Posts Tagged “produce loads”

Fall Produce Shipments Increasing Around the Country

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Fall is definately settling in across the USA and autumn produce loads also are increasing.

The biggest indication the new season is gearing up is in the Northwest with shipments of apples from Washington’s Yakima and Wenachee Valleys.   Last week the state’s apple volume exceeded 2,200 truckload equivalents and the amount will continue increasing in the weeks ahead.  Demand for apples around the country is strong in big part due to Michigan losing most of its crop due to weather, plus significant losses in New York state.

In California, the heaviest volume for produce shipments continues with table grapes from the San Joaquin Valley, averaging about 1,600 truckloads per week.  Salinas Valley lettuce is providing the next most available loads averaging about around 1,200 truckloads each week.  There also are good loading opportunities with Watsonville area strawberries and with tomatoes from the Central San Joaquin Valley.  The valley also is shipping stone fruit, but it is now in a seasonal decline.

In the upper mid-west, central Wisconsin about 400 truckloads of potatoes a week, but this will be increasing.   In the same area, fresh cranberry shipments are small compared to potatoes, but still significant and will be increasing, particularly by the end of October as Thanksgiving shipments get underway.

In New England, there are light amounts of apples being shipped.  Massachusetts cranberry shipments from the Cape Cod area also have started, and will increase in a similar fashion to those in Wisconsin.

On New York’s Long Island, about 60 truckloads of potatoes are being shipped weekly from the eastern end of the island.

Looking at North Carolina, the nation’s largest sweet potato shipper, there are about 65,000 acres of the product.  Normal volume is expected.  Some of the old crop is still being loaded.  However, the new sweet potato crop will soon provide most of the shipments.  A average amount of about 15 million cartons of sweet potatoes should be shipped from North Carolina over the next 10 or 11 months.

Washington apples – grossing about $4400 to Chicago.

Salinas Valley vegetables and berries – about $7100 to New York City.

Wisconsin potatoes – about $1000 to Chicago.

North Carolina sweet potatoes – about $1500 Atlanta.

 

 

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Late Summer, Fall Launches Sweet Potatoes Loads

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Late summer and early fall launches sweet potato shipments from several states.  Before I go any further, sweet potatoes are not among the leaders when it comes to good produce rates.  But neither are other basic “hardware” items such as potatoes and onions.  There’s a reason berries and vegetable trucking rates are better;  they are more perishable.

North Carolina is the leading shipper of sweet potatoes in the USA.  The Tar Heel state has slashed acreage by 5,000 acres this season after a disaterous overproduction a year ago.  The old crop has been finally clean up and you will now be loading sweet potatoes from the new crop, which means a fresher product with which receivers should be more pleased.  Happy receivers result in fewer claims and rejections of loads.  One other point.  Receivers don’t care for green sweet potatoes.  They prefer product that has been cured.  Most sweet potatoes loads should be cured entering October.

Mississippi and Louisiana have been irrigating dry sweet potato fields, at least until Hurrican Issac arrived.

Louisana sweet potatoes apparently dodged the budget from Issac.  Farms in southwest and central Louisiana received about an inch of rain from Isaac, and farms in northeast Louisiana between 4 and 4 1/2 inches.  Harvest may be delayed up to week to allow fields to dry out.

No word on yet on how Mississippi sweet potatoe shipments may have been affected.

 

 

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