hop farm

5Q: NC Hop Researcher Jeanine Davis

NC State Hop Farm

Hop production in North Carolina is a relatively new industry. Farmers are seeking new cash crops while the multitude of brewers in our state attempt to source out locally made ingredients more and more often. Jeanine Davis is on the NC State University hop research team and answered a few questions about their the results of their research and the problems facing growers in our state.

North Carolina Hop Cones

Tell our readers what the scope of your research with NC State has been?
The hops research at NC State University is a collaborative effort between Scott King and Rob Austin in the Soil Science Department and my program in the Department of Horticultural Science. We obtained several grants to build research hop yards on university research stations in Raleigh and in Mills River (near Asheville, in the mountains). The main objective of the current research is to identify the best varieties for North Carolina. We have ten varieties at each location. We are also looking at various cultural aspects; we have a short trellis in Raleigh and a high trellis (that we can raise and lower the top wire) in Mills River. We are also studying soil fertility; weed, disease, and insect control, and costs of production. We are also working with hop growers across the state.

Is there a history of hop production in North Carolina apart from the most recent growers? IE, pre prohibition?
There was a hop industry in North Carolina over 100 years ago. I have not been able to find out much about it online; I’ll have to hit the library stacks sometime. A friend of mine found an old ledger book from an ancestor of hers who was a hop farmer in NC long ago. She promised to photocopy some of the pages of that for me.

really nice hop cones from North Carolina

What results have you seen? (varieties that have done well, seasons in NC, terrior, etc)
The hops are doing surprisingly well here, considering how far south we are located! They seem to be doing particularly well in the mountain areas. Identifying the right varieties is going to be crucial for success. Cascade, Chinook, Nugget, Zeus, and Newport are good performers in many locations across the state. Our yields will never be as high as they are in the Pacific Northwest, but the reports we are getting back from brewers indicate that overall the quality is good. Our hops mature really early here; we start harvesting in July. We aren’t sure what that means for the plants in the long term. We have more disease, insect, and weed pressure than in the PNW, but we expected that and we are figuring out ways to cope. I think our success will rely on having markets that will pay a premium for high quality, locally grown, hand-harvested hops (wet or dry).

What are the challenges that North Carolina Hop growers are facing?
Our organic growers are having the biggest challenges right now fighting diseases and insects, but they are finding that some varieties are much better than others. Finding adequate labor to maintain and harvest a large yard is proving to be a challenge for some growers. We are going to have to find ways to reduce the labor needs.

What is in your beer fridge right now?
With four beer drinkers in the house with different tastes, there are new beers in the refrigerator almost every week. If I remember correctly, there are three NC breweries represented there right now: Highland, Weeping Radish, and Duck-Rabbit.

NC State Hop Farm

More North Carolina hop farming news




© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

Echoview Farms Second Annual Hop Farm Tour

News and photos from the Echoview Farms Second Annual Hop Farm Tour from http://www.mountainx.com/.

Thousands of lime green cones stretched along steel cables at Echoview Farm in Weaverville and the Mountain Horticultural Crops Research and Extension Center in Mills River on Saturday. Each tiny cone, a key component in beer production, is a small miracle. Our climate is more challenging than hop-friendly weather in the Pacific Northwest and many European countries. Western North Carolina’s afternoon thunderstorms are a far cry from the dry climate that hops prefer.

Click the link above for more photos



© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

Hop Farm Tour

Echo View Farms have announced their second annual Hops Festival on Saturday July 16th starting at 11am. Follow the link above for RSVP details and help the spread the word!

534 Old Mars Hill Hwy / Weaverville, NC 28787 / 828-645-7667



© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

Hop Farms have Challenges

Great article at http://www.citizen-times.com describes the challenges hop farmers face in North Carolina.

Jeanine Davis is a specialty crop researcher at the Mountain Horticulture Crops Research and Extension Center in Mills River. She and her research assistant, Kelly Gaskill, built a quarter-acre trellis system for hop production and planted 200 hop bines last week.

