Posts Tagged “Louisiana sweet potato shipments”

Updates: Citrus Imports; Louisiana Sweet Potatoes

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img_65561The last imports of South African citrus coming into the United States should be arriving this week.  Meanwhile, here is an update on Louisiana sweet potato shipments where product still not harvested got pounded by rains last month.

South Africa Citrus

The last boat of the season from South Africa with citrus is scheduled to arrive in Philadelphia the week of Sept. 26th.  Steady volumes of navel and midknight oranges from South Africa have been arriving in the U.S.

South Africa ships navels, midknights, mandarins, star ruby grapefruit and cara cara oranges.

Louisiana Sweet Potato Shipments

The nation’s fourth leading sweet potato shipper – Louisiana – was hit hard by heavy rains several weeks ago and we’re now starting to get a clearer picture of how much damage was done.

Torrential rains in southern Louisiana in mid-August caused major damage to the state’s agricultural producers, but the full  extent of sweet potato losses remains to be seen.  More than 30 inches of rain fell in a 48-hour period in many parts of southern Louisiana in mid-August, and more rain followed.

There’s no question the deluge will reduce the number of sweet potatoes shipped from Louisiana this year, but it is still too early to put a number on it.  Sweet potato shipments undoubtedly will be  be less because the fields were saturated for days.  By mid-September growers had either just started to dig or hadn’t started at all, making it difficult to come up with a good damage estimate.

Louisiana sweet potato growers south of Alexandria appeared to suffer the heaviest losses, but none of the state’s growers totally escaped the storm’s wrath.  Luckily, the majority of sweet potato production in the state is found north of Alexandria.

Louisiana shipped about 1.7 million boxes of sweet potatoes last season, fourth behind North Carolina, California and Mississippi.  Overall, sweet potato shipments on a national basis probably won’t be down, because North Carolina ships the majority of sweet potatoes, with California a distance second.

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NC Sweet Potato Shipments More Normal after Two Off Years

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DSCN3873+1After two consecutive years of lower-than-normal sweet potato shipments, North Carolina appears to back on track this season.

Weather factors cut into acreage and ultimately shipments, but the Tarheel state is forecast to have 66,000 acres for the 2014-15 season.   Of these total plantings, it is predicted 65,000 of those acres will be harvested, equal to almost half of the nation’s crop.

For the 2013-14 season there were only 54,000 acres of sweet potatoes planted.

The short crop last year resulted in some growers halting shipments in late August after running out of supplies of stored sweet potatoes, before they could harvest and cure their 2014-15 crop.  Curing takes five to 10 days, and then they are stored at 55-60 degrees for up to a year.

On September 14  about 27 percent of the sweet potato crop in North Carolina had been harvested.   Plantings hit a high for the 2011-12 season in the United States  with 134,000 acres planted.  Of that total  65,000 acres were in the Tarheel state.

Acreage planted dropped for the 2012-13 season to 130,500 acres nationwide, with 63,000 acres planted in North Carolina.

Among the major sweet potato shipping areas in North Carolina, are such rural towns as Chabourn, Faison, Sims, Snow Hill and Wilson.

North Carolina sweet potato shipments – grossing about $2250 to Miami.

Mississippi sweet potato shipments – grossing about $1100 to Atlanta.

Louisiana sweet potato shipments – grossing about $1900 to Chicago.

 

 

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