Neale Bennett: From Dried Fruits to Almonds – A Story of Adaptation and Resilience

MERBEIN almond grower Neale Bennett reckons he is ahead of schedule in this year’s harvest.

And he’s not just talking about the two, 21-acre blocks he runs with wife Debbie.

Because, in his spare time, he and a mate are also harvest contractors and still have another 970-plus hectares to get through.

But, season notwithstanding, in the perfect world it will still all be a wrap by Easter.

It’s a pretty impressive workload by anyone’s imagination, but Bennett is the first to admit he is something of an impulse farm manager and that tends to make life a little difficult from time to time.

First it was 1992 and he was facing yet another series of challenges in the dried fruits industry, in which he and his family had been engaged since circa 1910.

So pulling right out of the family history to do what he believed would be the best decision for his and his family’s future, generated a fair bit of comment – and amusement – among neighbours and peers at the time.

“At times it was a bit like being in that old TV show Greenacres, where the city executive moves to the country and buys a farm and bumbles along from season to season,” he laughs.

“This had been grape country for a long time but things were getting challenging, and things were happening which pushed us towards change.

“The dried fruit market was deregulated — labour costs were soaring and plenty of our plantings had passed their use-by date.

“We could see the emergence of almonds as an opportunity, you could machine harvest, there was a lot of investment coming into the industry, it seemed a good decision to make.”

A decision which today sees almost 4000 trees across the Bennett family’s two blocks, and in a normal year that would deliver somewhere between 42 and 45 tonnes.

Last year it was barely 36 tonnes and almonds were an industry in pain.

Which is why Neale also believes Select Harvests copped a bit of harsh publicity, with its $115 million loss being plastered all over the media and wider world.

He says it wasn’t just almonds, right across horticulture it had been a very tough year.

“It was a year which had been way too wet, and too cold,” Bennett said.

“Like most irrigators, we do our fertigation through the drippers and they weren’t running anywhere near normal levels because of all the rain so we were already underdone for nutrients,” he said.

“Then all that cooler weather hardly helped the nutrients that were delivered synthesise, so we ended up with a lot of flatter almonds.

“Even worse, the varroa mite incursion stopped movement of hives across the Victoria/NSW border and that further reduced productivity so all of us, from Select Harvests to small production units such as ours, were hit hard by those conditions.

“But now we are half way through this harvest and things look a lot better, it’s not wet, yields seem OK and there are fewer problems, so it’s a matter of putting that bad harvest in the rearview mirror and focusing on rebuilding.”

Bennett said the previous harvest has also made sure everyone is going as fast as they can to get this one off the trees while weather conditions remain good.

The production target is to deliver processors – in his case Almondco in South Australia’s Riverland – a crop with a 5 per cent moisture level in the kernel.

That is the optimum level as the moisture impacts the quality of the final product and the 5 per cent gives you “the crunch” in your almond.

Bennett’s kernels are air-dried with the process starting with shakers at the trees, windrowing and then the conditioner is used to constantly turn over the kernels, clean out the twigs and leaves and prepare the crop for processing.

“We grow mostly Nonpareil, using Price and Carmel as our pollinators – but we have put in a trial patch of Shasta, a new self-fertile variety from California.

“It went in last year and we should start seeing some results in the next two or three years.”

The pollinators are also used for value-adding in products such as the slivered, flake or almond meal market.

All good results that might help protect his business from the ongoing varroa management challenges and then everything will be fine – until the next problem emerges.

And it will, Bennett concedes; or it just wouldn’t be farming.

Digital Editions


  • Ricegrowers backs review

    Ricegrowers backs review

    The Ricegrowers’ Association has welcomed the start of a 12‑week consultation on the Murray–Darling Basin Plan Review. RGA president Peter Herrmann said industry would take…

More News

  • Big crop predicted for almonds

    Big crop predicted for almonds

    The almond harvest is underway and 2026 could produce Australia’s largest almond crop. Nationally it’s estimated that almost 167 thousand tonnes will be harvested this year. That’s a seven per…

  • The calm before the storm

    The calm before the storm

    We appear to be bogged down in a rut, with the commissioning of our new plant. I was super frustrated a couple of months ago – at the spanner throwing,…

  • Backpacking paves the way to leadership

    Backpacking paves the way to leadership

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531373 SUNRAYSIA’s summer harvest attracts travellers on working holidays from all over the world, particularly Europe. These workers perform a vital service for regional…

  • Warm weather set to continue

    Warm weather set to continue

    BARLEY prices are supported as drought speculation builds, with growers holding onto grain for livestock feed. The Bureau of Meteorology January drought statement showed below-average rainfall for much of Victoria…

  • Growers warn of fallout from visa cuts

    Growers warn of fallout from visa cuts

    UNPICKED crops, decimated rural communities and higher supermarket prices are among the consequences that could unfold if One Nation’s anti-immigration policy were to be implemented, farmers and experts have warned.…

  • Grape harvest underway

    Grape harvest underway

    Harvest has begun with our first loads of Chardonnay and Pinot Grigio. Reports of lower yields following the ongoing heat are common, although with the worldwide oversupply of wine, this…

  • Grant strengthens cattle and red meat industry

    Grant strengthens cattle and red meat industry

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 528596 Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA) in partnership with industry peak bodies, has secured a grant from the National Foundation for Australia-China Relations to…

  • Safety a priority

    Safety a priority

    EVERY farmer deserves to come home safely at the end of the day. That is the message at the heart of a new statewide campaign urging Victorian farmers to see…

  • Golden opportunity for future

    Golden opportunity for future

    THE Victorian Farmers Federation has called on the State Government to make strategic investments in agriculture, saying smarter policy and targeted funding in seven priority areas could supercharge the industry…

  • New initiative for soil diseases

    New initiative for soil diseases

    THE Grains Research and Development Corporation has recently launched a new initiative aimed at addressing economic strain from soilborne crop diseases. The Soil-Borne Disease Initiative is a five-year program that…