First generation Sunkist grower nurturing 100 acres of navels, mandarins, Valencias, and blood oranges in California’s Central Valley.
If you ask Romero Villicana where his story really starts, he won’t point to acreage or yields. He’ll point to a single tree.
In 1992, years after arriving in the United States from Central Mexico, Romero planted his first orange tree—more a promise than a plan. He’d come to the Central Valley in 1978 as a kid, surrounded by relatives who worked the land. A local citrus grower took him under his wing and taught him everything: how to read a leaf, listen to water, graft a bud, catch a pest problem before it spreads. The more he learned, the more he knew he wanted a grove of his own.
That first tree grew into a life.
Today, Romero is a first generation Sunkist grower with about 100 acres of citrus: Navel oranges, Mandarin oranges, Valencia oranges, and two kinds of blood oranges—Moro and Sanguinelli. Walk his ranch in the spring and you’ll catch the soft perfume of bloom drifting over glossy leaves; in winter, the rows glow with color.