Desert Vegetable Shipments are Rebounding; California Citrus Freeze Update

Desert Vegetable Shipments are Rebounding; California Citrus Freeze Update

DSCN1848Produce shipments can be a crap shoot anytime of the year, but the odds certainly increase when trying to grow and ship perishable products in the wintertime.  Sometimes you dodge the bullet, sometimes not.   The proverbial bullet was dodged recently in the California and Arizona deserts, although some vegetables may have been grazed.  But shipments are pretty much back to normal…At the end of the report is an update on the California citrus freeze.

Vegetable volumes out of the California and Arizona deserts are returning to normal after freezes in the first half of December.  Record lows slowed growth across the board, but broccoli and cauliflower were hit the hardest.

Desert lettuce shipments are warmer in the Imperial Valley from such places as  Holtville, compared to the Yuma district in Western Arizona.

Iceberg or head letttuc, as well as  mixed leaf mostly escaped the freezing weather but cauliflower, broccoli, spring mix, arugula and other leaf items suffered a little bit with damage such as tip burn.

It is too early to get a handle on whether desert celery plantings and its resulting shipments will come off later than their typical early January start because of the December cold.

Whether we are talking Imperial Valley vegetable shipments, or Yuma vegetables shipments, it is particularly wise to keep an eye on the weather, and when you do load, make sure your receiver knows the quality of the product.  Winter veggies tend to get beat up by Mother Nature and are not always pretty.

California Citrus Shipments

Early inspections of freeze-damaged citrus in California’s Kern County pegged mandarin orange and lemon losses at around 20 percent, and navel losses at less than 5 percent.

Still, the toll of a Dec. 4-10 cold snap remains unclear in Kern County and in Fresno and Tulare counties…..We’ll still ring in the New Year before we start getting a significant feel for how much California citrus shipments will be affected.