Can you grow hops in WV?

Can you grow hops in WV?

Currently there is no large scale hops production in West Virginia. Some people grow the plant for home brewing purposes, but commercial brewers order from what what Cochran calls the “hops mecca of the U.S.,” the Pacific Northwest.

How much is an acre of hops worth?

How much is an acre of hops worth? You can get $3 to $15 per pound depending on market prices. At one pound per plant, you can get between $3,600 and $18,000 for your acre.

Can hops grow in Virginia?

Virginia is at the southern range for hops, which normally are grown between 35°-55° of latitude (primarily in the states of Washington and Oregon). As one hopgrower has noted: Hops are not an easy crop. If you want to grow for the beer industry, and do it easier, grow barley.

Do deer eat hops?

However, deer are pretty adaptive and will eat anything, including hops, if they cannot access the more palatable choices. If growing hops are native to your area, you might also have difficulty convincing them to leave your hops alone.

How many acres do you need to grow hops?

Instructions and assumptions

A
28 1 acre of hops = 960 hop plants (In row spacing = 3.5 ft. Between row spacing = 14 ft.)
29 5 acres of hops will require more than 5 acres of land (it usually takes 1.1 acre of land to produce 1 acre of hops)

What hops grow well in Virginia?

The main varieties grown (at least commercially) in Virginia seem to be Cascade, followed by Zeus, Chinook and Galena. In comparison, the hops grown in the Pacific Northwest are easily four times the yield per acre than can be grown here in the Mid-Atlantic.

What farming is in Virginia?

Virginia’s Top 10 Agricultural Commodities

Crop / Livestock Farm Cash Reciepts
Cattle & Calves $463M
Dairy products & milk $335M
Turkeys $296M
Greenhouse/nursery $295M

Do hops smell when growing?

Hops will smell most pungent when ready for harvest, and they should appear light in color and feel dry to the touch when ready. Without the addition of hops, beer just wouldn’t be the same. Growing your own for brewing purposes can be a great experience for both master brewers as well as novices.

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