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Avocados From Mexico summer promotion partners with NatureSweet tomatoes and RealSweet Vidalia onions – Produce Blue Book

Avocados From Mexico summer promotion partners with NatureSweet tomatoes and RealSweet Vidalia onions – Produce Blue Book
producebluebook.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from producebluebook.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Proud to be a Farmer: Shuman Farms

Proud to be a Farmer: Shuman Farms Proud to be a Farmer: Shuman Farms By Dal Cannady | May 10, 2021 at 6:11 PM EDT - Updated May 10 at 6:49 PM TATTNALL COUNTY, Ga. (WTOC) - A Tattnall County farmer splits his time and energy between raising his own crops and helping deliver someone else’s nationwide. Bret Caudell watches sweet onions come in from the field and get ready to ship coast to coast. He started at Shuman Farms two days after he graduated college, 15 years ago. “I’d say the interest in agriculture started as a child. As I turned into an adult, it turned into a passion,” said Caudell.

SEPC s first STEP-UPP Virtual Classroom a success

The Southeast Produce Council held its first STEP-UPP Virtual Classroom within the SEPC Virtual Garden on Wednesday, April 28. STEP-UPP, which is an acronym for Southeast Training Education Program for Upcoming Produce Professionals, is SEPC’s flagship program giving retail and foodservice produce professionals a greater understanding of the industry through an emphasis on strategic orientation, personal leadership and hands-on field experience. 

Shuman Farms has long history with Vidalia onions

By April 28, 2021 The Vidalia onion is the official state vegetable of Georgia, and Shuman Farms is a big player in the Vidalia industry. Vidalia onions can only be grown which is made up of a 20-county region in south Georgia. Most of Shuman Farms’ production comes from Toombs and Tattnall counties, in the center of the designated growing region.  “The Vidalia onion was accidently discovered in Georgia in the 1930s during the Great Depression,” said John Shuman, President and CEO of Shuman Farms. “While a local favorite in Georgia, snowbirds driving back north in the south are accredited for spreading the word about Vidalia onions in the mid-Atlantic and Northeast. They would stop at roadside stands on their way back home to buy Vidalias for themselves and their neighbors back home.”

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