As we rapidly approach the New Year, vegetable volume will be increasing from Mexico through Nogales, as well as the California desert. Here also is a summary of what recent rains in drought stricken California will mean for produce haulers in the future.
Mexican vine-ripe tomato shipments will be moving into volume shipments around January 1st.
Mexican strawberry volume is increasing along with strawberries from the Plant City, FL area as well as fruit from Ventura County, CA.
Southern California strawberry shipments started the week of December 15th with very light volume. However, increasing the volume has been hampered due to rainy, cool weather. Mexican strawberry shipments have been steadily increasing, but decent volume won’t be available until the first or second week of January.
California Drought Update
A week of storms that swept through California in mid-December came nowhere close to ending the state’s drought. But with continued warm weather in the forecast, conditions are good for rapid crop growth — and possible winter shipping gaps. Celery out of Oxnard and iceberg lettuce out of Yuma, Ariz. are both coming on fast — where less rain fell but warm weather prevailed.
It has taken a crop that was well ahead of schedule and made it even more so,. The combination of rain, with mild conditions has created accelerated growth that is unprecedented. This is expected to result in shipping gaps during the next several weeks.
A NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory study released Dec. 16 found the water storage in the Sacramento and San Joaquin River basins was 11 trillion gallons below normal seasonal levels. It could take years to replenish that. The study was based on satellite data from earlier in 2014.
Mexican vegetables crossing at Nogales – grossing about $1000 to Los Angeles.
Imperial Valley/Yuma district vegetables – grossing about $5300 to Atlanta.