<p>John Clark crossed White
County with Souvenirs, a firm, yellow-flesh peach, cultivar from the Division
of Agriculture fruit breeding program, to get a wide variety of firm and
attractive yellow and white-fleshed progeny with maturity dates ranging from
June to August.</p>



<p>Worthington said that new
selections derived from that cross are in advanced testing now and are used as
parents every year to make new breeding lines, some of which she hopes will
yield new peaches for Arkansas fresh markets.</p>



<p>In the meantime, Arkansas
peaches are leaving their mark on the markets.</p>



<p>Knight said the Division of
Agriculture fruit breeding program has a solid reputation nationwide. “I
certainly appreciate Arkansas’ fruit breeding program and the work they do,”
Knight said.</p>



<p>Arkansas’ reputation gave
him confidence to add White County to his peach orchards, he said. “We
certainly wouldn’t put them in if they weren’t promising peaches.”</p>



<p>To learn more about Division of Agriculture
fruit breeding and research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station
website: <a href="https://aaes.uark.edu">https://aaes.uark.edu</a>. Follow us on Twitter at <a href="https://twitter.com/ArkAgResearch">@ArkAgResearch</a> and Instagram at <a href="https://www.instagram.com/arkagresearch/?hl=en">ArkAgResearch</a>.</p>



<p>To learn about Arkansas fruit varieties
and management practices, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service
agent or visit <a href="https://www.uaex.edu/farm-ranch/crops-commercial-horticulture/horticulture/commercial-fruit-production/">https://www.uaex.edu/farm-ranch/crops-commercial-horticulture/horticulture/commercial-fruit-production/</a>. Follow us on Twitter at <a href="https://twitter.com/fruitveg_uaex">@fruitveg_uaex</a>.</p>



<p><strong>About the Division of
Agriculture</strong></p>



<p>The University of Arkansas
System Division of Agriculture’s mission is to strengthen agriculture,
communities, and families by connecting trusted research to the adoption of
best practices. Through the Agricultural Experiment Station and the Cooperative
Extension Service, the Division of Agriculture conducts research and extension
work within the nation’s historic land grant education system.</p>



<p>The
Division of Agriculture is one of 20 entities within the University of Arkansas
System. It has offices in all 75 counties in Arkansas and faculty on five
system campuses.</p>



<p>The University
of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture offers all its Extension and
Research programs to all eligible persons without regard to race, color, sex,
gender identity, sexual orientation, national origin, religion, age,
disability, marital or veteran status, genetic information, or any other
legally protected status, and is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity
Employer.</p>
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