Jared77
Garden Addicted
Agreed!MyKidLuvsGreenEgz, you are counting your friend's eggs before they hatch
First thing to realize is its not how much you can plant, its how much you can maintain. Sure you can plant an acre of berries but if your not equipped to handle an acre of berries how many is she getting within that acre? And how much are going to waste that she can't get to?
Something else to consider, if she's got all this, who's picking all of it? Is she doing a U pick? If not who's going to pick all those berries when they come in? What are her plans with the extras? Maybe you can offer to get them at a deeply discounted price when the seasons over and she has extras and turn those into jelly and jam to sell? Maybe some kind of bartering to get them? Or maybe you can pick whatever is left over when the season ends for free. Never hurts to ask.
Does she have a compost pile? Is she composting her goat berries? Everything from her coop? Is she mulching with these goodies? If you can grow a BETTER crop you'll get the sales at the co-op. People eat and shop with their eyes first. If you have a superior product you'll sell. Even if you don't have as much the quality is there. Id rather sell out and stay diverse than have a huge crop of one thing and have my season hinge on it.
As said by Digits think creatively. Left overs get turned into something else. We do strawberry, 2 different kinds of blueberry jam (a blueberry spiced honey jam and a blueberry/rhubarb) raspberry, rhubarb, and mixed berry jams. The mixed berry is frozen left overs from when we make the other flavors of jam as they come in. Good use for the left overs that don't make up enough for another whole batch.
Id offer cheese, soap, check local laws on selling goat milk shares. Here in Michigan its illegal to sell milk shares of a dairy cow. However goat shares are perfectly legal since there is no legislation either way on them. If the demand is there then maybe expand the herd.
Have you thought of trying to get someone to set up a hive or 2 on your property for a share of honey? Contact the local bee club in your area and mention that your looking at possibly offering up your property to set up a hive on. Explain what you have on your property and a beek would be a fool not to at least look at your place for a hive set up. It wouldn't cost you a penny, they maintain it, you get some honey, and you have them pollinating your crops which will increase your production.
Maybe sell started plants of varieties not available at your nursery if that's inline with the co-op rules.
Stay diverse, and focus on QUALITY. Quantity is important but quality is what will bring people to your table again and again. The more diverse you can be the more options you have to increase your income. From everything I've read that's how the 1/4 acre people do it.