Farms.com Home   News

Alfalfa is Only One Link Up Ahead of Us on the Local Food Supply Chain

Alfalfa is Only One Link Up Ahead of Us on the Local Food Supply Chain

By Julie Murphree

Why is alfalfa so important to you and me? We eat beef, right? We eat dairy products, right? Then Arizona agriculture needs to grow alfalfa.

When uninformed, we equate Arizona agriculture’s market-driven ability to successfully export our hay to domestic and international markets to exporting our water. This overly simplifies a complex issue and ignores the success of our state’s agriculture, especially our farm and ranch exports. Export markets have always been a key part of the agricultural economy and certainly in Arizona agriculture due to our 300-plus days of sunshine and why the majority of America and Canada’s vegetables are coming from Yuma, Arizona in the winter (we’re growing things during seasonal times when others cannot). Export our wonderful products; import dollars to robustly feed Arizona’s economy. 

Arizona’s agricultural fortunes rest on the state’s remarkable soil and sun to grow crops with higher efficiency, quality, and yields than other parts of the world. For an alfalfa example, the Midwest gets an average of three to four tons of alfalfa annually per acre. In Arizona, it’s eight to nine and even as much as 12 tons per acre, per year. 

But it is also important to note that while a percentage of our alfalfa is delivered beyond our state’s borders (some estimate that we export 15% to 20% of our Arizona alfalfa), most of the crop grown in Arizona remains in Arizona to support our local dairy and livestock industries. Meanwhile, water continues to be Arizona Farm Bureau’s number one priority policy focus and will continue to be for the foreseeable future. Ultimately, our alfalfa production in Arizona ties directly to our local food supply chain. 

As this “Arizona’s Essential Alfalfa” campaign continues to unfold, I’ve begun to tell stakeholders (certainly those dozens of media calls I can get in just one week), alfalfa is only one link up ahead of us on the local food supply chain: Dairy cows eat alfalfa, we eat dairy products; beef cattle eat alfalfa, we eat beef. 

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Dr. Manuel Juarez: Pork Belly Quality

Video: Dr. Manuel Juarez: Pork Belly Quality

In this episode of The Swine it Podcast Show Canada, Dr. Manuel Juarez, the Livestock Phenomics Scientist at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, discusses the critical aspects of pork belly quality and the impact of slaughter weight on meat production. Dr. Juarez sheds light on genetic selection methodologies to optimize pork quality for different markets and the financial implications of increasing slaughter weight. Listen now on all major platforms!