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75A - PH - EIR -1584 E SANTA CLARA AVE
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75A - PH - EIR -1584 E SANTA CLARA AVE
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Last modified
2/27/2014 5:04:05 PM
Creation date
2/27/2014 4:53:25 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Agency
Planning & Building
Item #
75A
Date
3/4/2014
Destruction Year
2019
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5/22/20 t3 Sexlinger Orange Grove Page 12 <br />Analysis <br />Considering the price of water in Orange County, the value of land, the tax rate, and the ever - <br />increasing number of citrus pests and diseases, there is no way to snake a Valencia orange grove <br />even pay for itself. The only similar size grove in this area is, according to one family member, <br />"an expensive hobby', and they have a roadside stand so they are malting more money per <br />pound, Consider that packing houses are paying about $0,.05 per pound'and one healthy average <br />Valencia orange; produces about 200 pounds, Ten- dollars, per year per tree might cover the cost <br />of water in a wet year. If healthy trees filled all the availablc spaces (480) on this site, (only 226 <br />now are filled and 24 of which are healthy), the crop might be worth $4,800, assuming you <br />picked them yourself and shipping was free. However, there are many other expenses. <br />In speaking to Nick Nissen tit the Agriculture Commissioner's office, whose family has the last, <br />or one of the Mast, "commercial" orchards in Orange County; I learned that there is no way to <br />make a go of it at any size unless you have your own well and a larger property trader the <br />Williamson Act. At five cents a pound, maybe not even then would, it pay for itself. <br />At the'Sexiinger orchard 456 new trees would be needed to refill the property with healthy trees <br />that would have a chance of growing into a orchard capable of producing $4,800 worth offruit <br />per year. Another expense would be the cost of buying and planting those trees, and then taking <br />.care of them for the next five to seven years until they can produce a'worthwhile crop of fruit. <br />Replanting should he with 5 gallon container size trees. Each tree will cost approximately $15 <br />wholesale. Planting will also cost about $15. The total cost to install them for installation and <br />materials will then be $13,680. Removal of the 202 old unhealthy trees will cost about $100 per <br />free, or $20,200. <br />Fruit trees in general tend to have more pests because they produce more sugar that insects like <br />to feed on. Citrus are often infested by scale, psyllids, fruit flies, and finites, Typical commercial <br />and cost effective spraying methods would not be acceptable to the neighbors and local <br />community. Now we have the Asian psyllid, which brings the threat of Huanglongbing, a deadly <br />bacterial' disease. Huanglongbing is one of the most devastating citrus diseases in the world and <br />incurable. Infected trees must be removed and destroyed quickly to avoid infecting other citrus. <br />As privately held ,property by Concordia and Lutheran High; expecting them to m_ ake money <br />growing citrus is unreasonable. Now that this property is almost surrounded by residential <br />properties and parks, and zoned RI, the highest and best use of the property is RI residential use. <br />The Guy Stivers report is in error expecting any significant root growth to five feet deep. If there <br />are any toots at five feet it will be less than 1 percent ofthe root system. The amount of roots <br />growing to four feet deep is also extremely small Over 90 percent of the roots will be in the top <br />30 inches of soil. Considering the current decline and death of the trees, the report is a extreme <br />exaggeration of the amount of roots and their depth. Growing an orchard as a carbon bank does <br />not make sense in this area. <br />Conclusions <br />This property is not some sort of carbonn. bank, Orange m11Se11111 or one species botanic garden. <br />At onetime it may have been a viable orchard, or part of one. That time has long pasted. There <br />is a nice public part, next door and two cemeteries that can serve as "carbon banks ". Few if any <br />people would spend time to visit ail orange museum. <br />ARBORGATE CONSULTING, INC. <br />Hocticuttiue & Arbodculture <br />1131 Lucinda Way, Tus6u, Cif 92780, PI1. 714.731,6240, Cell: 714.292.7184, Fns 714.731:6138 <br />75A -122 <br />
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