Posts Tagged “Walla Walla onions”

Northwest Cherries and Sweet Onion Shipments will Start in a Few Weeks

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DSCN1335Washington state cherries and sweet onions will be available for loading in the coming weeks.

Cherry Shipments

It is more than two weeks away, but there should be plenty of loading opportunities with the arrival of near record Northwest cherry shipments.  Northwest cherries, that is led by Washington state, but also includes Oregon, will start shipping in early June, with decent volume coming in late June for the Fourth of July.  Estimates call for over 20 million boxes to be shipped this season, and possibly rival the record crop of 23 million boxes in 2012.  Last year, the region shipped only 14.3 million boxes.  The shipments this season will be the earliest start in four to five years.

Northwest cherry shippers expect to load 7 million boxes in June.  Peak loadings will occur in July when 12 to 13 million boxes are expected to be shipped.   In August, cherry loadings should hit 2 to 3 million boxes to end the season.

Walla Walla Onion Shipments

Temperatures were warming up in the Walla Walla River Valley during April and that is good news for owner operators, small fleet owners and otherswho annually haul Walla Wala onions, grown on about 600 acres.

Volume is forecast to be normal from the area, which usually ships around 1,000 40-pound units per acre.   That translates into around 600,00 cartons being loaded each season.  Shipments should get underway towards the end of June and run through mid-August.

Yakima Valley apples and pears – grossing about $7,000 to New York City.

 

 

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Northwest Summer Cherries, Plus Other Produce is Being Shipped

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IMG_7022Even with the recent lower estimates for Northwest cherry shipments, it is still being considered a decent amount of loadings.  The best volume should occur through about Aug. 10.

Frost in the Northwest during April and heavy rains at the end of May reduced the initial season estimate of 18 million boxes to 16-17 million boxes.

By the end of June, that estimate was due for another downward adjustment.  What was once a  17-million-box crop no longer exists.  Shipments are now estimated to be down to as low as 13 to 16 million boxes.”

About 23 million boxes  of cherries were shipped from the Northwest last year.

Blueberry loadings are picking up in both Washington state and Oregon….Washington state continues to ship late season apples from the Yakima and Wenachee Valleys.

The Walla Walla district in Washington is shipping onions, with volume increasing in the new season.  A similar situation with onions is occurring from the Columbia Basin and Umatilla Basin along the Washington/Oregon border.  The state line area also is shipping potatoes in light volume.

In Idaho, potatoes are averaging about 1,750 truckload equivalents a week, although a significant percentage of those spuds are being loaded in rail cars.

Idaho potatoes – grossing about $5500 to New York City.

Washington State cherries – about $6700 to New York City.

 

 

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