The results presented in this publication serve as a general guide for evaluating the feasibility of two different harvest methods—hand and mechanical—for cider apples grown in western Washington as of 2015. Specific budget assumptions were adopted for this study, but these assumptions may not fit every situation since production costs and returns vary across orchard operations. To avoid unwarranted conclusions for any particular orchard, readers must closely examine the assumptions made in this publication, and then adjust the costs, returns, or both as appropriate for their operation.
Metrics
Details
Title
Feasibility of different harvest methods for cider apples : case study for Western Washington
Creators
Suzette P. Galinato (Author)
Carol A. Miles (Author)
Travis R. Alexander (Author)
Academic Unit
Publications, WSU Extension
Series
Technical Bulletin (Washington State University. Extension); 32
Publisher
Washington State University Extension; Pullman, Washington
Identifiers
99900502969801842
Copyright
In copyright ; openAccess ; http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ; http://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/OpenAccess