Cornell Vegetable Program Enrollment

Program Areas

  • Food Safety
  • Variety Evaluation
  • Market Development
  • Pest Management
  • Cultural Practices

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  • VegEdge Newsletter
  • Direct Mailings
  • Educational Meetings & Conferences
  • In-Field Educational Opportunities
  • On-Farm Research Trials

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Event Offers DEC Credits

Event Details

Date

March 6, 2018

Time

9:30 AM - 2:30 PM

Location

First United Methodist Church
8221 Lewiston Rd (Rt 63)
Batavia, NY 14020

Cost

$25.00 CVP enrollee
(additional attendee $25.00 ea.)

$35.00 Non-CVP enrollee
(additional attendee $35.00 ea.)
Includes lunch if pre-registered by March 1



At the Door
$25.00 CVP enrollees
$35.00 All others
Lunch cannot be guaranteed unless pre-registered.

Host

Cornell Vegetable Program

Julie Kikkert
585-394-3977 x404

Pre-Registration Deadline: March 1, 2018

EVENT HAS PASSED

2018 NYS Dry Bean Meeting

March 6, 2018

2018 NYS Dry Bean Meeting

Join us for research and production updates on dry bean varieties and bean breeding, weed management, Western bean cutworm, and white mold disease. A market analysis will be provided as well. We will review research priorities and gather suggestions for future educational programs. DEC recertification credits and CCA credits will be available.

Agenda Topics:
  • Market analysis update - John McCreedy, New York Bean LLC
  • Weed management roundtable discussion and review of industry concerns form the 2017 growing season - Julie Kikkert, CCE Cornell Vegetable Program, and John Wallace, Cornell
  • Towards a durable management strategy for white mold in dry beans in NY - Sarah Pethybridge, NYS Agricultural Experiment Station, Cornell - Geneva
  • Breeding, evaluation and development of dry bean varieties that are highly adapted to NYS growing environments and markets - Phil Griffiths, Cornell
  • Comparison of new and standard dry bean varieties at the NYS Agricultural Experiment Station Research Farm - Jim Ballerstein, NYS Agricultural Experiment Station, Cornell - Geneva
  • What's new from industry? 
  • Crop insurance education project update - Daniel Welch, NY FarmNet
  • Cool school food: Encouraging the use of dry beans in school lunches, and promoting the health aspects of dry bean consumption - Amie Hamlin, Coalition for Healthy School Food
  • The magnitude and distribution of western bean cutworm and the risk to dry bean production - Marion Zuefle, NYS IPM Program
  • Report on the NYS Dry Bean Endowment for dry bean research - Shelly Vaccaro, NYSAES, Cornell - Geneva
  • 2:10 PM - Adjourn educational meeting and pick up DEC certificates
  • 2:15-2:30 PM - NYS Dry Bean Industry Advisory Committee Meeting - John McCreedy
Cost: $25 for Cornell Vegetable Program enrollees; $35 for all others. Registration will be available at the door but lunch cannot be guaranteed unless pre-registration is received by March 1st.

This event is sponsored by New York Bean LLC.

Sponsor opportunities are available.

Questions or special needs, contact Julie Kikkert. In case of bad weather, call 585-313-8160.




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Upcoming Events

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Announcements

Cornell Crop and Pest Management Guidelines Paused

From Cornell IPM:

Highlighting its commitment to quality and long-term sustainability, Cornell Integrated Pest Management's Pesticide Safety Education Program has announced
a pause in production of the 2026 Cornell Crop and Pest Management Guidelines.

Cornell IPM Director Alejandro Calixto said this temporary measure is the result of a comprehensive reimagining process facilitated by Illume Projects of Ithaca, which included end-user interviews, internal surveys and sales data analytics.

"It became clear to us that we cannot continue producing the guidelines and fully restructure them at the same time," Calixto said. "By pausing production, we can dedicate all available resources and time to rebuilding the production process, ensuring that when we re-launch in 2027, the guidelines will reflect a modernized approach built around the grower and other user experience."

A series of annually updated reference manuals produced by Cornell IPM and the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS), the Cornell Crop and Pest Management Guidelines are widely used by farmers, agronomists, crop consultants and extension educators in New York and throughout the Northeast. They include information about current IPM recommendations, pesticide options, cultural practices, nutrient management, disease, insect and weed identification and resistance-management strategies.

Calixto and Pesticide Safety Education Program Lead Mike Helms will spearhead efforts to restructure the guideline process over the next 12 months, with a goal of launching a more streamlined, user-friendly version in 2027.

Limited copies of the 2025 guidelines remain available for purchase while supplies last through The Cornell Store. The 2026-2027 Greenhouse Guidelines will be available.

For more information contact Helms at mjh14@cornell.edu.