Key themes: Volga-sourced irrigation and its evolution, a shift from a massive vegetable economy to a diversified model with dairy, workforce realities, and climate shifts seen by a hands-on practitioner.

From flood meadows to center pivots

Sergey Kislyakov recalls childhood and youth on the Volga: once there were lush flood meadows and chains of lakes; part of the farm’s land later fell into the inundation zone. Systematic irrigation arrived only at the end of the 1970s—canals were dug, and by 1982 the Fregat system was running at full capacity. Before that, roughly 140 ha were irrigated by pumping from the Volga, growing early potatoes and a wide range of vegetables (radish, carrot, cabbage, beet, tomato, etc.).

The “vegetable economy” of the past

In Soviet times, Lunacharsk supplied vegetables at scale: cabbage storages held 6,000–7,000 tonnes, and potatoes went to the city’s wholesale bases. Potato area reached 1,200 ha; harvests involved thousands of volunteers and students—field sorting into containers and endless buses shuttling people to the fields.

Today’s structure: less sprawl, more efficiency

AO “Lunacharsk,” the successor of the former state farm, has passed all the familiar legal forms and now operates more compactly: 4,643 ha under management after some farmers withdrew with their land. The production mix includes:

  • Crops: grains, potato, soy, perennial and annual forages, corn primarily for silage (with trial grain plots).
  • Dairy livestock (with beef as a by-product via culling) and finishing of young bulls when feasible.
  • Infrastructure: on-farm grain hub, a new dryer (not yet needed to run on gas), storage capacity “for the whole volume” (a small shortfall in underground space), a machinery fleet with its own maintenance and overhaul shop, and a small construction unit focused on upkeep.

Irrigation: between policy and reality

The farm uses Fregat pivots and DDA-100 machines on an open-channel network. From more than 700 ha of open networks in the past, only 40–100 ha are irrigated in practice, depending on the year. Official support exists, but typically requires building the project with your own funds first, then queuing for compensation—hardly motivating given the risks. Field risks include theft and vandalism—even parts stripped off a moving pivot.

Productivity and people

The workforce has shrunk from ~600 to a lean team that covers the entire operation. For years the focus was on productivity—aggregating implements, doubling and tripling hitches to do more with fewer tractors. Today the chief challenge is labor: “mechanics are aging,” while many younger workers want a five-day week with two days off and clear shifts, even at lower pay. Winters are a standard five-day schedule; long New Year breaks are normal. The principle: don’t keep people “for the sake of a broom”—let them rest when fields aren’t urgent.

Kislyakov welcomes the return of school tractor classes: what matters is skills and mindset, not just a diploma. He recalls strong “people of the soil” who covered both agronomy and mechanics.

Climate change: old signs no longer work

Decades of observation convince him that his grandfather’s weather signs—like crows on wires foretelling rain—no longer hold. Around the Zhiguli Sea (Kuybyshev Reservoir), the climate has noticeably shifted, demanding adjustments in agronomy and more caution in decision-making (a lucerne seeding timed by “signs” once got trapped by drought).

Family and succession

Speaking about his son Maxim (CEO of Samara Solana), Kislyakov highlights perseverance, focus, and languages. “During talks with Germans, he suddenly switched to English, then to German—he just works,” says Sergey. He notes a healthy generational difference: younger managers weigh work–life balance differently than the “old guard.”

What’s next?

Big forecasts are tough, but the direction is clear: maintain irrigated acres, add storage, keep renewing equipment, retain in-house maintenance and basic construction, and seek a sustainable staffing model. Sunflower only in small rotations (“so we don’t turn soil into asphalt”), corn mostly for silage, grains as the feed base for dairy. Potatoes remain a keystone crop, calibrated to market, climate, and labor realities.


Potatoes News takeaway: Lunacharsk illustrates adaptation in motion—from a vast vegetable machine powered by thousands of seasonal hands to a compact, technical farm that still anchors irrigation, dairy, and potatoes. Craft skill, pragmatism, and a clear-eyed read of shifting climate and labor markets underpin its resilience here and now.

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Viktor Kovalev CEO
POTATOES NEWS Viktor Kovalev is the founder of Potatoes.News and the creator of the International Potato Tour (IPT) — a global multimedia project that connects potato farmers, processors, researchers, and agribusiness companies across more than 20 countries. Viktor writes about potato production, processing technologies, storage, seed breeding, export markets, innovations, and sustainable agriculture. His work combines journalism, field research, and video storytelling, giving readers and viewers a unique perspective on the global potato industry. Areas of expertise: Global potato market trends Seed potato production and certification Potato processing (chips, flakes, fries, starch) Smart farming and agri-technologies Storage, logistics, and export Interviews and field reports from leading producers