West Coast is Providing Plenty of Produce Loads

West Coast is Providing Plenty of Produce Loads

IMG_7030California is the hotbed for produce loads right now and it will probably only get better for the next month or so.  Strangely, some loads out of the San Joaquin Valley have been paying a higher rate than the Salinas Valley, even though it’s a shorter haul to eastern markets.

The SJV is rockin’ with increasing volume on a variety of stone fruit, some veggies, while table grapes are about to get started….Meanwhile, Salinas has plenty of mixed vegetables and berries for hauling.

California pears will join the fray when shipments get underway from the Sacramento River district in early July, which is nearly two weeks earlier than last year.

California also has another large avocado crop to ship, with peak loadings now underway from Southern areas ranging from Ventura County down to San Diego.  Strong shipments should continue through August, with volume easing in September.

Washington State

Meanwhile, the new crop of Northwest pears could be the third-largest on record.  Most loads originate from the regions around  Wenatchee and Yakima, WA, plus  Mid-Columbia and Medford, OR.  Total shipments should amount to about 19.8 million 44-pound box equivalents of pears for the fresh market. This estimate is 4 % larger than the five-year average and 2 percent larger than last year’s crop.

Northwest pear shipments should start in early August.

British Columbia Pears

Orchards in the Southeast region of the Okanagan Valley, around Oliver and Osoyoos were clobbered by spring  frost damage and shipments on BC cherries, peaches, nectarines, and apricots could be reduced by 30-40%  on all items.

San Joaquin Valley stone fruit – grossing about $8700 to New York City.

Salina Valley produce – about $8600 to New York City/about $6200 to Chicago.