Master commercial-scale leek production with intensive management systems, precision nutrition, integrated pest management, and post-harvest handling for market success.
Dr. Michael Chen
Ph.D. in Plant Sciences from UC Davis. Former extension specialist with 20+ years of agricultural research experience. Specializes in commercial vegetable production and integrated pest management.
My Garden Journal
Advanced Leek Production: Commercial Systems & Intensive Management
This advanced guide addresses commercial-scale leek production, covering intensive management systems, precision nutrition, integrated pest and disease control, and post-harvest handling. Whether you're scaling a market garden or developing commercial production, these strategies will optimize your leek enterprise.
Commercial Production Systems
Site Selection
Optimal Field Characteristics:
| Factor | Specification | Importance |
|---|---|---|
| Soil Type | Deep loam to sandy loam | Critical for shank development |
| Soil Depth | 18"+ of loose soil | Blanching success |
| Drainage | Excellent | Disease prevention |
| Organic Matter | 4-6% | Nutrient retention |
| Previous Crop | Non-allium | 4+ year rotation required |
| pH | 6.2-6.8 | Nutrient availability |
Production Systems
Flat Bed System:
- Standard bed width: 36-48 inches
- Rows per bed: 3-4
- In-row spacing: 4-6 inches
- Requires mechanical hilling for blanching
Raised Bed System:
- Bed height: 8-12 inches
- Better drainage
- Easier blanching with less hilling
- Higher initial cost
Transplant Production:
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Cell size | 200-288 cells/tray |
| Growing time | 8-10 weeks |
| Transplant size | 8-12 inches tall, pencil thick |
| Root trimming | Trim to 1 inch before transplanting |
| Leaf trimming | Trim to 4-6 inches |
Commercial Planting Configurations
Standard Commercial Spacing:
| Configuration | Rows/Bed | Spacing | Plants/Acre |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3 | 6" x 18" | 58,000 |
| Intensive | 4 | 4" x 14" | 112,000 |
| Ultra-intensive | 5 | 3" x 12" | 174,000 |
Production Calendar (Northern Temperate)
Year-Round Production Schedule:
| Planting | Transplant | Variety Type | Harvest |
|---|---|---|---|
| January (greenhouse) | Mid-April | Early | July-August |
| February (greenhouse) | May | Mid-season | September-October |
| March (greenhouse) | May-June | Late | November-December |
| April (direct seed) | — | Overwinter | March-May (next year) |
Precision Nutrition Management
Soil Fertility Targets
Pre-Plant Soil Test Goals:
| Nutrient | Optimal Level | If Deficient |
|---|---|---|
| Nitrogen (NO₃) | 20-30 ppm | Increase N program |
| Phosphorus (Bray P1) | 40-60 ppm | Apply triple superphosphate |
| Potassium | 200-300 ppm | Apply potassium sulfate |
| Calcium | 1,500-2,500 ppm | Lime or gypsum |
| Magnesium | 150-250 ppm | Dolomitic lime or epsom salt |
| Sulfur | 15-25 ppm | Gypsum |
| Boron | 1-2 ppm | Borax |
Fertilization Program
Total Season Requirements (per acre):
- Nitrogen: 180-250 lbs
- Phosphorus (P₂O₅): 60-80 lbs
- Potassium (K₂O): 120-160 lbs
Application Schedule:
| Timing | N | P₂O₅ | K₂O | Form |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-plant | 60 | 60 | 80 | Broadcast, incorporate |
| 3 weeks post | 40 | 0 | 20 | Side-dress |
| 6 weeks post | 40 | 0 | 20 | Side-dress |
| 9 weeks post | 40 | 0 | 20 | Side-dress |
| 12 weeks post | 30 | 0 | 10 | Side-dress/fertigation |
Fertigation System
Drip System Specifications:
| Component | Specification |
|---|---|
| Tape | 8 mil, 8-12" emitter spacing |
| Flow rate | 0.4-0.6 GPM/100 ft |
| Pressure | 8-12 psi |
| Lines per bed | 1-2 (centered or dual) |
Weekly Fertigation (lbs N/acre):
| Week | N | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1-3 | 5 | Establishment |
| 4-7 | 10 | Rapid growth |
| 8-11 | 12 | Peak demand |
| 12+ | 8 | Bulking |
Mechanical Operations
Mechanical Transplanting
Transplanter Types:
- Water-wheel transplanters (small scale)
- Mechanical transplanter systems (large scale)
- Precision planting for uniform stands
Optimal Conditions:
- Soil temperature: >50°F (10°C)
- Soil moisture: Moist but not saturated
- Transplant condition: Turgid, hardened
Mechanical Hilling
Hilling Schedule:
| Pass | Timing | Height Added | Cumulative |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4 weeks post | 2-3 inches | 2-3" |
| 2 | 7 weeks post | 2-3 inches | 4-6" |
| 3 | 10 weeks post | 2-3 inches | 6-9" |
| 4 | 13 weeks post | 1-2 inches | 7-11" |
Equipment Options:
- Cultivator with hilling disks
- Dedicated hilling equipment
- Modified potato hiller
Integrated Pest Management
Monitoring Protocols
Scouting Schedule:
- Weekly during active growth
- Check 10 locations per acre
- 5 plants per location
- Record pest numbers and damage levels
Pest Thresholds:
| Pest | Threshold | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Thrips | 3-5/plant or damage visible | Treatment |
