Posts Tagged “New Mexico onion loadings”

Shipping Updates: Onions Nationwide; Western Vegetables; and Florida Blueberries

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IMG_5516+1Here are shipping updates on Mexican and South Texas sweet onion shipments.  We also update Western vegetable shipments transitioning from the desert areas to up north in Salinas Valley. Finally, it appears Florida blueberry shipments will be good despite a killing Southeastern freeze.

It is the tail end of Mexican sweet onion shipments out of Mexico crossing the border in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas.  Still about 400 truck loads should cross the border next week, and perhaps the week after that.  Meanwhile, South Texas sweet onion shipments have been underway for several weeks and will continue for a few more weeks.

By contrast, in  New York, steady loadings of storage onions are occurring from Orange County, but volume is less than 150 truck loads a week .

Onions from the California desert get underway from El Centro around April 18 -20.

New Mexico onion loadings from the southern part of the state will start at the end of May or early June.

The nation’s biggest volume shipments of onions are from storages out of the Idaho, Eastern Oregon area, amounting to about 875 truck loads per week.

Idaho, Malheur County, Oregon onions – grossing about $3000 to Chicago.

Mexican tropical fruits and vegetables – grossing about $3000 to Chicago.

Salinas Vegetable Shipments

The transition from the deserts of California and Yuma, AZ are starting, but this is going to require some patience on the part of produce truckers.  With the desert areas wrapping up shipments early and Salinas vegetables getting a late start, this simply means SHIPPING GAPS!

Florida Blueberry Shipments

A freeze that swept through an estimated three-quarters of Georgia’s $400 million blueberry crop around St. Patrick’s Day could turn into an Easter boon for Florida blueberry shippers.

Florida skirted the most damaging parts of the cold wave that enveloped the Southeast and wrecked much of Georgia’s blueberry crop, with temperatures reported in the low 20s.

However,  Florida dodged the bullet, with only minimal damage in Gainesville and north/  Blueberries grown south of I-4 are fine.

At Wish Farms in Hawthorne, FL, located east of Gainesville, temperatures dropped to as low as  28 degrees F., but it emerged relatively unscathed.

Florida’s peak shipments for blueberries are during April and May.  How much?  Good question.  Whether the Florida blueberry industry is embarrassed with their production compared to larger producing states, or they are just secretive isn’t clear.  You just don’t see volume statistics readily available.

 

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