Meet the Ho Family
Oahu, Hawaii
It started with a little pest management
The Ho Family has 40 acres to farm Japanese cucumbers, long beans,
squash, tomatoes, and eggplant. They’ve been dedicated land stewards for
over 20 years. The conservation plan they hold with NRCS is to address
weeds, insects, and plant disease by following an integrated pest
management system.
In partnership with the Oahu Soil and Water Conservation District, the
Oahu Resource Conservation and Development, the University of
Hawaii’s Ag Extension, the Hawaii State Department of Agriculture, and
the Farm Bureau, the Ho family is working diligently to reduce the use of
chemicals with the limited resources they have.
In 2006, they were awarded a state Conservation Innovation Grant to
install and test a fine mesh netting screen house for exclusion of insect pests
of cucumber. The project seeks to install a technology that has been proven to
be effective in the mainland under temperate conditions but has
not been put to such a test in a tropical climate where insect pest pressure is
intense year round.
The new system will reduce the use of pesticide by 90% and address the
damage caused by pickleworm, melon thrips, silverleaf whitefly, and melon
fly. It also addresses the air quality and determines cost effectiveness of the
system for future use to reduce soil and water contamination from pesticides.
Wei Chong Ho and his family continually do soil testing on their property to
minimize the use of fertilizers and pesticides. Crop rotation is also used on
their farm. They truly care about their land and their neighbors.
Media Contact: Jolene Lau, Pacific Islands Area NRCS,
Jolene.lau@hi.usda.gov, 808-541-2600 ext. 135
For more information, visit www.nrcs.usda.gov or
www.nrcs.usda.gov/ourpurpose.
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