The group is studying the production of around a dozen different varieties. Since hops on the West Coast are mostly grown in an arid climate, nobody knows how well the varieties that are preferred by commercial brewers will perform in the eastern mountains.

There used to be large hop production on the East Coast, but the moist climate contributed to fungi that regularly destroyed the crops.

“We had an industry in Virginia and New York,” Davis said. “People from Europe had to have their beer.”

Davis said a lot of research needs to be done on growing hops in North Carolina. She believes new technology can help local hop farmers, but she knows the industry faces challenges. Hops grow in northern latitudes, and North Carolina is thought to be at the southern end of their range. The researchers want to determine how productive the plants can be this far south.

NC State Hop Farm

File photo of NC State Hop Farm in Raleigh



© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

Order Your Hops Now!

Once a year hop rhizomes are offered for your back yard growing pleasure. You can order yours in a variety of styles from American Brewmaster of Raleigh. Order now because planting season in North Carolina is soon!

Centennial
Cascade
Fuggle
Glacier
Golding
Hallertauer
Horizon
Mount Hood
Nugget
Sterling
Tettnang
Willamette

http://www.americanbrewmaster.com/index.php?cPath=32



© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

NC Hop Farming

There is a small hop research farm in a field just outside of the 440 Beltline in Raleigh. On a hot day in early September I was met there by Scott King from the N.C. State Soil Science Department. King’s interest in beer and home brewing led to a grant from goldenleaf.org to fund research of beers key ingredients.

NC State Hop Farm

NC State Hop Farm

This project marks the first time that research has been given to the possibility of hop farming in North Carolina, a state that has seen a lower demand in tobacco farming with many of those farmers searching for alternative cash crops.

NC State Hop Farm

NC State Hop Farm

The ½ acre field has 200 vines with 10 varieties of hop plants. He and his team are looking at pest and disease issues as well as soil quality and even alpha and beta acids of the harvested hop cones. In addition to their work in Raleigh they visit with hop farmers in the western part of the state to round out their research.

NC State Hop Farm

NC State Hop Farm

Pisgah Brewing and French Broad Brewing in Asheville as well as Natty Greene’s in Greensboro are a few of the North Carolina brewers who have made brews with North Carolina grown hops.

Scott King N.C. State Soil Science Department

Scott King N.C. State Soil Science Department

Scott King offers a warning to anyone who wants to get into the hop business: “Growing hops is a labor intensive job and there are many questions regarding how much demand will there be, what varieties are needed and how much a farm can produce.”

Watering & trimming vines are just a two of the many labor intensive tasks involved. On top of that you need to set up 18 foot high poles with cables for the vines to grow on. And we haven’t even mentioned harvesting and packaging the finished product. While the prospect of North Carolina’s new crop is exciting there is still work to be done.

That hasn’t stopped many from forging on. I’ve spotted hop vines in front of the Village Draft House in Raleigh and Hops and Vines homebrew store in Asheville, Pisgah Brewing has a row in the back and the front of Big Boss (where today, we picked a pound and half of cascade hops) is covered in 12 vines! I even have a neighbor with a few vines in his backyard. The interest in producing hops is there. Time will tell us if demand and production will ever match up!

Geist Bear Beer blog has posted this list of North Carolina Hop Farms!

The following video from Fox 8 News in Greensboro the reporter visits the NC State Hop Farm and a crop operated by the Battleground Brewers Guild.



© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

Winding River Hops tour

Smoky Mountain News speaks with hop farmer Scott Grahl who’s Hop Farm tour takes place next weekend as previously posted here.

Hop Farming in NC - photo: Smoky Mt News

Hop Farming in NC - photo: Smoky Mt News

Grahl and his girlfriend Stephanie Willis both come from families that farmed tobacco in Haywood County. With the help of a Tobacco Trust Fund grant aimed at converting historic tobacco farms into other means of sustainable agriculture, Grahl started Winding River Hops on one-acre of pine scrub off Thickety Road, within spitting distance of I-40.

