Posts Tagged “Florida lime shipments”

Hauling Opportunities for Fall Tropical Fruit Looks Good

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DSCN0858Some tropical fruit crops have been plagued by weather at the beginning of this year’s hurricane season in some growing regions, while the lasting effects of the 2017 hurricane season continues to be felt in Florida.

Despite these issues, adequate tropical fruit shipments should continue through the fall.

Mangoes

Entering the last several weeks of the Mexican mango shipping season, 64 million boxes had been shipped through July. A total of 83.6 million boxes is projected for the season, about 2 million more boxes than last year.

Kent and keitt are the two predominant varieties coming from the northern states of Mexico for the remainder of the season.  This fall, the transition to off shore mangoes from Brazil, Ecuador and Peru occur with tommy atkins and ataulfo/honey mangoes from Brazil and Ecuador and kents from Peru.

The first shipments of Brazilian mangoes arrived in mid- to late August, followed by Ecuadoran fruit in the last half of September.

Avocados

Florida avocado production is still seeing the fallout from Hurricane Irma about a year ago.

Unity Groves Corp.,  of Homestead, FL ships green-skin avocados, and is facing a rebuilding years resulting from the hurricane. Volume was slashed by 50 percent when normal shipments would be about 200,000 bushels.  Still, avocado shipments by the company will continue through January.

Limes

Veracruz in Mexico’s prime growing region for limes, but production has been limited due to rains.

Amazon Produce Network reports there were some harvesting issues due to weather affecting crossings from Mexico into South Texas, but this has improved.

Unity Groves Corp has noted its Florida lime shipments will be about 50 percent less this year due to Hurricane Irma a year ago.

Others

World Variety Produce of Los Angeles notes there should be normal shipments of other tropical fruits.  Jackfruit got underway in the last half of September and will be available through the fall.  Yellow Dragon from Ecuador is now in normal supply.  Good volumes with white and red dragon fruit out of Vietnam is expected, while red flesh dragon fruits is typically more limited.

It remains to be see whether passion fruit shipments from California will be hurt by hot weather during the growing season.

Taiwan’s starfruit season was launched at the end of September.

Thomas Fresh  of Calgary, Alberta sees high volumes of dragon fruit, pummelo, star fruit and cracked coconut.

HLB Specialties of Pompano Beach, FL handled its first Mexican organic formosa papayas in mid-September.  Brazilian golden papaya imports improved in September.  Additionally, imports of Guatemalan rambutan season will continue until mid-November, and Honduras got underway in early September with good production.

Yellow dragon fruit from Ecuador stared in early September.

 

 

 

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