Metadata
Title
Soil to Market
Category
general
UUID
577cb7a9106149b4abc9ab8645ff7946
Source URL
https://ag.purdue.edu/department/agecon/extension/soiltomarket.html
Parent URL
https://ag.purdue.edu/department/agecon/undergraduate-program/scholarships.html
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T03:23:33+00:00
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Soil to Market

Source: https://ag.purdue.edu/department/agecon/extension/soiltomarket.html Parent: https://ag.purdue.edu/department/agecon/undergraduate-program/scholarships.html

About the Soil to Market Project

The Soil to Market project is based out of the USDA-NIFA funded grant, “Taking the Next Step as a Small and Medium Sized Farm: Understanding the Integration of Production, Food Safety, and Profitability,” which will address farmer decision making with respect to appropriate scale management strategies and technologies to enhance economic efficiency and sustainability. The Soil to Market project stands to address those issues with three pillars of curriculum in economics, production, and food safety. The critical output of this project is a research-based program that is based on the interdependence and unification of applied research and Extension from each pillar. Scroll down for more information on the three pillars and to learn more about Soil to Market team members.

Research has shown that small and medium-sized farms have lower profit margins. In Indiana, only 16% of vegetable farmers had sales over $50,000. Our goal is to improve the profitability of small and medium-sized vegetable farms by developing a research-based Extension program that increases strategic soil to market decision making by farmers titled Soil to Market Decision Making.

Events & Webinars

March Webinar Series: Scaling Up Your Small- and Medium-Size Farm

This March webinar series covers Marketing and Food Safety Planning. 

Marketing topics on March 7th and 9th.

Food Safety Plan topics on March 21st, 23rd, 28th, and 30th. 

Register and learn more here!

April 2023: Soil Quality and Fertility: Impact of Compost and Cover Crops

Soil quality and fertility. What is the impact of compost and cover crops?

Join Petrus Langenhoven and Nathan Shoaf at Agriculture Soil Management Webinar, April 4, 2023

Register and learn more here!

April Webinar Series: Scaling Up Your Small- and Medium-Size Farm

This April webinar series covers Agricultural Soil Management & Good Agricultural Practices

April dates are the 4th, 6th, 11th, and 13th. 

Register and learn more here!

April 2023: Using soil test results to develop a soil fertility management plan for vegetables

Using soil test results to develop a soil fertility management plan for vegetables

Join Petrus Langenhoven and Nathan Shoaf at Agriculture Soil Management Webinar, April 6, 2023

Register and learn more here!

VETERAN FARMER WEBINAR SERIES - recordings available.

VETERAN FARMER WEBINAR SERIES

View past recorded sessions here!

Publications from the Project

From Soil to Market: How Integrated Decision-Making Drives Vegetable Production Success

by Petrus Langenhoven, Maria Marshall, Nathan Shoaf, and Renee Wiatt in Vegetable Crops Hotline

Access the Article Here!

Succession, Family, and Success: Differences Across Farm Size and Farm Type

by Renee Wiatt and Maria Marshallin Vegetable Crops Hotline

Access the Article Here!

From Soil to Market: How Vegetable Growers Are Integrating Sustainable Practices

by Petrus Langenhoven,Maria Marshall, Nathan Shoaf, and Renee Wiattin Vegetable Crops Hotline

Access the Article Here!

The Connected Farm: How Growers Integrate Practices from Soil to Market

by Maria Marshall, Petrus Langenhoven, and Renee Wiattin Vegetable Crops Hotline

Access the Article Here!

Small and Medium Farms: Does Focusing on and Communicating with Customers Pay Off?

by Renee Wiatt and Maria Marshallin Vegetable Crops Hotline

Access the Article Here!

Mix Organic, Conventional Methods to Boost Soil Health

by Petrus Langenhoven and Nathan Shoafin Vegetable Growers Network

Access the Article Here!

PROGRAM PILLARS & OBJECTIVES

Pillar 1 Objectives

Improve farm management practices of small and medium-sized vegetable farmers by: 

  1. assessing farmers' current soil to market planning processes,
  2. evaluating barriers to integrated soil to market strategic planning,
  3. calculating the increased profitability of integrated soil to market planning, and
  4. developing a Vegetable Farm Strategic Planning Extension program that increases farmer awareness of how profitable farm planning is an integrated process.

Pillar 2 Objectives

Increase farm production capacity and produce quality by enhancing the farmers' ability to comprehensively manage soil health and plant nutrient availability while using appropriate genetic materials by: 

  1. assessing soil health variables to determine best management practices (BMPs) for optimal vegetable production,
  2. evaluate how the best features of organic and conventional production systems can be utilized to improve soil health, nutrient availability, productivity, and produce quality,
  3. increase understanding of how different commercially-available compost sources affect soil health and productivity,
  4. evaluation and selection of appropriate vegetable varieties suitable for use during spring, summer, and fall production in each region,
  5. develop and evaluate nutrient management strategies for optimized vegetable production in different soil types in each region, and
  6. develop an Intensive Sustainable Production Extension program to assist small and medium-sized farms to improve yield and produce quality, while taking care of their most valuable resource, soil.

Pillar 3 Objectives

Increase farmer profitability by enhancing their understanding of consumer food safety expectations and use of food safety practices by:

  1. assessing consumer expectations of quality and safety of produce from small and mid-size farms and identify consumer preferred communication strategies;
  2. evaluating small and mid-size produce farmers' attitude change toward food safety, and organic practices after exposure to consumer expectations on produce quality and safety; and
  3. developing and evaluating a food safety Extension program to assist small to medium-scale farmers to better compliance with Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) regulations titled Vegetable Food Safety and Quality Extension Program.

Soil to Market Team

Maria Marshall

Agricultural Economics

Professor, Jim and Lois Ackerman Endowed Chair in Agricultural Economics

mimarsha@purdue.edu

765.494.4268

Maria is the PI on the project and will be focused on Pillar 1. She is a Professor in the Department of Agricultural Economics at Purdue University, as well as the Jim and Lois Ackerman Endowed Chair in Agricultural Economics. Maria directs the Purdue Institute for Family Business and the North Central Regional Center for Rural Development.

Yoahua “Betty” Feng

Food Science

Assistant Professor

yhfeng@purdue.edu

765.494.0331

Betty Feng is Assistant Professor in the Department of Food Sciences at Purdue University. For the Soil to Market project, Betty will focus on Pillar 3.

Petrus Langenhoven

Horticulture and Landscape Architecture

Horticulture and Hydroponic Crop Specialist

plangenh@purdue.edu

765.496.7955

Petrus Langenhoven is a Horticulture and Hydroponic Crop Specialist in the Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture at Purdue University. For this project, Petrus will focus on Pillar 2.

Nathan Shoaf

Purdue Extension

Urban Agriculture State Coordinator

nlshoaf@purdue.edu

765.496.3225

Nathan Shoaf is the Urban Agriculture State Coordinator for Purdue Extension. For this project, Nathan will focus on Pillar 2.

Renee Wiatt

Agricultural Economics

Family Business Management Specialist

reneewiatt@purdue.edu

765.496.9051

Renee Wiatt is the Family Business Management Specialist in the Purdue Institute for Family Business, housed in the Department of Agricultural Economics at Purdue University. For this project, she will focus on Pillar 1.