OFFICE 805 925 2478
SALES 805 925 2585
BONIPAK PRODUCE INC
P.O. Box 5079
1850 W STOWELL ROAD
SANTA MARIA
CALIFORNIA
93456














Betteravia Farms, the growing team at Bonipak, is always looking for new ideas in farming that can improve the quality of the produce we grow and enhance our soil management operations. Through seminars, industry research and in-the-field testing, we are constantly educating ourselves. Every field that we plant undergoes some sort of test or trial. Crop spacing, seed coating, water trials, fertilizer trials, variety trials... are just some of the tests we do on a regular basis. Data is collected, analyzed and logged. And results are used to implement new procedures if we determine them beneficial to our operation.



farming on 15,000 crop acres
The Santa Maria Valley in California's central coast is home to Betteravia Farms and over 15,000 crop acres of multi-commodity farmland. Additionally, another 2,500 crop acres in California and Arizona are farmed under Bonipak contractual agreements.

In 2002, Betteravia was ranked 16th nationally in number of crop acres farmed, and in 2003 they received a prestigious, national Grower Achievement Award honoring outstanding growing practices.



responsible growing practices
All the commodities grown at Bonipak are available year round. One of the reasons this is possible lies in the way we manage the soil. Unlike previous generations at Bonipak, today we're aided by technological advances not seen before in farming. But we still have that same love for the land as we did in the beginning.

We know that through care and responsible growing practices we''ll leave this land for the next generation as bountiful as it is today.



minimum tillage and cultivation
Other growers, even today, are using what we consider to be old methods when it comes to cultivation. They use Moldboard plows and other high-horsepower equipment to go into a field after harvest and begin turning the plant beds under. Soil is taken from about 18 inches down and rolled up to the surface. The n the process of creating plant beds begins all over again. It's called "deep tillage," and the equipment needed to do it is heavy and requires a lot of diesel fuel.

At Bonipak, we've learned to do it another way. It's called "minimum tillage" and it's a completely different method of treating the soil. We leave the recently harvested plant beds in place, and gently cultivate them into the soil using the plant residue as a natural source of fertilizer. Instead of plowing the bed down into a deep unusable location, we're keeping it on top, letting the organisms in the soil break the plant matter down. Through the microbial process that takes place in the soil, a reservoir of nutrients is released. Along with maintaining all the beneficial insects that are active there, we now have an increase in nutrients in the soil.

on-site laboratory
With the capabilities of our on-site laboratory we're now able to measure nutrient levels in the soil and hence, use less fertilizers because of the natural nutrients created by minimum tillage.

farming the soil
We've taken on the philosophy that we're not farming crops, we're farming the soil. If we make sure the soil is in good condition, where it's active and healthy, we know that the plants we grow there will be healthy, vigorous and disease resistant. Healthy plants have the natural ability to resist disease and pests which in turn cuts down on the usage of pesticides and herbicides.

integrated pest management
In the past, fertilizer and pesticide application was always done on a schedule. It was a "spray and kill the bug" philosophy rather than having the plant defend itself. We're now working on developing new, resistant varieties that can battle insects and diseases on their own. Using cover crops, compost, crop rotation and select planting locations we're able to minimize the use of pesticides and fertilizers. Unlike the days of aerial spraying that covered the entire field, spraying today is done by tractor, is more precise and effects only the immediate problem areas.

computerized electronic drip irrigation
In the mid-1990's, computerized electronic drip irrigation was a new technology. At Bonipak, we embraced this new process almost immediately, and we cut our water usage and fertilizer usage in half. Today, all Bonipak growing fields are irrigated through this process.

However, we're never quite satisfied with the status quo. We are constantly evaluating new materials and methods to improve upon irrigation and our overall growing operations.