| Allium leafminer | Any adults detected | Row covers |
| Onion maggot | 5% plants affected | Treatment |
| Leek moth | Any larvae detected | Treatment |
Biocontrol Integration
Beneficial Organisms:
| Agent | Target | Release Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Amblyseius cucumeris | Thrips | 50-100/plant |
| Orius insidiosus | Thrips | 1-2/plant |
| Steinernema feltiae | Onion maggot | 250M/acre |
Chemical Control Program
Rotational Spray Program:
| Week | Target | Product Class | Active |
|---|---|---|---|
| As needed | Thrips | Spinosyn | Spinosad |
| As needed | Thrips | Neonicotinoid | Imidacloprid |
| As needed | Moths | Microbial | Bt |
| As needed | Disease | Copper | Copper hydroxide |
Disease Management
Rust Management Protocol:
| Condition | Risk Level | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Dry, low humidity | Low | Monitor |
| Moderate humidity | Moderate | Scout weekly |
| High humidity, 59-73°F | High | Preventive fungicide |
| Active infection | — | Fungicide rotation |
Fungicide Rotation (for rust):
| Week | Product Class | Active Ingredient |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Strobilurin | Azoxystrobin |
| 3 | DMI | Tebuconazole |
| 5 | Contact | Mancozeb |
| 7 | Strobilurin | Pyraclostrobin |
Harvest and Post-Harvest
Harvest Specifications
Commercial Grade Standards:
| Grade | Diameter | Length | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fancy | 1.5-2" | 6"+ white | No defects |
| No. 1 | 1-2" | 5"+ white | Minor blemishes |
| No. 2 | 0.75-2.5" | 4"+ white | More defects allowed |
Harvest Operations
Field Harvest Protocol:
- Undercut with blade or lifter
- Pull by hand or mechanical
- Remove outer leaves
- Root trim (1" stub)
- Top trim (12-16" total length)
- Wash if marketing immediately
- Pack or bin for cold storage
Mechanical Harvest:
- Undercutter bar loosens soil
- Top lifter raises plants
- Labor follows for collection
- Production: 100-200 lbs/person-hour
Post-Harvest Handling
Cooling:
| Method | Temperature Target | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Hydrocooling | 33-35°F | 15-20 min |
| Forced-air | 33-35°F | 4-8 hours |
| Room cooling | 33-35°F | 12-24 hours |
Storage Specifications:
| Parameter | Optimal |
|---|---|
| Temperature | 32-34°F (0-1°C) |
| Humidity | 95-100% |
| Duration | 2-3 months |
| Atmosphere | Normal air (no CA needed) |
| Ethylene | Low producer, not sensitive |
Pack Formats
| Format | Count/Weight | Market |
|---|---|---|
| Bunched | 3-4 leeks/bunch | Retail, farmers market |
| Loose | 20 lb carton | Wholesale |
| Trimmed | 24 count | Foodservice |
| Baby leeks | 5-10 per bunch | Specialty |
Economic Analysis
Production Costs (Per Acre)
| Category | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Transplant production | $800-1,200 |
| Land preparation | $200-400 |
| Transplanting (labor) | $600-1,000 |
| Fertilizer | $300-500 |
| Irrigation | $200-400 |
| Pest management | $200-400 |
| Hilling operations | $300-500 |
| Harvest labor | $2,000-4,000 |
| Packing/washing | $500-1,000 |
| Total | $5,100-9,400 |
Revenue Projections
| Market | Price | Yield | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wholesale | $0.75-1.25/lb | 15,000-25,000 lbs | $11,250-31,250 |
| Farmers Market | $2.00-3.50/bunch | 12,000-18,000 bunches | $24,000-63,000 |
| Restaurant | $1.50-2.50/lb | 15,000-20,000 lbs | $22,500-50,000 |
Break-Even Analysis
- Wholesale: ~7,000 lbs @ $1.00/lb
- Retail/Farmers Market: ~3,000 bunches @ $2.50
Troubleshooting Advanced Issues
Problem: Inconsistent sizing across field
- Cause: Uneven transplanting, irrigation variation, soil differences
- Solution: Calibrate transplanter, audit irrigation uniformity, zone management
Problem: Excessive rust despite sprays
- Cause: Spray timing, resistance, environmental conditions
- Solution: Preventive applications, rotate chemistries, improve air flow
Problem: Poor blanching/short white shank
- Cause: Insufficient hilling, soil falling back, shallow planting
- Solution: More frequent hilling, use collars, deeper initial planting
Problem: High post-harvest losses
- Cause: Delayed cooling, temperature fluctuations, disease
- Solution: Rapid cooling (<2 hours), strict cold chain, pre-harvest inspection
Quality Assurance Checklist
Pre-Harvest:
- Scout for pests/diseases 48 hours prior
- Verify size meets grade standards
- Check washing/packing facilities
- Confirm cold storage availability
Harvest:
- Harvest in cool part of day
- Minimize handling damage
- Remove damaged/diseased plants
- Transport to washing facility promptly
Post-Harvest:
- Cool to 35°F within 4 hours
- Maintain cold chain
- Document lot numbers
- Quality check before shipping
With these advanced production systems, you'll achieve the consistency, quality, and efficiency required for successful commercial leek production.
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