Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Citrus growers find ways to survive despite disease

- By Susan Jacobson Staff writer

SANFORD — Brothers Ted and Ed White grew up picking citrus in their dad’s groves five decades ago, when oranges were king in Central Florida and the future of the industry shined with seemingly limitless potential.

That was before the freezes of the 1980s, the land-developmen­t boom of the 1990s, the hurricanes of the 2000s and the latest and deadliest scourge: citrus-greening disease.

But like other growers who are sticking with Florida’s state fruit, Ted, 58, and Ed, 57, are finding ways to adapt and survive.

In November, they closed the packinghou­se that operated in the Conway neighborho­od of Orlando for nearly 55 years — 34 with the Whites as owners — and moved their business, Red Hill Groves, to 7 acres at their parents’ homestead in Sanford, slashing commuting and labor costs. They pared their budget further by switching from a landline telephone to cellphones.

The brothers converted a barn into a farm store and began selling vegetables and pick-your-own herbs and strawberri­es along with old-Florida standards such as fruit, juice, honey, orange ice cream and boiled peanuts. For 50 cents, kids can feed a flock of chickens.

It’s free to watch oranges skitter up a conveyer belt into a machine that washes and waxes them.

“Citrus greening is a huge challenge,” said Ted White, the company president. “We felt like it would be better for us to downsize.”

The latest U.S. Department of Agricultur­e production estimate for the 2016-17 Florida orange season is more bad news for the battered industry: 71 million boxes, each containing 90 pounds of fruit. That’s down from the 242 million boxes produced in the 2003 to 2004 season, shortly before several hurricanes devastated Florida, and nearly one-third less than in 2013-2014.

The record is 244 million boxes in 1997-1998.

Uncle Matt’s Organic is a Lake company that’s found a niche in natural. Based in Clermont, Uncle Matt’s touts its products as free of geneticall­y modified organisms, or GMOs, and synthetic pesticides and fertilizer­s.

The family business was launched in 1999 and now markets to Publix and Whole Foods, among other retailers.

“We’re very fortunate,” said Benny McLean, 74, who has been in the citrus business for more than 50 years and is production manager and father of founder and chief executive Matt McLean. “We got in at the right time.”

The family also operates three pick-your-own organic peach orchards in Clermont and is branching out to organic vegetables. But citrus is its lifeblood, and the McLeans are among the growers contributi­ng to research on how to control greening, which first appeared in Florida in 2005 in Miami-Dade County.

About $250 million has been invested in citrusgree­ning research over the past decade, according to the trade group Florida Citrus Mutual.

The state’s $10.8 billion citrus industry is at stake. Florida produces most of the juice oranges in the country, and the fruit is so identified with the state that its image appears on license plates.

“Citrus is not only our industry,” said Peter Chaires, director of associatio­n services at the Florida Fruit & Vegetable Associatio­n. “It’s our way of life, and we’re going to do everything we can to hold onto it.”

While some growers have given up, others are cautiously optimistic. Prices have risen as the orange crop has dwindled, and juice prices are up, too.

“Generally, I am more upbeat because as this thing continues to shrink in size, I think it will create a better opportunit­y for those who are left,” said Alex Heller, vice president of the 78-year-old Heller Bros. in Winter Garden.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Red Hill Groves co-owner Ed White, right, at the family’s citrus stand in Sanford.
JOE BURBANK/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Red Hill Groves co-owner Ed White, right, at the family’s citrus stand in Sanford.

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