California Avocado Shipping Outlook, Plus an Apple Shipping Update

California Avocado Shipping Outlook, Plus an Apple Shipping Update

DSCN4434Here’s an outlook for the new season with California avocado shipments, plus a round up of the huge amount of U.S. apples remaining in storages to be shipped between now and late summer.

California avocado shipments this year should be about 10 percent greater than last season, although in 2014 volume was the smallest it had been in a decade.

The 327 million-pound crop is coming on about a month a head of schedule in both the northern and southern shipping areas of California.  Volume is light now, but it should improve significantly by the end of March and will continue through the summer.

In an extremely rare weather event, 6-8 inches of snow hit the Temecula area in late December and early January.  The result the snow and wind was a thinning of the crop.  The weight of the snow also snapped some tree limbs.  However, there will be a significant increase in volume of California avocados from March to June, with peak shipment occurring prior to the Fourth of July.

Southern California avocados, berries, citrus and veggies – grossing about $5500 to Atlanta.

Apple Shipments

About 79 million bushels of U.S.-grown fresh-market apples had yet to ship as of March 1st, 28 percent more than last year at the same time.  However, the March 1 total was a whopping 37 percent above the five-year average.

Washington accounted for 70.6 million bushels of those still in storage. Michigan accounted for 3.08 million bushels of the total, New York 3.05 million bushels and Pennsylvania 831,200 bushels.

March volumes of all major  apple varieties were up over last year. About 29 million bushels of red delicious had yet to ship, up from 21.3 million bushels in March 2014.

Gala volumes increased from 9.4 million to 12.9 million bushels; granny smith from 8.5 million to 8.9 million bushels; golden delicious from 6.5 million to 8.1 million bushels; fuji from 6.1 million to 7.9 million bushels; Pink Lady from 1.9 million to 2.4 million bushels; and Honeycrisp from 652,000 to 1.2 million bushels.

Yakima Valley, WA apples – grossing about $6500 to New York City.