Horton’s Produce & More Strawberry Harvest Brings Sweet Taste of Spring to Arkansas Farm Trail

Arkansas Farm Trail Passport brings visitors to operations across the state, like Horton’s Produce & More, where strawberry harvest focuses on quality over quantity.

BALD KNOB, ARKANSAS (RFD News) — Strawberry season has arrived, and one Arkansas farm is preparing to produce nearly 45,000 pounds of fresh berries. Horton’s Produce & More is part of the Arkansas Farm Bureau’s Farm Trail Passport, which features more than 35 operations across the state.

Kenneth Horton says the program has brought new attention to the farm while they gear up for spring.

“We’ve had a lot of response to the Farm Trail, a lot of people coming by that usually didn’t come this way. It’s been a good experience. You meet a lot of different people.”

Horton says it has also created opportunities to educate the public about agriculture.

“A lot of people are simply not aware of the way things are grown. They don’t live the farm life. It’s not that they don’t want to. It’s just that they don’t have the opportunity to come out and see it actually hands-on,” he said. “It helps to educate the people to know we do raise this product right here on the farm.”

Horton adds that the farm focuses on creating quality over volume.

READ MORE: www.capts-ndsu.com/ndsu-ag-trade-monitor

Related Stories
Crave Brothers Farmstead Cheese is using cattle waste to help power its dairy operation and cheese production.
The campaign helps support students attending National FFA Convention while funding local chapters and scholarship opportunities.
Trey Myers and T. Wayne Williams discuss lessons learned on the road and what continues inspiring students across the country.
For more than 70 years, The Pancake Shop has served sausage supplied by the Hawthorn family’s meat operation.
Smith’s Farm Market now draws visitors with produce, flowers, and homemade ice cream.
Ashley Stockwell discusses representing dairy farmers during one of motorsports’ most recognizable traditions.

Knoxville native Neal Burnette-Irwin is a graduate from MTSU where he majored in Journalism and Entertainment Studies. He works as a digital content producer with RFD News and is represented by multiple talent agencies in Nashville and Chicago.


LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

ISA says Southeast Asia continues driving demand for soy-based feed products through expanding livestock and seafood industries.
International Paper’s Rome facility produces roughly 850,000 tons of containerboard each year.
The ranch’s stewardship practices are designed to support both cattle production and long-term sustainability.
RealAg Radio host Shaun Haney says producers should continue to watch tariff negotiations, market access, and the possibility of a more transactional trade relationship with China.
Dr. Jeffrey Gold says health officials continue monitoring outbreaks in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda.
RFD News Farm Legal Expert Roger McEowen discussed red flags landowners should watch for during property transactions.
Rural Lifestyle & Entertainment Shows
Analiese Gregory is taking one of the biggest risks of her life: she’s left her successful career as a restaurant chef and bought a century-old cottage at the bottom of the world, in pristine Tasmania, Australia.
RFD+ EXCLUSIVE | This hour-long show explores the trains and locomotives that aided the growth of travel, further settlement, and the development of a variety of American industries and agricultural ventures.
The internationally-known “King of Polka,” 18-time Grammy award winner for “Best Polka Album,” and bandleader of arguably the most popular polka band in America—Jimmy Sturr—is taking to the stage for another slate of shows made for his fans and polka lovers across the country.
Strong rural traditions, religion, cowboy boots, and technology collide in “Cowboy Church” — and taking part is as easy as turning on the TV! Airing Sundays on RFD Network.
This half-hour program showcases the finest traditional country music that America has to offer. Recorded live at the four-acre Circle T Arena in Hamilton, Texas, each episode of TruCountry features live performances by some of the nation’s most authentic country music artists, playing good-time songs to a jam-packed dance floor.