IPT Potato Tour of Russia: Visit to Production Cooperative “Boguslavsky” (Orenburg Oblast)

Potato Tour of Russia: Visit to Production Cooperative “Boguslavsky” (Orenburg Oblast)

Orenburg’s “Boguslavsky” cooperative: how to grow potatoes under 45–50 °C and hot dry winds. Night irrigation, heat-tolerant varieties, 25 kg bags, year-round staffing, and family succession.

Orenburg steppe, hot dry winds, and the “watermelon capital” — here, potatoes demand a special temperament. The production cooperative “Boguslavsky” started in the 2010s with just 10 hectares and watermelons. Today it’s a family-run farm operating about 1,500 ha, building a resilient vegetable system in an extremely hot climate.

“We have steppe, sukhovei (hot, desiccating winds), and 45–50 °C in summer. That’s a plus for watermelon and a constant stress for potatoes. So we irrigated at night to cool fields and picked varieties that can take the heat,” the team explains.

Region & Beginnings: a Watermelon Heartland and Family Backbone

  • The area is known as a center of cucurbit production: “they plant more watermelon here than in many southern regions.”
  • Last season hit watermelons hard: rains + logistics — part of the crop couldn’t be hauled in time, and growers lost out.
  • It’s a family enterprise: dig a little and “everything is ours.” Children — and even grandchildren — are involved: summer shifts on machines and sorting lines, “teaching love for the land.”

Potatoes: Coping With Heat

  • Agro-tech: night irrigation; gradual move from hose-reel sets to modern irrigation machines; careful ridge work to avoid damage from surface watering.
  • Varieties (farm-tested): Columbia, Korolevan, Ortlen — “tolerate heat better,” show stress resistance.
  • Seed: part from trusted suppliers (“from Andrey”), part own grading/selection.
  • Fields & water: center-pivot circles 750–900 m; water from 35–40 m boreholes, “slightly saline but workable.”

Cropping & Economics

  • Besides potatoes: peas and barley in the rotation.
  • Grain prices, according to the farmers, haven’t covered costs for two seasons (barley cited around ≈5,800 ₽/t — “below cost”).
  • Potatoes go mainly to the local retail market: households cellar them and closely watch quality and storability “through June–August.”
  • 25 kg bags instead of traditional 36–40 kg string-tied sacks: less reliance on loaders and easier for older buyers to carry into root cellars.

People: Shortage of Operators & the Year-Round Answer

  • An acute shortage of machine operators — “a nationwide story.”
  • Boguslavsky’s remedy: year-round employment (not just the seasonal “watermelon spike”) and a stable crew — “when the same people work daily, the rhythm is smoother and the machinery lasts longer.”

Equipment & What’s Next

  • Much of the fleet is used but well-kept: “the main thing is care and maintenance.”
  • Dream on the horizon: a four-row self-propelled harvester — “expensive but worthwhile; when it works in the field, efficiency is on a different level.”

Competition & “Right-Sized” Growth

  • The site is remote from large processors and major players — competition is lower, but the logistics leg bites.
  • Growth philosophy: no big leaps — “hold ground for the next 2–3 years, refine quality and technology, don’t chase acreage.”

Key Facts From the Visit

  • Where: Production Cooperative “Boguslavsky,” Orenburg Oblast.
  • Area: about 1,500 ha in rotation.
  • Climate factor: hot dry winds, 45–50 °C → night irrigation.
  • Potato varieties: Columbia, Korolevan, Ortlen (farm-rated as more heat-tolerant).
  • Sales: local market; focus on storability through summer.
  • Packaging: 25 kg — convenient for private buyers.
  • Labor: shortage of operators; priority on year-round jobs.
  • Water: boreholes 35–40 m, mild salinity.
  • Plans: tech upgrades (self-propelled harvester), no aggressive expansion.

“We’re not alone. There are people who want to plant and feed the country. When labor starts paying, you go to work like to a celebration, not to hard labor.”

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

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