After burning the land, Grahl added three truckloads of horse compost, two of mushroom compost and a whopping three tons of lime to bring the pH in line with what hops need to grow.

“We wanted to see how quickly we could take poor soil and turn it around,” Grahl said.

Grahl’s project isn’t the only one in Western North Carolina. He has joined experimental farmers in Madison and Buncombe counties to form the Southern Appalachian Hops Guild.

That group is relying on scientific expertise from the N.C. State Soil Science and Horticulture Departments, which have initiated their own statewide project to improve the market opportunities for North Carolina hops farmers by bettering yields and quality. Their work is funded with a grant from the Golden LEAF Foundation.

Full story: http://smokymountainnews.com/



© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

North Carolina Hops

Hops at Big Boss Are you growing Hops at your brewery, backyard or home brew club? Please send me photos – I want to include them in an upcoming post! DM me on Twitter @craftbeergroup or email me:

dave(at)away(dash)team(dot)com

Probably the hottest story in North Carolina Beer (so far this year) is hops! The potential of several new farms in Western North Carolina paired with NC State’s research have been making the rounds in the news and the newest story appears in this Week’s Independent Weekly. All About Beer’s Julie Johnson writes the monthly column Beer Hopping for the Independent Weekly and and chats with NCSU researcher Scott King:

Scott King, a researcher in the NCSU Department of Soil Science, describes the project as “a classic agricultural extension role,” where the scientists can explore variables that would prove a potentially ruinous risk for a farmer.

“The experimental design will allow us to play with different factors: pest and disease management, water management, fertilizer regime and pruning base,” says King. Most important, the 200 hop plants, established from rhizomes, represent 10 different American hop varieties in the hopes that early results will point to good disease resistance. (Geek alert: The varieties are Cascade, Centennial, Chinook, Willamette, Northern Brewer, Nugget, Mt. Hood, Sterling, Zeus—a very high alpha acid hop not yet in commercial use—and Newport, renowned for disease resistance.)

As the new crop develops in the experimental plot, King hopes that the first year’s results will give some good information about potentially viable varieties.

hops at Pisgah Brewing

INFO ON TWO HOP FARM TOURS



© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

NC Hop Farm Tour

From Erin Bonito, the County Extension Secretary for North Carolina State University (details below):

“The Second Annual Hops Farms Tour is Saturday, July 31st, 2010 beginning at 8:00am at Winding River Hops Farm. The tour features two local growers in their second year of production and one premier local brewer.”

Hops Tour 2010

Hops Tour 2010



© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

The Hop Report

Wow, two great articles emerged this weekend that cover hop production in North Carolina. This is a story that keeps getting picked up by the media. Hop farming in NC is in it’s infancy and most of it revolves around research.

First Asheville’s Mountain Xpress profiles Sue Colucci’s Hops Page where she compiles Western North Carolina’s hop growing efforts:

Sue Colucci, NC Cooperative Extension agent, has created a webpage for the promotion of hops growing in WNC. There has been a lot of buzz around the production of hops in western North Carolina lately. While many of us recognize the end product of hops, flavorful and bitter beer or herbal remedies, we are less familiar with what the plant looks like and how it is produced.

And then a front page N&O article why the success of NC hop farming might be a long shot but not totally impossible!

Davis, an extension agent specialist, had already been working with four farms in the mountains that are trying to grow hops. The goals, Austin said, are to test the plants’ ability to grow in North Carolina and to monitor potential diseases, particularly mold, which drove hops production out of the eastern United States and Midwest in the 1920s. Now most hops grown in the U.S. come from arid parts of the Pacific Northwest.

Mountain Express article

News and Observer article

Photo of NC State’s hop fields with Fullsteam staffers

Hop Report

Hop Report



© 2011 Craft Beer Collective / Away Team Media

Bringing you the craft and culture of beer in North Carolina --> Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Wilmington, NC and beyond

Contact us at dave (at) away (dash) team (dot) com

Share

Switch to our mobile site