The Elkhorn Slough
by Daniel Mountjoy, Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Imagine yourself as a farmer on a 35 acre strawberry
ranch in the sandy coastal hills of Monterey County. You came
to California as a migrant farm worker over 20 years ago and gradually
learned the detailed management of berry production from your
employers and other farm workers. A berry broker agreed to finance
your production costs 10 years ago and you found some hillside
land to lease. Being an independent producer has not been easy.
Your primary language is Spanish, but virtually all production
assistance is in English. You have all the regular pest and disease
problems, and the winter rains cause severe erosion problems.
Some years you donít break even due to low berry prices
but at least it's your own farm.
This is the typical profile of about 85 strawberry
farmers who account for production of over $40 million worth of
berries on 2,800 acres in the watershed area surrounding Elkhorn
Slough. These farmers of Mexican origin and their Japanese-American
and Anglo neighbors were the subject of a farming survey that
I conducted in 1993 as part of a water quality study sponsored
by the Association of Monterey Bay Area Governments (AMBAG). The
findings have led to the formation of the Elkhorn Slough Watershed
Project, a Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCSóformerly
SCS) effort to address the unique needs of these small-scale,
limited-resource farmers.
One of the most striking findings of the survey was that the Mexican
farmers have less contact with advisors from Cooperative Extension
and NRCS than their neighbors. Despite the potential importance
of the technical information available through these public assistance
agencies only 10 percent of the Mexican farmers reported attending
any Extension event compared to 75 percent and 45 percent of Anglo
and Japanese growers respectively. Similarly, 30 percent of the
Mexican farmers had received assistance from NRCS compared to
60 percent of the Anglo and Japanese growers. Despite the fact
that the Mexican farmers produce on the steepest, most erodible
soils, they had implemented less erosion control than the most
profitable, larger acreage farms of the other ethnic groups.
What accounts for the low level of contact between the Mexican
farming sector and available public programs? Local stereotypes
suggest that Mexican farmers are less innovative and tend to stick
with familiar production techniques. However, their steady rise
as producers in the strawberry industry tends to contradict this
view and suggests instead that technical assistance programs may
not be as universally "available" as we assumed. Most
of the Mexican farmers interviewed simply didnít know that
public sources of farming information existed or tended to think
that all "government" programs are regulatory. In addition,
field days and assistance programs are under-utilized due to the
excessively technical format of the presentation, scheduling conflicts
with basic farm management tasks, the amount of paper work required,
and the lack of Spanish translations. As a result, the Mexican
community has learned to rely on its own members for farming information
and tends to learn of production innovations later than the rest
of the strawberry industry.