Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

As Florida citrus fades, farmers diversify

They’re learning to adapt in a constantly changing industry

- By Austin Fuller

UMATILLA — A maze made of stacked citrus picking bins will serve as a nod to three generation­s of citrus production on land where a new agricultur­e attraction called Sunsationa­l Farms is sprouting this fall.

The maze, a retail store where people can watch fresh juice be squeezed, a food barn envisioned to cook up fresh produce and a structure where visitors can see how fruit is processed are replacing five acres of old tangerine trees and 10 acres of grapefruit devastated by citrus greening disease.

A multi-week fall festival is in the works, mini-pumpkins have been planted that the farmers are still learning about growing and other crops are coming including strawberri­es, vegetables and some citrus in seedless tangerines, seedless mandarins and lemons.

As greening stresses trees and stunts their fruit, some Central Florida citrus farmers are seeking to attract visitors through what’s known as agritouris­m and planting other crops, measures they hope will keep their businesses afloat.

“You’re going to have to find some type of alternativ­e, and agritouris­m just is a huge thing that’s growing right now,” said Bill Baker, one of the owners of Sunsationa­l Farms. “Back when I was a kid, my dad said, ‘40 acres of citrus, you could raise a family on, make good money, send your kids to college.’ Now, 400 acres of citrus you have a hard time raising a family on.”

The changes come as hundreds of thousands of commercial citrus acres in Florida have disappeare­d with greening and urbanizati­on.

Brian Faryna, his sister Lauren Sutton and her husband, Kris Sutton, have partnered with another longtime citrus farming family, Bill and Dru Baker, to develop Sunsationa­l Farms on Roger Giles Road off East Collins Street in Umatilla. The farm’s name also reflects the history of the struggling Central Florida citrus industry — a now-shuttered packing house, owned by Faryna and the Suttons’ family, was called Sunsationa­l Citrus.

Their family already runs a smaller retail store in town on North Central Avenue in Umatilla that will relocate to the new building on the farm along with the iconic big orange that sits outside the smaller store.

‘You can’t sustain that forever’

Across Florida, there were more than 400,000 acres of citrus-bearing acreage in the 2017-2018 crop year, down by nearly half from more than 777,000 acres in 1998-1999, according to a U.S. Department of Agri

culture and Florida Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services report.

Many of those lost acres are reflected across Central Florida.

In 2018, Osceola County had 6,925 citrus acres, Lake County had 6,567 and Orange County had 1,130. In January 2008, Osceola had 9,197, Lake 13,100 and Orange 3,674. In January 1998, those numbers were at 15,480 in Osceola, 20,807 in Lake and 9,155 in Orange.

Not all of the decline in citrus over the past 20 years has been because of greening, a disease spread by the tiny Asian citrus psyllid insect that kills parts of a tree’s root system and was confirmed in Florida in 2005. Other factors such as urban developmen­t have encroached on farmland, explained Michael Rogers, director and professor at the University of Florida’s Citrus Research and Education Center in Lake Alfred.

The acreage lost right now and over the past 10 years, though, is largely because of people dealing with greening.

Smaller growers can only sustain the losses for so many years, Rogers said.

“Some look at it as we want to get back in citrus, but right now we don’t have the confidence we could do it at this point and stay in business,” he said. “For the small guys, several years of consecutiv­e losses — you can’t sustain that forever.”

At Michael and Mary Graham’s family farm, much of their 12-acre orange grove on Lake Yale Road near Umatilla has transforme­d into a peach orchard.

“If we’re going to continue to be farmers, we needed to come up with something else to farm,” Mary Graham said. “We didn’t see any hope of seeing a cure for greening anytime soon.”

The Graham family started growing citrus in 1918, but planted peaches in 2014. The family didn’t have a market for selling peaches once they were ready to pick in 2016, so they decided to have people come out to the farm and pick the fruit themselves.

“I literally just started a Facebook page,” she said.

Along with the farm’s eight acres of peaches, a sunflower attraction has been added for visitors and a 2,000-square-foot barn for parties and events like weddings is in the works. The family is also experiment­ing with other crops.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? The tiny Asian citrus psyllid spreads citrus greening, killing parts of a tree’s root system. The insect is seen on a citrus tree in Umatilla.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL The tiny Asian citrus psyllid spreads citrus greening, killing parts of a tree’s root system. The insect is seen on a citrus tree in Umatilla.

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